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Jerry; or, the sailor boy ashore

Chapter 12: PREFACE TO MEMOIR.
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About This Book

A young sailor returns home after years at sea and recounts his voyages, beginning with enlistment on a brig and hardship at sea, including sea-sickness, catching a shark, crossing the line, stops in Rio and Valparaiso, rounding Cape Horn, encountering icebergs, storms that wreck the ship, survival on an island, and eventual rescue and passage home. Interwoven are moral lessons about the perils of running away, the corrupting influence of bad companions, and the value of filial duty, industry, thrift, and steady application, illustrated further by a thrifty friend who exemplifies saving, study, and mechanical skill.

PREFACE TO MEMOIR.

This is not a story of romantic scenes or unusual incidents. Externally, the life of Walter Aimwell was but a common one,—uncommonly common, if the paradoxical term may be used. And not only are the scenes familiar, but the hero, although a working power behind or within them, hardly appears, personally.

Without doubt, the mind is most startled by singular and showy living; and it is well to know of those who, amid extraordinary circumstances, have moved gloriously. As we look on, we surely admire; we may covet the surroundings and the opportunity; we may think of copying the action; we may feel the inspiration of a generous ambition, most likely to be balked. But an every-day life, lived finely, firmly, truly, purely, appeals to all our every-day hearts, and moves them, not to envy, not to servile imitation, not to ambition; but to such sincere sympathy as will naturally take effect in noble action where we are,—we not waiting for special position, or the probability of applause.