The Custom of the SeaWiley, 1999 - 315 pagina's Cast adrift in a tiny boat on a vast and desolate ocean, faced with almost certain death, what would you do to survive? This is the agonizing question that lies at the heart of the gripping true drama of The Custom of the Sea. On May 19, 1884, the yacht Mignonette set sail from Southampton, England, bound for Sydney, Australia. Halfway through the 12,000-mile voyage, Captain Tom Dudley and his three-member crew were best by a monstrous storm off the coast of West Africa. After four terrifying days battling towering waves and hurricane-force gales, the Mignonette was sunk by a massive forty-foot "freak" wave. Captain Dudley and his crew were cast adrift a thousand miles from the nearest land in a leaky thirteen-foot dinghy with only two small tins of turnips for food, no water, and no shelter from the scorching sun. After nineteen days, they were all near death, and Dudley determine that they must resort to the horrifying practice well known among seamen of the time called "the custom of the sea." While the others watched, the captain killed the weakest of them, the seventeen-year-old cabin boy, and his body was eaten. Five days later, the survivors were picked up by a passing ship, and although such cases of survival cannibalism were usually either hushed up or condoned as terrible but justified acts of desperation, in this case the men were arrested for murder. The sensational trial that followed kept a shocked public enthralled during the following winter, from the lowliest ship’s deckhand to Queen Victoria herself. In this riveting account, Neil Hanson re-creates with vivid detail the harrowing ordeal of the Mignonette’s crew. Drawing from newspaper accounts, personal letters and diaries, court proceedings, and first-person accounts of the principals, he has brilliantly pieced together their tragic story, a tale rife with moral twists and turns that will draw you deeper and deeper in to the drama of the men’s fate. |
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Arthur Collins bail barque began bench blood Board of Trade boat boy's Brooks and Stephens cannibalism canvas Cape Captain Dudley cargo Cheesman chronometer Coleridge Collins court crew crime custom Danckwerts death deck defence dinghy drink Dudley and Stephens eyes face Falmouth feet gale gaze glanced guilty gunwale hand Harcourt heard helm Holloway Holloway Prison Home Office home secretary Huddleston judge jury Justice killed knife Laverty Liddicoat lives London looked Lord magistrates mainsail mast mate Mignonette Mignonette's Moctezuma morning murder necessity night nodded oakum oars oilskins once paused Philippa Plimsoll prisoners prosecution rescued Richard Parker rigging rope sail sailors Samuel Plimsoll sea-anchor sea-water seamen sentence sextant shark ship ship's shook his head side Simonsen Southampton Special Verdict stared Stephens's stood survivors Sydney thirst Tilly Tollesbury Tom's took trial turned voyage watch waves wife wind wreck yacht