THE SPEEDWELL VOYAGE
A Tale of Piracy & Mutiny in the 18th Century
Kenneth Poolman
NEW copy. Hardcover with dust jacket, still in shrinkwrap.
(Annapolis: Naval Institute Press,
1999). 216 pages.
"No mythic journey, this tale of adventure on the high seas is completely true,
told by a writer who spent World War II in warships of the Royal Navy. The story
is based on the real-life adventures of George Shelvocke, commander of the
22-gun privateer Speedwell that set sail in 1718 to steal treasure from Spanish
ships in the South Seas. Filled with pirates, mutinies, sea battles, violent
storms, and shipwrecks on exotic islands, the fast-moving narrative offers
authentic details of the period and honest characterizations of real
individuals. Not since Shelvocke's own book was published in 1726 has the full
story been told, although Samuel Coleridge based his Rime of the Ancient Mariner
on events reported by Speedwell's captain. This is the only modern attempt to
recount the epic voyage. We learn how Shelvocke's seamanship skills allowed him
to outfight larger Spanish warships and capture prizes but were no match for the
stormy seas that claimed his frigate. We get an uncomfortably close look at the
lives of the ship-wrecked survivors on a Pacific Island - the same island from
which the real "Robinson Crusoe" was rescued - and we watch in fascination as
the crew mutinies and forms the first sailors' soviet in history. Though not
without his shortcomings, Shelvocke is shown to be a natural leader who
persuades the men to build a small vessel with timber from the wreck and trees
hacked from the forest. Eventually the sailors reinstate their captian and
manage to take over a Spanish ship, which they sail to Macao. Shelvocke's role
in getting the sick and starving men to safety is just one of the dramatic
stories included in this classic sea odyssey. A richly detailed and colorful
glossary ensures that readers will enjoy this tale regardless of their
background."
$26.00

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