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40+ Works 539 Members 3 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Bonamy Dobrée, | Source and credit: National Portrait Gallery (NPG), London. by Howard Coster | half-plate film negative, 1939 | permission of the NPG via Creative Commons license for non-commercial use only. (c) cc logo Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) | https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/use-this-image.php?mkey=mw44734

Works by Bonamy Dobree

The Floating Republic (1935) 59 copies, 3 reviews
The London Book of English Verse (1949) — Editor — 45 copies
English Essayists (1977) 25 copies
Five heroic plays (1979) — Editor — 18 copies
John Wesley (Great Lives) (2006) 16 copies
The London Book of English Prose (2006) — Editor — 16 copies
Five Restoration Tragedies (1941) — Editor — 16 copies
The Letters of King George III (1968) — Editor — 14 copies
Alexander Pope (1969) 11 copies
Modern Prose Style (1978) 10 copies
John Dryden (1966) 6 copies
Casanova (1933) 4 copies
Rudyard Kipling (1965) 4 copies
William Congreve (1929) 2 copies

Associated Works

Wuthering Heights (1847) — Introduction, some editions — 61,633 copies, 808 reviews
The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) — Editor, some editions; Editor, some editions — 3,286 copies, 66 reviews
Poetry and Prose in the Sixteenth Century (1954) — Editor — 521 copies, 7 reviews
Eight Great Comedies (1958) — Contributor, some editions — 385 copies, 2 reviews
Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Comedy [Norton Critical Edition] (1973) — Contributor — 282 copies, 2 reviews
The comedies of William Congreve (1693) — Editor, some editions — 245 copies
Collected Poems (1956) — Editor — 157 copies
Malory and Fifteenth-Century Drama, Lyrics, and Ballads (1945) — Editor, some editions — 148 copies
The Sofa (1742) — Translator, some editions — 106 copies, 4 reviews
A Quarto of Modern Literature (1935) — Contributor — 43 copies
Swinburne: The Penguin Poets (1961) — Editor — 36 copies
The Reader's Guide (1960) — Contributor — 34 copies
Thomas De Quincey (2010) — Editor — 17 copies
Poems of John Dryden (Everyman's library. Poetry. [no. 910]) (1934) — Editor; Editor — 15 copies
The Victorians and After, 1830-1914 (2011) — Author, some editions — 9 copies
The Mourning Bride, Poems, and Miscellanies (2013) — Editor — 8 copies
English translators and translations (1962) — General Editor — 7 copies
Kipling and the Critics (1965) — Contributor — 6 copies
Essays of the year (1929-1930) (1930) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
This was a fascinating and thought provoking read. Drawn very heavily from the primary sources of the period it paints a picture of the events and also how the prevailing attitudes of the time shaped them. Those at the top believed (erroneously) that the mutinies were caused by foreign interference (from French Jacobins, or their English supporters). Those on board ship felt that the improvements in standards of living across the entire 18th century had left them behind, in 1797 the pay show more rates for seamen were the same they had been under Charles II. This was brought into stark relief by the sudden increase in the size of the navy with the war, bring on board many educated volunteers.

Life on board ship was harsh in the extreme, many officers brutal bullies who ignored the protections in the discipline regulations. Pursers sold short measures (the naval pound had 14 rather than 16 ounces) and the quality of their food was awful, not fit for human consumption - even by the laxer standards of the time. The book shows the conditions and explains why the mutinies happened, it contrasts the conduct and management of the two mutinies, both from a mutineer and an official point of view. There are lessons both on how to conduct a mutiny and on how to peacefully end one, the two adjacent mutinies clearly showing this.

I certainly felt inspired in reading the book and would strongly recommend it to both naval historians and social historians, an excellent work on a period that otherwise gets overlooked.
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This is a superbly written history of just a few moments of British history,but in doing so it illuminates an age. The British Navy fleets at Spitshead, Nore and Yarmouth mutinied in 1797 protesting against abysmal condition, brutal treatment and the whole tottering structure of the Admiralty and the system of press gangs that it relied upon to keep the fleet manned. And all in the middle of a war, and while protesting loyalty to the King and keeping the fleets in readiness (although in the show more hand of the mutineers) to sail against the enemy. The authors detail the story with brilliant clarity, and lay out exactly why one fleet succeeded while the other's failed. The insight into the working conditions of British sailors in the days of sail has possibly never been bettered - at least in non-fiction. It is also an insight into that extraordinary capacity for the British system of governance to be at one and the same time despotic and extraordinarily sensible. It is left to the reader to work out whether D & M thought the mutiny to be astonishing, or whether they were referring to the eminently reasonable and accommodating response from the British Government and Admiralty. Perhaps both. show less
½

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Works
40
Also by
23
Members
539
Popularity
#46,219
Rating
3.9
Reviews
3
ISBNs
54
Languages
1
Favorited
1

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