Read Alone at Sea : The Adventures of Joshua Slocum (9780385674072) Online
Authors: Ann Spencer
“Mine was not the sort of life …”
— SAAW, pp. 3, 4
“With all its vicissitudes …”
— VJS,
Voyage of the Liberdade
, p. 122
“She was canoe-shaped …”
— Joseph Chase Allen, Directory Edition,
Vineyard Gazette
, undated clipping 195?, TC
“full brow, bright hazel eyes …”
—
New York World
, May 19, 1889, TC
“wee cabin on a plank …”
— Ibid.
“comfortable apartment ashore”
— From “An American Family Afloat,” New York Tribune.
“‘Just there’ …”
—
New York
World
, May 19, 1889, TC
“Xmas day was spent …”
— Hettie Slocum’s letter of January 28, 1889, to Mrs. Alfred McNutt,
Masstown, Colchester County, Nova Scotia — PANS
“We had a big storm …”
— Ibid.
“brave enough to face …”
— VJS,
Voyage of the Liberdade
, p. 122
“Hettie found she was not wholly …”
— Grace Murray Brown, letters to Teller (1952–56), TC
“Father did not come to the house”
— Garfield Slocum, correspondence with Teller, TC
“His love for Hettie …”
— Grace Murray Brown, letters to Teller (1952–56), TC
“More than any other event …”
— Joseph Conrad,
Mirror of the Sea
, p. 61
“spent much of his time …”
— Ben Aymar Slocum, correspondence with Teller, TC
“a hand alas! …”
— Title page,
Voyage of the Liberdade
, 1890, Robinson & Stephenson
“It is a very interesting narrative …”
—
Yarmouth
Herald
, July 2, 1895, gleaned from research sent by Leon Fredrich to Walter Teller, TC
Pg. 80
“a record of skilful seamanship …”
— Ibid.
“The book is written …”
— Ibid.
“I would have to get used to steamships …”
— Garfield Slocum, correspondence to Teller, TC
“It didn’t seem to suffice …”
— Slocum, in undated newspaper interview (around 1908), probably
Providence Journal
, TC
“the first ship …”
— PANS
“Frankly it was with a thrill …”
— VJS,
Voyage of the Destroyer from New York to Brazil
, Introduction, p. 171
“Confidentially: I was burning to get a rake …”
— Ibid., p. 189
“Being a man of a peaceful turn …”
— Ibid., p. 173
“navigator in command”
— Ibid., p. 173
“This Department …”
— Department of State letter, Washington, D.C., December 9, 1893, TC
“Alas! for all the hardships …”
— VJS,
Voyage of the Destroyer
, p. 194
“ridiculed and defamed him …”
—
Boston Sun
, August 3, 1894, TC
“anywhere at any time …”
— Ibid.
“duellists should …”
— Ibid.
“My wife would …”
— Ibid.
“she sat on the water …”
SAAW, p. 6
“a smart New Hampshire spruce”
— PANS
“What was there …”
— Ibid., p. 4
“I’m glad you’re quite frank …”
— Letter from Teller to William Sloane at Rutgers University Press, TC
“Joshua, I’ve had a v’yage”
— Slocum’s comments to reporters,
Boston Globe
, April 16, 1895; also appeared in “The Voyage of the Aquidneck and its Varied Adventures in South American Waters,”
Outing
, April 1903, TC
“The object of the trip?”
—
Boston Globe
, undated clipping, TC
“My Syndicade is filling up, …”
— Letter to Eugene Hardy, Roberts Brothers, TC
“I can not contract with you …”
— Letter to Slocum from Alf Ford, managing editor of the
Louisville Courier Journal
, January 3, 1894, TC
[Ralph Shoemaker, librarian of the
Courier Journal
, wrote to Walter Teller that he could find no articles written by
Slocum. Teller records in his notes about correspondence with Shoemaker, “Looks as though in Louisville they never bought a line. In fact, the only paper I know that did, is the Boston Globe, and as we shall see they didn’t buy much. I expect part of the trouble may have been that Slocum was too busy and hard-working to write.”
TC [Travel letters from Slocum’s
The Spray
appeared as Monday columns in the
Boston Globe
as follows: October 14, 1895, p. 6; October 21, 1895, p. 5; November 11, 1895, p.4]
“Mr. Wagnalls of the house …”
— Undated letter from JS to Eugene Hardy, TC
“a shop-worn …”
— Ibid.
“A thousand thanks”
— Letter from JS to Eugene Hardy, January 9, 1895, TC
“Rarely if ever …”
— H. Rider Haggard’s foreword to
A Strange Career
, a biography of John Gladwin Jebb by his widow, William Blackwood and Sons, 1895
“The library of the Spray …”
—
Boston Herald
, April 16, 1895, TC
“I don’t go out …”
— Ibid.
“Capt. Josh is a kinky salt …”
— Undated clipping, (before voyage, probably April 1895),
Boston
Herald
, TC
“very easily managed …”
— Ibid.
“the suicide squad”
— John Hanna,
The Rudder
, May 1940, p. 51, TC
“A big lurching sea …”
— Ibid.
“they flop right over …”
— Ibid.
“the Spray was a …”
— Howard Chapelle,
Maine Coast Fisherman
, June 1965
“I laid in two barrels …”
— Clifton Johnson, “The Cook Who Sailed Alone,”
Good Housekeeping
, February 1903
“To Sail Around World …”
—
Boston Daily Globe
, April 16, 1895, p. 4, TC
“builder, owner, skipper, …”
— Ibid.
“There now lies a little sloop …”
— Ibid.
“Her present rig …”
— Ibid.
“From New York I shall …”
— Ibid.
“sleep in the day time …”
— Ibid.
“an adventure …”
— Ibid.
“Capt. Slocum …”
— Ibid.
“The enterprise the old knight …”
—
Joshua Slocum
, Walter Teller, p. 77
“Do you think …”
— Letter to Teller from Walter Sloane, TC
“Waves dancing joyously …”
— SAAW, Capt. Joshua Slocum, Ch. 2, p. 8
Chapter Six —
All Watches
“I used to soak …”
— In Clifton Johnson, “The Cook Who Sailed Alone,”
Good Housekeeping
, February 1903.
“Sleeping or waking …”
— SAAW, p. 31
“thrilling pulse”
— Ibid., p. 8
“weigh the voyage …”
— Ibid.
“fisherman’s own”
— Ibid.
“I perceived, moreover, …”
— Ibid.
“the worst tide-race …”
— Ibid., p. 11
“He dodged a sea …”
— Ibid.
“fierce sou’west rip”
— Ibid., pp. 11, 12
“I think Pernambuco …”
— Letter from JS in Westport to Eugene Hardy, May 21, 1895, TC
“In our newfangled notions …”
— SAAW, p. 9
“The price of it was …”
— Ibid., p. 12
“an attack of malaria at Gloucester …”
— Letter from JS in Yarmouth to Roberts Brothers, June 20, 1895, TC
“After all deliberations …”
— Ibid.
“let go my last hold on America”
— PANS
Pg. 100
“[I have] been trying to scribble …”
— Letter from JS in Horta Faial to Eugene Hardy, July 23, 1895
“I send one more letter …”
— Letter from JS in Pernambuco to Eugene Hardy, October 8, 1895.
[Slocum also sent a personal letter to Hardy from Pernambuco, in which he let off a little steam. The note has prophetic overtones: “The Sun printed trash of mine freely enough on more than one occasion when it came for nothing and I suspect that a case of murder or rape would find space for all the particulars in all of the papers, But I cant [sic] go to war with them. I lived awful hard coming down: But dont say anything about it.”]
“A navigator husbands the wind”
— SAAW, p. 140
“The
Spray
had barely …”
— Ibid., p. 87
“To know the laws that govern …”
— Ibid., p. 76
“I saw antitrade clouds …”
— Ibid., p. 109
“I wished for no winter gales …”
— Ibid., p. 104
“It never took long …”
— Ibid., Appendix, p. 154
“During those twenty-three days …”
— Ibid., p. 110
“I found no fault …”
— Ibid., p. 23
“a contrivance of my own …”
— In Clifton Johnson, “The Cook Who Sailed
Alone,”
Good Housekeeping
, February 1903
“My way is to cook my victuals …”
— Ibid.
“Ground coffee …”
— Ibid.
“I had much difficulty …”
— SAAW, p. 23
“The only fresh fish …”
— Ibid., p. 30
“hermetically sealed the pores”
— In Johnson,
Good Housekeeping
“butter that will keep …”
— Ibid.
“I was determined to rely …”
— SAAW, p. 58
Pg. 109
“set to work with my palm and needle …”
— Ibid., p. 58
“If it was not the best-setting sail afloat, …”
— Ibid., p. 58
“Between the storm-bursts …”
— Ibid., p. 66
“I … mended the sloop’s sails …”
— Ibid., p. 66
“carefully top and bottom”
— Ibid., p. 94
“unshipped the sloop’s mast …”
— Ibid., p. 40
“In the days of serene weather …”
Ibid., p. 106
Chapter Seven —
High Seas Adventures
“But where the sloop avoided
— SAAW, p. 45
“For under great excitement, one lives fast.”
— Ibid.
“Take warning, Spray …”
— SAAW, p. 8
“It was the 13th of the month, …”
— Ibid., p. 12
“whirled around like a top”
— Ibid.
“I now saw the tufts …”
— Ibid., p. 28
“the sons of generations of pirates”
— Ibid.
“shook her in every timber”
— Ibid.
“You can just imagine …”
— PANS
“I perceived this theiving …”
— Ibid., p. 28
“too fatigued to sleep”
— Ibid., p. 29
“heartsore of choppy seas”
— Ibid., p. 44
“I will not say …”
— Ibid., p.44
“where the sloop avoided …”
— Ibid., p. 45
“I had only a moment …”
— Ibid., p. 45
“At this point where the tides …”
— Ibid., p. 63
“the waves rose and fell …”
— Ibid., p. 53
“as squalid as contact …”
— Ibid., p. 46
“fire-water”
— Ibid.
“poisonous stuff …”
— Ibid.
“You must use them …”
— Ibid.
“It was not without thoughts …”
— Ibid., p. 47
“savages”
— Ibid.
“yammerschooner”
— Ibid.
“into the cabin, …”
— Ibid., p. 48
“So much for the …”
— Ibid.
“I reasoned that I had all …”
— Ibid.
“business end”
— Ibid., p. 55
“like a pack of hounds”
— Ibid.
“They jumped pell-mell …”
— Ibid.