Subtitled a "Memoir for the Stage," the play is told both from the point
of view of the twenty-year-old author who was the captain's tiger--a
glorified personal servant to the ship's captain--and the author as his
current-day self. This is a fascinating voyage, a writer's pilgrimage, a
whole painful process we are privy to. We witness his coming of age
through author monologues, recreations of onboard conversations, letters
written to his mother, imagined discourse and dreams. Fugard has created
a personal dramatic structure moving from present to past, from reality
to reverie. One of the author's most imaginative works, Fugard has
created a world with imagery that is visual, visceral and poetic.