Two Years Before the Mast

A Personal Narrative of Life at Sea

Paperback, 408 pages

English language

Published July 9, 2007 by BiblioBazaar.

ISBN:
978-1-4346-3615-7
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OCLC Number:
315458678

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5 stars (3 reviews)

Two Years before the Mast is but an episode in the life of Richard Henry Dana, Jr., yet the narrative in which he details the experiences of that period is, perhaps, his chief claim to a wide remembrance.

His services in fields other than literary occupied the greater part of his life. Dana was a well known and respected lawyer, a stalwart abolitionist, and an advocate for the rights of common sailors. He and his wife, Sarah, had many friends among New England's cultural elite, including Henry Wadsworth and Fanny (Appleton) Longfellow and the artist Washington Allston and his wife, Martha Remington (Dana), who was Richard's aunt.

Two Years before the Mast appeared in 1840, while its author was still a law student. Though at the time it created no great stir in the United States, it was most favorably received in England, where it paved the way for many …

40 editions

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5 stars

I'd long heard of this book as being used as source material for other texts. I can see why... Dana's clear and compelling prose transported me to the age of sail. I felt myself tasting the salt of the sea and many other details so wonderfully woven into this tale. The epilogue of his return to California after the transformative 24 years of the late 1840s and 50s is a real treat. I am a lover of first person histories un-interpreted by succeeding years. This text hits the mark squarely. I knew it to be a book about life at sea and of the merchant trade in the late years of sail, but the description of the sparsely populated Alta California coast with its Missions and Presidios in the years before the Mexican - American war were a great treasure

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Subjects

  • Fiction / General