Swinburne's Les Casquets A. C. Swinburne's poem
Les Casquets is based on the Houguez family who actually lived on the island for 18 years. The Houguez were originally from Alderney, and the poem describes their life on Les Casquets. The daughter falls in love with a carpenter from Alderney but, moving to his island, finds life there too busy. She finds the "small bright streets of serene
St Anne" and "the sight of the works of men" too much, and returns to Les Casquets.
Victor Hugo's ''L'Homme qui Rit'' Victor Hugo, who lived on
Guernsey, and who wrote much about the Channel Islands, says in his novel
The Laughing Man (''L'Homme qui Rit''), published in 1869:
C. S. Forester's Hornblower and the Hotspur In this tenth published, but third chronologically, of
C. S. Forester's
Horatio Hornblower series of novels, the titular hero of
Hornblower and the Hotspur (published in 1962) is sent to reconnoitre the port of
Brest in anticipation of war with France. The Casquets are mentioned as an area that should be negotiated carefully on the way there. File:The Casquets Lighthouses off Alderney 1868.jpg|Les Casquets with lighthouses in 1868 File:The Race of Alderney, from the Caskets (about 1868).jpg|Les Casquets looking east (towards Alderney) == See also ==