Captain Cook’s Epic Voyage Quotes
Captain Cook’s Epic Voyage
by
Geoffrey Blainey154 ratings, 4.19 average rating, 12 reviews
Captain Cook’s Epic Voyage Quotes
Showing 1-2 of 2
“Captain James Cook himself remains a hero. One of the most remarkable voyagers in the long history of the seas, he deserves far more praise than blame. Contrary to the common belief, he admired the Aborigines and facets of their traditional way of life. Above all he grasped this continent and began unknowingly the work of knitting it again to the outside world. On the whole the outside world has gained because of his epic voyage. The settlers who arrived after him eventually made this land so productive that it is capable, almost annually, of feeding tens of millions of people in foreign lands as well as all those in Australia.”
― Captain Cook’s Epic Voyage
― Captain Cook’s Epic Voyage
“The Latin language is no longer read widely, and so we have lost sight of the old distinction between the real Terra Australis or Australia on the one hand, and the unknown continent called Terra Australis Incognita on the other. That distinction, however, was real to scientists and geographers living in the eighteenth century. They knew of one southern continent, now known as Australia, but then called New Holland by the Dutch and even by the English. But somewhere, out in the vastness of the Pacific Ocean, lay another and richer continent, which, they believed, was waiting to be found.”
― Captain Cook’s Epic Voyage
― Captain Cook’s Epic Voyage