WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Life and Adventure in the South Pacific cover

Life and Adventure in the South Pacific

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

The narrative presents a first-person account of five years in the South Pacific whaling trade, combining practical description of fitting out in New Bedford, shipboard routines, and the technical phases of hunting and processing whales—boat work, masthead lookouts, cutting in, and trying out. It records storms, crossings, island visits and port calls across Pacific archipelagos, encounters with local inhabitants, episodes of desertion and discipline, and the daily food, illness, and camaraderie of sailors. Interwoven are naturalistic observations of whale species and seascapes, vivid episodic scenes of pursuit and capture, and reflections on hardship, luck, and the rhythms of long maritime voyages.

PREFACE.

The present volume lays no claim to literary merit. Two young men, led to engage in the whale-fisheries, and spending five years in the employment, have compiled from their log-books and their recollection a plain, unvarnished narrative of this period. The work is placed before the public as an account of localities few have visited, and the detail of an employment of which little is generally known. The chief effort in the way of style has been to give vivid descriptions, and make the reader the companion of the traveler. Aside from the information of the volume, it is enlivened by “life on shipboard.”

In these days of many books, in which “voyages” have no small representation, it may seem almost presumptuous to put forth another tale of travel. Yet every traveler has his own experiences; and the sailors who offer here their narrative for the landsman’s inspection believe that their yarn is not an old one, and they have some confidence that the reader will not say it is a dull one.