The great difference between voyages rests not with the ships, but with the people you meet on them.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
My experience of ships is that on them one makes an interesting discovery about the world. One finds one can do without it completely.
It is not the going out of port, but the coming in, that determines the success of a voyage.
Every seaman is not only a navigator, but a merchant and also a soldier.
We may have all come on different ships, but we're in the same boat now.
Ships are like children: they need individual attention.
Creating a believable world on the ship was very important, and technically they got better and better and better at showing the ship too.
After a prosperous, but to me very wearisome, voyage, we came at last into port. Immediately on landing I got together my few effects; and, squeezing myself through the crowd, went into the nearest and humblest inn which first met my gaze.
I love sailing but hate cruise ships.
In this world, shipmates, sin that pays its way can travel freely, and without passport; whereas Virtue, if a pauper, is stopped at all frontiers.
It is not the ship so much as the skillful sailing that assures the prosperous voyage.