'Univesiti Fakafonua 'a Tonga -
Tonga National University
Ko e Mo’oni, Ko e Totonu mo e Tau’ataina - Truth, Justice, Freedom



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The life of Captain James Cook / by J. C. Beaglehole.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Stanford, California : Stanford University Press, [1974]Copyright date: c1974Description: xi, 760 pages, 8 unnumbered leaves of plates (1 folded) : illustrations, maps, color portrait ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0804708487
  • 9780804708487
  • 0804720096
  • 9780804720090
  • 0713613823
  • 9780713613827
Subject(s): Other classification:
  • HK 1779
  • NN 7500
  • RB 10032
Online resources:
Contents:
The North Sea -- The Navy -- The master -- Newfoundland -- Scientific background -- Preparations -- Passage to Tahiti -- Tahiti -- New Zealand -- New South Wales -- Batavia to England -- England 1771-1772 -- England to New Zealand -- The first island sweep -- The Antarctic again -- The second island sweep -- From New Zealand to England -- England 1775-1776 -- A third voyage -- England to New Zealand again -- New Zealand to Tonga -- Last days at Tahiti -- To New Albion -- The North-West Coast -- Kealakekua Bay -- End of a voyage.
Summary: Captain Cook is the greatest explorer-seaman of all time, yet the world has had to wait almost two centuries for the first full-scale biography to do justice to the man and his achievements. Professor J.C. Beaglehole, the leading authority on Pacific exploration, devoted himself for many years to the editing of Cook's copious Journals, a monument of scholarship in four massive volumes, and the Journal of Joseph Banks, who accompanied Cook in the Endeavor. The Journals completed, Beaglehole turned to writing as the crown of his life's work, this biography of Cook, which was completed but for a final checking when he died.Summary: This is not merely a chronological account of events in Cook's life but a deeply revealing study of the growth of a complex character, stubborn and passionate yet patient and judicious, seen in his actions as an unrivalled navigator and explorer and as a commander of men. Those who influenced Cook from childhood up, and those who sailed with him on his voyages, are as clearly and surely drawn as the man himself. The author's first-hand knowledge of the Pacific Islands and the coasts of New Zealand and Australia give a warmth and actuality to the narrative, while his impeccable scholarship and skill in handling the mass of documentary material, his wit, and his elegant literary style, confirm the expectration that this is one of the great historical biographies.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Texts - cam Texts - cam TNU, Faculty of Education, Arts and Humanities Pasifika Collection PAC 910.92 BEA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan FEAH25072405

Includes bibliographical references (pages 715-734) and index.

The North Sea -- The Navy -- The master -- Newfoundland -- Scientific background -- Preparations -- Passage to Tahiti -- Tahiti -- New Zealand -- New South Wales -- Batavia to England -- England 1771-1772 -- England to New Zealand -- The first island sweep -- The Antarctic again -- The second island sweep -- From New Zealand to England -- England 1775-1776 -- A third voyage -- England to New Zealand again -- New Zealand to Tonga -- Last days at Tahiti -- To New Albion -- The North-West Coast -- Kealakekua Bay -- End of a voyage.

University of California, San Diego. Hill collection of Pacific voyages (2nd edition), 86

Captain Cook is the greatest explorer-seaman of all time, yet the world has had to wait almost two centuries for the first full-scale biography to do justice to the man and his achievements. Professor J.C. Beaglehole, the leading authority on Pacific exploration, devoted himself for many years to the editing of Cook's copious Journals, a monument of scholarship in four massive volumes, and the Journal of Joseph Banks, who accompanied Cook in the Endeavor. The Journals completed, Beaglehole turned to writing as the crown of his life's work, this biography of Cook, which was completed but for a final checking when he died.

This is not merely a chronological account of events in Cook's life but a deeply revealing study of the growth of a complex character, stubborn and passionate yet patient and judicious, seen in his actions as an unrivalled navigator and explorer and as a commander of men. Those who influenced Cook from childhood up, and those who sailed with him on his voyages, are as clearly and surely drawn as the man himself. The author's first-hand knowledge of the Pacific Islands and the coasts of New Zealand and Australia give a warmth and actuality to the narrative, while his impeccable scholarship and skill in handling the mass of documentary material, his wit, and his elegant literary style, confirm the expectration that this is one of the great historical biographies.

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