in
The Adventures of Captain Hatteras. The moving moment described by Xenophon has stirred the imagination of readers in later centuries, as chronicled in a study by Tim Rood.
Heinrich Heine uses the cry in his cycle of poems published in '''' in
1827. The first poem of the second cycle, ('Sea Greeting'), begins: The cry is used by the protagonists of
Jules Verne's
The Adventures of Captain Hatteras (1864-1866) when they reach the
Open Polar Sea after an arduous journey and by the protagonists of
Kéraban the Inflexible (1883) when they reach the Eastern shore of the
Bosporus after having traveled around the perimeter of the
Black Sea. The cry is also mentioned by the narrator of Frederick Amadeus Malleson's (1877) translation of Verne's
Journey to the Center of the Earth, when the explorers in the story discover an underground ocean. It is absent from the original French work. The shout briefly appears in
Lionel Dunsterville's memoir
The Adventures of Dunsterforce (1920), when, after passing
Rasht, Dunsterville's small force reaches the
Caspian Sea: The phrase appears in Book 1 of
James Joyce's 1922 novel
Ulysses when Buck Mulligan, looking out over Dublin Bay, says to Stephen Dedalus: In Book 18, Molly Bloom echoes the phrase in the closing moments of her monologue: In book III.3 of
Finnegans Wake this is echoed as "" combining the original chant with Greek kolossa, colossal. Christopher Gair sees the influence of this moment in the description in
Jack Kerouac's well-known 1957 novel
On the Road, when the narrator Sal Paradise sees the Pacific Ocean for the first time:
Sol Yurick’s 1965 novel that inspired
Walter Hill's 1979 film of the same name,
The Warriors, was based on
Anabasis, and the movie references this quotation near the end, as the titular gang stands on a
Coney Island beach and their leader (
Michael Beck) comments, "When we see the ocean, we figure we're home."
Iris Murdoch wrote a novel called
The Sea, The Sea, which won the
Booker Prize in 1978. ==See also==