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An Account of the Voyages

An Account of the Voyages Undertaken by the Order of his Present Majesty for Making Discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere, and successively performed by Commodore Byron, Captain Wallis, Captain Carteret, and Captain Cook, in the Dolphin, the Swallow, and the Endeavour: drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders, and from the papers of Joseph Banks, Esq. is a 1773 book by John Hawkesworth about several Royal Navy voyages to the Pacific: the 1764–1766 and 1766–1768 voyages of HMS Dolphin under John Byron and Samuel Wallis, the voyage of HMS Swallow under Philip Carteret (1766–1769), as well as the 1768–1771 first voyage of James Cook on HMS Endeavour. Hawkesworth received an advance of £6,000 for editing the three volumes.

An Account of the Voyages first page, 1773

Background edit

 
Captain Wallis, on his arrival at O'Taheite, in conversation with Oberea the Queen, engraving by John Hall depicting the 1767 encounter of Samuel Wallis and Queen Purea

In the middle of the 18th century, the knowledge of the Pacific by Europeans was still very limited, with the positions of many islands unknown and only some of the coasts of larger landmasses charted.[1] After the end of the Seven Years' War, the British Admiralty under John Perceval, 2nd Earl of Egmont started to send expeditions to make discoveries in the South Seas, hoping to expand British overseas power and to add new possessions.[2] The first of these voyages was John Byron's 1764–1766 circumnavigation on HMS Dolphin, which made few important discoveries.[1] It was followed in 1766 by the voyages of Samuel Wallis on the Dolphin and Philip Carteret on HMS Swallow, who were supposed to search the South Pacific for a southern continent.[1] The ships were separated; Wallis became the first European to reach Tahiti in 1767 and returned to Britain in May 1768, while Carteret discovered several islands including Pitcairn and returned to Britain in March 1769.[3]

With the dual aims of observing the 1769 transit of Venus from Tahiti and searching for a southern continent, the first voyage of James Cook set out in August 1768.[3] On board was also the botanist Joseph Banks with an entourage including naturalist Daniel Solander and the artists Alexander Buchan and Sydney Parkinson.[4] After sailing to Tahiti and observing the transit of Venus, Cook circumnavigated New Zealand and surveyed its coast, explored the east coast of Australia and passed through Torres Strait between Australia and New Guinea.[5] On the return journey, the ship was repaired at Batavia (now Jakarta), and several crew members including Parkinson died from dysentery.[6] The ship returned to Britain in July 1771.[7]

 
John Hawkesworth

John Hawkesworth was a writer who contributed to The Gentleman's Magazine from 1741 to 1773, worked on The Adventurer together with Samuel Johnson and edited Jonathan Swift's complete works. He was awarded a LL. D. degree by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1756.[8] In 1771, the Admiralty was looking for an editor for the journals of the recent circumnavigations, and the journal of Frances Burney recounts that her father Charles Burney recommended Hawkesworth to John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, the First Lord of the Admiralty.[9] The actor David Garrick also supported the choice of Hawkesworth, possibly as a second opinion.[10]

Writing and publication edit

 Dr Daniel SolanderSir Joseph BanksCaptain James CookDr John HawkesworthEarl of Sandwichuse button to expand image
Dr Daniel Solander, Sir Joseph Banks, Captain James Cook, Dr John Hawkesworth and Lord Sandwich by John Hamilton Mortimer, 1771.[11] Use a cursor to see who is who.[12]

Hawkesworth had access to about 57 journals and logs of the voyages, but probably used only a few of them.[13] Sandwich also helped him access the journal of Joseph Banks,[14] and Hawkesworth was pleased to be able to use the writings of an educated gentleman in addition to Cook's journal, which contained more nautical details.[15]

Hawkesworth was allowed to make his own publishing contract, and received the sum of £6,000 (equivalent to £990,000 in 2023) from William Strahan for editing the three volumes of the Account,[14] in "one of the most lucrative literary contracts of the eighteenth century."[16] The success made Hawkesworth overly confident, and he boldly declared "I would do my best to make it another Anson's Voyage",[17][18] referring to the account of George Anson's voyage around the world.[19] After compiling his draft, Hawkesworth submitted it to Lord Sandwich, and it was read by other Navy personnel, who made some suggestions for correction; however, these were not incorporated. Nevertheless, the book stated that the commanders as well as Banks and Solander had read the manuscript.[20] As Cook was due to depart on his second voyage in 1772, the two volumes regarding Cook's Endeavour journey were prepared first.[21]

Hawkesworth obtained a legal injunction against the competing publication of Parkinson's posthumous Journal of a Voyage to the South Seas, so it was delayed until after the Account appeared on 10 June 1773.[22]

Content edit

 
A view in the island of Ulietea with a double canoe and a boathouse, engraved by Edward Rooker, after drawings by Sydney Parkinson, c. 1773

The first volume is split into three parts, each concerned with one circumnavigation. It starts with John Byron's account of the 1764–1766 voyage of HMS Dolphin. This is followed by Samuel Wallis' journal of the 1766–1768 voyage of the same ship that included the first European encounter with Tahiti. The volume ends with Philip Carteret's 1766–1769 circumnavigation on HMS Swallow, where some islands including Pitcairn Island were found.

The second and third volume concern the first voyage of James Cook, with a large amount of content on Tahiti, where HMS Endeavour spent a considerable amount of time to observe the transit of Venus. This is followed by the description of the navigation near New Zealand and the east coast of Australia.

Illustrations edit

During Wallis' Dolphin expedition, there were no dedicated artists on board. To illustrate the first encounter with the people of Tahiti, the anonymous artist of the illustration Captain Wallis, on his arrival at O'Taheite, in conversation with Oberea the Queen fell back on interpreting Hawkesworth's text and on using oriental imagery from other places. They may have been inspired by engravings in François Valentijn's 1724–1726 Oud en Nieuw Oost-Indiën (Old and New East India).[23]

 
A View of the Indians of Tierra del Fuego in their hut, engraving by Francesco Bartolozzi after a drawing by Giovanni Battista Cipriani

For the Endeavour voyage with James Cook, Joseph Banks brought a party of eight people,[4] that included the two artists Sydney Parkinson for botanical drawings and Alexander Buchan as landscape and figure artist.[24] Work by both artists was later engraved for publication in the Account, but with some changes. Buchan's sketches were made to conform with Hawkesworth's interpretations. Giovanni Battista Cipriani added additional figures to Buchan's Inhabitants of the island of Tierra del Fuego, in their hut before the images were engraved by Francesco Bartolozzi.[25]

 
A View of Matavia Bay in Otaheite ... from One Tree Hill, engraving after John James Barralet based on a drawing by Sydney Parkinson. Point Venus can be seen across Matavai Bay, where HMS Endeavour lies anchored.

Some of the engravings in the Account were based on Parkinson's drawings, but this was not acknowledged;[26] Joseph Banks himself had written to Hawkesworth advising against it.[27] Some alterations were made; for example, Parkinson's original of Tree on One Tree Hill contains a seated figure of a person drawing as well as two Europeans; in the drawing by John James Barralet that was engraved for the Account, the seated figure has been erased and the Europeans have been replaced by Tahitians. It is possible that the seated figure depicts Parkinson himself and that he was removed at Banks' request.[28]

Reception edit

The first edition of the Account sold quickly, and a second edition came out in August of 1773.[22] Further editions followed, including an American edition in 1773 and French and German translations in 1774.[16] The book was generally very popular with the public. For example, it was the most borrowed book in the Bristol library between 1773 and 1784.[29]

However, the book was immediately criticised quite vehemently,[30] and the amount of abuse heaped on Hawkesworth was considered to have contributed to his death in November 1773.[16] Critics came from different directions; apart from criticism from seamen and the commanders whose journals had been used, flaws were found with Hawkesworth's morals, theology, geography, and with the excessive payment he had received.[31] There was outrage about the descriptions of Tahitian sexuality that Hawkesworth did not censor.[32] Writing about the Endeavour's shipwreck at Endeavour Reef, Hawkesworth had not accepted Providence, or divine intervention, as means by which Cook and his crew had escaped disaster.[33] His deism-influenced views were unorthodox and offended religious sensibilities.[34] The geographer Alexander Dalrymple, a strong believer in theory of a southern continent, published a pamphlet attacking Hawkesworth and Cook, in which he complained about differences between the narrative and the charts and defended his belief in Terra australis.[35][36]

James Cook first read Hawkesworth's Account at the Cape of Good Hope in 1775, on the return leg of his second voyage, and was shocked to read Banks's words appearing as his as well as the statement that he had read and approved the manuscript.[37] When they stopped at St Helena, wheelbarrows were conspicuously placed around Cook's lodgings.[38] Georg Forster, who accompanied Cook, wrote about the scene in his book A Voyage Round the World: "Dr. Hawkesworth's account of captain Cook's first voyage round the world, in the Endeavour, had reached this island some time before; it had been eagerly perused, and several articles, relative to this settlement, were now taken notice of with great good humour and pleasant raillery. The total want of wheelbarrows, and the ill-treatment of the slaves, which are spoken of in that account, were reckoned particularly injurious, and captain Cook was called upon to defend himself. Mrs. Skottowe, the sprightliest lady on the island, displayed to advantage her witty and satirical talents, from which there was no other escape left, than to lay the blame on the absent philosophers whose papers had been consulted."[39]

In 2004, the literary scholar Philip Edwards, described the Account as a "laundering of the actual record of the remorseless advance into the Pacific" and criticised the way that different witnesses of the event were merged into a single voice, losing their individuality.[40]

Legacy edit

For more than a century, Hawkesworth's Account was the most authoritative source for the voyages it covered.[41] For Wallis's journey, an additional text appeared in 1948, the journal of the Dolphin's master, George Robertson.[42] Cook's journals were published in their original text in an edition by William Wharton in 1893;[43] the next authoritative publication was John Beaglehole's 1955 edition of Cook's journals,[44] where Beaglehole himself stated "for a hundred and twenty years, so far as the first voyage was concerned, Hawkesworth was Cook."[45]

Another lasting legacy of Hawkesworth's Account was that his merging of the commanders into a single first-person narrator created the heroic British explorer as a literary character that would stay popular for more than 200 years.[46][47]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Williams 2020, p. 1083.
  2. ^ Edwards 2004, p. 80.
  3. ^ a b Edwards 2004, p. 81.
  4. ^ a b Beaglehole 1962, p. 24.
  5. ^ Williams 2020, p. 1085.
  6. ^ Beaglehole 1974, pp. 264–265.
  7. ^ Edwards 2004, p. 83.
  8. ^ Abbott 1970, p. 34.
  9. ^ Beaglehole 1968, p. ccxliii.
  10. ^ Wallis 1978, p. 164.
  11. ^ Digital Collection, National Library of Australia
  12. ^ Catalogue, National Library of Australia, accessed February 2010
  13. ^ Pearson 1972, p. 46.
  14. ^ a b Beaglehole 1974, p. 290.
  15. ^ Beaglehole 1968, pp. ccxlvii–ccxlviii.
  16. ^ a b c Wallis 1978, p. 165.
  17. ^ Wallis 1965, p. 465.
  18. ^ D'Arblay 1832, p. 269.
  19. ^ Williams 2001, p. 237.
  20. ^ Wallis 1978, pp. 168–170.
  21. ^ Beaglehole 1974, pp. 290–291.
  22. ^ a b Beaglehole 1974, p. 459.
  23. ^ Smith 1992, pp. 173–174.
  24. ^ Beaglehole 1962, p. 28.
  25. ^ Smith 1985, p. 40.
  26. ^ Joppien & Smith 1985, p. 28.
  27. ^ Joppien & Smith 1985, p. 54.
  28. ^ Joppien & Smith 1985, pp. 26–28, 100–101.
  29. ^ Leask 2002, p. 12.
  30. ^ Binney 2016, p. 530.
  31. ^ Wallis 1978, pp. 165–167.
  32. ^ Abbott 1982, pp. 167–171.
  33. ^ Beaglehole 1968, p. ccl.
  34. ^ Abbott 1982, pp. 164–165.
  35. ^ Beaglehole 1968, pp. ccli–cclii.
  36. ^ Abbott 1982, pp. 157–158.
  37. ^ Beaglehole 1974, p. 439.
  38. ^ Beaglehole 1974, p. 440.
  39. ^ Forster 1777, p. 560.
  40. ^ Edwards 2004, pp. 91–92.
  41. ^ Wallis 1978, p. 163.
  42. ^ Carrington 1948.
  43. ^ Ritchie 1978, p. 94.
  44. ^ Wallis 1978, pp. 163–164.
  45. ^ Beaglehole 1968, p. ccliii.
  46. ^ Pearson 1972, p. 253.
  47. ^ Spate 1988, p. 19.

Sources edit

  • Abbott, John Lawrence (1970). "John Hawkesworth: Friend of Samuel Johnson and Editor of Captain Cook's Voyages and of the Gentleman's Magazine". Eighteenth-Century Studies. 3 (3): 339–350. doi:10.2307/2737875. ISSN 0013-2586. JSTOR 2737875.
  • Abbott, John Lawrence (1982). John Hawkesworth : eighteenth-century man of letters. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-08610-7.
  • Beaglehole, John C. (1962). The Endeavour journal of Joseph Banks 1768–1771. Sydney: Trustees of Public Library of N.S.W. in association with Angus and Robertson. OCLC 222980498.
  • Beaglehole, John C. (1968) [1955]. The Journals of Captain James Cook: the Voyage of the Endeavour, 1768–1771. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press : Hakluyt Society. OCLC 223185477.
  • Beaglehole, John C. (1974). The Life of Captain James Cook. London: Adam & Charles Black. OCLC 480115019.
  • Binney, Matthew W. (1 May 2016). "The Authority of Entertainment: John Hawkesworth's An Account of the Voyages". Modern Philology. 113 (4): 530–549. doi:10.1086/685390. ISSN 0026-8232. S2CID 163754901.
  • Carrington, Hugh (1948). The Discovery of Tahiti. London: Hakluyt Soc. OCLC 250592706.
  • D'Arblay, Frances (1832). Memoirs of doctor Burney arranged from his own manuscripts from family papers, and from personal recollections. Moxon.
  • Edwards, Philip (20 May 2004). The Story of the Voyage: Sea-Narratives in Eighteenth-Century England. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-60426-0.
  • Forster, George (1777). A Voyage Round the World: In His Britannic Majesty's Sloop, Resolution, Commanded by Capt. James Cook, During the Years 1772, 3, 4, and 5. Vol. II. London: B. White.
  • Joppien, Rüdiger; Smith, Bernard (1985). The Art of Captain Cook's Voyages. Vol. One. The Voyage of the Endeavour 1768–1771. New Haven and London: Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art by Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03450-4. OCLC 12544694.
  • Leask, Nigel (10 January 2002). Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel-Writing, 1770–1840: 'From an Antique Land'. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-155439-1.
  • Pearson, W. H. (1 January 1972). "Hawkesworth's alterations". The Journal of Pacific History. 7 (1): 45–72. doi:10.1080/00223347208572200. ISSN 0022-3344.
  • Ritchie, G. S. (1 April 1978). "Captain Cook's Influence on Hydrographic Surveying". Pacific Studies. 1: 78–95.
  • Smith, Bernard (1985). European vision and the South Pacific. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-02815-7.
  • Smith, Bernard (1992). Imagining the Pacific : in the wake of the Cook voyages. New Haven : Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-05053-0.
  • Spate, O. H. K. (1988). "Seamen and Scientists: The Literature of the Pacific, 1697-1798". In Macleod, Roy; Rehbock, Philip F. (eds.). Nature in its Greatest Extent. University of Hawaii Press. doi:10.1515/9780824890766-004. ISBN 978-0-8248-9076-6.
  • Wallis, Helen (1965). Carteret's Voyage round the World, 1766–1769. London: Hakluyt Society. OCLC 562056101.
  • Wallis, Helen (1 April 1978). "Publication of Cook's Journals: Some New Sources and Assessments". Pacific Studies. 1: 163–194.
  • Williams, Glyndwr (2001). The prize of all the oceans : Commodore Anson's daring voyage and triumphant capture of the Spanish treasure galleon. New York : Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-100226-2.
  • Williams, Glyndwr (15 May 2020). "Pacific Voyages". In Edney, Matthew H.; Pedley, Mary Sponberg (eds.). The History of Cartography, Volume 4: Cartography in the European Enlightenment. University of Chicago Press. pp. 1083–1090. ISBN 978-0-226-33922-1.

Scans of the first edition edit

  • Hawkesworth, John (1773). An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere, and successively performed by Commodore Byron, Captain Wallis, Captain Carteret, and Captain Cook, in the Dolphin, the Swallow, and the Endeavour: drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders, and from the papers of Joseph Banks, esq.;. Vol. I. London: Printed for W. Strahan and T. Cadell.
  • Hawkesworth, John (1773). An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere, and successively performed by Commodore Byron, Captain Wallis, Captain Carteret, and Captain Cook, in the Dolphin, the Swallow, and the Endeavour: drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders, and from the papers of Joseph Banks, esq.;. Vol. II. London: Printed for W. Strahan and T. Cadell.
  • Hawkesworth, John (1773). An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere, and successively performed by Commodore Byron, Captain Wallis, Captain Carteret, and Captain Cook, in the Dolphin, the Swallow, and the Endeavour: drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders, and from the papers of Joseph Banks, esq.;. Vol. III. London: Printed for W. Strahan and T. Cadell.

account, voyages, undertaken, order, present, majesty, making, discoveries, southern, hemisphere, successively, performed, commodore, byron, captain, wallis, captain, carteret, captain, cook, dolphin, swallow, endeavour, drawn, from, journals, which, were, kep. An Account of the Voyages Undertaken by the Order of his Present Majesty for Making Discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere and successively performed by Commodore Byron Captain Wallis Captain Carteret and Captain Cook in the Dolphin the Swallow and the Endeavour drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders and from the papers of Joseph Banks Esq is a 1773 book by John Hawkesworth about several Royal Navy voyages to the Pacific the 1764 1766 and 1766 1768 voyages of HMS Dolphin under John Byron and Samuel Wallis the voyage of HMS Swallow under Philip Carteret 1766 1769 as well as the 1768 1771 first voyage of James Cook on HMS Endeavour Hawkesworth received an advance of 6 000 for editing the three volumes An Account of the Voyages first page 1773 Contents 1 Background 2 Writing and publication 3 Content 4 Illustrations 5 Reception 6 Legacy 7 References 8 Sources 9 Scans of the first editionBackground edit nbsp Captain Wallis on his arrival at O Taheite in conversation with Oberea the Queen engraving by John Hall depicting the 1767 encounter of Samuel Wallis and Queen Purea In the middle of the 18th century the knowledge of the Pacific by Europeans was still very limited with the positions of many islands unknown and only some of the coasts of larger landmasses charted 1 After the end of the Seven Years War the British Admiralty under John Perceval 2nd Earl of Egmont started to send expeditions to make discoveries in the South Seas hoping to expand British overseas power and to add new possessions 2 The first of these voyages was John Byron s 1764 1766 circumnavigation on HMS Dolphin which made few important discoveries 1 It was followed in 1766 by the voyages of Samuel Wallis on the Dolphin and Philip Carteret on HMS Swallow who were supposed to search the South Pacific for a southern continent 1 The ships were separated Wallis became the first European to reach Tahiti in 1767 and returned to Britain in May 1768 while Carteret discovered several islands including Pitcairn and returned to Britain in March 1769 3 With the dual aims of observing the 1769 transit of Venus from Tahiti and searching for a southern continent the first voyage of James Cook set out in August 1768 3 On board was also the botanist Joseph Banks with an entourage including naturalist Daniel Solander and the artists Alexander Buchan and Sydney Parkinson 4 After sailing to Tahiti and observing the transit of Venus Cook circumnavigated New Zealand and surveyed its coast explored the east coast of Australia and passed through Torres Strait between Australia and New Guinea 5 On the return journey the ship was repaired at Batavia now Jakarta and several crew members including Parkinson died from dysentery 6 The ship returned to Britain in July 1771 7 nbsp John Hawkesworth John Hawkesworth was a writer who contributed to The Gentleman s Magazine from 1741 to 1773 worked on The Adventurer together with Samuel Johnson and edited Jonathan Swift s complete works He was awarded a LL D degree by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1756 8 In 1771 the Admiralty was looking for an editor for the journals of the recent circumnavigations and the journal of Frances Burney recounts that her father Charles Burney recommended Hawkesworth to John Montagu 4th Earl of Sandwich the First Lord of the Admiralty 9 The actor David Garrick also supported the choice of Hawkesworth possibly as a second opinion 10 Writing and publication edit nbsp Dr Daniel Solander Sir Joseph Banks Captain James Cook Dr John Hawkesworth and Lord Sandwich by John Hamilton Mortimer 1771 11 Use a cursor to see who is who 12 Hawkesworth had access to about 57 journals and logs of the voyages but probably used only a few of them 13 Sandwich also helped him access the journal of Joseph Banks 14 and Hawkesworth was pleased to be able to use the writings of an educated gentleman in addition to Cook s journal which contained more nautical details 15 Hawkesworth was allowed to make his own publishing contract and received the sum of 6 000 equivalent to 990 000 in 2023 from William Strahan for editing the three volumes of the Account 14 in one of the most lucrative literary contracts of the eighteenth century 16 The success made Hawkesworth overly confident and he boldly declared I would do my best to make it another Anson s Voyage 17 18 referring to the account of George Anson s voyage around the world 19 After compiling his draft Hawkesworth submitted it to Lord Sandwich and it was read by other Navy personnel who made some suggestions for correction however these were not incorporated Nevertheless the book stated that the commanders as well as Banks and Solander had read the manuscript 20 As Cook was due to depart on his second voyage in 1772 the two volumes regarding Cook s Endeavour journey were prepared first 21 Hawkesworth obtained a legal injunction against the competing publication of Parkinson s posthumous Journal of a Voyage to the South Seas so it was delayed until after the Account appeared on 10 June 1773 22 Content edit nbsp A view in the island of Ulietea with a double canoe and a boathouse engraved by Edward Rooker after drawings by Sydney Parkinson c 1773 The first volume is split into three parts each concerned with one circumnavigation It starts with John Byron s account of the 1764 1766 voyage of HMS Dolphin This is followed by Samuel Wallis journal of the 1766 1768 voyage of the same ship that included the first European encounter with Tahiti The volume ends with Philip Carteret s 1766 1769 circumnavigation on HMS Swallow where some islands including Pitcairn Island were found The second and third volume concern the first voyage of James Cook with a large amount of content on Tahiti where HMS Endeavour spent a considerable amount of time to observe the transit of Venus This is followed by the description of the navigation near New Zealand and the east coast of Australia Illustrations editDuring Wallis Dolphin expedition there were no dedicated artists on board To illustrate the first encounter with the people of Tahiti the anonymous artist of the illustration Captain Wallis on his arrival at O Taheite in conversation with Oberea the Queen fell back on interpreting Hawkesworth s text and on using oriental imagery from other places They may have been inspired by engravings in Francois Valentijn s 1724 1726 Oud en Nieuw Oost Indien Old and New East India 23 nbsp A View of the Indians of Tierra del Fuego in their hut engraving by Francesco Bartolozzi after a drawing by Giovanni Battista Cipriani For the Endeavour voyage with James Cook Joseph Banks brought a party of eight people 4 that included the two artists Sydney Parkinson for botanical drawings and Alexander Buchan as landscape and figure artist 24 Work by both artists was later engraved for publication in the Account but with some changes Buchan s sketches were made to conform with Hawkesworth s interpretations Giovanni Battista Cipriani added additional figures to Buchan s Inhabitants of the island of Tierra del Fuego in their hut before the images were engraved by Francesco Bartolozzi 25 nbsp A View of Matavia Bay in Otaheite from One Tree Hill engraving after John James Barralet based on a drawing by Sydney Parkinson Point Venus can be seen across Matavai Bay where HMS Endeavour lies anchored Some of the engravings in the Account were based on Parkinson s drawings but this was not acknowledged 26 Joseph Banks himself had written to Hawkesworth advising against it 27 Some alterations were made for example Parkinson s original of Tree on One Tree Hill contains a seated figure of a person drawing as well as two Europeans in the drawing by John James Barralet that was engraved for the Account the seated figure has been erased and the Europeans have been replaced by Tahitians It is possible that the seated figure depicts Parkinson himself and that he was removed at Banks request 28 Reception editThe first edition of the Account sold quickly and a second edition came out in August of 1773 22 Further editions followed including an American edition in 1773 and French and German translations in 1774 16 The book was generally very popular with the public For example it was the most borrowed book in the Bristol library between 1773 and 1784 29 However the book was immediately criticised quite vehemently 30 and the amount of abuse heaped on Hawkesworth was considered to have contributed to his death in November 1773 16 Critics came from different directions apart from criticism from seamen and the commanders whose journals had been used flaws were found with Hawkesworth s morals theology geography and with the excessive payment he had received 31 There was outrage about the descriptions of Tahitian sexuality that Hawkesworth did not censor 32 Writing about the Endeavour s shipwreck at Endeavour Reef Hawkesworth had not accepted Providence or divine intervention as means by which Cook and his crew had escaped disaster 33 His deism influenced views were unorthodox and offended religious sensibilities 34 The geographer Alexander Dalrymple a strong believer in theory of a southern continent published a pamphlet attacking Hawkesworth and Cook in which he complained about differences between the narrative and the charts and defended his belief in Terra australis 35 36 James Cook first read Hawkesworth s Account at the Cape of Good Hope in 1775 on the return leg of his second voyage and was shocked to read Banks s words appearing as his as well as the statement that he had read and approved the manuscript 37 When they stopped at St Helena wheelbarrows were conspicuously placed around Cook s lodgings 38 Georg Forster who accompanied Cook wrote about the scene in his book A Voyage Round the World Dr Hawkesworth s account of captain Cook s first voyage round the world in the Endeavour had reached this island some time before it had been eagerly perused and several articles relative to this settlement were now taken notice of with great good humour and pleasant raillery The total want of wheelbarrows and the ill treatment of the slaves which are spoken of in that account were reckoned particularly injurious and captain Cook was called upon to defend himself Mrs Skottowe the sprightliest lady on the island displayed to advantage her witty and satirical talents from which there was no other escape left than to lay the blame on the absent philosophers whose papers had been consulted 39 In 2004 the literary scholar Philip Edwards described the Account as a laundering of the actual record of the remorseless advance into the Pacific and criticised the way that different witnesses of the event were merged into a single voice losing their individuality 40 Legacy editFor more than a century Hawkesworth s Account was the most authoritative source for the voyages it covered 41 For Wallis s journey an additional text appeared in 1948 the journal of the Dolphin s master George Robertson 42 Cook s journals were published in their original text in an edition by William Wharton in 1893 43 the next authoritative publication was John Beaglehole s 1955 edition of Cook s journals 44 where Beaglehole himself stated for a hundred and twenty years so far as the first voyage was concerned Hawkesworth was Cook 45 Another lasting legacy of Hawkesworth s Account was that his merging of the commanders into a single first person narrator created the heroic British explorer as a literary character that would stay popular for more than 200 years 46 47 References edit a b c Williams 2020 p 1083 Edwards 2004 p 80 a b Edwards 2004 p 81 a b Beaglehole 1962 p 24 Williams 2020 p 1085 Beaglehole 1974 pp 264 265 Edwards 2004 p 83 Abbott 1970 p 34 Beaglehole 1968 p ccxliii Wallis 1978 p 164 Digital Collection National Library of Australia Catalogue National Library of Australia accessed February 2010 Pearson 1972 p 46 a b Beaglehole 1974 p 290 Beaglehole 1968 pp ccxlvii ccxlviii a b c Wallis 1978 p 165 Wallis 1965 p 465 D Arblay 1832 p 269 Williams 2001 p 237 Wallis 1978 pp 168 170 Beaglehole 1974 pp 290 291 a b Beaglehole 1974 p 459 Smith 1992 pp 173 174 Beaglehole 1962 p 28 Smith 1985 p 40 Joppien amp Smith 1985 p 28 Joppien amp Smith 1985 p 54 Joppien amp Smith 1985 pp 26 28 100 101 Leask 2002 p 12 Binney 2016 p 530 Wallis 1978 pp 165 167 Abbott 1982 pp 167 171 Beaglehole 1968 p ccl Abbott 1982 pp 164 165 Beaglehole 1968 pp ccli cclii Abbott 1982 pp 157 158 Beaglehole 1974 p 439 Beaglehole 1974 p 440 Forster 1777 p 560 Edwards 2004 pp 91 92 Wallis 1978 p 163 Carrington 1948 Ritchie 1978 p 94 Wallis 1978 pp 163 164 Beaglehole 1968 p ccliii Pearson 1972 p 253 Spate 1988 p 19 Sources editAbbott John Lawrence 1970 John Hawkesworth Friend of Samuel Johnson and Editor of Captain Cook s Voyages and of the Gentleman s Magazine Eighteenth Century Studies 3 3 339 350 doi 10 2307 2737875 ISSN 0013 2586 JSTOR 2737875 Abbott John Lawrence 1982 John Hawkesworth eighteenth century man of letters Madison University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 08610 7 Beaglehole John C 1962 The Endeavour journal of Joseph Banks 1768 1771 Sydney Trustees of Public Library of N S W in association with Angus and Robertson OCLC 222980498 Beaglehole John C 1968 1955 The Journals of Captain James Cook the Voyage of the Endeavour 1768 1771 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Hakluyt Society OCLC 223185477 Beaglehole John C 1974 The Life of Captain James Cook London Adam amp Charles Black OCLC 480115019 Binney Matthew W 1 May 2016 The Authority of Entertainment John Hawkesworth s An Account of the Voyages Modern Philology 113 4 530 549 doi 10 1086 685390 ISSN 0026 8232 S2CID 163754901 Carrington Hugh 1948 The Discovery of Tahiti London Hakluyt Soc OCLC 250592706 D Arblay Frances 1832 Memoirs of doctor Burney arranged from his own manuscripts from family papers and from personal recollections Moxon Edwards Philip 20 May 2004 The Story of the Voyage Sea Narratives in Eighteenth Century England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60426 0 Forster George 1777 A Voyage Round the World In His Britannic Majesty s Sloop Resolution Commanded by Capt James Cook During the Years 1772 3 4 and 5 Vol II London B White Joppien Rudiger Smith Bernard 1985 The Art of Captain Cook s Voyages Vol One The Voyage of the Endeavour 1768 1771 New Haven and London Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art by Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 03450 4 OCLC 12544694 Leask Nigel 10 January 2002 Curiosity and the Aesthetics of Travel Writing 1770 1840 From an Antique Land OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 155439 1 Pearson W H 1 January 1972 Hawkesworth s alterations The Journal of Pacific History 7 1 45 72 doi 10 1080 00223347208572200 ISSN 0022 3344 Ritchie G S 1 April 1978 Captain Cook s Influence on Hydrographic Surveying Pacific Studies 1 78 95 Smith Bernard 1985 European vision and the South Pacific New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 02815 7 Smith Bernard 1992 Imagining the Pacific in the wake of the Cook voyages New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 05053 0 Spate O H K 1988 Seamen and Scientists The Literature of the Pacific 1697 1798 In Macleod Roy Rehbock Philip F eds Nature in its Greatest Extent University of Hawaii Press doi 10 1515 9780824890766 004 ISBN 978 0 8248 9076 6 Wallis Helen 1965 Carteret s Voyage round the World 1766 1769 London Hakluyt Society OCLC 562056101 Wallis Helen 1 April 1978 Publication of Cook s Journals Some New Sources and Assessments Pacific Studies 1 163 194 Williams Glyndwr 2001 The prize of all the oceans Commodore Anson s daring voyage and triumphant capture of the Spanish treasure galleon New York Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 100226 2 Williams Glyndwr 15 May 2020 Pacific Voyages In Edney Matthew H Pedley Mary Sponberg eds The History of Cartography Volume 4 Cartography in the European Enlightenment University of Chicago Press pp 1083 1090 ISBN 978 0 226 33922 1 Scans of the first edition editHawkesworth John 1773 An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere and successively performed by Commodore Byron Captain Wallis Captain Carteret and Captain Cook in the Dolphin the Swallow and the Endeavour drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders and from the papers of Joseph Banks esq Vol I London Printed for W Strahan and T Cadell Hawkesworth John 1773 An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere and successively performed by Commodore Byron Captain Wallis Captain Carteret and Captain Cook in the Dolphin the Swallow and the Endeavour drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders and from the papers of Joseph Banks esq Vol II London Printed for W Strahan and T Cadell Hawkesworth John 1773 An account of the voyages undertaken by the order of His present Majesty for making discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere and successively performed by Commodore Byron Captain Wallis Captain Carteret and Captain Cook in the Dolphin the Swallow and the Endeavour drawn up from the journals which were kept by the several commanders and from the papers of Joseph Banks esq Vol III London Printed for W Strahan and T Cadell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title An Account of the Voyages amp oldid 1165150363, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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