WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Japan expedition. Japan and around the world / An account of three visits to the Japanese empire, with sketches of Madeira, St. Helena, cape of Good Hope, Mauritius, Ceylon, Singapore, China, and Loo-Choo cover

The Japan expedition. Japan and around the world / An account of three visits to the Japanese empire, with sketches of Madeira, St. Helena, cape of Good Hope, Mauritius, Ceylon, Singapore, China, and Loo-Choo

Chapter 3: PREFACE.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

The author recounts nearly two and a half years aboard a steam frigate during three visits to Japan and stops along Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific routes, offering descriptive sketches of ports such as Madeira, St. Helena, the Cape, Mauritius, Ceylon, Singapore, China, and the Loo-Choo islands. He blends shipboard routine and seafaring incidents with onshore observations of landscapes, markets, temples, and everyday customs. Practical details about navigation, health, and provisioning punctuate the narrative, while historical outlines and local anecdotes supply context for impressions formed during diplomatic and commercial voyages.

PREFACE.

The kindness and courtesy of that fine officer and estimable gentleman, Commander Sydney Smith Lee, in conferring upon the writer a position on the ship under his command, gave him the opportunity of seeing the “wonders of the world abroad,” in the Japan Expedition.

The following pages do not profess to be a history of Japan, of which there are already a number extant, but only embody observations of what came under notice, in a cruise of nearly two and a half years. They do not pretend to invariable accuracy, the writer having kept no journal, and having had to depend on scattered memoranda, jottings down to friends, and to memory. He has endeavored to tell the tale of his travels, as his eyes told it to him.

He has indulged in no adjectives about the ocean, because he believes that there has been more deliberate nonsense written upon it, than upon any other thing in all Nature.

Richmond, Va., 1855.