• Thumbnail for Frederick Marryat
    Captain Frederick Marryat CB FRS (10 July 1792 – 9 August 1848) was a Royal Navy officer and a novelist. He is noted today as an early pioneer of nautical...
    16 KB (1,741 words) - 20:17, 24 May 2024
  • 1906 Emilia Marryat (1835–1875), English author of children's books Frank Marryat (1826–1855), sailor, artist, and author Frederick Marryat (1792–1848)...
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  • Thumbnail for Wimbledon, London
    mother of the writer Frederick Marryat. Their association with the area is recorded in the names of nearby Calonne and Marryat roads. Directly south...
    62 KB (6,769 words) - 17:49, 8 July 2024
  • variations exist such as 1. From the 1840 novel Poor Jack (chapter 4), by Frederick Marryat. Pretty little twinkling star, How I wonder what you are; All above...
    8 KB (840 words) - 06:31, 2 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mr Midshipman Easy
    Mr Midshipman Easy (category Novels by Frederick Marryat)
    1836 novel by Frederick Marryat, a retired captain in the British Royal Navy. The novel is set during the Napoleonic Wars, in which Marryat himself served...
    4 KB (595 words) - 13:26, 9 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nautical fiction
    was first pioneered by James Fenimore Cooper (The Pilot, 1824) and Frederick Marryat (Frank Mildmay, 1829 and Mr Midshipman Easy 1836) in the early 19th...
    68 KB (8,622 words) - 22:22, 14 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Rudyard Kipling
    Jefferies Charles Kingsley W. H. G. Kingston Rudyard Kipling Andrew Lang Frederick Marryat George MacDonald Mary Louisa Molesworth Kirk Munroe E. Nesbit Frances...
    129 KB (14,931 words) - 02:56, 9 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Florence Marryat
    Florence Marryat (9 July 1833 – 27 October 1899) was a British author and actress. The daughter of author Capt. Frederick Marryat, she was particularly...
    12 KB (1,101 words) - 21:56, 20 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Brig
    and naval officer Frederick Marryat characterised brigs as having superior windward performance to the schooners of that time. Marryat is considered, by...
    21 KB (2,378 words) - 02:23, 13 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald
    HMS Imperieuse, formerly the Spanish frigate Medea. One of his midshipmen was Frederick Marryat, who later wrote fictionalised accounts of his adventures with Cochrane...
    64 KB (7,699 words) - 10:57, 15 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Beatrix Potter
    didactic verse, and made the rounds of the London publishing houses. Frederick Warne & Co had previously rejected the tale but, eager to compete in the...
    75 KB (8,438 words) - 12:19, 13 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for George Cruikshank
    February 2013. The caricature was devised in collaboration with Frederick Marryat (*Captain Marryat). See Temi Odumosu's article in The Slave in European Art:...
    21 KB (2,122 words) - 23:47, 25 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for The Children of the New Forest
    The Children of the New Forest (category Novels by Frederick Marryat)
    Children of the New Forest is a children's novel published in 1847 by Frederick Marryat. It is set in the time of the English Civil War and the Commonwealth...
    11 KB (1,315 words) - 18:29, 25 May 2024
  • first general system of signalling for merchant vessels was Captain Frederick Marryat's A Code of Signals for the Merchant Service published in 1817. This...
    15 KB (1,745 words) - 17:32, 21 September 2023
  • continent. Marryat was born in Fulham, Surrey, England, the daughter of Frederick Marryat and his wife Catherine (née Shairp). Captain Marryat was a successful...
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  • Thumbnail for Shiver my timbers
    "shiver my timbers" probably first appeared in a published work by Frederick Marryat called Jacob Faithful (1835), the phrase actually appeared in print...
    8 KB (1,050 words) - 04:56, 9 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Masterman Ready, or the Wreck of the Pacific
    Masterman Ready, or the Wreck of the Pacific (category Novels by Frederick Marryat)
    the Pacific is a robinsonade children's novel published in 1841 by Frederick Marryat. The book follows the adventures of the Seagrave family who are shipwrecked...
    5 KB (519 words) - 22:54, 13 January 2024
  • by Captain Frederick Marryat, a friend of novelist Charles Dickens, and the author of a series of popular sea novels. It is said that Marryat requested...
    12 KB (1,732 words) - 10:58, 19 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Peter Simple (novel)
    Peter Simple (novel) (category Novels by Frederick Marryat)
    Peter Simple is an 1834 novel written by Frederick Marryat about a young British midshipman during the Napoleonic wars. It was originally published in...
    2 KB (192 words) - 23:51, 25 May 2023
  • Thumbnail for Spanish Ladies
    rather than naval ones. However, in his 1840 novel Poor Jack, Captain Frederick Marryat reports that the song "Spanish Ladies"—though once very popular—was...
    19 KB (2,102 words) - 20:00, 30 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Lewis Carroll
    Jefferies Charles Kingsley W. H. G. Kingston Rudyard Kipling Andrew Lang Frederick Marryat George MacDonald Mary Louisa Molesworth Kirk Munroe E. Nesbit Frances...
    91 KB (10,739 words) - 11:32, 8 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mudlark
    as a slang expression for a pig. Poor Jack, novel by Frederick Marryat, 1842. In his novel Marryat, who was himself a seaman before he turned to writing...
    13 KB (1,816 words) - 09:19, 7 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Lord Robert Somerset
    Horace Marryat (1815 – 3 April 1905) who married 1842 Horace Marryat, and had issue two sons: Adrian Somerset Marryat (born 1844) and Frederick Marryat (born...
    16 KB (1,085 words) - 14:29, 2 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for New Milton
    well known local smuggling families. It was in this context that Frederick Marryat, author of The Children of the New Forest, was sent on patrol here...
    21 KB (2,277 words) - 22:17, 23 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Jolly boat
    It is called simply 'jolly' in the early 19th century novels of Frederick Marryat. The word may have been in use considerably earlier, as the record...
    6 KB (764 words) - 08:00, 27 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Clipper
    is from 1824. The dictionary cites Royal Navy officer and novelist Frederick Marryat as using the term in 1830. British newspaper usage of the term can...
    41 KB (5,079 words) - 22:52, 20 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mint julep
    small "hailstones" or pounded small lumps of ice. British captain Frederick Marryat's 1840 book Second Series of A Diary in America describes on page 41...
    15 KB (1,813 words) - 15:25, 11 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gabriel's Rebellion
    University Press. p. 260. ISBN 978-0521598606. Frederick Marryat, A Diary in America (London, 1839) Frederick Marryat (1840), "Chapter 17", Poor Jack "Africans...
    30 KB (3,602 words) - 12:09, 14 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for The Phantom Ship
    The Phantom Ship (category Novels by Frederick Marryat)
    The Phantom Ship (1839) is a Gothic novel by Frederick Marryat which explores the legend of the Flying Dutchman. The plot concerns the quest of Philip...
    6 KB (698 words) - 18:21, 13 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Robert Louis Stevenson
    health, the 13-year-old was sent to Robert Thomson's private school in Frederick Street, Edinburgh, where he remained until he went to university. In November...
    107 KB (12,181 words) - 16:53, 9 July 2024