An edition of The life and death of the Duchess (1958)

The Duchess

The Life and Death of the Herzogin Cecilie

[1st American ed.]
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Last edited by MARC Bot
September 27, 2020 | History
An edition of The life and death of the Duchess (1958)

The Duchess

The Life and Death of the Herzogin Cecilie

[1st American ed.]

This is the First Edition, published in London in 1958

Publish Date
Publisher
Secker and warburg
Language
English
Pages
247

Buy this book

Edition Availability
Cover of: The Duchess
The Duchess: The Life and Death of the Herzogin Cecilie
1958, Secker and warburg
Hardcover in pale blue cloth with bluish pictorial dust wrapper in English - [1st American ed.]

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Pronounciation
Foreword
Part One. 1935 - Bridal Wealth
Chapter I. Lemland
Part Two
Chapter II. Nils
Chapter III. 1934 - First Encounter
Chapter IV. 1934 - One Hundred and Twenty Days
Part Three. All the Wide Oceans of the World
Chapter V. Out of the Baltic - October 1935
Chapter VI. Ballast
Chapter VII. Paik
Chapter VIII. Swan Song
Part Four. The End of the Duchess
Chapter IX. The Channel
Part Five. A Funny Sort of Boy
Chapter X. Pellas
Appendix
25 Illustrations

Edition Notes

First published in London in 1958 under title: The Duchess: the life and death of the Herzogin Cecille.

Published in
London

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
910.45
Library of Congress
G540 .E7 1959

The Physical Object

Format
Hardcover in pale blue cloth with bluish pictorial dust wrapper
Pagination
247 p.
Number of pages
247
Dimensions
22 x 14 x 2.8 centimeters
Weight
460 grams

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL6270125M
LCCN
59006887
OCLC/WorldCat
1328972

Work Description

This book describes the story of the last two years of Herzogin Cecilie, one of the last and finest four-masted, steel-hulled, commercial sailing ships.
In her first book, ‘Out of the World’, Pamela Bourne described how she acquired the nickname ‘Nils Jacob’ en route from Europe to Australia on a modern cargo vessel, then travelled extensively in the southern Pacific, and finally became a working passenger on this great sailing ship. They left South Australia with a cargo of wheat in April, 1934, and arrived in Belfast four months later.
Her earlier adventure is recounted as a flashback in Part Two of this book, but Part One starts on September 28th, 1935, with her marrying the Captain of the ship, Sven Eriksson, in Finland, at his Pellas home in the Åland Islands, where the ship was registered. Part Three describes how, within a few days, they set sail for South Australia, where they again loaded wheat for Europe. On April 23rd, 1935, they reached Falmouth, and received or orders to discharge at Ipswich. Part Four recounts how Sven set out almost immediately, and, during the early morning darkness of the 25th, tragically drove the vessel onto rocks near Bolt Head on the Devon Coast. Over the next three months, desperate efforts were made to refloat and save the ship, but she was eventually abandoned in nearby Starehole Cove where she had been beached. Part Five is again set in Sven’s home area and tells of the birth of the first child “a boy with three parents” whom they named Sven-Cecilie.
Pamela Bourne’s relationship with the ship was truly passionate, and, being well-read, she introduced her book with a passage from ‘The Shadow-Line’ by Joseph Conrad which eloquently described such passion. She was also madly in love with Sven, and the loss of both the ship and his career were two unbelievably harsh burdens for her. Indeed, it was not until after Sven’s death in 1954, that she wrote this book, inspired by Eric Newby’s account of his similar voyage around the world in 1938-1939 aboard another four-masted barque called Moshulu (published in 1956 as ‘The Last Grain Race’). Poetically, he had embarked on his adventure after swimming around the wreck of the Herzogin Cecilie.
Pamela Bourne was deeply and emotionally committed to both the ship and to her husband (and he had a similar relationship with his dog Paik!). The rescue attempt, for example, seemed to have been directed predominantly by her and in the Appendix she stoutly defended Sven against later criticism. Readers will find a more reflective and balanced assessment of the story in the book ‘Herzogin Cecilie’ by Greenhill and Hackman, which was published in 1991.

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
September 27, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
December 9, 2012 Edited by Keith Holmes Described what its about
August 17, 2012 Edited by 86.2.123.226 Added new cover
December 6, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Added subjects from MARC records.
December 10, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page