The Adventures & Brave Deeds Of The Ship's Cat On The Spanish Maine: Together With The Most Lamentable Losse Of The Alcestis & Triumphant Firing Of The Port Of Chagres is the full title of
The Ship's Cat, a
narrative poem by
Richard Adams with illustrations by
Alan Aldridge, first published in 1977. It describes the adventures of an
anthropomorphized Elizabethan ship's cat.
Plot summary
The Ship's Cat is introduced as a
patriotic swashbuckling crewmember of the
English privateer Alcestis. After attacking a lone
Spanish ship, the
Alcestis is defeated by Spanish reinforcements and its crew taken as captives to the
Panamanian port of
Chagres. The Ship's Cat is initially imprisoned, but the
gaoler's daughter takes pity on him and has him released to serve in the gaoler's kitchen. After the gaoler and his companions become drunk celebrating
Saint Philip's Day, the Ship's Cat steals the keys to the gaol and releases his shipmates. Together, they steal a ship from the harbor and sail for home, pursued by their erstwhile captors. Their pursuers are frightened off by the sudden appearance of
Sir Francis Drake (outward bound on his global circumnavigation of
1577). After Drake departs, the Ship's Cat reveals that he has discovered a hoard of
treasure in the ship's hold. The crew sail home to England, where they are greeted as heroes and the Cat is
knighted by
Queen Elizabeth I.
Editions
ISBN 9780224014410 (Jonathan Cape Children's Books,
1977, hardcover, first English edition)
ISBN 0394423348 (Alfred A. Knopf, 1977, hardcover, first American edition)