Produced by Ron Swanson
[Frontispiece: PTOLEMY'S MAP OF THE WORLD, ORIGINALLY DRAWN ABOUT A.D. 150. From the first printed edition of 1472 (the first book to have printed maps) and the famous Rome edition of 1508. It is only necessary to compare this map with the mythical geography represented in a mediaeval map such as the Hereford map of the world, made _eleven centuries_ later to recognise the extraordinary accuracy and scientific value of Ptolemy's geography.]
A BOOK OF DISCOVERY THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD'S EXPLORATION, FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE FINDING OF THE SOUTH POLE
By M. B. SYNGE, F.R.Hist.S. AUTHOR OF "THE STORY OF THE WORLD" "A SHORT HISTORY OF SOCIAL LIFE IN ENGLAND" ETC.
_FULLY ILLUSTRATED FROM AUTHENTIC SOURCES AND WITH MAPS_
[Illustration: THE _GOLDEN HIND_ (_From the Chart of "Drake's Voyages"_)]
LONDON: T. C. & E. C. JACK, LTD. 35 PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C., & EDINBURGH
INTRODUCTION
"Hope went before them, and the world was wide."
Such was the spirit in which the exploration of the world was accomplished. It was the inspiration that carried men of old far beyond the sunrise into those magic and silent seas whereon no boat had ever sailed. It is the incentive of those to-day with the wander-thirst in their souls, who travel and suffer in the travelling, though there are fewer prizes left to win. But
"The reward is in the doing, And the rapture of pursuing Is the prize."
"To travel hopefully," says Stevenson, "is a better thing than to arrive." This would explain the fact that this Book of Discovery has become a record of splendid endurance, of hardships bravely borne, of silent toil, of courage and resolution unequalled in the annals of mankind, of self-sacrifice unrivalled and faithful lives laid ungrudgingly down. Of the many who went forth, the few only attained. It is of these few that this book tells.
"All these," says the poet in Ecclesiastes--"all these were honoured in their generation, and were the glory of their times ... their name liveth for evermore."
But while we read of those master-spirits who succeeded, let us never forget those who failed to achieve.
"Anybody might have found it, but the Whisper came to Me."
Enthusiasm too was the secret of their success. Among the best of crews there was always some one who would have turned back, but the world would never have been explored had it not been for those finer spirits who resolutely went on--even to the death.
This is what carried Alexander the Great to the "earth's utmost verge," that drew Columbus across the trackless Atlantic, that nerved Vasco da Gama to double the Stormy Cape, that induced Magellan to face the dreaded straits now called by his name, that made it possible for men to face without flinching the ice-bound regions of the far North.
"There is no land uninhabitable, nor sea unnavigable," asserted the men of the sixteenth century, when England set herself to take possession of her heritage in the North. Such an heroic temper could overcome all things. But the cost was great, the sufferings intense.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Book of Discovery by M. B. Synge
- 2: To discover inhospitable shores and savage foes
- 3: With Pillars of Hercules guarding the Straits of Gibraltar
- 4: The end of mediaeval exploration
- 5: Sturt's discoveries in australia
- 6: The Hereford Mappa Mundi of 1280
- 7: And the Cities of Nineveh and Babylon
- 8: 117 From a Miniature in the Livre des Merveilles
- 9: 160 From a Woodcut of 1494
- 10: Hondius his Map of the Magellan Streight
- 11: Barents in the Arctic Hut wherein we wintered
- 12: 355 From a Sketch by MUNGO PARK
- 13: 471 From BAKER'S Albert Nyanza
- 14: 507The Vega frozen in for the Winter
- 15: And cypress were brought from Lebanon to Chaldea
- 16: I am a prince of the land of Punt
- 17: Illustration EGYPTIAN SHIP OF THE EXPEDITION TO PUNT
- 18: Illustration A PHOENICIAN SHIP
- 19: Illustration A MAP OF THE VOYAGE OF THE ARGONAUTS
- 20: But contrary winds drove him as far south as Cape Malea
- 21: The famous rock of Scylla and whirlpool of Charybdis
- 22: The voyage was arranged by Neco
- 23: I once went aboard a Phoenician ship
- 24: The centre of the earth was at Delphi
- 25: But Herodotus does not believe in Crophi and Mophi
- 26: Or the Coasting Survey of Hanno
- 27: To what is now called Sierra Leone
- 28: They crossed the Tigris near its source
- 29: Footnote 1 Kandahar Alexandria in a modern form
- 30: And the army of Porus was annihilated
- 31: Prows were dashed against poops
- 32: Nearchus saw that something must be done at once
- 33: But Eratosthenes did more than this
- 34: From the Tagus to the Pyrenees
- 35: But Himilco returned home by the Azores or Fortunate Islands
- 36: Pytheas said that Thule was six days' sail north of Britain
- 37: His ships were ready on the Loire
- 38: Caesar was determined to cross the Rhine
- 39: Strabo had travelled himself from Armenia and western Italy
- 40: Runs parallel to the Guadalquivir
- 41: The tunny fish become gradually thinner
- 42: Drusus crossed the Rhine near the coast
- 43: But Pliny has news of land beyond the Elbe
- 44: The world as known to ptolemy and the romans
- 45: Ptolemy wrote just a thousand years after Homer
- 46: From Matthew of Paris's Itinerary
- 47: One of the earliest was Paula of Rome a weak
- 48: Patrick climbed the great peak
- 49: Columba and his disciples across the rough mountains
- 50: Made welcome by an Irish monk Adamnan
- 51: Illustration THE WORLD MAP OF COSMAS
- 52: Illustration THE MOUNTAIN OF COSMAS
- 53: Shipload followed shipload from Iceland to colonise Vinland
- 54: That he dwelt northmost of all Northmen
- 55: Illustration A CHINESE EMPEROR GIVING AUDIENCE
- 56: Sindbad was a native of Bagdad
- 57: Here Sindbad found the camphor trees
- 58: Sindbad as usual escapes upon a plank
- 59: Carpini made his way eastwards
- 60: We shall hear of Prester John again
- 61: For very soon Rubruquis found that his toes were frozen
- 62: Illustration MARCO POLO LANDS AT ORMUZ
- 63: It had but lately fallen into the hands of Kublai Khan
- 64: Throughout the whole province of Cathay
- 65: At last the Polo family wearied of Court honours
- 66: While the work of Ibn Batuta remains entirely disregarded
- 67: Ibn held this office for eight years
- 68: 'there are cocks in China much bigger than that
- 69: Preserved in the library at Albi in Languedoc
- 70: Drawn by Richard de Haldingham and Lafford
- 71: Dreariest spots of sunny Portugal
- 72: Till in 1441 two men Gonsalves
- 73: And Cadamosto turned home again
- 74: It was prepared between 1457 and 1459
- 75: Another thirteen years and Diego Cam
- 76: What neither Diaz nor his crew even suspected
- 77: He learnt the art of navigation
- 78: Illustration THE BEST PORTRAIT OF COLUMBUS
- 79: The Pinta leads and her crew are raising the 'Te Deum
- 80: Suddenly the Pinta disappeared
- 81: Making for the island of Hayti
- 82: Columbus again started off on his third voyage
- 83: Illustration AMERIGO VESPUCCI
- 84: Whither the eyes of the Portuguese were still straining
- 85: With angry words Vasco da Gama bade them be silent
- 86: Illustration CALICUT AND THE SOUTHERN INDIAN COAST
- 87: September found Cabral at last at anchor off Calicut
- 88: Cabral in revenge bombarded the city
- 89: Almeida built a strong fortress near Zanzibar
- 90: And he was succeeded by the famous Albuquerque
- 91: This great discovery was left to Vasco Nunez de Balboa
- 92: Balboa resolved to find this great sea
- 93: Whilst Balboa himself plunged in
- 94: Anselm appeared to us several times
- 95: Illustration FERDINAND MAGELLAN
- 96: Illustration HONDIUS HIS MAP OF THE MAGELLAN STREIGHT
- 97: Magellan landed with armed men
- 98: And soon young Juan Grijalva was on his way to the same land
- 99: After the original portrait at Mexico
- 100: Murmurs arose which reached the ears of Cortes
- 101: And precious stones taken by Cortes
- 102: Whence Pizarro sailed for Spain
- 103: We prepared for our entrance into Caxamalea
- 104: Off started Orellana down the river
- 105: Cabot got leave from the English King
- 106: Showing sebastian cabot's voyage to newfoundland
- 107: And a good deal was known when Jacques Cartier
- 108: Cartier arrived at the native town of Hochelaga
- 109: The Isola de Demoni is Labrador
- 110: All ways apparently led to Cathay
- 111: Willoughby led his ships to the Lofoten Islands
- 112: Master Jenkinson made his way to the Volga
- 113: He should be called Mendax Pinto
- 114: Illustration GREENLANDERS AS SEEN BY MARTIN FROBISHER
- 115: Illustration SIR FRANCIS DRAKE
- 116: Illustration SIR FRANCIS DRAKE
- 117: As he named his country New Albion
- 118: Sir Francis Drake died at sea in 1596
- 119: And in 1585 they chose John Davis
- 120: But Cathay seemed as far off as ever
- 121: Towards the kingdoms of Cathay and China
- 122: Illustration NOVA ZEMBLA AND THE ARCTIC REGIONS
- 123: Then William Barents wrote a letter
- 124: The sufferings of Barents and his men
- 125: And he persuaded the Muscovy Company to let him go off again
- 126: And the hot baths of Iceland delighted them
- 127: You will know soon enough when you are in the shallop
- 128: William Baffin sailed for the northern seas
- 129: Keep along the coast of Greenland and up Davis Strait
- 130: Descry the spires of El Dorado
- 131: Besides the Orinoco in South America
- 132: Champlain and his two companions
- 133: To the land of the cannibal Nipissings
- 134: Illustration AN EARLY MAP OF TERRA AUSTRALIS
- 135: Captain Pelsart commanded the Batavia
- 136: And one of his most trusted commanders was Abel Tasman
- 137: We named it Staaten Land in honour of the States General
- 138: Dampier makes his observations
- 139: Dampier had spent five weeks cruising off the coast
- 140: A week later Behring started for Kamtchatka
- 141: To sail to Kamtchatka and thence to Japan
- 142: He proposed to make Kamtchatka again his headquarters
- 143: Spending his boyhood in the neighbourhood of Whitby
- 144: Orange and lemon juice and portable soup was put on board
- 145: He sailed north till he reached Cape Turnagain
- 146: Naming the last point of land Cape Farewell
- 147: But the climate of Batavia now wrought havoc among the men
- 148: To stand farther to the south for ice
- 149: They were now in the sea discovered by Behring
- 150: That the celebrated Circumnavigator
- 151: On 26th January 1788 he landed at Botany Bay
- 152: Whence he reached Bengazi once more
- 153: The canja bore Bruce on the first stage of his great journey
- 154: He drank the King's health and sailed across to Masuah
- 155: To the admiration of these wild Abyssinian folk
- 156: And established schools and mosques westward of Timbuktu
- 157: When Mumbo Jumbo announced the offending wife
- 158: And at last Mungo fell on the sand
- 159: And a few years later he started off again to reach Timbuktu
- 160: Vancouver made for Nootka Sound
- 161: And myself dined with Senor Quadra
- 162: Which had been discovered by Vancouver the year before
- 163: Cried Sacheuse to the astonished natives
- 164: And a bay which still bears the name of Hecla and Griper Bay
- 165: And an English sailor named John Hepburn
- 166: And Parry Bay after my friend
- 167: Even in the tragic history of Arctic exploration
- 168: The Strait of the Fury and Hecla
- 169: With what heartfelt emotion I first saw it unfurled
- 170: In Franklin's Second Expedition to the Polar Sea
- 171: Leaving the Hecla in safe harbour on the Spitzbergen coast
- 172: The mystery of Timbuktu and the Niger remained unsolved
- 173: But Lake Tchad was not their goal
- 174: And Oudney was growing rapidly worse
- 175: They had descended the river from Timbuktu to Bussa
- 176: Our canoe passed smoothly along the Niger
- 177: A messenger from the Chief of Bonney on the coast
- 178: Drawing them charts of Boothia Gulf beyond Felix Harbour
- 179: Once commanded by Captain Ross
- 180: Illustration MATTHEW FLINDERS
- 181: Kangaroo Island speaks for itself
- 182: Flinders as usual was the moving spirit
- 183: Fortunately before reaching Mauritius
- 184: The Murrumbidgee is a magnificent stream
- 185: Thinking that Sturt was asleep
- 186: Illustration BURKE AND WILLS AT COOPER'S CREEK
- 187: Nine hundred miles from Hobart Town
- 188: From Ross's Voyage in Antarctic Regions
- 189: And Franklin was appointed to the Erebus and Terror
- 190: McClintock sailed from Beechey Island
- 191: McClintock led his party along the coast
- 192: At the discovery of lake ngami
- 193: With twenty seven faithful black Makololos
- 194: Nor were the Makololos forgotten
- 195: Which form the site of Quilimane
- 196: They stayed over a month at Kaze
- 197: Illustration BURTON IN A DUG OUT ON LAKE TANGANYIKA
- 198: Illustration THE MA ROBERT ON THE ZAMBESI
- 199: The residence of the British Commissioner for Nyassaland
- 200: You have really entered the kingdom of Uganda
- 201: Illustration THE RIPON FALLS ON THE VICTORIA NYANZA
- 202: And soon after the two explorers walked into Gondokoro
- 203: It was a fifty days' voyage to Gondokoro
- 204: I called this great lake 'the Albert Nyanza
- 205: Wrote Livingstone from Rovuma Bay
- 206: Livingstone once more reached Lake Nyassa
- 207: Lake Meoro seems of goodly size
- 208: To take a good look at the Lualaba here
- 209: Descending into marshy regions north of Lake Bangweolo
- 210: Discovered by Speke sixteen years before
- 211: Stanley now took his whole expedition to Uganda
- 212: And now the famous Arab Tippu Tib comes on the scene
- 213: Seventeen days from Nyangwe we saw again the great river and
- 214: At the junction of the Aruwimi
- 215: On 31st July he reached the Isangila cataract
- 216: Nordenskiold the Swede was to have this honour
- 217: Four reindeer were put side by side to each sledge
- 218: On 3rd September a thick snowstorm came on
- 219: But Nordenskiold could not wait long
- 220: Where Nordenskiold was presented to the Mikado
- 221: I was afraid to admit any Firinghis into the country
- 222: We would go to Lhasa whatever obstacles impeded
- 223: It is here the Dalai Lama has set up his abode
- 224: The Potala has been photographed
- 225: It stood straight above Cape Chelyuskin
- 226: To celebrate the 82nd degree of latitude
- 227: Once Nansen was very nearly drowned
- 228: Nansen was surveying the lonely line of coast
- 229: Where Peary had wintered before in 1905
- 230: There were races for the Eskimos
- 231: With four sledges and nineteen dogs
- 232: Shackleton was now invalided home
- 233: Shrieking blizzard made all further advance impossible
- 234: Which was fatal to the motor car carried by Shackleton
- 235: The crevasses in the ice were very bad
- 236: 170 74 Ptolemy's Geography and Maps
- 237: 1419 140 Zarco discovers Madeira
- 238: 1857 454 Speke sees Victoria Nyanza
- 239: A Book of Discovery by M. B. Synge
- 240: A Book of Discovery by M. B. Synge
- 241: Itinerary from Bordeaux to Jerusalem
- 242: A Book of Discovery by M. B. Synge
- 243: A Book of Discovery by M. B. Synge
- 244: A Book of Discovery by M. B. Synge
