Notes by the Way in A Sailor's Life

By

Captain Arthur E. Knights

Introduction.

In 1898 I was in Hongkong on a business affair which gave me much leisure, when Murray Bain, editor of the China Mail, whom I had long known, asked why I did not send him a letter occasionally. This led to my venturing to give him "Some Notes by the Way in A Sailor's Life."

These Notes, I considered, could only be of interest locally. But some of my friends have urged me to overcome my diffidence and put them in pamphlet form, which I now do for distribution among my friends, trusting that they will treat leniently the literary efforts of one who is a sailor and not a cleric.

A.E.K.

Contents.

[A Quick Passage]
[A Record Long Passage]
[A Voyage of Misfortune]
[Beginning of the German Navy]
[An Incident in Hongkong Harbour]
[A Singular Meeting]
[A Little Railway Experience]
[A Good Record in Life-Saving]
[Presentation of a Telescope by the British Government]
[The Ship "Bombay"]
[Is There a Fatality Attaching to Men or Inanimate Things?]
[Chinese Politeness]
[A Brazilian Slaver]
[Mary Ann Gander]
[Hard Times]
[Memory For Voices]
[An Incident of the Great Taiping Rebellion]
[Conclusion]