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+ | ====== 1767 Knox Preface ====== | ||
+ | * A new collection of voyages, discoveries and travels\\ containing whatever is worthy of notice, in Europe, Asia, Africa and America : in respect to the situation and extent of empires, kingdoms, and provinces : their climates, soil, produce, &c. with the manners and customs of the several inhabitants, | ||
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+ | Im Vorwort bewertet der Kompilator Reisende, die Autoren von Reiseberichten, | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====== Preface ====== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====== [Band 1] III ====== | ||
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+ | Few books are more pleasing or instructive than those which contain accounts of travels or voyages, into distant countries. But at the same time, no writers seem more incapable of describing what they fee, or more liable to be imposed upon by others, than many of those to whom we owe productions of this nature. The lot of visiting foreign climates; or travering: lavage lands, has generally fallen to the avaritious or the devout, men whose views were contracted by gain, or blinded by superstitions thus, though in general they tell us what they have observed, their accounts are mixed with instances of gross ignorance, or mistaken zeal. We generally find their productions loaded with minute and uninteresting transactions, | ||
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+ | The being acquainted with the world from books of this kind, thus becoming a task almost as dificult as visiting in person the places they describe; and the numbers of such books still increasing the difficulty, it was by many thought adviseable to reduce the number, and retrench the absurdities of such works by compilation. To this we owe the many Collections of voyages and travels that have been published at different times among us, all prosessing to afford the reader | ||
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+ | ====== IV ====== | ||
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+ | the greatest pleasure in the smallest compass, the greatest benefits at the smallest expence. The three most considerable collections of this kind are '' | ||
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+ | '' | ||
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+ | The former observations are in a great measure applicable to the collection by Dr. '' | ||
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+ | ====== V ====== | ||
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+ | with so little care, that they may justly be considered and ranked among the number of those works which are merely calculated to please the vulgar. some of these compilations therefore, though promising in the title the contents of a folio, are too small to afford much entertainment to the disappointed purchaser. | ||
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+ | To mix profit with delight should be the aim of all writers, and the business of every book: and nothing can contribute more to these valuable ends than a judicious work of this nature, in which we can travel to the most distant corners of the world, without stirring from our closets, choose the most entertaining route, embark with the most agreeable companions, view remote cities and their governments, | ||
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+ | These purposes, we apprehend, have not been fully antwered in the voluminous collections which have hitherto appeared in our language; the size and price of a folio are sufficient to intimidate an ordinary reader from purchasing the work, or perusing its contents. And what we observed in regard to travels is equally applicable to the numerous accounts of voyages that have obtained a place in even the best compilations. They are generally so stuffed with dry descriptions of bearings and distances, tides and currents, variations of the compass, leeward, wind and weather, founding, anchoring, and other terms of navigation, that none but mere pilots, or seafaring people, can read | ||
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+ | ====== VI ====== | ||
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+ | them without disgust. In a word, they are filled with such remarks as may be very useful in a sea-journal, | ||
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+ | From these considerations, | ||
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+ | In order to this, great care was to be taken in the selecting of proper guides. And even in some of the best, the caution was to be used of not implicitly following them into error or absurdities. | ||
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+ | In the arrangement of the materials, we have brought together the different accounts of each country into one view, though they may have | ||
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+ | ====== VII ====== | ||
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+ | been made at very distant periods; and when there was an opportunity of choice among writers on the same nation, the latest visitors have generally been preferred, as likely to give the least fallacious information. | ||
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+ | This collection admitted of a natural division into two capital parts, namely, those who visited the coasts only, and of those who travelled through the interior countries. In the Voyages, which form the first part of this work, the reader will find a true picture of naval vicissitudes and dangers. The courses pursued by vessels from one country to another, their shipwrecks and escapes. Here will be found descriptions of the several coasts, bays, rivers and harbours, with such accounts of the inhabitants as a cursory acquaintance could supply. | ||
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+ | The latter part of this work consists of Travels only, and exhibits the interior parts. The accounts of these contain a more minute detail of the natural history of each country, its monuments of antiquity, its government, religion, com merce, manners, and spirit of thinking. The whole given not with the dry and disgusting prolixity of a geographer, but for the most part in the language of the travellers themselves; a language in some instances rude indeed, but energetic, expressive of the feelings of men acquainted with fatigue and with danger. Nor will it be one of the smallest advantages of this work, that we have scarce any where omitted the hazard, the calamities, the hair-breadth escapes, which these bold men have endured and surmounted. These accounts interest us as we read, we travel on with the pilgrim; fear for his distresses, | ||
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+ | ====== VIII ====== | ||
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+ | and exult in his deliverance and satisfaction. | ||
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+ | From this method it is hoped that we have united the two great aims of every writer, instruction and amusement. While the reader is only pursuing his entertainment, | ||
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+ | In pursuance of this plan, the first volume contains, besides the compendium of geography above mentioned, the first discovery of America, by '' | ||
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+ | ====== IX ====== | ||
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+ | with a view of the policy which regulates the trade between Old spain and its colonies; containing some curious particulars not generally known. | ||
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+ | In the second volume we give in '' | ||
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+ | ====== X ====== | ||
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+ | given from '' | ||
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+ | Having thus, as far as our design admitted, exhausted the description of the New World, we next proceed to the first discovery of the East Indies by the Portuguese, and in an introduction to '' | ||
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+ | Having now given the completest accounts that could be obtained from the preceding method, of the western and eastern navigations; | ||
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+ | ====== XI ====== | ||
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+ | their wealth and their discoveries. Of these we have selected '' | ||
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+ | With the circumnavigators, | ||
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+ | After traversing so many foreign countries, it would be an unpardonable omission to have overlooked our own, and like some ministers, | ||
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+ | ====== XII ====== | ||
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+ | too much employed in foreign conquests, leave our native dominions unregarded. In other countries we had, perhaps, scenes of natural beauty, luxuriant soils, and happy climates to describe; but in Britain we chiefly confined ourselves to what makes the happiness of the people still superior to that derived from such advantages, namely, the government of the country, its constitution and excellent laws. It is these which make Great Britain the delight, the envy and the mistress of the world; and in this part of our undertaking, | ||
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+ | Having described our interior government and laws, it was thought a necessary conclusion to this work to exhibit a short historical view of our naval transactions from the time when our navy became respectable by the defeat of the spanish Armada, to the end of the late successful war. Nor will this be so foreign from our principal design, as may appear on a transient glance: for in this we shall see the effect of wife regulations on land powerfully operating on the ocean, we shall see how far a just policy at home is capable of rendering us formidable in every part abroad. | ||
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+ | This, it is hoped, will suffice (nor could less have been sufficient) to give the reader a previous idea of the nature of the collection here put into his hands; of the labour this work hath cost, | ||
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+ | ====== XIII ====== | ||
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+ | of the many volumes we have been obliged to wade through, and which were to be read, though they were at length to be rejected. Men not versed in studies of this kind are apt to overlook a collector' |