Cook's journals display the skill and courage with which he faced the continuous dangers of uncharted seas and endeavoured to form relationships with the peoples he encountered. While he had an eighteenth-century Englishman's imperial self-assurance, Cook writes of 'native' cultures with striking sympathy and respect to create a truly compelling and revealing account of these momentous voyages of discovery.
These Journals record the historic meeting between two worlds as Europe's greatest navigator made the first contact with many of the peoples of the Pacific. In three extraordinary expeditions, Captain Cook charted the entire coast of New Zealand and eastern Australia,and made detailed descriptions of Tahiti, Tonga and many islands previously unknown to Europeans. Cook's journals display the skill and courage with which he faced the continuous dangers of uncharted seas and endeavoured to form relationships with the peoples he encountered. While he had an eighteenth-century Englishman's imperial self-assurance, Cook writes of 'native' cultures with striking sympathy and respect to create a truly compelling and revealing account of these momentous voyages of discovery.This edition, abridged from the Hakluyt Society's definitive four-volume collection and preserving Cook's idiosyncratic spelling, makes this inimitable personal account of his nine years of voyaging accessible to the general reader. Philip Edwards provides an introduction to each voyage and a postscript on the controversy surrounding Cook's death.
List of maps
General Introduction
Further Reading
THE FIRST VOYAGE, I768-177I
Voyage Maps
Introduction
Journal
THE SECOND VOYAGE, 1772-1775
Voyage Maps
Introduction
Journal
THE THIRD VOYAGE, 1776-1780
Voyage Map
Introduction
Journal
Postscript: the Death of Cook
Glossary
Index of Persons
Index of Places
Location Maps