The Blue Peter: Sea comedies by Morley Roberts

(6 User reviews)   1044
By Ethan Ward Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - Early Education
Roberts, Morley, 1857-1942 Roberts, Morley, 1857-1942
English
You know those stories about crusty old sailors? Forget them. 'The Blue Peter' is like someone handed a microphone to the actual crew and let them tell the wildest, funniest, and most unbelievable stories from their time at sea. This isn't about noble captains conquering storms—it's about the chaos below deck. Think about the young sailor who accidentally becomes a hero while trying to avoid work, or the cook whose 'special stew' causes a near-mutiny. Morley Roberts writes with a wink, like he's sharing inside jokes from a world most of us will never see. The main thread isn't one big plot; it's the constant, hilarious conflict between men and the absurd, maddening, beautiful ocean that both employs and torments them. If you've ever wondered what sailors really talked about after a long watch, this book is your backstage pass. It’s salty, surprising, and packed with more character than a crowded harbor bar.
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If you pick up The Blue Peter: Sea Comedies expecting a grand naval adventure, you're in for a surprise. Morley Roberts isn't interested in the polished, heroic tales. Instead, he takes us below decks and into the fo'c'sle, where the real life of a sailing ship happens. The book is a collection of linked stories and sketches that follow a crew—not as anonymous parts of a machine, but as a bunch of distinct, often quarrelsome, and always vivid characters.

The Story

There's no single epic voyage here. Instead, Roberts gives us a series of episodes that feel like chapters from a long, shared memory. We meet the boastful bosun, the eternally grumpy cook, the greenhorn making every mistake in the book, and the old salts with a thousand yarns. The 'plot' is the daily grind and unexpected chaos of life at sea: a disastrous attempt to celebrate a holiday, the panic that ensues when a prized (and illicit) pet gets loose, or the sheer boredom that leads to ridiculous bets and pranks. The ocean itself is a character—sometimes a brutal foe, sometimes a serene backdrop to human foolishness. The stories are held together by the ship, The Blue Peter, and the unbreakable, if often exasperated, bond between the men who sail her.

Why You Should Read It

Roberts's great trick is his authenticity. He sailed these routes himself, and it shows. The dialogue crackles with the peculiar slang and rhythm of sailors from that era. The humor isn't forced or slapstick; it grows naturally from the characters and their impossible situation. You laugh because you recognize the universal truths—the petty rivalries, the schemes to get out of work, the strange camaraderie forged by shared hardship. Beneath the jokes, there's a real affection for these men and their world, which was already fading even as Roberts wrote about it. It’s a celebration of a breed of men who found freedom, frustration, and family on the rolling deck of a ship.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for anyone who loves character-driven stories or has a soft spot for maritime history, but prefers the messier, human side of it over technical manuals. If you enjoyed the vibe of Patrick O'Brian's lesser-known sailors or the witty observations in Jerome K. Jerome's Three Men in a Boat (but on a ship!), you'll feel right at home. It's a charming, funny, and surprisingly poignant look at life on the waves, told by a writer who was clearly smiling as he remembered it all.



ℹ️ Copyright Status

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George Anderson
1 year ago

Citation worthy content.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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