'In 1867 a rather frail little boy gazed out on the ocean for the first time in his life. His uncle had taken him to Odessa, the Black Sea resort town, hoping to change of scene might take the child's mind off t he recent death of his mother. He was only nine years old, but the sight of the vast ocean filled him with dreams of travel and escape. The sea would come to symbolise liberation from the problems of his family and his country, a route away from the past and into a new world of romance and opportunity. Even at the age of nine, the boy knew the sea offered adventure - the sea stories of Captain Marryat and James Fenimore Cooper had taught him that. Across the sea new lands awaited and he could hardly wait to see them. At present they were only coloured shapes on the globe, but he promised himself that one day he would get to visit them.'