ꥼJaphet, in Search of a Father
Project Gutenberg's Japhet, In Search Of A Father, by Frederick Marryat This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: Japhet, In Search Of A Father
Author: Frederick Marryat
Release Date: June 5, 2005 [EBook #15991]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JAPHET, IN SEARCH OF A FATHER ***
Produced by Ted Garvin, Daniel Mahu, Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
JAPHET, IN SEARCH OF A FATHER
BY CAPTAIN MARRYAT
LONDON J.M. DENT AND CO. BOSTON: LITTLE, BROWN AND CO.
MDCCCXCVI
Contents
CHAPTER I
1
CHAPTER II
7
CHAPTER III
14
CHAPTER IV
18
CHAPTER V
24
CHAPTER VI
29
CHAPTER VII
37
CHAPTER VIII
41
CHAPTER IX
47
CHAPTER X
53
CHAPTER XI
60
CHAPTER XII
67
CHAPTER XIII
73
CHAPTER XIV
79
CHAPTER XV
84
CHAPTER XVI
91
CHAPTER XVII
98
CHAPTER XVIII
104
CHAPTER XIX
110
CHAPTER XX
113
CHAPTER XXI
118
CHAPTER XXII
123
CHAPTER XXIII
130
CHAPTER XXIV
134
CHAPTER XXV
139
CHAPTER XXVI
144
CHAPTER XXVII
147
CHAPTER XXVIII
152
CHAPTER XXIX
156
CHAPTER XXX
160
CHAPTER XXXI
165
CHAPTER XXXII
169
CHAPTER XXXIII
173
CHAPTER XXXIV
176
CHAPTER XXXV
182
CHAPTER XXXVI
187
CHAPTER XXXVII
192
CHAPTER XXXVIII
196
CHAPTER XXXIX
201
CHAPTER XL
206
CHAPTER XLI
211
CHAPTER XLII
216
CHAPTER XLIII
220
CHAPTER XLIV
224
CHAPTER XLV
229
CHAPTER XLVI
234
CHAPTER XLVII
237
CHAPTER XLVIII
241
CHAPTER XLIX
247
CHAPTER L
251
CHAPTER LI
254
CHAPTER LII
259
CHAPTER LIII
265
CHAPTER LIV
268
CHAPTER LV
273
CHAPTER LVI
279
CHAPTER LVII
285
CHAPTER LVIII
290
CHAPTER LIX
294
CHAPTER LX
299
CHAPTER LXI
305
CHAPTER LXII
310
CHAPTER LXIII
314
CHAPTER LXIV
319
CHAPTER LXV
322
CHAPTER LXVI
327
CHAPTER LXVII
333
CHAPTER LXVIII
338
CHAPTER LXIX
344
CHAPTER LXX
349
CHAPTER LXXI
355
CHAPTER LXXII
362
CHAPTER LXXIII
259
CHAPTER LXXIV
378
CHAPTER LXXV
387
CHAPTER LXXVI
394
CHAPTER LXXVII
400
CHAPTER LXXVIII
408
CHAPTER LXXIX
414
Prefatory Note
In the Metropolitan Magazine, where this novel originally appeared (Sep. 1834-Jan. 1836), Marryat prepared his readers for its reception in the following words:--
"And having now completed 'Jacob Faithful,' we trust to the satisfaction of our readers, we will make a few remarks. We commenced writing on our own profession, and having completed four tales, novels, or whatever you may please to call them" (viz., Frank Mildmay, The King's Own, Newton Forster, Peter Simple), "in 'Jacob Faithful' we quitted the salt water for the fresh. From the wherry we shall now step on shore, and in our next number we shall introduce to our readers 'The Adventures of Japhet, in search of his Father.'"
The promise was faithfully kept, and Japhet, with all his varied experience, never went to sea. There were indeed few companies on land to which he did not penetrate. Reared in a foundling hospital, and apprenticed to a Smithfield apothecary, his good looks, impulsive self-confidence, and unbounded talent for lying, carried him with éclat through the professions of quack doctor, juggler, and mountebank, gentleman about town, tramp, and quaker: to emerge triumphantly at last as the only son of a wealthy Anglo-Indian general, or "Bengal tiger," as his friends preferred to call him.
Japhet's "adventures," of course, are shared by a faithful friend and ally, Timothy Oldmixon, the Sancho to his Quixote, originally an orphan pauper like himself, composed of two qualities--fun and affection. He encounters villains, lawyers, kind-hearted peers, "rooks" and "pigeons," gipsies, leaders of fashion, fair maidens--enough and to spare. In a word, Marryat here makes use of well-worn material, and uses it well. He has constructed a tale of private adventure on the old familiar lines, in which the local colour--acquired from other books--is admirably laid on, and the interest sustained to the end. The story is well told, enlivened by humour, and very respectably constructed.
The reader will find Japhet thoroughly exciting, and will have no difficulty in believing that, while it was running in the pages of the Metropolitan, "an American vessel meeting an English one in the broad Atlantic, instead of a demand for water or supplies, ran up the question to her mast-head, 'Has Japhet found his father yet?'"
_Japhet, in search of a Father_, is here re-printed, with a few corrections, from the first edition in 3 vols. Saunders & Otley, 1836. On page 360 a few words, enclosed in square brackets, have been inserted from the magazine version, as the abbreviated sentence, always hitherto reproduced from the first edition, is unintelligible.
R.B.J.
* * * * *
Japhet, in Search of a Father
Chapter I
Like most other children, who should be my godfather is decided by Mammon--So precocious as to make some noise in the world and be hung a few days after I was born--Cut down in time and produce a scene of bloodshed--My early propensities fully developed by the choice of my profession
Those who may be pleased to honour these pages with a perusal, will not be detained with a long introductory history of my birth, parentage, and education. The very title implies that, at this period of my memoirs, I was ignorant of the two first; and it will be necessary for the due development of my narrative, that I allow them to remain in the same state of bliss; for in the perusal of a tale, as well as in the pilgrimage of life, ignorance of the future may truly be considered as the greatest source of happiness. The little that was known of me at this time I will however narrate as concisely, and as correctly, as I am able.
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