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The Offshore Pirate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"The Offshore Pirate"
Short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald
May 29, 1920 cover of the
Saturday Evening Post
Text available at Wikisource
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Short story
Publication
Published inSaturday Evening Post
Publication typePeriodical
PublisherCurtis Publishing Company
Media typePrint (Magazine, Hardback & Paperback)
Publication dateMay 29, 1920[1]

"The Offshore Pirate" is a short story written by F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1920.[1] It is one of eight short stories included in Fitzgerald's first published collection, Flappers and Philosophers.[2] The story was first published in the May 29, 1920 issue of The Saturday Evening Post and illustrated by Leslie L. Benson.[1]

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Transcription

Plot summary

F. Scott Fitzgerald

“The Offshore Pirate” is told in the   third-person omniscient point-of-view, with Ardita Farnam as the focal character. The story opens on a luxury yacht off the coast of Florida in shortly after the   First World War.] Lounging on deck is the 19-year-old Ardita Farnam, the wealthy heir of a family fortune. Raised by her father’s brother and his wife, she is well-educated, indolent, pretty, and scornful of the men in her social class. The object of the sea cruise, organized by her uncle, is to prevent Ardita from rendezvousing with her latest beau in Palm Beach, a man her family regards as a licentious bounder and she regards as man possessing “the courage of his own convictions.” When her uncle insists that she join a dinner party to meet the 26-year-old Toby Moreland, the son of an associate, she flippantly dismisses the offer and insists she be taken to Palm Beach. Disgusted, the uncle departs on a launch to spend the night on shore. Ardita is left on the yacht in solitude. An elaborate practical joke, organized by her uncle and Toby begins to unfold, the purpose of which is to tame the shrewish Ardita and woo her to matrimony.

As night falls, seven men in a large rowboat approach the yacht, six black men at the oars, and a white man at the helm. The rowers sing lusty songs with nonsense lyrics. “Carrots and peas/Beans on their knees/Pigs in the seas/Lucky fellows!” The white man conducts with a baton. Ardita, leaning over the rail, is astonished and intrigued by the bizarre ensemble. The white man leaps aboard and demands,  pirate-like, that she surrender the vessel. Ardita is momentarily stunned by his good looks, but recovers and orders him off the yacht. Ignoring her, he and his six-man crew proceed to take possession of the ship: the yacht’s chief engineer, cook and a valet submit to the hijackers. The strange men carry aboard musical instruments and mysterious white sacks. The white man introduces himself to Ardita as Curtis Carlyle, his men the “Six Black Buddies”, all of them nightclub entertainers. The bags apparently contain loot from a Palm Beach heist. He gives Ardita an ultimatum: she can row herself to shore or remain on the yacht and accompany them on the high seas escape. Ardita, fearless and defiant, finds her predicament exciting, and remains on board.

When they get underway, she and Carlyle begin to share their personal histories and exchange philosophies on life. His narrative is that of a struggling musician, his service in the army, and his ambition to be wealthy: he plans to travel to India and become a rajah. She relates her backstory as a much sought after rich girl, pursued by men she holds in low esteem. Ardita detects a certain gravity in Carlyle’s character she finds compelling. Carlyle and his men navigate to a remote island and conceal the ship in a secluded cove so as to evade revenue cutters searching for them. While the pirates keep lookout, Ardita and Carlyle enjoy a tropical interlude for several days: she is falling in love.

An unidentified vessel is spotted near the mouth of the cove. The pirates suspect they have been discovered, and prepare to resist. Firearms are distributed. The revenue cruiser appears, mounted with six-inch cannons and machine guns. The situation appears hopeless. To Ardita’s delight, Carlyle keep’s his nerve. The revenue officers board the yacht, with Ardita’s uncle in the lead. Confronting his niece, he berates her for absconding with pirates. Flinging her arms around Carlyle, she tells her uncle to shut up. Now certain he has won Ardita’s everlasting devotion, "Carlyle" reveals that he is, in fact, Toby Moreland. He admits that he masterminded the elaborate burlesque in order to win her affection and wed her.

Unfazed, Ardita kisses Toby, and the Six Black Buddies begin to serenade them: “Time is a Thief/Gladness and grief/Cling to the leaf/As it yellows—“[3]

Publication history

The story was first published in the May 29, 1920 issue of The Saturday Evening Post, his third short story appearance in the magazine that month.[1] The story was republished in the short story collection Flappers and Philosophers.[4]

Critical appraisal

Fitzgerald’s early short fiction, as represented in Flappers and Philosophers (1920), frequently offers “authorial self-conscious” declarations.[5] Literary critic John Kuehl cites the following “pseudo-philosophical passage” from “The Offshore Pirate” as an example:

Most of us are content to exist and breed and fight for the right to do both, and the dominant idea, the foredoomed attempt to control one’s destiny, is reserved for the fortunate and unfortunate few.”[6]

As Fitzgerald was still in his youth (23-years-of-age), Kuehl suggests that such sententious pronouncements would be less intrusive if issued by the storys’ protagonists.[7]

Kuehl adds that Fitzgerald “betrayed bad taste” in rating “The Offshore Pirate” superior to his “A Diamond as Big as the Ritz,” the latter termed “a classic novelette” by biographer Matthew J. Bruccoli.[8][9]

In his annotated table of contents from Tales of the Jazz Age (1922), Fitzgerald demurred when a “well-known critic” hailed “A Diamond as Big as the Ritz,” writing: “Personally, I prefer ‘The Offshore Pirate.’”[10][11][12]

Adaptations

The story was adapted to film as The Off-Shore Pirate in 1921, which starred Viola Dana as Ardita.[13]

In 2010 an operatic version by Joel Weiss premiered at Christopher Street Opera in New York City.[14]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d Fitzgerald 1920.
  2. ^ Fitzgerald 1998, p. 89; Turnbull 1962, p. 340.
  3. ^ Elbe, 1963 p. 65: Plot summary
  4. ^ Fitzgerald 1998, p. 89.
  5. ^ Kuehl, 1991 p. 26
  6. ^ Kuehl, 1991 p. 27
  7. ^ Kuehl, 1991 p. 27: “...we first encounter [Ardita Farnam] reading Anatole France’s The Revolt of the Angels, because she has an unconventional personality.”
  8. ^ Kuehl, 1991 p. 33
  9. ^ Bruccoli, 1989 p. 201
  10. ^ Kuehl, 1991 p. 46
  11. ^ Fitzgerald, 2000, p. 800
  12. ^ Bruccoli, 1989 p. 201
  13. ^ Mizener 1951, p. 330.
  14. ^ Operas: Joel Weiss. Retrieved July 12 2021.

Sources

External links

This page was last edited on 20 March 2024, at 17:16
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