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:''For the first (1935) film of the novel, see Brown on Resolution (film). For the second (1953) film, see Sailor of the King.'' ''Brown on Resolution'' is a 1929 nautical novel written by C. S. Forester. It is set during World War I. The hero of the novel, seaman Brown, is the sole able-bodied survivor of a sunken British warship, who is able single-handedly to discomfit its attacker, a German cruiser, long enough to ensure its destruction by its pursuers. The title is similar to the titles of legal textbooks, implying that the qualities shown by Brown are the epitome of "Resolution". ==Plot== The novel opens with Brown, wounded and dying, on Resolution Island. The story is then told in flashback. The first part of the story tells of Brown's birth, as a result of a liaison between his mother, Agatha Brown, and a Royal Navy officer, Lt Cdr Richard Saville-Samarez. It describes his upbringing, with Agatha as a single mother in Edwardian England, and her instilling into him of a sense of duty to the Navy and to his country. As soon as he is old enough, Brown joins the Navy, and on the eve of World War I is serving on the cruiser HMS ''Charybdis'' in the Pacific. In the second half of the story ''Charybdis'' is sunk by the German cruiser ''Ziethen'' on a raiding mission in the central Pacific, and Brown, with 2 or 3 wounded men, is picked up by the raider. As the ''Ziethen'' was damaged in the exchange, her captain plans to pull into an isolated Pacific anchorage to try to repair his vessel. In the novel, he chooses (fictitious) Resolution Island, in the Galápagos Islands. The resourceful Brown escapes, steals a rifle and a small amount of ammunition, and makes his way ashore. Her captain having already careened his vessel, the vessel's main battery could not be brought to bear on Brown, and he was able to pick off exposed crew-members who are trying to repair her punctured hull plates. In Forester's description Resolution is an impenetrable tangle of scrub and thorn bushes, making it difficult for shore parties to run the hero to ground. Brown is eventually mortally wounded by a lucky German shot. He never learns that his actions delayed the repairs long enough to ensure that the German vessel fails to escape her British pursuers. Ironically, the senior British naval officer of the force which sinks ''Ziethen'' and benefits from Brown's action, is none other than now Captain Saville-Samarez, Brown's father, although they do not know of each other. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Brown on Resolution」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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