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A Voyage Round the World
Front page
The front page of the first edition
AuthorGeorg Forster
LanguageEnglish
GenreTravel literature
PublisherBenjamin White
Publication date
17 March 1777
Publication placeEngland
Pages1200 (in two volumes)
OCLC311900474

A Voyage Round the World (complete title 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) is Georg Forster's report about the second voyage of James Cook. The book was written in 1776/77 by Georg instead of his father, Johann Reinhold Forster, the naturalist on the Second Voyage, after the elder Forster had fallen out with Cook and John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich. It was published in March 1777 and has become a classic of travel literature.

Background

Johann Reinhold Forster and Georg Forster, by John Francis Rigaud, London 1780.[1] The plant in the brim of the hat is a Forstera sedifolia, locating the scene in New Zealand,[2] although the image has been commonly called "Reinhold and George Forster at Tahiti" or similar.[3][4]

The first voyage of James Cook, 1768–1771, had been undertaken to observe the 1769 transit of Venus from Tahiti.[5] Another aim, following the urgings of geographer Alexander Dalrymple, had been to find Terra Australis Incognita. Cook circumnavigated New Zealand, proving it was not attached to a landmass further south, and mapped the East coast of Australia, but had not found evidence for a large southern continent. After Cook's return, a second voyage was commissioned with the aim to aim to circumnavigate the globe as far south as possible in order to finally find this famed continent.[6][7] In the preparations for Cook's second voyage, Joseph Banks, the botanist on the first voyage, had been designated as main scientific member of the crew. He asked for major changes to the expedition ship, HMS Resolution, which made it top-heavy, and had to be mostly undone. Subsequently, Banks was dissatisfied with the ship and refused to go on the expedition.[8] On ten days' notice,[9] the Royal Society's vice president Daines Barrington[10] then commissioned Johann Reinhold Forster as the expedition's scientist, accompanied by his seventeen-year-old son Georg[11] (sometimes referred to as "George" in English),[12] and First Lord of the Admiralty Lord Sandwich recommended Forster to the prime minister.[13]

After the return of Cook's expedition, there was disagreement about who should write the official account of the journey. After Cook's first voyage, a report had been compiled from the journals of Cook and Banks by writer and editor John Hawkesworth for a compensation of £6,000, after Hawkesworth had been recommended to Lord Sandwich by their mutual friend Charles Burney.[14] Hawkesworth's report, which contained several inaccuracies, was poorly received by critics, and Cook strongly disliked both Hawkesworth's moralising and instances where Hawkesworth had chosen not to follow either of Banks' or Cook's journals.[15] After this experience, Cook preferred to write his own report. Johann Reinhold Forster, on the other hand, believed he would be allowed to write the official report and reap the expected financial rewards from it. Both Cook and Forster had kept journals for this purpose and reworked them in the winter of 1775/76. In April 1776, Sandwich brokered a compromise that both sides agreed to: Cook should write the first volume, concentrating on the nautical observations, and the elder Forster was to write the second volume concerning the discoveries made in natural history and ethnology. Costs and profits were to be shared equally, but the Admiralty was to pay for the engravings.[16][17] However, when Forster had completed a sample chapter, Sandwich was dissatisfied with the writing style and asked Daines Barrington to revise it.[18] Reinhold Forster was furious about this interference with his writing, and refused to submit his drafts for correction. He offered to sell his manuscripts to the Admiralty for £200,[19] which Cook and Barrington supported, but Sandwich refused.[20] In June 1776, it was decided that Cook would publish his report alone,[21][22] giving Cook the full financial benefit of the publication.[23] Reinhold Forster's agreements with Sandwich made it impossible for him to publish a separate narrative.[24]

Writing and publication

Georg Forster was not bound by his father's agreements with the Admiralty,[18] and began to write A Voyage Round the World in July 1776.[24] His father's journals were the main source for the work.[19] The facts about what they saw and did are typically taken from these journals but recast into Georg's own style, with different ordering of the details and additional connecting material.[25] Some parts were also based on segments of Cook's journals that Forster's father had had access to [26][27] or on Georg's own notes and recollections,[28] including his own memorandum Observationes historiam naturalem spectantes quas in navigationes ad terras australes institutere coepit G. F ., which contains botanical and biological observations up to 1 January 1773.[29]

Unlike the systematic approach of Johann Reinhold Forster's later book Observations Made during a Voyage round the World (1778), A Voyage Round the World is a chronology of the voyage,[30] but written as entertaining literature instead of a dry collection of facts,[31] including the use of quotations from classical literature to frame the narrative.[32] Among the first books using such scientific-literary techniques, it is regarded as a seminal book in the history of travel writing[9] and has been described as "unambiguously the finest of the Cook voyage narratives".[33] The book's manuscript was proofread by Oxford astronomer Thomas Hornsby.[34][35][36]

The book appeared on 17 March 1777,[37] printed by Benjamin White, in two volumes totalling 1200 pages. Cook's official account of the voyage, A Voyage Towards the South Pole and Round the World, appeared six weeks later. Cook's book included 63 copper engravings,[38] some of which were based on Georg Forster's drawings, while A Voyage Round the World was not illustrated. Nevertheless, both books were sold at the same price of 2 guineas.[11] Forster's book sold slowly; in 1778, 570 of about 1000 copies were still unsold,[38] and the Forsters, who were in debt, had to sell most of their collection of Pacific artifacts and of Georg's drawings. The drawings were not published for more than 200 years, when they appeared in an illustrated German edition of Voyage.[39]

Authorship controversy

The authorship of the young Forster was immediately questioned. William Wales, who had been the astronomer on Cook's second journey, considered Johann Reinhold Forster to be the true author,[24][40][41] and accused him of lies and misrepresentations.[42] The editor of Cook's journals, John Beaglehole, refers to Georg's claims of originality as "not strictly truthful" in his biography of Cook.[34] R. L. Kahn, the editor of the 1968 edition of Voyage, calls the book a joint work based on Reinhold's journals, stating "probably sixty percent of it was finally written by George".[43] According to Leslie Bodi, the style and philosophy both point towards Georg.[40] Thomas P. Saine similarly states in his biography of Georg Forster that the quality of the English writing is too good to be Reinhold's work, and the comments and observations "reveal more of the youthful enthusiasm and attitude to be expected from Georg than of the more scientific temperament to be expected of Reinhold".[44] In her 1973 thesis, which has been described as the most reliable account of the history of writing and publication of Voyage,[45] Ruth Dawson describes the style of the work as "convincing evidence" for Georg's authorship and notes that his father was "involved in other matters" during the six months of writing.[46] On sources, she states "While the role which J. R. Forster personally played in the writing of Voyage round the World and Reise um die Welt is a limited one, his records are the major source for almost all the facts and events described."[47] Her overall conclusion is "It seems certain however that it was Georg Forster who wrote the account."[48] Philip Edwards, while pointing out many observations that clearly are Georg's, calls Voyage a "collaborative, consensual work; a single author has been created out of the two minds involved in the composition."[49] Nicholas Thomas and Oliver Berghof, the editors of the 2000 edition, explicitly disagree with Kahn and state the text is "in effect an independent account, an additional source for the events of Cook’s second voyage, rather than simply a revised version of another primary source", differentiating Voyage from earlier publications where Georg had been his father's assistant.[50]

Content

Map showing the second voyage of James Cook

The book is structured as a travelogue, chronologically retelling the events and observations of the journey. Unlike Cook's report, it does not focus on the nautical aspects of the voyage, but on the scientific and ethnological observations. Forster describes encounters with the peoples and cultures of the South Seas and the corrupting impact of the contact with European sailors.[51] Peoples described include the Tahitians, the Maori of New Zealand, and the inhabitants of Tierra del Fuego, whose technologies and societies Forster analysed and compared.[52]

The following is a summary of the contents of each chapter, following the journey of the Resolution under Cook, which was accompanied for parts of the journey by the Adventure under the command of Tobias Furneaux.

Preface

The greatest navigator of his time, two able astronomers, a man of science to study nature in all her recesses, and a painter to copy some of her most curious productions, were selected at the expence of the nation. After completing their voyage, they have prepared to give an account of their respective discoveries, which cannot fail of crowning, their employers at least, with immortal honour.[53]

Forster explains the history of the work, including the agreements between his father, Cook and Sandwich. He proceeds with an apology for producing a work separate to Cook's, and gives an account of Omai's life in England.

Book I

Halcyon leucocephala acteon, by Georg Forster, Cape Verde, 1772

Chapter I. Departure—Passage from Plymouth to Madeira—Description of that Island.

The Forsters travel from London to Plymouth. After final works on the Resolution have been completed, the sea voyage begins. They sail along the coast of Spain, then spend some days in Madeira, and Forster describes the island on several pages.

Chapter II. The Passage from Madeira to the Cape Verd Islands, and from thence to the Cape of Good Hope.

The voyage passes first the Canary Islands, then crosses the Tropic of Cancer. They visit Cape Verde. Forster comments on its inhabitants and their wretchedness, which he blames on "despotic governors, bigotted priests, and indolence on the part of the court of Lisbon".[54] On the way south, they encounter dolphins, flying fish, and some luminous sea creatures.

Chapter III. Stay at the Cape of Good Hope.—Account of that Settlement.

Table Mountain and Cape Town, by William Hodges, 1772

The voyagers spend three weeks in Cape Town. Forster describes the colony, which he finds far superior to the Portuguese colony at Cape Verde. They meet Anders Sparrman, who agrees to accompany them.

Chapter IV. Run from the Cape to the Antarctic Circle; first season spent in high Southern Latitudes.—Arrival on the Coast of New Zeeland.

The voyagers sail south, into unknown waters. As the weather gets colder, Cook provides warm clothing to the seamen. At 51°5’ South, they encounter icebergs. William Wales and Forster's father get lost in the fog in a small boat, but eventually manage to return to the ship. The sailors are drunk at Christmas. Ice is brought on board to be melted. On 17 January 1772, they cross the Antarctic Circle:

On the 17th, in the forenoon, we crossed the antarctic circle, and advanced into the southern frigid zone, which had hitherto remained impenetrable to all navigators. [..] About five o'clock in the afternoon, we had sight of more than thirty large islands of ice a-head; and perceived a strong white reflexion from the sky over the horizon. Soon after we passed through vast quantities of broken ice, which looked honey-combed and spungy, and of a dirty colour. This continually thickened about us, so that the sea became very smooth, though the wind was fresh as before. An immense field of solid ice extended beyond it to the south, as far as the eye could reach from the mast-head. Seeing it was impossible to advance farther that way, Captain Cook ordered the ships to put about, and stood north-east by north, after having reached 67° 15' south latitude, where many whales, snowy, grey, and antarctic petrels, appeared in every quarter.[55]

The voyage continues eastwards, with occasional attempts to go further south. They lose contact with the Adventure. Several sailors suffer from symptoms of scurvy. They arrive in New Zealand at the end of February, "after a space of four months and two days, out of sight of land".[56]

Chapter V. Stay at Dusky Bay; description of it, and account of our transactions there.

Melaleuca aestuosa, watercolour painting of a Metrosideros umbellata, by Georg Forster, New Zealand 1773.
Dusky Bay in New Zealand, painting by William Hodges, April 1773

Resolution arrives at Dusky Bay, where they meet some natives and make several excursions. There is plenty of fish and many ducks to shoot. They leave some geese to breed, and restock with water and timber. They stay for some days at Long Island. After six weeks in the area, Forster concludes:

The climate of Dusky Bay, is I must own, its greatest inconvenience, and can never be supposed a healthy one. During the whole of our stay, we had only one week of continued fair weather, all the rest of the time the rain predominated. But perhaps the climate was less noxious to Englishmen than to any other nation, because it is analogous to their own.[57]

Chapter VI. Passage from Dusky Bay to Queen Charlotte's Sound—Function with the Adventure.—Transactions during our stay there.

The voyagers encounter a waterspout. At Queen Charlotte Sound, they are rejoined by the Adventure, and Forster reports on its journey to New Zealand via Tasmania. Again, they make several excursions, including one to another Long Island, where Cook has some seeds planted. Forster comments on the geology and concludes the existence of volcanoes in New Zealand. They trade with natives and invite them on board the ship, and the unmarried women are forced into prostitution by the natives:

Our crews, who had not conversed with women since our departure from the Cape, found these ladies very agreeable[..]. However their favours did not depend upon their own inclination, but the men, as absolute masters, were always to be consulted upon the occasion; if a spike-nail, or a shirt, or a similar present had been given for their connivance, the lady was at liberty to make her lover happy, and to exact, if possible, the tribute of another present for herself. Some among them, however, submitted with reluctance to this vile prostitution; and, but for the authority and menaces of the men, would not have complied with the desires of a set of people who could, with unconcern, behold their tears and hear their complaints. [..] Encouraged by the lucrative nature of this infamous commerce, the New Zeelanders went through the whole vessel, offering their daughters and sisters promiscuously to every person's embraces, in exchange for our iron tools, which they knew could not be purchased at an easier rate.[58]

Forster comments on the moral corruption inflicted upon the natives by the Europeans. The voyagers spend several more days in the areas and converse with the natives, and Cook shows one of them the seed garden on Long Island.

Chapter VII. Run from New Zeeland to O-Taheitee.

The ships pass through Cook Strait and turn to the northeast. Forster reports on consumption of dog meat and on the relatively better health of the crew on board the Resolution as compared to the Adventure.

Chapter VIII. Anchorage in O-Aitepeha harbour, on the lesser peninsula of O-Taheitee.—Account of our stay there.—Removal to Matavai Bay.

Forster describes the arrival in Tahiti:

It was one of those beautiful mornings which the poets of all nations have attempted to describe, when we saw the isle of O-Taheite, within two miles before us. The east-wind which had carried us so far, was entirely vanished, and a faint breeze only wafted a delicious perfume from the land, and curled the surface of the sea. The mountains, clothed with forests, rose majestic in various spiry forms, on which we already perceived the light of the rising sun: nearer to the eye a lower range of hills, easier of ascent, appeared, wooded like the former, and coloured with several pleasing hues of green, soberly mixed with autumnal browns. At their foot lay the plain, crowned with its fertile bread-fruit trees, over which rose innumerable palms, the princes of the grove. Here every thing seemed as yet asleep, the morning scarce dawned, and a peaceful shade still rested on the landscape.[59]

The natives are friendly, and come to the ship unarmed and in large numbers. Forster finds the language very easy to pronounce, and notices that the letter O that many words seem to begin with is just an article.

In the afternoon the captains, accompanied by several gentlemen, went ashore the first time, in order to visit O-Aheatua, whom all the natives thereabouts acknowledged as aree, or king. Numbers of canoes in the mean while surrounded us, carrying on a brisk trade with vegetables, but chiefly with great quantities of the cloth made in the island. The decks were likewise crouded with natives, among whom were several women who yielded without difficulty to the ardent sollicitations of our sailors. Some of the females who came on board for this purpose, seemed not to be above nine or ten years old, and had not the least marks of puberty. So early an acquaintance with the world seems to argue an uncommon degree of voluptuousness, and cannot fail of affecting the nation in general. The effect, which was immediately obvious to me, was the low stature of the common class of people, to which all these prostitutes belonged.[60]

They continue to trade, and an incident of theft is resolved after Cook confiscates a canoe. The Forsters go ashore to collect plants, and the natives help them, but do not sell their hogs, stating these belong to the king. They continue to enjoy the hospitality of the natives and meet a very fat man, who appears to be a leader. Some days later, Cook and his crew are granted an audience with the local chief, attended by 500 natives. Forster reports on the recent political history. They continue to Matavai Bay, where Cook had stayed also during his previous visit to Tahiti.

Chapter IX. Account of our Transactions at Matavaï Bay.

View of Maitavie Bay, Otaheite, by William Hodges, 1776

The voyagers meet King O-Too. An exchange of presents ensues, including several live animals. On excursions the Forsters encounter more hospitality, including a type of refreshing massage. After two weeks, they leave Tahiti, and Forster remarks on the society of Tahiti, which he perceives as more equal than that of England, while still having class distinctions.

Chapter X. Account of our Transactions at the Society Islands.

Forster reports that some seamen have caught venereal diseases from their sexual encounters in Tahiti. They arrive at Huahine, and there is a welcoming ceremony for Cook. On an excursion, Forster and Sparrman notice a woman breastfeeding a puppy; upon inquiry, they find out she lost her child. The interactions with local chief Oree are described. Soon after, on Bora Bora, they shoot some kingfishers, which makes the women unhappy, and the local chief asks them not to kill kingfishers or herons, while allowing them to shoot other species. They discuss the nearby islands with the natives. Forster describes a dance performance. They visit O-Tahà, and Forster describes a feast, the local alcoholic beverages, and another dance performance.

Book II

Chapter I. Run from the Society Isles to the Friendly Isles, with an Account of our Transactions there.

Fully restocked and with a crew that is healthy except for venereal diseases, the voyagers continue eastwards. Cook discovers Hervey's Isle. They meet the natives at Middelburg Island. Forster criticises related images by Hodges and Sherwin. The natives sing a song for them, a transcription of which is given in the book. Forster comments on the houses and the diet of the inhabitants, and describes their tattoos and ear piercings. As there is little opportunity to trade, they continue to Tongatapu. Here again, the natives are friendly, and Forster sees one of their priests. During daytime, many women prostitute themselves on board the ship, all of them unmarried. Forster describes the natives' boats and their habit to colour their hair with powders. The priest is seen drinking a kava-based intoxicating beverage and shares some with the travellers. Forster compares the Tahitians and the Tongans.

Chapter II. Course from the Friendly Isles to New Zeeland.—Separation from the Adventure.—Second stay in Queen Charlotte's Sound.

The ships sail back to New Zealand, where some natives in Hawke's Bay perform a war dance for them. A storm hinders them from passing west through Cook's Strait, and they have a terrible night, in which most of the beds are under water and the Forsters hear the curses of the sailors "and not a single reflection bridled their blasphemous tongues".[61] They lose sight of the Adventure, but finally manage to pass through Cook's Strait and return to Queen Charlotte's Sound on South Island. Forster describes various trades and excursions, and comments on the treatment of women:

Among all savage nations the weaker sex is ill-treated, and the law of the strongest is put in force. Their women are mere drudges, who prepare raiment and provide dwellings, who cook and frequently collect their food, and are requited by blows and all kinds of severity. At New Zeeland it seems they carry this tyranny to excess, and the males are taught from their earliest age, to hold their mothers in contempt, contrary to all our principles of morality.[62]

A shipmate buys the head of a victim of a recent fight, and takes it on board, where other natives proceed to eat the cheeks, proving the existence of cannibalism in New Zealand. Forster describes the mixed reactions of the company on board; the most shocked is Mahine, a native of Bora Bora who accompanies them. They take provisions in order to continue their journey, with the "hope of completing the circle round the South-Pole in a high latitude during the next inhospitable summer, and of returning to England within the space of eight months."[63]

Chapter III. The second course towards the high southern latitudes from New Zeeland to Easter Island.

Resolution sails south. Forster describes Mahine's reaction to seeing snow for the first time and to life on board. They observe Christmas at the Antarctic Circle, with icebergs often hindering their progress south. Going east and north again, they have finally "proved that no large land or continent exists in the South Sea within the temperate zone, and that if it exists at all, we have at least confined it within the antarctic circle."[64] Forster comments on the hardship of the voyage. When they turn south again, they are stopped at 71° 10' south by "a solid ice-field of immense extent."[65] They turn north again towards the tropics; many crew are afflicted with scurvy, and the captain with other illnesses, and they sail to Easter Island.

Chapter IV. An Account of Easter Island, and our Stay there.

A View of the Monuments of Easter Island, by William Hodges, c. 1776

As the voyagers come to Easter Island, the natives provide them with fresh bananas, which are very welcome to the crew that has lacked fresh provisions. Trade with the natives is not very successful, as they do not have much, and sometimes attempt to cheat. The sailors buy sexual favours fairly cheaply. Forster quotes from his father's journal, which describes seeing the moai and meeting the king. Forster closes with the observation by their companion Mahine, "the people were good, but the island very bad."[66]

Chapter V. Run from Easter Island to the Marquesas—Stay in Madre-de-Dios harbour on Waitahoo—Course from thence through the Islands to Taheitee.

As they sail slowly northwest towards the Marquesas Islands, many of the crew are sick again, including the captain. Forster's father has his dog killed to provide better food for Cook. When they arrive at the Marquesas, they trade with the natives for food. A native who has attempted to steal is shot dead by one of the officers. Forster describes the inhabitants and finds them overall very similar to those of the Society Islands. They sail to the King George Islands, discover the Palliser Islands, and return to Tahiti.

Chapter VI. An account of our second visit to the island of o-Taheitee.

Forster describes a war fleet of canoes and some of the background of the war. Red feathers are highly valued by the natives, leading to offers of prostitution from higher-ranked women than before. Mahine marries a Tahitian girl, and the ceremony is witnessed by a midshipman, who can't relate any details, and Forster laments the lost opportunity to observe the local customs. Forster describes the recent political and military history of the island. He concludes with a comparison of life in England and in Tahiti.

Chapter VII. The second stay at the Society Islands.

On their way from Tahiti to Huahine, they have a stowaway on board. Arrived at the island, they trade again, and there are various incidents involving theft. They encounter the arioi, a venerated religious order of people who remain childless by killing their newborn. It turns out that Mahine is a member of this order, but he is persuaded not to kill any of his own children. Forster describes more encounters and more of the religion and calendar of the natives.

Chapter VIII. Run from the Society to the Friendly Islands.

As they leave the Society Islands, about half of the crew suffer from venereal diseases. Forster discusses their prevalence and states that there is now proof that they existed before contact with Europeans. They discover Palmerston Island, but do not go ashore. They continue to Savage Island, where they are attacked and retreat. They continue to Nomuka and other of the Friendly Islands, where people are similar to those of Tongatapu, and Forster describes their houses and their trade. The sailors celebrate the second anniversary of their departure by drinking.

Book III

Cook's map of New Caledonia and the New Hebrides, titled Chart of discoveries made in the South Pacific Ocean in his majesty's ship Resolution under the command of Captain Cook. 1774., plate III of Cook's Voyage Towards the South Pole, vol II, 1777

Chapter I. An account of our stay at Mallicollo, and discovery of the New Hebrides.

The voyagers sail in the vicinities of Aurora Island, Lepers Island and Whitsun Island. After seeing the volcano on Ambrym, they turn to Mallicollo, where they engage with the natives. Forster reports their language as different from all South Sea dialects they encountered especially in its use of consonants. The natives are described as intelligent and perceptive, and an account is given of their body modifications and clothing, their food and their drums. As the voyagers sail south, some of the officers suffer from poisoning after eating a red fish. They discover the Shepherd Islands and then Sandwich Island, and continue south to Erromango, where they attempt to land in order to obtain fresh water, but are attacked by the natives. They see the lights of a volcano at night and then anchor close to it at Tanna Island.

Chapter II. Account of our stay at Tanna, and departure from the New Hebrides.

The Landing at Tanna, one of the New Hebrides, by William Hodges, 1775–1776

At Tanna, they meet the natives. As a demonstration of might, Cook has a cannon fired. When a man tries to steal the buoy, they fire more shots, without harming the natives. They manage to land and, after giving some presents to the natives and receiving coconuts in return, ask to take some fresh water and wood, which is granted. On the next day, the natives come aboard to trade, and when a man tries to take what he was bartering for without payment, Cook again uses firearms to punish the theft. Many natives gather on the shore in two groups, but Cook scares them away:

One of them, standing close to the water's edge, was so bold as to turn his posteriors towards us, and slap them with his hand, which is the usual challenge with all the nations of the South Sea. Captain Cook ordered another musket to be shot into the air, and, at this signal, the ship played her whole artillery, consisting of five four-pounders, two swivels, and four musketoons. The balls whistled over our heads, and making some havock among the coco-palms, had the desired effect, and entirely cleared the beach in a few moments.[67]

They stake out an area that the natives should not enter, and have no more trouble with them. Forster describes their hairstyle, bodypaint, and scars as well as their weaponry. Forster and his father make several excursions on the island and learn the names of several nearby islands from the natives. Whenever they approach a certain area, they are stopped by the natives who threaten to eat them. They do not succeed to approach the volcano, but measure temperatures at solfataras and hot springs. A native is shot dead by a marine despite Cook's orders. After 16 days, they depart. Forster comments at length on the island's geography, plants, animals and people. They sail near islands called Irronan and Anattom. Cook names the island group the New Hebrides. They sail north to Espiritu Santo and discover further small islands off its eastern coast. At Espiritu Santo, again the language is different from those previously encountered.

Chapter III. Discovery of New Caledonia.—Account of our stay there.—Range along the coast to our departure.—Discovery of Norfolk Island.—Return to New Zeeland.

Sailing south, they discover New Caledonia, come in contact with the natives and go ashore. Forster describes the clothes, earrings, and tattoos of the natives. With their help, they find a watering place. William Wales and Cook observe a solar eclipse. Forster observes some native women cooking, but they send him away. Cook's clerk purchases a fish that the Forsters identify as a Tetraodon and warns against the possibility that it might be poisonous, but as Cook claims to have eaten the same fish before, a meal is made of its liver. The liver is so oily that Cook and the Forsters eat very little of it, but still suffer symptoms of poisoning. When natives come aboard and see the fish, they make signs that it is bad and suggest to throw it in the sea. The poisoning makes excursions difficult, and Forster apologises for the lack of interesting content, asking the reader "to consider our unhappy situation at that time, when all our corporeal and intellectual faculties were impaired by this virulent poison."[68] They meet an albino native. When the natives observe the travellers eating a large beef bone, they are surprised and assume that this is a sign of cannibalism, as they have never seen large quadrupeds. They depart, and Forster compares the people of New Caledonia with others they have encountered. They continue eastwards along the coast of New Caledonia, aiming for New Zealand, discovering further small islands and catching a dolphin. Sailing south, they discover Norfolk Island. They quickly sail onwards to arrive at Queen Charlotte Sound in New Zealand.

Chapter IV. Third and last stay at Queen Charlotte's Sound, in New Zeeland.

Resolution stays in Queen Charlotte's Sound for repairs and restocking. They learn that there has been a battle between natives and some Europeans, with many dead, and are concerned for the Adventure. Forster reports on what they found out later: a boat with 10 people had gone ashore to collect celery and scurvy-grass when natives stole one of their jackets, and the Europeans fired at them until their ammunition was spent and were then killed by the natives. Forster reports on incidences of killings between New Zealanders and Europeans from other journeys. They make further excursions and interact and trade with the natives. Forster comments on their music, with some excerpts in musical notation. Having restocked on fish and antiscorbutics, they depart.

Chapter V. The course from New Zeeland to Tierra del Fuego.—Stay at Christmas Harbour.

They sail east towards Tierra del Fuego. They drop anchor in a small cove, 41 days after their departure from New Zealand. They make excursions and meet the natives, which Forster finds extraordinarily wretched. They sail on, around Cape Horn, pass the eastern side of Tierra del Fuego and sail eastwards to the small islands near Staten Islands that Cook calls New Year's Islands.

Chapter VI. Stay at the New Year's Islands. Discovery of lands to the southward. Return to the Cape of Good Hope.

Map of South Georgia, from James Cook's report, 1775. Note that North is downwards on the map.

Forster describes large seals, called sea-lions. The crew hunt sea-lions and penguins. They sail to the east and discover Willis Islands and claim South Georgia for Great Britain. They sail around South Georgia, proving it to be an island. They continue southward, but are stopped by ice fields, "greatly to the satisfaction of all the crew, who were at present thoroughly tired of this dreadful climate"[69] They sail east and discover Southern Thule and various other islands that Cook names Sandwich Land. Having exhausted their supply of antiscorbutic sauerkraut, they sail on to the Cape of Good Hope.

Chapter VII. Second stay at the Cape of Good Hope.—Run from thence to the Islands of St. Helena and Ascension.

At the Cape of Good Hope, they are restored to full health and hear news from Europe. They go on some excursions while the ship is repaired. A German stowaway is found on board, who is first punished then allowed to stay. They sail on to Saint Helena, where Cook learns of its incorrect description by Hawkesworth, and they are invited by the governor and to a ball. The next stop is Ascension, which Forster finds dreary. They encounter a ship from New York and catch turtles for food.

Chapter VIII. Run from Ascension, past the Island of Fernando da Noronha, to the Açores.—Stay at Fayal.—Return to England.

From Ascension, they sail west, coming in sight of Fernando de Noronha and exchanging salutes with forts there. They cross the equator again after two years and nine months in the Southern hemisphere. Their next stop is the Azores, where they anchor at Fayal, and visit the town Horta, where they stay in the house of the deputy consul. Forster proceeds to describe the Azores. They soon continue to England.

Thus, after escaping innumerable dangers, and suffering a long series of hardships, we happily completed a voyage, which had lasted three years and sixteen days; in the course of which, it is computed we run over a greater space of sea than any ship ever did before us; since, taking all our tracks together, they form more than thrice the circumference of the globe. We were likewise fortunate enough to lose only four men; three of whom died by accident, and one by a disease, which would perhaps have brought him to the grave much sooner had he continued in England. The principal view of our expedition, the search after a southern continent within the bounds of the temperate zone, was fulfilled; we had even searched the frozen seas of the opposite hemisphere, within the antarctic circle, without meeting with that vast tract of land which had formerly been supposed to exist.[70]

Reception and influence

Contemporary reviews

While it did not sell well, Voyage was well received critically in Britain, with many favourable reviews,[71] some of which gave quotations from both Forster's and Cook's report that demonstrated the superior style of the former.[72] For example, the Critical Review found fault with many mistakes in the engravings in Cook's book and with Cook's inclusion of nautical details, and after presenting lengthy sections where Forster's presentation is superior, concluded "We now leave the reader to judge for himself on the merits of each of these performances".[73] In the Monthly Review, an author identified by Robert L. Kahn as William Bewley[74] reviewed Voyage in the April and June issues, mostly giving a summary of the Preface in April[75] and of the rest of the voyage in June.[76] The reviewer concludes by "acknowledging the pleasure we have received from the perusal of this amusing and well-written journal ; which is rendered every where interesting by the pleasing manner in which the Author relates the various incidents of the voyage in general ; as well as those which occurred to himself, in particular, during his several botanical excursions into the country."[76] In The Lady's Magazine, two anonymous "Letters to the Editor" are followed by excerpts, first from Forster's Tahiti episode,[77] then from Cook's and Forster's description of the arrival at Middelburg Island.[78] The letter-writer praises the writing of Forster and the engravings in Cook's work, concluding "In our opinion it is worth every gentleman's while to purchase both, in order to compare the prints of the one, with the descriptions of the other ; but where one must be rejected, the choice of the reader will fall on Mr. Forster's narrative, whilst those who delight in pretty pictures, will prefer Cook's."[78]

Translations

The book was translated into German by Georg Forster and Rudolf Erich Raspe as Reise um die Welt.[79] The translation also included some additional material taken from Cook's report.[80] After publication of the German edition, excerpts of which were published in Wieland's influential journal Der Teutsche Merkur, both Forsters became famous, especially Georg, who was celebrated upon his arrival in Germany.[81][82] Reise um die Welt immediately made Georg Forster one of the most widely read writers in Germany.[83] Both Forsters eventually obtained professorships in Germany: Georg started teaching at the Collegium Carolinum in Kassel in 1778 and his father at Halle in 1780.[84] The first German edition sold out in 1782 and was followed by a second edition in 1784, and has become a classic of travel literature, reprinted in many editions.[85] Voyage was also translated into other European languages. Before 1800, translations into French, Russian, and Swedish appeared; additionally, a Spanish translation contained also parts of Cook's official account.[86]

Influence

Georg Forster and his works, especially Voyage, had a great influence on Alexander von Humboldt and his Voyage aux régions equinoxiales du Nouveau Continent.[87] In the article on Georg Forster in the 9th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Richard Garnett wrote about Voyage, "His account of Cook's voyage is almost the first example of the glowing yet faithful description of natural phenomena which has since made a knowledge of them the common property of the educated world, a prelude to Humboldt, as Humboldt to Darwin and Wallace."[88][89]

The book has been studied as one of the sources for Samuel Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, which is heavily influenced by reports of Cook's second journey, possibly because William Wales was one of Coleridge's teachers at Christ's Hospital.[90] According to Arnd Bohm, there are "details of imagery and wording that suggest Forster as the strongest influence."[91]

There has been a large body of literature studying Voyage since the 1950s,[92] including the PhD thesis of Ruth Dawson,[93] which contains the most extensive account of the genesis of the text.[32] The most widely studied part of the work is the content relating to Tahiti. Despite making up less than five percent of the text, almost half of the literature about Voyage has focused exclusively on this part of the journey.[94]

English editions

Other than an unauthorised reprint of both Cook's and Forster's reports that appeared in Dublin in 1777, the book was not reprinted in English for almost two centuries. In 1968, it appeared (edited by Robert L. Kahn) as the first volume of an edition of Forster's collected works, published by the East German Akademie-Verlag. Finally, in 2000 the University of Hawaii Press published an edition by Nicholas Thomas and Oliver Berghof.[95] The list of all editions is as follows:

  • 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. Vol. I. London: B. White. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  • 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. Vol. II. London: B. White. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  • Cook, James; Forster, Georg (1777). A voyage round the world, performed in His Britannic Majesty's ships the Resolution and Adventure, in the years 1772, 1773, 1774, and 1775. Dublin: Printed for W. Whitestone, S. Watson, R. Cross, J. Potts, J. Hoey, L.L. Flin, J. Williams, W. Colles, W. Wilson, R. Moncrieffe, T. Armitage, T. Walker, C. Jenkin, W. Hallhead, G. Burnett, J. Exshaw, L. White, and J. Beatty. OCLC 509240258.
  • Forster, Georg (1968). Kahn, R. L. (ed.). Werke: A voyage round the world. Akademie-Verlag. OCLC 310001820.
  • Forster, George (2000). Thomas, Nicholas; Berghof, Oliver (eds.). A voyage round the world. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 9780824861308. JSTOR j.ctvvn739. OCLC 70765538.

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Mariss 2019, p. 166.
  2. ^ Beaglehole 1992, p. viii.
  3. ^ Wilke 2013, p. 265.
  4. ^ Saine 1972, p. 20.
  5. ^ Hough 2003, p. 182–183.
  6. ^ Saine 1972, p. 21.
  7. ^ O'Brian 1997, p. 156.
  8. ^ a b Hoare 1967.
  9. ^ Hoare 1982, p. 43.
  10. ^ a b Thomas & Berghof 2000, p. xxvi.
  11. ^ The Royal Society.
  12. ^ Mariss 2019, p. 22.
  13. ^ Abbott 1970, p. 341.
  14. ^ Truss 2017.
  15. ^ Williams 2013, p. 113–114.
  16. ^ Beaglehole 1992, p. 465.
  17. ^ a b Williams 2013, p. 114.
  18. ^ a b Hoare 1982, p. 66.
  19. ^ Dawson 1973, p. 18.
  20. ^ Hoare 1976, p. 162.
  21. ^ Edwards 2004, p. 119.
  22. ^ Saine 1972, p. 23.
  23. ^ a b c Thomas & Berghof 2000, p. xxviii.
  24. ^ Dawson 1973, p. 34.
  25. ^ Görbert 2017.
  26. ^ Dawson 1973, p. 30–34.
  27. ^ Edwards 2004, p. 115.
  28. ^ Dawson 1973, p. 26.
  29. ^ Görbert 2014, p. 73–74.
  30. ^ Goldstein 2019, p. 25.
  31. ^ a b Görbert 2015.
  32. ^ Thomas 2016, p. 102.
  33. ^ a b Beaglehole 1992, p. 470.
  34. ^ Feingold 2017, p. 212.
  35. ^ Kahn 1968, p. 698.
  36. ^ Hoare 1976, p. 169.
  37. ^ a b Enzensberger 1996, p. 87.
  38. ^ Oberlies 2008.
  39. ^ a b Bodi 1959.
  40. ^ Wales 1778, p. 2.
  41. ^ Mariss 2019, p. 3.
  42. ^ Kahn 1968, p. 696-697.
  43. ^ Saine 1972, p. 24.
  44. ^ Peitsch 2001, p. 216.
  45. ^ Dawson 1973, p. 24.
  46. ^ Dawson 1973, p. 25.
  47. ^ Dawson 1973, p. 252.
  48. ^ Edwards 2004, p. 115–116.
  49. ^ Thomas & Berghof 2000, p. xxviii–xxix.
  50. ^ Hamilton 2010.
  51. ^ Edwards 2004, p. 120.
  52. ^ Forster 1777a, p. iv.
  53. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 36.
  54. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 108–109.
  55. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 120.
  56. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 187.
  57. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 211–212.
  58. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 253.
  59. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 264–265.
  60. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 488.
  61. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 510–511.
  62. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 526.
  63. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 540.
  64. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 544.
  65. ^ Forster 1777a, p. 601.
  66. ^ Forster 1777b, p. 272.
  67. ^ Forster 1777b, p. 411.
  68. ^ Forster 1777b, p. 575.
  69. ^ Forster 1777b, p. 604–605.
  70. ^ Williams 2013, p. 114-115.
  71. ^ Kahn 1968, p. 704-705.
  72. ^ Critical review 1777.
  73. ^ Kahn 1968, p. 703.
  74. ^ Bewley 1777a.
  75. ^ a b Bewley 1777b.
  76. ^ Lady's Magazine 1777a.
  77. ^ a b Lady's Magazine 1777b.
  78. ^ Harpprecht 1990, p. 180.
  79. ^ Görbert & Peitsch 2016.
  80. ^ Uhlig 2004, p. 107.
  81. ^ Liebersohn 2005.
  82. ^ Hahn & Fischer 1993, p. 15.
  83. ^ Craig 1969.
  84. ^ Lepenies 1983.
  85. ^ Kahn 1968, p. 702-704.
  86. ^ Ackerknecht 1955.
  87. ^ Garnett 1879.
  88. ^ Merz 1896, p. 179.
  89. ^ Smith 1956.
  90. ^ Bohm 1983.
  91. ^ Peitsch 2001, p. 215-222.
  92. ^ Dawson 1973.
  93. ^ Peitsch 2001, p. 219–220.
  94. ^ Thomas & Berghof 2000, p. xlv.

Bibliography