Mr. Midshipman Easy (Historical Novel)

Mr. Midshipman Easy (Historical Novel)
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Описание книги

Midshipman easy is an open-hearted joyful led, who joins the navy of admiral Nelson lead by the romantic ideals planted in his head by his father, a philosopher. Having gone through Napoleonic wars, Mr. Easy matures, learns the officer craft, meets new friends and true love. Through the storyline, he gradually casts off his father's ideals of equality and the reuse of the property. His friend, an escaped slave and former African prince helps him get out of trouble he encounters while serving on several British ships. Having matured, Easy comes back home, takes up and revives the family business, and finally proposes to the love of his life.

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Фредерик Марриет. Mr. Midshipman Easy (Historical Novel)

Mr. Midshipman Easy (Historical Novel)

Table of Contents

Chapter Two

In which Mrs. Easy, as usual, has her own way

Chapter Three

In which our hero has to wait the issue of an argument

Chapter Four

In which the Doctor prescribes going to school as a remedy for a cut finger

Chapter Five

Jack Easy is sent to a school at which there is no flogging

Chapter Six

In which Jack makes essay of his father’s sublime philosophy and arrives very near to truth at last

Chapter Seven

In which Jack makes some very sage reflections, and comes to a very unwise decision

Chapter Eight

In which Mr. Easy has his first lesson as to zeal in His Majesty’s Service

Chapter Nine

In which Mr. Easy finds himself on the other side of the Bay of Biscay

Chapter Ten

Showing how Jack transgresses against his own philosophy

Chapter Eleven

In which our hero proves that all on board should equally sacrifice decency to duty

Chapter Twelve

In which our hero prefers going down to going up; a choice, it is to be hoped, he will reverse upon a more important occasion

Chapter Thirteen

In which our hero begins to act and think for himself

Chapter Fourteen

In which our hero finds that disagreeable occurrences will take place on a cruise

Chapter Fifteen

In which mutiny, like fire, is quenched for want of fuel and no want of water

Chapter Sixteen

In which Jack’s cruise is ended, and he regains the Harpy

Chapter Seventeen

In which our hero finds out that trigonometry is not only necessary to navigation, but may be required in settling affairs of honour

Chapter Eighteen

In which our hero sets off on another cruise, in which he is not blown off shore

Chapter Nineteen

In which our hero follows his destiny and forms a tableau

Chapter Twenty

A long story, which the reader must listen to, as well as our hero

Chapter Twenty One

In which our hero is brought up all standing under a press of sail

Chapter Twenty Two

Our hero is sick with the service, but recovers with proper medicine—an argument, ending, as most do, in a blow up—Mesty lectures upon craniology

Chapter Twenty Three

Jack goes on another cruise—love and diplomacy—Jack proves himself too clever for three, and upsets all the arrangements of the high contracting powers

Chapter Twenty Four

Our hero plays the very devil

Chapter Twenty Five

In which the old proverb is illustrated, “that you must not count your chickens before they are hatched.”

Chapter Twenty Six

In which our hero becomes excessively unwell, and agrees to go through a course of medicine

Chapter Twenty Seven

In which Captain Wilson is repaid with interest for Jack’s borrowing his name; proving that a good name is as good as a legacy

Chapter Twenty Eight

“Philosophy made easy” upon agrarian principles, the subject of some uneasiness to our hero—the first appearance, but not the last, of an important personage

Chapter Twenty Nine

In which our hero sees a little more service, and is better employed than in fighting Don Silvio

Chapter Thirty

Modern philanthropy which, as usual, is the cause of much trouble and vexation

Chapter Thirty One

A regular set-to, in which the parties beaten are not knocked down, but rise higher and higher at each discomfiture—nothing but the troops could have prevented them from going up to Heaven

Chapter Thirty Two

In which our hero and Gascoigne ought to be ashamed of themselves, and did feel what might be called midshipmite compunction

Chapter Thirty Three

In which Mesty should be called throughout Mephistopheles, for it abounds in black cloaks, disguises, daggers, and dark deeds

Chapter Thirty Four

Jack leaves the service, in which he had no business, and goes home to mind his own business

Chapter Thirty Five

Mr. Easy’s wonderful invention fully explained by himself—much to the satisfaction of our hero, and, it is to be presumed, to that also of the reader

Chapter Thirty Six

In which Jack takes up the other side of the argument, and proves that he can argue as well on one side as the other

Chapter Thirty Seven

In which our hero finds himself an orphan, and resolves to go to sea again, without the smallest idea of equality

Chapter Thirty Eight

In which our hero, as usual, gets into the very middle of it

Chapter Thirty Nine

A council of war, in which Jack decides that he will have one more cruise

Chapter Forty

In which there is another slight difference of opinion between those who should be friends

Chapter Forty One

Which winds up the Nautical Adventures of Mr. Midshipman Easy

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Frederick Marryat

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Chapter Thirty Six.

Chapter Thirty Seven.

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