Frederick Marryat's 'The Phantom Ship' (1839), James F. Cooper's 'The Red Rover' (1828) and Richard H. Dana's 'Two Years Before the Mast' (1840) may be regarded as simulacra of reality imitating the then extremely popular literary conventions of the Gothic sea novel, the nautical romance and the sea diary, respectively. However, informed by Rene Girard's model of mimetic desire, Luigi Pirandello's theory of mimetic form and Meyer H. Abrams' metaphor of Amimetic mirrorA the analysis proves that the explored texts combine 'mimesis' with 'creatio', that is the reproduction of maritime experience with the representation of general truths concerning human existence. Thus, the study demonstrates that the reading of the selected nineteenth-century sea novels through the lens of twentieth-century theories, regarded as variations on the concept of 'mimesis', may lead to re-evaluation of the long forgotten texts, which proved inspiring to some of the most prominent nautical writers, among others Joseph Conrad and Herman Melville.