A Boy's Voyage Round the World by Samuel Smiles

(19 User reviews)   2895
By Scarlett Ruiz Posted on Feb 5, 2026
In Category - Digital Rights
Smiles, Samuel, 1852?- Smiles, Samuel, 1852?-
English
Okay, hear me out. I just read this 1850s book about a boy who basically runs away to sea on a whaling ship, and it’s wild. It’s not some dry history lesson—it’s the real, messy, and sometimes terrifying diary of a teenager named Samuel Smiles Jr., who signs up for a multi-year voyage to the South Seas. The main conflict isn't just with whales or storms (though there's plenty of that). It's this kid against himself: his homesickness, his struggle to prove he's not just a 'gentleman's son,' and his fight to earn respect in a world of hardened sailors. The mystery is whether this privileged boy can hack it, or if the adventure will break him. It’s a coming-of-age story written in real time, with all the grit and wonder of the 19th-century world laid bare. You feel every wave and every moment of doubt.
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Let's set the scene: it's 1852, and a 16-year-old boy from a comfortable Scottish family decides he needs more than schoolbooks. Samuel Smiles Jr. signs on as an apprentice on the Thomas, a whaling ship bound for the Pacific. What follows is his personal journal of a voyage that lasts years.

The Story

The book is his day-by-day account. We sail with him from Scotland, down the Atlantic, around Cape Horn (a nightmare of storms he describes in vivid, shaky detail), and into the vast Pacific. The goal: hunt sperm whales for their oil. Samuel details the brutal, bloody work of whaling—the long chases in small boats, the danger, the exhaustion. But it's also a travelogue. He describes strange ports in Peru and Chile, encounters with Indigenous communities in New Zealand and the Pacific Islands, and his wide-eyed observations of everything from penguins to volcanoes. The plot is the journey itself, charting his transformation from a green 'landsman' to a capable, if forever changed, young man.

Why You Should Read It

Forget romanticized pirate tales. This is the real deal. The power isn't in a fictional plot, but in the raw honesty of a teenager's voice. You feel his acute loneliness and his pride when he finally masters a sailor's knot. You see his privileged worldview bump against harsh realities. The writing is straightforward, not flowery, which makes the moments of awe—like seeing the ice cliffs of Antarctica—hit even harder. It’s a time capsule. You get an unfiltered look at 19th-century industry, colonialism, and natural science, all through the eyes of a kid just trying to do his job and not be seasick.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect pick for anyone who loves true adventure stories or immersive historical diaries. If you enjoyed the gritty reality of Two Years Before the Mast or the youthful perspective of Treasure Island but wanted the real journal it might have been based on, this is your book. It’s also great for people curious about maritime history, but who want a personal, ground-level view instead of a admiral's strategy. Fair warning: the whaling scenes are graphic, and the 1850s cultural attitudes are very much of their time. But if you can read it with that context, you'll find a surprisingly gripping and human story about growing up in the most extreme classroom imaginable: the wide, wild ocean.



📢 Usage Rights

Legal analysis indicates this work is in the public domain. It is now common property for all to enjoy.

Christopher Smith
4 months ago

High quality edition, very readable.

David Perez
5 months ago

Citation worthy content.

Betty Davis
2 months ago

Finally a version with clear text and no errors.

Karen Taylor
1 year ago

Beautifully written.

Steven Thompson
1 year ago

Great reference material for my coursework.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (19 User reviews )

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