To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



Landsman Hay: v. 4: Seafarers' Voices

Hardback

Main Details

Title Landsman Hay: v. 4: Seafarers' Voices
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Robert S. Hay
Edited by Vincent McInerney
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:224
Dimensions(mm): Height 178,Width 114
Category/GenreMemoirs
Ships and shipping
ISBN/Barcode 9781848320680
ClassificationsDewey:387.5092
Audience
General
Illustrations 1 map

Publishing Details

Publisher Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Imprint Seaforth Publishing
Publication Date 21 October 2010
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

In 1803, at the age of 14, Robert Hay ran away from home to join the Royal Navy, and for the next eight years experienced the trials and tribulations of a sailor's life. Intelligent, agile and willing, he became a boy servant to a series of officers, all of whom helped advance his education as was the practice of the day. But the taxing conditions of life onboard he found detestable and he was, after an action off the French coast, sorely tempted to desert but the well known and ruthless treatment of deserters, if caught, deterred him this time. He was then posted to the East Indies where he was badly wounded and nearly lost a leg before returning home after five years with GBP14 and fourteen days leave to look forward to. His next ship ran aground off Plymouth and, this time, he took the opportunity to desert but was then quickly taken by a press gang. Terrified of being identified, he managed to escape and reach Scotland and home. As well as a wonderful yarn, the book is also an impressive description of early nineteenth-century naval life, and his ability as a writer was considerable. His descriptions of his remarkable experiences in the East Indies are full of the flavour of the region, while the sailor's natural inclination to drink and debauchery is told with verve. But also running through the narrative are many fine observations on nature and on the human condition. A true and vivid account of the sailor's life of this era. AUTHOR: Robert Hay was born in Scotland in 1789 and ran away to sea at the height of the wars with France. His life at sea is told in his remarkable memoir which he wrote after his escape from the Navy. His talent for writing drew him to journalism and he rose to become a weekly magazine editor. He died in 1847. SELLING POINTS: -Racy and compelling narratives for modern readers -Fascinating first-hand accounts of sailors' lives in bygone eras -Fourth work in a highly collectible library of twelve volumes, painting a picture of life at sea over 300 years ago.

Author Biography

Robert Hay was born in Scotland in 1789 and died there in 1847. After writing about his experiences at sea, he became a journalist.