Watercraft in A Series of Unfortunate Events
|
In the children's book series A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket, there are various fictional boats and submarines where events take place.
The Beatrice
The Beatrice was named after Beatrice Baudelaire, the woman Lemony Snicket dedicates all of his books to, and is implied to have been built by , Beatrice's husband. The boat first appeared in The Penultimate Peril when Carmelita Spats was using it in the pool on the Hotel Denouement's rooftop salon. At this point the name Carmelita was taped on the ship over its real name. When the hotel caught fire Count Olaf, and Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire, set sail on the ship. Count Olaf then removed the name Carmelita, revealing beneath it the name Count Olaf. They were stranded on the ship with only beans to eat until a storm washed the boat and all its contents to coastal shelf. Over a year later, Violet reconstructed the ship to depart from the island to civilization, and removed the name "Count Olaf" to reveal the boat's original name, "Beatrice".
The Carmelita
The Carmelita, which makes its first appearance in The Grim Grotto, is a submarine named after Carmelita Spats. It is in the shape of a giant octopus, and the interior is decorated with numerous eye insignias that are similar to the tattoo on Count Olaf's ankle. There is a large room in which some of the Snow Scouts, Prufrock Preparatory School students, and other kidnapped children are forced to row long metal oars that function as the arms of the octopus, thereby steering the submarine. It is much larger than the Queequeg, which can fit inside the Carmelita.
In The Penultimate Peril, Count Olaf states that the submarine was stolen by Fernald and Fiona. What happened to it afterwards is unknown, but it may have been destroyed, since Esmé Squalor's flame-imitating dress, last mentioned as being aboard the submarine, washed up on the shores of Olaf-Land in The End.
The Great Unknown
For obvious reasons, not much is known about the Great Unknown (which is called this in The End). All that is known is on radar where it appears in the shape of a question mark and that it seems to show up at the most inconvenient times, or just when people think a situation is about to get better. On radar it is larger than both the submarines Carmelita and Queequeg and may in fact be neither a submarine nor a boat at all. Although it first appeared during The Grim Grotto, where it was shown that both Captain Widdershins and Count Olaf are afraid of it. This shows how it is used as a more obvious metaphor for their fear of the unknown in general. It should also be noted that Count Olaf tells Carmelita Spats not to tap dance while returning to the Carmelita during the time the sub was being threatened by The Great Unknown, because, as he says "I don't want to show up on their sonar."
When the Baudelaires are left alone to operate the Queequeg, The Great Unknown approaches on the radar just as they finish repairing the porthole that Olaf damaged in capturing the submarine and the Baudelaires see its shadow in the water, though they do not see enough to determine what it is. Eventually the entity moves away and the Baudelaires escape. The author says that he knows what The Great Unknown is, but refuses to elaborate further on a description.
During The End, it is mentioned that the Queequeg sailed out to sea with Kit Snicket, the Incredibly Deadly Viper, Captain Widdershins, and his stepchildren Fernald and Fiona on board, to find the self-sustaining hot air mobile home where Hector and the Quagmire triplets were living, in order to aid them in a battle against trained V.F.D. eagles. A shipwrecked Kit later tells the Baudelaires that the eagles popped the balloons of Hector's mobile home and the falling wreckage destroyed the Queequeg. There, all but Kit and the viper chose to be taken by the approaching Great Unknown, although it is unknown whether it rescued or captured them. Kit states that her brother (although she does not specify which) calls the question mark "The Great Unknown", which is often a euphemism for what comes after death. By the end of The End, the Quagmires, Hector, Captain Widdershins, Fernald, and Fiona, and possibly Phil and the Baudelaires are taken aboard.
The Prospero
The Prospero is the ship belonging to the V.F.D. It is anchored along Daedalus Dock (in Hazy Harbor), and among other things makes journeys to Peru.
The Prospero (named after Prospero, a character who can control the sea in Shakespeare's The Tempest Or, possibly Prince Prospero in Edagar Allan Poe's "The Masque of the Red Death.) plays its biggest role in The Reptile Room.
In The Reptile Room, Count Olaf (masquerading as Stephano) attempts to take the Baudelaires with him to Perú, where he plans to kill two of the Baudelaires, and wait with the third until he/she comes of age (thus acquiring the enormous Baudelaire fortune). His plan is foiled, however, when his car crashes into Mr. Poe's automobile.
Olaf had acquired the tickets from the late Dr. Montgomery Montgomery, who had shredded Olaf's original ticket (having suspected him of espionage).
The ship was scheduled to leave at 8:00 to some unknown destination, but in actuality left at 5:00, in order to take volunteers out of the country. Count Olaf was unaware of this schedule change (possibly because it was written on the special V.F.D. tickets Dr. Montgomery had presumably purchased), but intended to leave much earlier (in order to, "have time for a bottle of wine before lunch").
A man on the Black Rapids Deck (see below) attempted to explain why the ship was leaving early, but was only heard to shout out the words, "Phase Two," and, "Drat!" which most likely relates to phase two of V.F.D disguise training which is the disguise of a sailor and/or captain.
In The End, it is revealed by Ishmael that the ship was originally called the Pericles (named after a ruler of Athens in ancient Greece and also the title of another Shakespeare play involving a sea voyage).
Crew
* The woman with the beaded necklace ::One of the two owners of the Prospero; wife of the man with the corsage. * The man with the corsage ::One of the two owners of the Prospero; husband of the woman with the beaded necklace. * Captain Julio Sham ::Captain of the Prospero. Both Count Olaf and a person known only as J. (possibly Jacques Snicket) have disguised themselves as this gentleman. Whether there is a real Captain Sham or whether it is simply a generic name for the disguise is unknown.
The following is a list of the crew. It is of note that each of the crew members has the last name of some well-known children's author.
:* Sailor Bellairs ::Referencing John Bellairs, author of St. Fidgeta and Other Parodies and The Face in the Frost, among others. :* Sailor Cleary ::Referencing Beverly Cleary, author of, among others, Ramona Quimby, Age 8, one of the V.F.D. encoded books assigned by Kit Snicket for the students of Prufrock Preparatory School to read, and Beezus and Ramona, alluded to in the thirteenth book. :* Sailor Creech ::Referencing Sharon Creech, author of Walk Two Moons and The Wanderer, which takes place on a ship. :* Sailor Dahl ::Referencing Roald Dahl, author of Matilda, one of the V.F.D. encoded books assigned by Kit Snicket for the students of Prufrock Preparatory School to read. :* Sailor Danziger ::Referencing Paula Danziger, author of The Cat Ate My Gymsuit and Remember Me to Harold Square, among others. :* Sailor Eager ::Referencing Edward Eager, author of the book Half Magic and the play The Liar, among others. :* Sailor Gantos ::Referencing Jack Gantos, author of the Joey Pigza series, among others. :* Sailor Griffin (?; there are many children's authors by the name of Griffin) :* Sailor Kalman ::Referencing Maira Kalman, author of Stay Up Late and Max Makes a Million, among others. :* Sailor Kerr ::Referencing Philip Kerr, author of many adult books and the children's Children of the Lamp series. :* Sailor Konigsburg ::Referencing E.L. Konigsburg, author of The Outcasts of 19 Schuyler Place and From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, among other books. :* Sailor Lowry ::Referencing Lois Lowry, the author of The Giver and Gathering Blue (both of which are about utopias and dystopias), among other books. :* Sailor Peck ::Referencing Robert Peck, author of Soup and A Day No Pigs Would Die, among others. :* Sailor Scieszka ::Referencing John Scieszka, author of The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales among others. :* Sailor Seibold (not to be confused with Gustav Sebald) ::Probably Referencing J. Otto Seibold, illustrator of Olive, the Other Reindeer, among others. :* Sailor Selznick ::Referencing Brian Selznick, co-author of The Doll People and author of The Invention of Hugo Cabret. :* Sailor Snicket ::Probably referencing himself or one of his siblings. :* Sailor Snyder ::Referencing Zilpha Keatley Snyder, author of The Witches of Worm and The Egypt Game, among others. :* Sailor Sones ::Referencing Sonya Sones, author of What My Mother Doesn't Know, among others. :* Sailor Walsh (?) ::Possible referencing María Elena Walsh, an Argentine children's musician and author. :* Sailor Whelan ::Referencing Gloria Whelan, author of Homeless Bird, among others. :* Sailor Woodson ::Possible referencing Jacqueline Woodson, author of I Hadn’t Meant To Tell You This, among others.
The Ship Black Rapids Deck From here a person tried to explain the reason for the ship's early departure to a Punctilio reporter. This is also one of the decks patrolled by "enemies" disguised as either passengers or seagulls.
:* White Jacket Lounge
Black Guinea Deck & Ringman Deck
According to Brett Helquist's illustration (above), these two decks are on the same level of the ship.
:* Typee Shuffleboard Court
|
|
|