'''Two Years Before the Mast''' is a book by the
American author
Richard Henry Dana, Jr., written after a two-year
sea voyage starting in
1834.
Prelude
While at
Harvard College Dana had an attack of the
measles which affected his sight. Thinking it might help his sight, Dana, rather than going on a
Grand Tour as most of his classmates traditionally did (and unable to afford it anyway), and being something of a non-conformist, left Harvard to enlist as a common sailor on a voyage around
Cape Horn, on the
brig ''
Pilgrim''. He returned to
Massachusetts two years later aboard the ''Alert'' (which left California sooner than the ''Pilgrim'').
He kept a
diary throughout the voyage, and after returning he wrote a recognized American classic, ''Two Years Before the Mast'', published in
1840, the same year of his admission to the bar.
A sailor's story
The term "before the mast" refers to the quarters of the common sailors — in the
forecastle, in the front of the ship. His writing evidences his later social feeling for the oppressed; he later became a prominent anti-
slavery activist and helped found the
Free Soil Party.
It is of note that he did not set out to write ''Two Years Before the Mast'' as a sea adventure, but to highlight how poorly common sailors were treated on ships. It quickly became a best seller.
The journey
In the book, which takes place between 1834 and 1836, Dana gives a vivid account of "the life of a common sailor at sea as it really is". He sails from
Boston, around Cape Horn, arriving in
California when it was a remote
Mexican land, and
San Diego,
San Pedro,
Los Angeles, and
San Francisco weren't much more than a few sheds. He gives descriptions of landing at each of the ports up and down the California coast as they existed then. In the book, he makes a tellingly accurate prediction of San Francisco's future. He also gives a nice description of a society wedding amongst the "
Californios."
His ship was on a journey to trade goods from the east for cow hides. Since he was the educated person on his ship, he learned
Spanish and became an interpreter. He befriended a
Kanaka (a native of modern-day
Hawaii), later saving his life when his
racist captain would as soon see him die. He spent a season in San Diego preparing hides for the journey home.
On the return trip around Cape Horn in the middle of the
Antarctic winter he describes terrifying storms and incredible beauty, giving vivid descriptions of
icebergs, and the
scurvy that afflicts members of the crew. In ''
White-Jacket'',
Herman Melville wrote, "But if you want the best idea of Cape Horn, get my friend Dana's unmatchable ''Two Years Before the Mast''. But you can read, and so
you must have read it. His chapters describing Cape Horn must have been written with an icicle."
[1]
1869 and 1911 editions
In 1869, Richard Henry Dana, Jr. added an appendix entitled "Twenty-Four Years After". This appendix recounts his visit to California after the Gold Rush. During this trip, he revisited some of the sites mentioned in the book as well as seeing several old friends including some that had also been mentioned, and one unamed person, the "Agent" (of the trading company), whom he intensly disliked (a man named Fitch, who had married into the wealthy Spanish Colonial Moraga family).
In 1911, Dana's son Richard Henry Dana III added an introduction detailing the "subsequent story and fate of the vessels, and of some of the persons with whom the reader is made acquainted."
Legacy
With the onset of the 1849
California Gold Rush, Dana's book was one of the few books in existence that described California, adding greatly to the book's readership, legacy and Dana's renown—when he returned to San Francisco in 1859 he was treated as a minor celebrity.
First the headland and then the city of
Dana Point in Southern California were named after him.
There are three middle schools in California that bear Dana's name: one in
San Pedro, one in
Arcadia, and one in
Chatsworth.
There is also an elementary school named after Dana called R.H. Dana in Dana Point, California.
External links
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