BY THE SAME AUTHORS

FROM DARTMOUTH TO THE DARDANELLES

A MIDSHIPMAN'S LOG

Edited by His Mother

Price 1s. 6d. net

"Short and slight though it is, few books on the war have interested us more than this midshipman's account of his experiences ... ranging from his going to Dartmouth in May 1914, to his first leave after ten months' service, when his ship had been torpedoed in the Dardanelles. It is a picture of life from day to day on active service, written with an absence of self-consciousness, an ingenuous, boyish eagerness for new experiences, and an enthusiasm for the Navy that would disarm criticism, were any forthcoming."—Country Life.

"Keen as mustard, the Middy describes, in that terse language with a thrill behind it which the Navy has brought to a fine art, all the strange, exciting happenings of ten months' active service."—Graphic.

"Written with a vivid sense of the picturesque, an ability which will make the record extremely popular ... his cheery letters will live and be treasured more probably than many a more ambitious work. His mother's introduction is written in his own brave spirit."—Sheffield Daily Telegraph.