Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States by Raphael Semmes, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Raphael Semmes ISBN: 9781465602633
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Raphael Semmes
ISBN: 9781465602633
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
A number of publications have appeared, first and last, concerning the author and his career, as was naturally to have been expected. The Alabama was the first steamship in the history of the world—the defective little Sumterexcepted—that was let loose against the commerce of a great commercial people. The destruction which she caused was enormous. She not only alarmed the enemy, but she alarmed all the other nations of the earth which had commerce afloat, as they could not be sure that a similar scourge, at some future time, might not be let loose against themselves. The Alabama, in consequence, became famous. It was the fame of steam. As a matter of course, she attracted the attention of the book-makers—those cormorants ever on the lookout for a “speculation.” A number of ambitious literateurs entered the seductive field. But it was easier, as they soon found, to enter the field than to explore it, and these penny-a-liners all made miserable failures,—not even excepting the London house of Saunders, Otley & Co., to whom the author was induced to loan his journals, in the hope that something worthy of his career might be produced. To those who have chanced to see the “Log of the Sumter and Alabama,” produced by that house, it will be unnecessary to say that the author had no hand in its preparation. He did not write a line for it, nor had he any interest whatever in the sale of it, as the loan of his journals had been entirely gratuitous. So far as his own career was concerned, the author would gladly have devolved the labor of the historian on other shoulders, if this had been possible. But it did not seem to be possible, after the experiments that had been made. With all the facilities afforded the London house referred to, a meagre and barren record was the result. The cause is sufficiently obvious. The cruise of a ship is a biography. The ship becomes a personification. She not only “Walks the waters like a thing of life,” but she speaks in moving accents to those capable of interpreting her. But her interpreter must be a seaman, and not a landsman. He must not only be a seaman, he must have made the identical cruise which he undertakes to describe. It will be seen, hence, that the career of the author was a sealed book to all but himself. A landsman could not even interpret his journals, written frequently in the hieroglyphics of the sea. A line, or a bare mark made by himself, which to other eyes would be meaningless would for him be fraught with the inspiration of whole pages.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
A number of publications have appeared, first and last, concerning the author and his career, as was naturally to have been expected. The Alabama was the first steamship in the history of the world—the defective little Sumterexcepted—that was let loose against the commerce of a great commercial people. The destruction which she caused was enormous. She not only alarmed the enemy, but she alarmed all the other nations of the earth which had commerce afloat, as they could not be sure that a similar scourge, at some future time, might not be let loose against themselves. The Alabama, in consequence, became famous. It was the fame of steam. As a matter of course, she attracted the attention of the book-makers—those cormorants ever on the lookout for a “speculation.” A number of ambitious literateurs entered the seductive field. But it was easier, as they soon found, to enter the field than to explore it, and these penny-a-liners all made miserable failures,—not even excepting the London house of Saunders, Otley & Co., to whom the author was induced to loan his journals, in the hope that something worthy of his career might be produced. To those who have chanced to see the “Log of the Sumter and Alabama,” produced by that house, it will be unnecessary to say that the author had no hand in its preparation. He did not write a line for it, nor had he any interest whatever in the sale of it, as the loan of his journals had been entirely gratuitous. So far as his own career was concerned, the author would gladly have devolved the labor of the historian on other shoulders, if this had been possible. But it did not seem to be possible, after the experiments that had been made. With all the facilities afforded the London house referred to, a meagre and barren record was the result. The cause is sufficiently obvious. The cruise of a ship is a biography. The ship becomes a personification. She not only “Walks the waters like a thing of life,” but she speaks in moving accents to those capable of interpreting her. But her interpreter must be a seaman, and not a landsman. He must not only be a seaman, he must have made the identical cruise which he undertakes to describe. It will be seen, hence, that the career of the author was a sealed book to all but himself. A landsman could not even interpret his journals, written frequently in the hieroglyphics of the sea. A line, or a bare mark made by himself, which to other eyes would be meaningless would for him be fraught with the inspiration of whole pages.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Vocational Psychology: Its Problems and Methods by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book Our Little Hawaiian Cousin by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book The Uses of Diversity: A Book of Essays by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book The Story of the Mormons from the Date of Their Origin to the Year 1901 by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book Water Baptism: A Pagan and Jewish Rite but not Christian, Proven by Scripture and History Confirmed by the Lives of Saints Who Were Never Baptized With Water by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book The Golden Fleece: A Romance by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book Adapa's Treatise on Sumerian Religion by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book The Adventures of Chatterer The Red Squirrel by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book The American Revolution and the Boer War, an Open Letter to Mr. Charles Francis Adams on His Pamphlet "The Confederacy and the Transvaal" by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book The Life of Napoleon (Complete) by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book The Doctor of Pimlico: Being the Disclosure of a Great Crime by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book Historic Tales (First 14 Volumes of 15) by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book Le Nabab (Complete) by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book The Boy Travellers in the Far East: Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey to Ceylon and India by Raphael Semmes
Cover of the book History of Ancient Pottery: Greek, Etruscan, and Roman (Complete) by Raphael Semmes
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy