Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- INSTRUCTIONS TO THE BINDER
- INTRODUCTION
- A MEMORIAL ADDRESSED TO HIS CATHOLIC MAJESTY PHILIP THE THIRD, KING OF SPAIN
- RELATION OF LUIS VAEZ DE TORRES
- EXTRACT FROM THE BOOK OF DISPATCHES FROM BATAVIA
- THE VOYAGE AND SHIPWRECK OF CAPTAIN FRANCIS PELSART
- VOYAGE OF GERRIT THOMASZ POOL TO THE SOUTH LAND
- ACCOUNT OF THE WRECK OF THE SHIP “DE VERGULDE DRAECK”
- DESCRIPTION OF THE WEST COAST OF THE SOUTH LAND
- EXTRACT TRANSLATED FROM BURGOMASTER WITSEN'S
- ACCOUNT OF THE OBSERVATIONS OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM DAMPIER
- EXTRACT FROM SLOAN MS., 3236
- SOME PARTICULARS RELATING TO THE VOYAGE OF WILLEM DE VLAMINGH
- EXTRACT FROM THE JOURNAL OF A VOYAGE MADE TO THE UNEXPLORED SOUTH LAND
- ACCOUNT OF THE OBSERVATIONS OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM DAMPIER
- A WRITTEN DETAIL OF THE DISCOVERIES AND NOTICEABLE OCCURRENCES
- THE HOUTMAN'S ABROLHOS
- INDEX
- Outline Chart of TERRA AUSTRALIS OF AUSTRALIA
- Plate section
INTRODUCTION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- INSTRUCTIONS TO THE BINDER
- INTRODUCTION
- A MEMORIAL ADDRESSED TO HIS CATHOLIC MAJESTY PHILIP THE THIRD, KING OF SPAIN
- RELATION OF LUIS VAEZ DE TORRES
- EXTRACT FROM THE BOOK OF DISPATCHES FROM BATAVIA
- THE VOYAGE AND SHIPWRECK OF CAPTAIN FRANCIS PELSART
- VOYAGE OF GERRIT THOMASZ POOL TO THE SOUTH LAND
- ACCOUNT OF THE WRECK OF THE SHIP “DE VERGULDE DRAECK”
- DESCRIPTION OF THE WEST COAST OF THE SOUTH LAND
- EXTRACT TRANSLATED FROM BURGOMASTER WITSEN'S
- ACCOUNT OF THE OBSERVATIONS OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM DAMPIER
- EXTRACT FROM SLOAN MS., 3236
- SOME PARTICULARS RELATING TO THE VOYAGE OF WILLEM DE VLAMINGH
- EXTRACT FROM THE JOURNAL OF A VOYAGE MADE TO THE UNEXPLORED SOUTH LAND
- ACCOUNT OF THE OBSERVATIONS OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM DAMPIER
- A WRITTEN DETAIL OF THE DISCOVERIES AND NOTICEABLE OCCURRENCES
- THE HOUTMAN'S ABROLHOS
- INDEX
- Outline Chart of TERRA AUSTRALIS OF AUSTRALIA
- Plate section
Summary
When, at a period comparatively recent in the world's history, the discovery was made that, on the face of the as yet unmeasured ocean, there existed a western continent which rivalled in extent the world already known, it became a subject of natural enquiry whether a fact of such momentous importance could for so many thousands of years have remained a secret. Nor was the enquiry entirely without response. Amid the obscurity of the past some faint foreshadowings of the great reality appeared to be traceable. The poet with his prophecy, the sage with his mythic lore, and the unlettered seaman who, with curious eye, had peered into the mysteries of the far-stretching Atlantic, had each, as it now appeared, enunciated a problem which at length had met with its solution.
In these later days, when the enquiry has assumed gigantic proportions, and the facilities of investigation have been simultaneously increased, much has been done towards bringing to light the evidence of various ascertained or possible visitations from the Old World to the New, which had previously remained unknown. A summary of them has already been laid before the members of the Hakluyt Society by the editor of the present volume, in his introduction to the “Select Letters of Columbus”, and requires no repetition here.
Of the future results of that momentous discovery, what human intelligence can foresee the climax?
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- Early Voyages to Terra Australis, Now Called AustraliaA Collection of Documents, and Extracts from Early Manuscript Maps, Illustrative of the History of Discovery on the Coasts of that Vast Island, from the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century, pp. xiii - cxxviiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1859