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A New Voyage Round the World

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The first great English-language travel book, A New Voyage Round the World (1697) is an incomparably vivid, chaotic and fascinating account by the pirate, explorer and naturalist William Dampier of his many adventures.

The world he describes sprawls all the way from the Caribbean west across the Pacific to the Philippines and Southeast Asia - a vast expanse tied together by the Spanish Empire. Dampier and his men live lives of rascally precariousness, in the shadow of great Spanish galleons and fortresses, always on the verge of disaster. His book is filled with raids, escapes, wrecks and storms, but Dampier is also a great observer of animals, exotic foods, boats, customs: the book is a cornucopia of descriptions of everything from giant centipedes to bananas. It was originally designed simply to entertain and inform, but it is now a unique document, miraculously preserving glimpses of now long-vanished peoples and places.

This new edition, introduced and annotated by Nicholas Thomas, makes clear Dampier's key role as a proselytizer for the early British Empire, as an inspiration for generations of naturalist and explorers, and as a uniquely curious character.

512 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1697

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About the author

William Dampier

150 books9 followers
William Dampier (1651 - 1715) was an English pirate, explorer and navigator who became the first Englishman to explore parts of what is today Australia, and the first person to circumnavigate the world three times. He has also been described as Australia's first natural historian, as well as one of the most important British explorers of the period between Sir Walter Raleigh and James Cook.

Dampier was the son of a Somerset farmer. He sailed to Newfoundland and the East Indies while still a boy and took part in the Third Dutch War. After a brief sojourn in Jamaica as undermanager of a plantation, he joined the buccaneers of the Caribbean in Capt. Morgan's heyday. In 1686 Capt. Swan of the Cygnet, in which Dampier was sailing, decided to seek prizes in the Pacific before returning to England. After spending 6 months in the Philippines, Swan's crew seized the ship and cruised in Far Eastern waters between China and Australia. Dampier accordingly spent the summer of 1688 at King Sound in Western Australia. After being marooned on one of the Nicobar Islands, he traveled by native canoe to Sumatra and served as a gunner at Bencoelen before returning to England.

Dampier recorded details of his amazing adventures along with navigational data in a diary on which he based A New Voyage round the World and Voyages and Descriptions. Impressed with his work, the English Admiralty commissioned him with the rank of captain to command an expedition to explore the Australian coastline. He reached Shark Bay, Western Australia, in August 1699, and using Tasman's charts, he sailed up the coast for a month seeking an estuary. After revictualing at Timor, he proceeded along the north coast of New Guinea and discovered New Britain but abandoned plans to explore the east coast of Australia because his ship, the H. M. S. Roebuck, was in poor condition. On the way home, the Roebuck was lost off Ascension Island, and the crew were rescued by returning East India men.

A court-martial in 1702 found Dampier unfit to command a naval vessel. During the next 4 years he led an unsuccessful privateering expedition in the South Seas. Between 1708 and 1711 he again sailed around the world as pilot for Capt. Woodes Rogers, a privateer sponsored by Bristol merchants. Dampier died in London in March 1715 before receiving his share of the expedition's spoils.

Further Reading
An account of Dampier which notes both his achievements and defects is Christopher Lloyd, William Dampier (1966). See also Clennell Wilkinson, Dampier: Explorer and Buccaneer (1929).

Excerpted from http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Wil... (Encyclopedia of World Biography 2004)

*There seems to be some doubt as to whether it was 1651 or 1652 - various generally reliable sources contradict each other.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Anne Hamilton.
Author 57 books184 followers
November 6, 2015
In many ways it's hard to imagine this book as a bestseller of the seventeenth century. It chronicles the day-to-day life of an English buccaneer with a naturalist's bent. There's lots of sailing from island to island, crew squabbles, ordinary everyday routine - and, suddenly, occasionally, the outright exotic happens. However, I didn't feel it got genuinely interesting until the buccaneers arrived at Mindanao where political intrigue and cultural observations started to be rich and complex, instead of a hurried passing description.

Parking this passage here for future reference:

Other dangers did not come upon me with such a leisurely and dreadful Solemnity. A sudden Skirmish or Engagement, or so, was nothing when one’s Blood was up, and pushed forwards with eager Expectations. But here I had a lingering View of approaching Death, and little or no hopes of escaping it. And I must confess that my Courage, which I had hitherto kept up, failed me here, and I made very sad reflections on my former Life, looking back in Horror and Detestation on Actions which before I disliked, but no trembled at the remembrance of. I had long before this repented of that roving Course of Life, but never with such concern as now. I also called to mind the many miraculous Acts of God’s Providence towards me in the whole Course of my Life, of which kind I believe few Men have met with the like. For all these I returned Thanks in a peculiar Manner, and once more desired God’s Assistance, composing my Mind as well as I could in the Hopes of it, and, as the Event showed I was not disappointed of my Hopes.
18th May 1688, after leaving Australia in March.

Profile Image for Todd Cheng.
553 reviews15 followers
August 15, 2022
This is a tough read. However, it was the catalyst to attract Darwin into being a naturalist. The pirate and buccaneer was an exhaustive observer. He develops these journaled narratives on the people, cultures, diets, ecologies, and interactions in his travels in the late 1600s. He provides a time capsule of the state of the communities near the sea and the Dutch, French, Chinese, and English impacts.
Profile Image for محمد الزهراني.
64 reviews2 followers
August 21, 2024
أبحر القبطان "وليام دامبير" على متن سفينة سيجنت فى ( 1688-1689). قام خلال رحلته بجمع عينات من النباتات واحتفظ برسوم توضيحيَّة للحيوانات والنباتات في أنابيب من الخيزران مختومة بالشمع حتى لا يصلها الماء. وبعد شهرين من الاكتشافات والبحث عن المياة العذبة بدون جدوى، كانت آرائه غير إيجابيَّة وخرج بانطباعات سيَّئة عن الأبروجينيين هناك، وذكر في كتابه ( رحلة جديدة حول العالم):
" سُكان هذا البلد هم أفقر الناس في العالم، وبغض النظر عن أشكالهم البشريَّة إلا أنهم لا يختلفون إلا قليلاً عن الوحوش، مظاهرهم بشعة وغير سارة، وقاماتهم طويلة وضخمة ولا يحملون أي سمة رشيقة في وجوههم "
" أُنوفهم كبيرة وأفواههم واسعة ولهم شفاه مُمتلئة، والأسنان الأماميَّة من الفك العلوي مفقودة في الرجال والنساء، والأطفال .. وليس لهم لِحى . شعورهم سوداء مُجعَّدة تشبه شعور الزنوج . قصيرة وليست ناعمة وطويلة مثل شعور الهنود. لون جلودهم و سائر أجسادهم أسود فحميَّ مثل زُنوج غينيا. لا يلبسون سوى قطعة صغيرة من لِحاء الشجر الخفيف، يلفونها بحزامٍ حول خُصورهم ويغطون عريَّهم ببعض العشب أو بعض الأغصان الخضراء الصغيرة المليئة بأوراق الشجر. ليس لديهم منازل، ينامون في العراء دون أي غطاء.. الأرض سريرهم والسماء قُبتهم .
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#ترجمتي
Profile Image for ?.
213 reviews
February 21, 2024
A common man who went in search of adventure.
Profile Image for Kay Kay.
1 review
June 1, 2024
Just didn't like it, it wasn't my cup of tea so I'm going to give it to my step mom for her birthday gift since she likes reading too
Profile Image for Ronen.
56 reviews21 followers
August 7, 2010
Didn't actually finish it, I had trouble relating to it and had trouble following the account. More maps could have been useful.
Profile Image for Jeff.
Author 7 books41 followers
September 19, 2009
Like any sea voyage, long stretches of the doldrums broken up by some interesting landfalls...
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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