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The Ship that Found Herself
・ The Ship that Never Returned
・ The Ship Who Sang
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・ The Shipbuilders
・ The Shipman Inquiry
・ The Shipman's Tale
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・ The Shipping News
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・ The Ships of Earth
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The Ship that Found Herself : ウィキペディア英語版
The Ship that Found Herself

"The Ship that Found Herself" is a short story by Rudyard Kipling, first published in The Idler in 1895. It was collected with other Kipling stories in ''The Day's Work'' (1898).〔("The Ship that Found Herself ) The New Readers' Guide to the works of Rudyard Kipling, accessed 1 June 2014.〕
The ''Dimbula'', a cargo ship, makes her first voyage from Liverpool to New York. During the storm which the ship encounters, the various parts of the ship, each of which has a distinct personality, talk and argue with each other until, at the end of the voyage, they have learnt to co-operate effectively.
==Story summary==
Before the ''Dimbula'' leaves Liverpool, the owner's daughter, Miss Frazier, who named the ship when she was launched in Scotland, enthuses about the ship to the captain. He is more cautious, and says:

"She has to find herself yet. It's the way wi' ships, Miss Frazier. She's all here, but the parrts of her have not learned to work together yet. They've had no chance.... We can no more than drive and steer her, and so forth; but if we have rough weather this trip - it's likely - she'll learn the rest by heart!"
The ship encounters heavy seas during the voyage to New York, and the parts of the ship, being strained, complain about the conditions, and about the behaviour of neighbouring parts. The deck-beams, the stringers,〔It is explained in the story that "the stringers... are long iron girders that run lengthways from stern to bow".〕 the garboard-strake,〔It is explained in the story that "the garboard-strake is the lowest plate in the bottom of a ship".〕 the triple-expansion engine and other parts, have particular functions, and their characters are correspondingly distinct. Stringers "always consider themselves most important, because they are so long"; the garboard-strake says "I'm twice as thick as most of the others, so I ought to know something". The Steam, who "had been to sea many times before... he used to spend his leisure ashore in a cloud, or a gutter..." makes many comments on the conditions and the various complaints.
As the ''Dimbula'' enter the Port of New York, the ship's parts stop talking and after a long silence there is a "new, big voice.... The Steam knew what had happened at once; for when a ship finds herself all the talking of the separate parts ceases and melts into one voice, which is the soul of the ship."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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