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The Explorations of Captain James Cook in the Pacific: As Told by Selections of His Own Journals PDF

324 Pages·1971·13.06 MB·English
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I Is A THE EXPLORATIONS OF 1 CAPTAIN JAMES COOK INTHE PACIFIC AS TOLD BY SELECTIONS OF HIS OWN JOURNALS 1768-1779 I.! r~~ . - ggPfllMp -r'iff ; . .* • ‘: ec;- ' t .■•J•* - rj ■ ) . • ■?! ■- ■• ■j : M |: ■ ^ 7 i ■ ^ i / i / j ■M- :M m iff;,; ;! ■ felsi .< j. ;■ •: V - iSgi MM > ■> lpp$: O•.' / ; i I 1 *2 ■*. ./Tasp ■ ^'• - I F/ VC C ; - , S^jgjSPr* ► , i' m ■-■■I:'-r. lie mm- & ^ ;v.;> tv-> ” .. • ' »,N •;./V Sfasar—nr ■ -v:-;r-r •\{i iis Nfflyv. t mVX :“i^-%*»*s*sr;*&■a."•■••. EDITED BYA.GRENFELL PRICE va„tuIL,L^TRATED BVejOFFREYC. INCLETON . :7 WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY PERCY C j ADAMS "TS K i } i ■ DOVER CLASSICS OF TRAVEL, EXPLORATION, TRUE ADVENTURE ( i Melville in the South Seas, Charles R. Anderson. (21589-X) $2.25 The Eyes of Discovery: The Pageant of North America as Seen / by the First Explorers, John Bakeless. (20761-7) $3.00 i- r Travels of William Bartram, edited by Mark Van Doren. (20013-2) $2.25 Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and I Meccah, Richard F. Burton. (21217-3, 21218-1) Two-volume r set $4.50 t; Histories of the Dividing Line Betwixt Virginia and North ■. Carolina, William Byrd. (21831-7) $2.75 The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova. (20338-7, 20339-5, 20340-9) Three-volume set $6.00 The History of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, edited by Elliott Coues. (21268-8, 21269-6, 21270-X) Three-volume set $7.50 A New Voyage Round the World, William Dampier. (21900-3) $3.00 h Memoirs of Lorenzo Da Ponte, Mozart’s Librettist, translated by Elisabeth Abbott. (21706-X) $2.75 f The Buccaneers of America, John Esquemeling. (21751-5) $3.00 Norse Discoveries and Explorations in America 983-1362; Leif Erikson to the Kensington Stone, Hjalmar R. Holand. (22014-1) $2.75 Among the Indians of Guiana, Everard F. Im Thurn. (21772-8) $3.00 Travels in North America, Peter Kalm. (21576-8, 21577-6) Two- volume set $5.00 i i A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms: Being an Account by the Chinese Monk Fa-Hien of his Travels in India and China i: (AD. 399-414) in Search of the Buddhist Books of Discip­ line, translated by James Legge. (21344-7) $2.00 t The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, edited by A. W. Pollard. (21221-1) $2.75 : t. (continued on back flap) 1 v r r }.■ u - 'e 7 PLAQUE BY FLAXMAN FOR WEDGWOOD, 1784, IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM THE EXPLORATIONS OF Captain lames C[ook IN THE PACIFIC AS TOLD BY SELECTIONS OF HIS OWN JOURNALS 1768-1779 Edited by A. GRENFELL PRICE C.M.G.,M.A.(Oxon),D.LnT.(ADEL),F.R.G.S Illustrated by GEOFFREY C. INGLETON With a new Introduction by PERCY G. ADAMS Professor o f English The University of Tennessee DOVER PUBLICATIONS, INC. NEW YORK Copyright© 1971 by Dover Publications, Inc. All rights reserved under Pan American and International Copyright Conventions. This Dover edition, first published in 1971, is an un­ abridged republication of the work originally published by The Limited Editions Club in 1957. This edition also contains a new Introduction by Percy G. Adams. International Standard Book Number: 0-486-22766-9 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 79-145750 Manufactured in the United States of America Dover Publications, Inc. 180 Varick Street New York, N.Y. 10014 INTRODUCTION to the Dover Edition EXACTLY TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO CAPTAIN JAMES COOK was sailing the Pacific Ocean on the first of three voyages that were to make him the greatest of sailor explorers the world has known. The two-hundredth anniversary of his decade of unbelievable accomplishments began in London in late July of 1968, on the day of the month when Cook started the Endeavour toward the mouth of the Thames. After an address delivered before hundreds of distinguished guests by R. A. Skelton, the chief student of Cook’s charts, the celebration moved to the British Museum for a long look at the most attractive, easily the most valuable, exhibit ever arranged to honor the memory of a restless, curious son of earth: there were original maps and drawings, great natural history collections and artifacts, and manuscripts and first editions of dozens of journals and logs kept by Cook and the men who sailed with him. From England the celebration of Cook’s exploits has moved and is moving to Tahiti, to New Zealand, to Australia, to Hawaii, to the northwest coast of North America. One of the most appropriate observances of the anniversary has been held at Wellington, for that city overlooks the strait that bears Cook’s name and separates the two islands of New Zealand which he knew so well. And there too works the most noted of Cook scholars, Professor J. C. Beaglehole, whose careful editing of the three journals kept by Cook himself—completed just in time for the anniversary—constitutes not only one of the best monuments to the man himself but, appropriately, the best work ever published by the Hakluyt Society. Since those four volumes contain over 3300 pages of notes, essays, and journals and will probably never be reproduced in an inexpensive edition, Dover Publications is offering as its part in the bi-centennial this handsomely illustrated, one-volume selection of entries from the original journals. Each of the three voyages was carefully planned, for each the British Admiralty provided a detailed set of general instructions, and each increased knowledge and brought fame for James Cook. On the first voyage (1768-1771), taken in the Endeavour, Cook went through the Strait of Le Maire to Tahiti, where he observed the transit of Venus at the same time two other expeditions were observing it at far separated spots and where he and his men fell in love with the South Sea paradise discovered a year before by Samuel Wallis; from there he made his way to New Zealand to chart the coast and show it to be two islands, then to the eastern coast of Australia, and finally home by Batavia and South Africa. On the second voyage VI INTRODUCTION TO THE DOVER EDITION (1772-1775), in the Resolution and the Adventure, Cook sailed in the opposite direction, first to Cape Town and then south to the ice of Antarctica, which he coasted as he headed east looking for the great continent that maps from the time of the middle ages had shown as •Terra Incognita. Finding no southern continent he twice turned north on this circumnavigation to make huge exploring sweeps among the islands of the warmer part of the South Pacific before returning to the upper latitudes and other tries for the continent. On voyage three (1776-1780), in the Resolution and the Discovery, the now famous sailor started out as he had on the second circumnavigation but went by the shortest route to the islands of the South Pacific, by then so well known, before heading due north to discover Hawaii; then he explored the northwest coast of North America well into the Bering and Arctic Seas and proved nonexistent the navigable Northwest or Northeast Passage to India which merchants and rulers had long sought from the Atlantic side and which many mapmakers had confidently sketched in as a reality. But the third proved to be Cook’s last voyage; for on a second visit to Hawaii, intended to be a respite from the rigors of the Alaskan winter, his luck ran out and he was killed by savages. It had taken more than luck, however, to move among the giant ice floes that have since captured and crushed so many ships, to brave the reefs and shores of hundreds of unmapped islands small and large, to keep peace with thousands of savages some of whom were cannibals, to guard the health of his men successfully at a time when a circumnavigation normally meant death to so many, and to keep such helpful journals, draw such fine maps, and see the necessity of aiding the scientists whom he took along. For such successes Cook had to have experience as well as genius, and his experience was of the proper, most practical kind. After a bare minimum of school­ ing he went to sea and by the age of twenty-one had worked his way up to the position of mate on a small coaling ship, meanwhile learning much about piloting, navigation, mathematics, and charting. When the Seven Years’ War began he gave up his career to enlist as a seaman in the British navy. Again he quickly gained the admiration of his superiors and rose in rank, serving on three men-of-war and ending as Master of a sixty-four-gun ship, the Pembroke, a position that required not only considerable talents as a leader but great ability as a navigator and pilot. During the fight for Canada he provided important charts and gave helpful advice to General Wolfe. When the war was over his former commanders saw to it that his genius was employed in surveying and charting the newly acquired coasts and waters of Newfoundland and the St. Lawrence, a job that permitted him to spend only four winter months a year for several years with his wife and children in England. By 1768, then, James Cook at age forty was well known in the British Admiralty as a man whose talents and training equipped him to be the leader of a long sailing expedition whose object would be not to fight battles or to sack treasure ships but to bring back scientific information. One of the first evidences of Cook’s judgment and ability was his choice of a ship PERCY G. ADAMS Vll for the voyage. Instead of a large, heavily armored, comfortable navy vessel like the one he had served on last, he selected one of the small, square-rigged coalers out of Whitby, of the kind he had once known so well. It was a masterful choice, for such an expedition required putting in close to shore in order to land scientists and to chart coasts. The coaler’s flat bottom and shallow draft were best for such work. Further­ more, great speed and huge guns were not necessary since thecivilized world quickly heard of Cook’s peaceful pursuit of knowledge: the only men he would need to fear were those poorly armed ones in the Pacific islands who were not yet aware of the values of science. Even the third voyage, which took place during four years of the war fought between Britain and its American colonies and France, was safe. At that time Benjamin Franklin himself sent an open letter to all American armed ships asking them not to “plunder” or in any way “obstruct” the return home of “that most celebrated Navigator and Discoverer Captain Cook,” who was doing so much “to the Benefit of Mankind in general.” Cook’s first small coaler performed its function so well that he never considered any other kind of ship for either of his later voyages of discovery. Perhaps the most lasting evidence of Cook’s genius has been the journals he kept; for while each of the three voyages ultimately supplied the world with numerous accounts produced by crewmen or supernumeraries on his ships, the most important are of course those written by the commander-in-chief himself. But it has not always been possible to read Cook’s own words exactly as he wrote them. It was customary in the eighteenth century to order everyone on an official voyage for the Admiralty to turn over all logs and journals he had kept, the reason being that the Admiralty itself wished to publish its “official” version first. On every well known circum­ navigation, however, someone—sometimes several people—managed to hide a journal, perhaps by writing it in the margins of a Bible or on such thin paper that it could be secreted in the lining of a jacket. Such subterfuges were profitable since publishers were always ready to pay well for the surreptitious journals. Hardly, for example, had the Endeavour docked when one publisher came out with an anony­ mous account of its voyage. For the “official,” ghost-written, version of that first voyagejohn Hawkesworth was paid at least £6,000, a munificent sum. (His contem­ porary Henry Fielding received only £1,000 for Tom Jones.) Hawkesworth’s assignment was to collate Cook’sjournal with that ofjoseph Banks, who went along as chief scientist, then to rewrite the two accounts as one and publish it in 1773 in three volumes along with the journals of the circumnavigators Philip Carteret, Wallis, and John Byron. But Hawkesworth was not Captain Cook, for not only did he depend heavily on Banks but he often rewrote Cook’s words and even inserted comments and opinions of his own. Nevertheless, his edition was enormously successful as a publishing venture and is undoubtedly one of the most important travel books. Not until 1893 would Cook’s own journal be published, and not until the Hakluyt Society’s edition of 1955 would the copy in Cook’s handwriting, now INTRODUCTION TO THE DOVER EDITION VUl preserved in the Commonwealth National Library at Canberra, be given to the world. By the time he had completed his second circumnavigation the explorer was so important that he was permitted to select his own editor, and so his last two journals—both of which are in the British Museum—were brought out substan­ tially as he would have wanted them. As a writer Cook was untrained and artless, but he learned fast and had good teachers. Without formal schooling he did not spell or punctuate accurately or consistently. Some of his inconsistencies, such as the confusion of then and than, can be in part attributed to his times; but he had far more trouble with ie and ei than did his educated contemporaries, and sometimes he wrote a page or more without inserting any mark of punctuation. On the first voyage he was quite close to Joseph Banks, the rich young scientist, highly educated and cultured, whose own journal contains evidence that he was an important influence on Cook as a writer, especially during the early months when they were together. Professor Beaglehole has shown, for example, that while Cook’s description of Tahiti owes something to Banks, his account of New Zealand is his own. On the second voyage the mathematician William Wales seems to have had a similar influence, although to a much smaller degree. The explorer’s chief teacher, however, was probably James Cook, for just as he taught himself surveying and navigating he must have worked at improving his method of recording what he experienced. The best evidence for such an opinion is to be found in the fact that he constantly wrote and rewrote his second journal. The last journal is, of course, incomplete and must be supplemented by the records of Clerke and King, who succeeded him after his death. Through all his accounts he remained modest and unobtrusive, preferring not only objectivity but his own observations. And to read him, whether in one volume of selections or in four long volumes, is to arrive at certain definite conclusions about him as a man and about the results of his career. The most obvious conclusion is that no man ever did more to alter and to correct the map of the earth. After him cartographers abandoned the great southern Terra Incognita and the equally mythical Northwest Passage while at the same time they were able to sketch in Australia’s east coast and Great Barrier Reef even more correctly than Dampier and others had given them the western coast. After him maps could show Hawaii, the southern ice line, the northwest coast of North America, dozens of previously undiscovered islands in Polynesia, and New Zealand as two islands. And since he drew such splendid, professional charts himself, after him the map of the Pacific was everywhere more trustworthy. Furthermore, that map will show how well his names for islands, points, reefs, and mountains have stood the test of time. His journals will also show Cook’s great importance in the struggle to keep sailors healthy while on long voyages. He constantly experimented with diets that would prevent scurvy-sauerkraut, spruce beer, inspissated beer; he kept his crews and

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"No man ever did more to alter and correct the map of the Earth," writes Percy Adams in his new Introduction, than James Cook, the Scotland-born British naval commander who rose from humble beginnings to pilot three great eighteenth-century voyages of discovery in the then practically uncharted Paci
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.