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Narrative of the Voyages Round The World, Performed by Captain James Cook
CHAPTER VII. Character of Captain Cook.--Effects of his Voyages.--Testimonies of Applause.--Commemorations of his Services.--Regard paid to his Family
Andrew Kippis
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       _ From the relation that has been given of Captain Cook's course of
       life, and of the important events in which he was engaged, my readers
       cannot be strangers to his general character. This, therefore, might
       be left to be collected from his actions, which are the best
       exhibitions of the great qualities of his mind. But, perhaps, were I
       not to endeavour to afford a summary view of him in these respects, I
       might be thought to fail in that duty which I owe to the public on the
       present occasion.
       It cannot, I think, be denied, that genius belonged to Captain Cook in
       an eminent degree. By genius, I do not here understand imagination
       merely, or that power of culling the flowers of fancy which poetry,
       delights in; but an inventive mind; a mind full of resources; and,
       which, by its own native vigour, can suggest noble objects of pursuit
       and the most effectual methods of attaining them. This faculty was
       possessed by our navigator in its full energy, as is evident from the
       uncommon sagacity and penetration which be discovered in a vast
       variety of critical and difficult situations.
       To genius Captain Cook added application, without which nothing very
       valuable or permanent can be accomplished, even by the brightest
       capacity. For an unremitting attention to whatever related to his
       profession, he was distinguished in early life. In every affair that
       was undertaken by him, his assiduity was without interruption, and
       without abatement. Whereever he came, he suffered nothing, which was
       fit for a seaman to know or to practise, to pass unnoticed, or to
       escape his diligence.
       The genius and application of Captain Cook were followed by a large
       extent of knowledge; a knowledge which, besides a consummate
       acquaintance with navigation, comprehended a number of other sciences.
       In this respect the ardour of his mind rose above the disadvantages of
       a very confined education. His progress in the different branches of
       the mathematics, and particularly in astronomy, became so eminent,
       that, at length, he was able to take the lead in making the necessary
       observations of this kind, in the course of his voyages. He attained
       likewise to such a degree of proficiency in general learning, and the
       art of composition, as to be able to express himself with a manly
       clearness and propriety, and to become respectable as the narrator, as
       well as the performer, of great actions.
       Another thing, strikingly conspicuous in Captain Cook, was the
       perseverance with which he pursued the noble objects to which his life
       was devoted. This, indeed, was a most distinguished feature in his
       character: in this he scarcely ever had an equal, and never a
       superior. Nothing could divert him from the points he aimed at; and he
       persisted in the prosecution of them, through difficulties and
       obstructions, which would have deterred minds of very considerable
       strength and firmness.
       What enabled him to persevere in all his mighty undertakings was the
       invincible fortitude of his spirits. Of this, instances without number
       occur in the accounts of his expeditions; two of which I shall take
       the liberty of retailing to the attention of my readers. The first is,
       the undaunted magnanimity with which he prosecuted his discoveries
       along the whole southeast coast of New Holland. Surrounded as he was
       with the greatest possible dangers, arising from the perpetual
       succession of rocks, shoals, and breakers, and having a ship that was
       almost shaken to pieces by repeated perils, his vigorous mind had a
       regard to nothing but what he thought was required of him by his duty
       to the public. It will not be easy to find, in the history of
       navigation, a parallel example of courageous exertion. The other
       circumstance I would refer to, is the boldness with which, in his
       second voyage after he left the Cape of Good Hope, he pushed forward
       into unknown seas, and penetrated through innumerable mountains and
       islands of ice, in the search of a southern continent. It was like
       launching into chaos: all was obscurity, all was darkness before him;
       and no event can be compared with it, excepting the sailing of
       Magelhaens, from the straits which bear his name into the Pacific
       Ocean.
       The fortitude of Captain Cook, being founded upon reason, and not upon
       instinct, was not an impetuous valour, but accompanied with complete
       self-possession. He was master of himself on every trying occasion,
       and seemed to be the more calm and collected, the greater was the
       exigence of the case. In the most perilous situations, when our
       commander had given the proper directions concerning what was to be
       done while he went to rest, he could sleep, during the hours he had
       allotted to himself, with perfect composure and soundness. Nothing
       could be a surer indication of an elevated mind; of a mind that was
       entirely satisfied with itself, and the measures it had taken.
       To all these great qualities Captain Cook added the most amiable
       virtues. That it was impossible for any one to excel him in humanity,
       is apparent from his treatment of his men through all his voyages, and
       from his behaviour to the natives of the countries which were
       discovered by him. The health, the convenience, and, as far as it
       could be admitted, the enjoyment of the seamen, were the constant
       objects of his attention; and he was anxiously solicitous to
       ameliorate the condition of the inhabitants of the several islands and
       places which he visited. With regard to their thieveries, he candidly
       apologized for, and overlooked many offences which others would have
       sharply punished; and when he was laid under an indispensable
       necessity of proceeding to any acts of severity, he never exerted
       them without feeling much reluctance and concern.
       In the private relations of life, Captain Cook was entitled to high
       commendation. He was excellent as a husband and a father, and sincere
       and steady in his friendships: and to this it may be added, that he
       possessed that general sobriety and virtue of character, which will
       always be found to constitute the best security and ornament of every
       other moral qualification.
       With the greatest benevolence and humanity of disposition, Captain
       Cook was occasionally subject to a hastiness of temper. This, which
       has been exaggerated by the few (and they are indeed few) who are
       unfavourable to his memory, is acknowledged by his friends. It is
       mentioned both by Captain King and Mr. Samwell, in their delineations
       of his character. Mr. Hayley, in one of his poems, calls him the
       _mild Cook_; but, perhaps, that is not the happiest epithet which
       could have been applied to him. Mere mildness can scarcely be
       considered as the most prominent and distinctive feature in the mind
       of a man, whose powers of understanding and of action were so strong
       and elevated, who had such immense difficulties to struggle with, and
       who must frequently have been called to the firmest exertions of
       authority and command.
       Lastly, Captain Cook was distinguished by a property which is almost
       universally the concomitant of truly great men, and that is, a
       simplicity of manners. In conversation he was unaffected and
       unassuming; rather backward in pushing discourse; but obliging and
       communicative in his answers to those who addressed him for the
       purposes of information. It was not possible that, in a mind
       constituted like his, such a paltry quality as vanity could find an
       existence.
       In this imperfect delineation of Captain Cook's character, I have
       spoken of him in a manner which is fully justified by the whole course
       of his life and actions, and which is perfectly agreeable to the
       sentiments of those who were the most nearly connected with him in the
       habits of intimacy and friendship. The pictures which some of them
       have drawn of him, though they have already been presented to the
       public, cannot here with propriety be omitted. Captain King has
       expressed himself concerning him in the following terms: 'The
       constitution of his body was robust, inured to labour, and capable of
       undergoing the severest hardships. His stomach bore, without
       difficulty, the coarsest and most ungrateful food:--Great was the
       indifference with which he submitted to every kind of self-denial. The
       qualities of his mind were of the same hardy vigorous kind with those
       of his body. His understanding was strong and perspicacious. His
       judgment, in whatever related to the services he was engaged in, quick
       and sure. His designs were bold and manly; and both in the conception,
       and in the mode of execution, bore evident marks of a great original
       genius. His courage was cool and determined, and accompanied with an
       admirable presence of mind in the moment of danger. His temper might
       perhaps have been justly blamed, as subject to hastiness and passion,
       had not these been disarmed by a disposition the most benevolent and
       humane.
       'Such were the outlines of Captain Cook's character; but its most
       distinguishing feature was that unremitting perseverance in the
       pursuit of his object, which was not only superior to the opposition
       of dangers, and the pressure of hardships, but even exempt from the
       want of ordinary relaxation. During the long and tedious voyages in
       which he was engaged, his eagerness and activity were never in the
       least abated. No incidental temptation could detain him for a moment:
       even those intervals of recreation, which sometimes unavoidably
       occurred, and were looked for by us with a longing, that persons who
       have experienced the fatigues of service will readily excuse, were
       submitted to by him with a certain impatience, whenever they could not
       be employed in making a farther provision for the more effectual
       prosecution of his designs.'
       'The character of Captain Cook,' says Mr. Samwell, 'will be best
       exemplified by the services he has performed, which are universally
       known, and have ranked his name above that of any navigator of ancient
       or of modern times. Nature had endowed him with a mind vigorous and
       comprehensive, which in his riper years he had cultivated with care
       and industry. His general knowledge was extensive and various: in that
       of his own profession he was unequalled. With a clear judgment, strong
       masculine sense, and the most determined resolution; with a genius
       peculiarly turned for enterprise, he pursued his object with unshaken
       perseverance:--vigilant and active in an eminent degree:--cool and
       intrepid among dangers; patient and firm under difficulties and
       distress; fertile in expedients; great and original in all his
       designs; active and resolved in carrying them into execution. These
       qualities rendered him the animating spirit of the expedition: in
       every situation he stood unrivalled and alone; on him all eyes were
       turned; he was our leading star, which, at its setting, left us
       involved in darkness and despair.
       'His constitution was strong, his mode of living temperate.--He was a
       modest man, and rather bashful; of an agreeable lively conversation,
       sensible and intelligent. In his temper he was somewhat hasty, but of
       a disposition the most friendly, benevolent, and humane. His person
       was about six feet high, and, though a good looking man, he was plain
       both in address and appearance. His head was small; his hair, which
       was a dark brown, he wore tied behind. His face was full of
       expression; his nose exceedingly well shaped; his eyes, which were
       small and of a brown cast, were quick and piercing; his eyebrows
       prominent, which gave his countenance altogether an air of austerity.
       'He was beloved by his people, who looked up to him as to a father,
       and obeyed his commands with alacrity. The confidence we placed in him
       was unremitting; our admiration of his great talents, unbounded; our
       esteem for his good qualities, affectionate and sincere.----
       'He was remarkably distinguished for the activity of his mind: it was
       that which enabled him to pay an unwearied attention to every object
       of the service. The strict economy he observed in the expenditure of
       the ship's stores, and the unremitting care he employed for the
       preservation of the health of his people, were the causes that enabled
       him to prosecute discoveries in remote parts of the globe, for such a
       length of time, as had been deemed impracticable by former navigators.
       The method he discovered for preserving the health of seamen in long
       voyages will transmit his name to posterity as the friend and
       benefactor of mankind: the success which attended it afforded this
       truly great man more satisfaction than the distinguished fame that
       attended his discoveries.
       'England has been unanimous in her tribute of applause to his virtues,
       and all Europe has borne testimony to his merit. There is hardly a
       corner of the earth, however remote and savage, that will not long
       remember his benevolence and humanity. The grateful Indian, in time to
       come, pointing to the herds grazing his fertile plains, will relate to
       his children how the first stock of them was introduced into the
       country; and the name of Cook will be remembered among those benign
       spirits, whom they worship as the source of every good, and the
       fountain of every blessing.'
       At the conclusion of the Introduction to the Voyage to the Pacific
       Ocean is an eulogium on Captain Cook, drawn up by one of his own
       profession, of whom it is said, that he is not more distinguished by
       the elevation of rank, than by the dignity of private virtues. Though
       this excellent eulogium must be known to many, and perhaps to most of
       my readers, they will not be displeased at having the greater part of
       it brought to their recollection.
       'Captain James Cook possessed,' says the writer, 'in an eminent
       degree, all the qualifications requisite for his profession and great
       undertakings; together with the amiable and worthy qualities of the
       best men.
       'Cool and deliberate in judging: sagacious in determining: active in
       executing: steady and persevering in enterprising, from vigilance and
       unremitting caution: unsubdued by labour, difficulties, and
       disappointments: fertile in expedients: never wanting presence of
       mind; always possessing himself, and the full use of a sound
       understanding.
       'Mild, just, but exact in discipline: he was a father to his people,
       who were attached to him from affection, and obedient from confidence.
       'His knowledge, his experience, his sagacity, rendered him so entirely
       master of his subject, that the greatest obstacles were surmounted,
       and the most dangerous navigations became easy, and almost safe, under
       his direction.
       'By his benevolent and unabating attention to the welfare of his
       ship's company, he discovered and introduced a system for the
       preservation of the health of seamen in long voyages, which has proved
       wonderfully efficacious.
       'The death of this eminent and valuable man was a loss to mankind in
       general; and particularly to be deplored by every nation that respects
       useful accomplishments, that honours science, and loves the benevolent
       and amiable affections of the heart. It is still more to be deplored
       by this country, which may justly boast of having produced a man
       hitherto unequalled for nautical talents; and that sorrow is farther
       aggravated by the reflection, that his country was deprived of this
       ornament by the enmity of a people, from whom, indeed, it might have
       been dreaded, but from whom it was not deserved. For, actuated always
       by the most attentive care and tender compassion for the savages in
       general, this excellent man was ever assiduously endeavouring, by kind
       treatment, to dissipate their fears, and court their friendship;
       overlooking their thefts and treacheries, and frequently interposing,
       at the hazard of his life, to protect them from the sudden resentment
       of his own injured people.----
       'Traveller! contemplate, admire, revere, and emulate this great master
       in his profession; whose skill and labours have enlarged natural
       philosophy; have extended nautical science; and have disclosed the
       long concealed and admirable arrangements of the Almighty to the
       formation of this globe, and, at the same time, the arrogance of
       mortals, in presuming to account, by their speculations, for the laws
       by which he was pleased to create it. It is now discovered, beyond all
       doubt, that the same great Being who created the universe by his
       _fiat_, by the same ordained our earth to keep a just poise,
       without a corresponding southern continent, and it does so. _He
       stretches out the north over the empty place, and hangeth the earth
       upon nothing,_ Job XXVI. 7.
       'If the arduous but exact researches of this extraordinary man have
       not discovered a new world, they have discovered seas unnavigated and
       unknown before. They have made us acquainted with islands, people, and
       productions of which we had, no conception. And if he has not been so
       fortunate as Americus, to give his name to a continent, his
       pretensions to such a distinction remain unrivalled; and he will be
       revered while there remains a page of his own modest account of his
       voyages, and as long as mariners and geographers shall be instructed,
       by his new map of the southern hemisphere, to trace the various
       courses and discoveries he has made.
       'If public services merit public acknowledgments, if the man, who
       adorned and raised the fame of his country, is deserving of honours,
       then Captain Cook deserves to have a monument raised to his memory by
       a generous and grateful nation.
       "Virtutis uberrimum alimentum est honos."
       Val. Maximus, lib. ii. cap. 6.'
       The last character I shall here insert of Captain Cook comes from a
       learned writer, who, in consequence of some disagreements which are
       understood to have subsisted between him and our great navigator,
       cannot be suspected of intending to celebrate him in the language of
       flattery. Dr. Reinhold Forster, having given a short account of the
       captain's death, adds as follows: 'Thus fell this truly glorious and
       justly admired navigator. If we consider his extreme abilities both
       natural and acquired, the firmness and constancy of his mind, his
       truly paternal care for the crew intrusted to him, the amiable manner
       with which he knew how to gain the friendship of all the savage and
       uncultivated nations, and even his conduct towards his friends and
       acquaintance, we must acknowledge him to have been one of the greatest
       men of his age, and that reason justifies the tear which friendship
       pays to his memory.' After such an encomium on Captain Cook, less
       regard may justly be paid to the deductions from it, which are added
       by Dr. Forster. What he hath said concerning the captain's temper
       seems to have received a tincture of exaggeration, from prejudice and
       personal animosity; and the Doctor's insinuation, that our navigator
       obstructed Lieutenant Pickersgill's promotion, is, I have good reason
       to believe, wholly groundless. There is another error which must not
       pass unnoticed. Dr. Forster puts in his caveat against giving the name
       of Cook's Straits to the Straits between Asia and America, discovered
       by Beering. But if the Doctor had read the Voyage to the Pacific
       Ocean, published by authority, he would have seen, that there was no
       design of robbing Beering of the honour to which he was entitled.
       From a survey of Captain Cook's character, it is natural to extend our
       reflections to the effects of the several expeditions in which he was
       engaged. These, indeed, must have largely appeared in the general
       history of his Life; and they have finely been displayed by Dr.
       Douglas, in his admirable Introduction to the Voyage to the Pacific
       Ocean. Under the conduct of so able a guide, I shall subjoin a short
       view of the subject.
       It must, however, be observed, that, with regard to the three
       principal consequences of our great navigator's transactions, I have
       nothing further to offer. These are, his having dispelled the illusion
       of a _Terra Australis Incognita_; his demonstration of the
       impracticability of a northern passage from the Pacific to the
       Atlantic Ocean; and his having established a sure method of preserving
       the health of seamen in the longest voyages, and through every variety
       of latitude and climate. Concerning each of these capital objects, I
       have already so fully spoken, that it is not in my power to add to the
       impression of their importance, and of Captain Cook's merits in
       relation to them, which, I trust, is firmly fixed on the mind of every
       reader.
       It is justly remarked, by Dr. Douglas, that one great advantage
       accruing to the world from our late surveys of the globe, is, that
       they have confuted fanciful theories, too likely to give birth to
       impracticable undertakings. The ingenious reveries of speculative
       philosophers, which have so long amused the learned, and raised the
       most sanguine expectations, are now obliged to submit, perhaps with
       reluctance, to the sober dictates of truth and experience. Nor will it
       be only by discouraging future unprofitable searches, that the late
       voyages will be of service to mankind, but also by lessening the
       dangers and distresses formerly experienced in those seas which are
       within the actual line of commerce and navigation. From the British
       discoveries many commercial improvements may be expected to arise in
       our own times: but, in future ages, such improvements may be extended
       to a degree, of which, at present, we have no conception. In the long
       chain of causes and effects, no one can tell how widely and
       beneficially the mutual intercourse of the various inhabitants of the
       earth may hereafter be carried on, in consequence of the means of
       facilitating it, which have been explored and pointed out by Captain
       Cook.
       The interests of science, as well as of commerce, stand highly
       indebted to this illustrious navigator. That a knowledge of the globe
       on which we live is a very desirable object, no one can call in
       question. This is an object which, while it is ardently pursued by the
       most enlightened philosophers, is sought for with avidity, even by
       those whose studies do not carry them beyond the lowest rudiments of
       learning. It need not be said what gratification Captain Cook hath
       provided for the world in this respect. Before the voyages of the
       present reign took place, nearly half the surface of the earth was
       hidden in obscurity and confusion. From the discoveries of our
       navigator, geography has assumed a new face, and become, in a great
       measure, a new science; having attained to such a completion, as to
       leave only some less important parts of the globe to be explored by
       future voyagers.[17]
       [Footnote 17: Lieutenant Roberts's admirable chart will set this
       matter in the strongest light.]
       Happily for the advancement of knowledge, acquisitions cannot be
       obtained in any one branch, without leading to acquisitions in other
       branches, of equal, and perhaps of superior consequence. New oceans
       cannot be traversed, or new countries visited, without presenting
       fresh objects of speculation and inquiry, and carrying the practice,
       as well as the theory, of philosophy to a higher degree of perfection.
       _Nautical astronomy_, in particular, was in its infancy, when the
       late voyages were first undertaken; but, during the prosecution of
       them, and especially in Captain Cook's last expedition, even many of
       the petty officers could observe the distance of the moon from the
       sun, or a star, the most delicate of all observations, with sufficient
       accuracy. As for the officers of superior rank, they would have felt
       themselves ashamed to have it thought that they did not know how to
       observe for, and compute the time at sea; though such a thing had, a
       little before, scarcely been heard of among seamen. Nay, first-rate
       philosophers had doubted the possibility of doing it with the
       exactness that could be wished. It must, however, be remembered, that
       a large share of praise is due to the Board of Longitude, for the
       proficiency of the gentlemen of the navy in taking observations at
       sea. In consequence of the attention of that board to this important
       object, liberal rewards have been given to mathematicians for
       perfecting the lunar tables, and facilitating calculations; and
       artists have been amply encouraged in the construction of instruments
       and watches, much more accurately and completely adapted to the
       purposes of navigation than formerly existed.
       It is needless to mention what a quantity of additional information
       has been gained with respect to the rise and times of the flowing of
       the tides; the direction and force of currents at sea; and the cause
       and nature of the polarity of the needle, and the theory of its
       variations. Natural knowledge has been increased by experiments on the
       effects of gravity in different and very distant places; and from
       Captain Cook's having penetrated so far into the Southern Ocean, it is
       now ascertained, that the phenomenon, usually called the _Aurora
       Borealis_, is not peculiar to high northern latitudes, but belongs
       equally to all cold climates, whether they be north or south.
       Amidst the different branches of science that have been promoted by
       the late expeditions, there is none, perhaps, that stands so highly
       indebted to them as the science of botany. At least twelve hundred new
       plants have been added to the known system; and large accessions of
       intelligence have accrued with regard to every other part of natural
       history. This point has already been evinced by the writings of Dr.
       Sparrman, of the two Forsters, father and son, and of Mr. Pennant; and
       this point will illustriously be manifested, when the great work of
       Sir Joseph Banks shall be accomplished, and given to the world.
       It is not to the enlargement of natural knowledge only, that the
       effects arising from Captain Cook's voyages are to be confined.
       Another important object of study has been opened by them; and that
       is, the study of human nature, in situations various, interesting, and
       uncommon. The islands visited in the centre of the south Pacific
       Ocean, and the principal scenes of the operations of our discoverers,
       were untrodden ground. As the inhabitants, so far as could be
       observed, had continued, from their original settlement unmixed with
       any different tribe; as they had been left entirely to their own
       powers for every art of life, and to their own remote traditions for
       every political or religious custom or institution; as they were
       uninformed by science, and unimproved by education, they could not but
       afford many subjects of speculation to an inquisitive and
       philosophical mind. Hence may be collected a variety of important
       facts with respect to the state of man; with respect to his
       attainments and deficiences, his virtue and vices, his employments and
       diversions, his feelings, manners, and customs, in a certain period of
       society. Even the curiosities which have been brought from the
       discovered islands, and which enrich the British Museum, and the late
       Sir Ashton Lever's repository, may be considered as a valuable
       acquisition to this country; as supplying no small fund of information
       and entertainment.
       Few inquiries are more interesting than those which relate to the
       migrations of the various families or tribes that have peopled the
       earth. It was known in general, that the Asiatic nation, called
       Malayans, possessed, in former times, much the greatest trade in the
       Indies; and that they frequented, with their merchant ships, not only
       all the coasts of Asia, but ventured over even to the coasts of
       Africa, and particularly to the great island of Madagascar. But that,
       from Madagascar to the Marquesas and Easter Island, that is, nearly
       from the east side of Africa, till we approach towards the west side
       of America, a space including above half the circumference of the
       globe, the same nation of the oriental world should have made their
       settlements, and founded colonies throughout almost every intermediate
       stage of this immense tract, in islands at amazing distances from the
       mother continent, and the natives of which were ignorant of each
       other's existence--is an historical fact, that, before Captain Cook's
       voyages, could be but very imperfectly known. He it is who hath
       discovered a vast number of new spots of land lurking in the bosom of
       the South Pacific Ocean, all the inhabitants of which display striking
       evidences of their having derived their descent from one common
       Asiatic original. Nor is this apparent solely from a similarity of
       customs and institutions, but is established by a proof which conveys
       irresistible conviction to the mind, and that is, the affinity of
       language. The collections that have been made of the words which are
       used in the widely diffused islands and countries that have lately
       been visited cannot fail, in the hands of such men as a Bryant and a
       Marsden, to throw much light on the origin of nations, and the
       peopling of the globe.--From Mr. Marsden, in particular, who has
       devoted his attention, time, and study to this curious subject, the
       literary world may hereafter expect to be highly instructed and
       entertained.
       There is another family of the earth, concerning which new information
       has been derived from the voyages of our British navigators. That the
       Esquimaux, who had hitherto only been found seated on the coasts of
       Labradore and Hudson's Bay, agreed with the Greenlanders in every
       circumstance of customs, manners, and language, which could
       demonstrate an original identity of nation, had already been
       ascertained. But that the same tribe now actually inhabit the islands
       and coasts on the west side of North America, opposite Kamtschatka,
       was a discovery, the completion of which was reserved for Captain
       Cook. From his account it appears that these people have extended
       their migrations to Norton Sound, Oonalashka, and Prince William's
       Sound; that is, to nearly the distance of fifteen hundred leagues from
       their stations in Greenland, and the coast of Labradore. Nor does this
       curious fact rest merely on the evidence arising from similitude of
       manners: for it stands confirmed by a table of words, exhibiting such
       an affinity of language as will remove every doubt from the mind of
       the most scrupulous inquirer.
       Other questions there are, of a very important nature, the solution of
       which will now be rendered more easy than hath heretofore been
       apprehended. From the full confirmation of the vicinity of the two
       continents of Asia and America, it can no longer be represented as
       ridiculous to believe, that the former furnished inhabitants to the
       latter. By the facts recently discovered, a credibility is added to
       the Mosaic account of the peopling of the earth. That account will, I
       doubt not, stand the test of the most learned and rigorous
       investigation. Indeed, I have long been convinced, after the closest
       meditation of which I am capable, that sound philosophy and genuine
       revelation never militate against each other. The rational friends of
       religion are so far from dreading the spirit of inquiry, that they
       wish for nothing more than a candid, calm, and impartial examination
       of the subject according to all the lights which the improved reason
       and the enlarged science of man can afford.
       One great effect of the voyages made under the conduct of Captain Cook
       is their having excited a zeal for similar undertakings. Other princes
       and other nations are engaged in expeditions of navigation and
       discovery. By order of the French government, Mess. de la Perouse and
       de Langle sailed from Brest, in August, 1785, in the frigates Boussole
       and Astroloobe, on an enterprise, the express purpose of which was the
       improvement of geography, astronomy, natural history, and philosophy,
       and to collect accounts of customs and manners. For the more effectual
       prosecution of the design, several gentlemen were appointed to go out
       upon the voyage, who were known to excel in different departments of
       science and literature. Mr. Dagelet went as astronomer; M. de la
       Martiniere, P. Recevour, and M. de la Fresne, as naturalists; and the
       Chevalier de Lamanon and M. Monges, junior, as natural philosophers.
       The officers of the Boussole were men of the best information, and the
       firmest resolution: and the crew contained a number of artificers in
       various kinds of mechanic employments. Marine watches, and other
       instruments, were provided; and M. Dagelet was particularly directed
       to make observations with M. Condamine's invariable pendulum, to
       determine the differences in gravity, and to ascertain the true
       proportion of the equatorial to the polar diameter of the earth. From
       some accounts which have already been received of these voyages, it
       appears, that they have explored the coast of California; have
       adjusted the situation of more than fifty places, almost wholly
       unknown; and have visited Owhyhee, and the rest of the Sandwich
       Islands. When the expedition shall be completed, the whole result of
       it will doubtless be laid before the public.[18]
       [Footnote 18: An account of this voyage during the years 1785,
       1786, 1787, and 1788, has been published in France, from papers
       transmitted at different times by La Perouse; but nothing since
       the year 1788 has been received relative to the progress of the
       voyage, or the fate of the voyagers, who are all supposed to have
       perished by shipwreck.]
       Although Captain Cook has made such vast discoveries in the Northern
       Ocean, on and between the east of Asia and the west coast of America,
       Mr. Coxe has well shewn that there is still room for a farther
       investigation of that part of the world. Accordingly, the object has
       been taken up by the Empress of Russia, who has committed the conduct
       of the enterprise to Captain Billings, an Englishman in her majesty's
       service. As Captain Billings was with Captain Cook in his last voyage,
       he may reasonably be supposed to be properly qualified for the
       business he has undertaken. The design, with the execution of which he
       is entrusted, appears to be very extensive and important; and, if it
       should be crowned with success, cannot fail of making considerable
       additions to the knowledge of geography and navigation.
       There is one event at home, which has evidently resulted from Captain
       Cook's discoveries, and which, therefore, must not be omitted. What I
       refer to is the settlement at Botany Bay. With the general policy of
       this measure the present narrative has not any concern. The plan, I
       doubt not, has been adopted with the best intentions, after the
       maturest deliberation, and perhaps with consummate wisdom. One evident
       advantage arising from it is, that it will effectually prevent a
       number of unhappy wretches from returning to their former scenes of
       temptations and guilt, and may open to them the means of industrious
       subsistence and moral reformation. If it be wisely and prudently begun
       and conducted, who can tell what beneficial consequences may spring
       from it, in future ages? Immortal Rome is said to have risen from the
       refuse of mankind.
       While we are considering the advantages the _discoverers_ have
       derived from the late navigations, a question naturally occurs, which
       is, What benefits have hence accrued to the _discovered_? It
       would be a source of the highest pleasure to be able to answer the
       question to complete satisfaction. But it must be acknowledged, that
       the subject is not wholly free from doubts and difficulties; and these
       doubts and difficulties might be enlarged upon, and exaggerated, by an
       imagination which is rather disposed to contemplate and represent the
       dark than the luminous aspect of human affairs. In one respect, Mr.
       Samwell has endeavoured to shew, that the natives of the lately
       explored parts of the world, and especially so far as relates to the
       Sandwich Islands, were not injured by our people; and it was the
       constant solicitude and care of Captain Cook, that evil might not be
       communicated in any one place to which he came. If he was universally
       successful, the good which, in various cases, he was instrumental in
       producing, will be reflected upon with the more peculiar satisfaction.
       There is an essential difference between the voyages that have lately
       been undertaken, and many which have been carried on in former times.
       None of my readers can be ignorant of the horrid cruelties that were
       exercised by the conquerors of Mexico and Peru; cruelties which can
       never be remembered, without blushing for religion and human nature.
       But to undertake expeditions with a design of civilizing the world,
       and meliorating its condition, is a noble object. The recesses of the
       globe were investigated by Captain Cook, not to enlarge private
       dominion, but to promote general knowledge; the new tribes of the
       earth were visited as friends; and an acquaintance with their
       existence was sought for, in order to bring them within the pale of
       the offices of humanity, and to relieve the wants of their imperfect
       state of society. Such were the benevolent views which our navigator
       was commissioned by his majesty to carry into execution; and there is
       reason to hope that they will not be wholly unsuccessful. From the
       long continued intercourse with the natives of the Friendly, Society,
       and Sandwich Islands, some rays of light must have darted on their
       infant minds. The uncommon objects which have been presented to their
       observation, and excited their surprise, will naturally tend to
       enlarge their stock of ideas, and to furnish new materials for the
       exercise of their reasonable faculties. It is no small addition to
       their comforts of life, and their immediate enjoyments, that will be
       derived from the introduction of our useful animals and vegetables;
       and if the only benefit they should ever receive from the visits of
       the English should be the having obtained fresh means of subsistence,
       that must be considered as a great acquisition.
       But may not our hopes be extended to still nobler objects? The
       connexion which has been opened with these remote inhabitants of the
       world is the first step toward their improvement; and consequences may
       flow from it, which are far beyond our present conceptions. Perhaps,
       our late voyages may be the means appointed by Providence, of
       spreading, in due time, the blessings of civilization among the
       numerous tribes of the South Pacific Ocean, and preparing them for
       holding an honourable rank among the nations of the earth. There
       cannot be a more laudable attempt, than that of endeavouring to rescue
       millions of our fellow-creatures from that state of humiliation in
       which they now exist. Nothing can more essentially contribute to the
       attainment of this great end, than a wise and rational introduction of
       the Christian religion; an introduction of it in its genuine
       simplicity; as holding out the worship of one God, inculcating the
       purest morality, and promising eternal life as the reward of
       obedience. These are views of things which are adapted to general
       comprehension, and calculated to produce the noblest effects.
       Considering the eminent abilities displayed by Captain Cook, and the
       mighty actions performed by him, it is not surprising that his memory
       should be held in the highest estimation, both at home and abroad.
       Perhaps, indeed, greater honour is paid to his name abroad than at
       home. Foreigners, I am informed, look up to him with an admiration
       which is not equalled in this country. A remarkable proof of it
       occurs, in the eulogy of our navigator, by Michael Angelo Gianetti,
       which was read at the royal Florentine academy, on the 9th of June,
       1785, and published at Florence, in the same year. Not having seen it,
       I am deprived of the power of doing justice to its merit. If I am not
       mistaken in my recollection, one of the French literary academies has
       proposed a prize for the best eulogium on Captain Cook; and there can
       be no doubt but that several candidates will appear upon the occasion,
       and exert the whole force of their eloquence on so interesting a
       subject.
       To the applauses of our navigator, which have already been inserted, I
       cannot avoid adding some poetical testimonies concerning him. The
       first I shall produce is from a foreign poet, M. l'Abbe Lisle. This
       gentleman has concluded his 'Les Jardins' with an encomium on Captain
       Cook, of which the following lines are a translation:
       "Give, give me flowers: with garlands of renown
       Those glorious exiles' brows my hands shall crown,
       Who nobly sought on distant coasts to find,
       Or thither bore those arts that bless mankind:
       Thee chief, brave Cook, o'er whom, to nature dear,
       With Britain, Gallia drops the pitying tear.
       To foreign climes and rude, where nought before
       Announced our vessels but their cannons' roar,
       Far other gifts thy better mind decreed,
       The sheep, the heifer, and the stately steed;
       The plough, and all thy country's arts; the crimes
       Atoning thus of earlier savage times.
       With peace each land thy bark was wont to hail,
       And tears and blessings fill'd thy parting sail.
       Receive a stranger's praise; nor, Britain, thou
       Forbid these wreaths to grace thy Hero's brow,
       Nor scorn the tribute of a foreign song,
       For Virtue's sons to every land belong:
       And shall the Gallic Muse disdain to pay
       The meed of worth, when Louis leads the way?
       But what avail'd, that twice thou daredst to try
       The frost-bound sea, and twice the burning sky,
       That by winds, waves, and every realm revered,
       Safe, only safe, thy sacred vessel steer'd;
       That war for thee forgot its dire commands
       The world's great friend, ah! bleeds by savage hands."
       There have not been wanting elegant writers of our own country, who
       have embraced with pleasure the opportunities that have offered of
       paying a tribute of praise to Captain Cook. The ingenious and amiable
       Miss Hannah More has lately seized an occasion of celebrating the
       humane intentions of the captain's discoveries.
       "Had those advent'rous spirits, who explore
       Through ocean's trackless wastes, the far-sought shore
       Whether of wealth insatiate, or of power,
       Conquerors who waste, or ruffians who devour:
       Had these possess'd, O Cook! thy gentle mind,
       Thy love of arts, thy love of humankind;
       Had these pursu'd thy mild and lib'ral plan,
       _Discoverers_ had not been a curse to man!
       Then, bless'd Philanthropy! thy social hands
       Had link'd dissever'd worlds in brothers' bands;
       Careless, if colour, or if clime divide;
       Then lov'd and loving, man had liv'd, and died."
       Soon after the account arrived in England of Captain Cook's decease,
       two poems were published in celebration of his memory; one of which
       was an Ode, by a Mr. Fitzgerald, of Gray's Inn. But the first, both in
       order of time and of merit, was an Elegy, by Miss Seward, whose
       poetical talents have been displayed in many beautiful instances to
       the public. This lady, in the beginning of her poem, has admirably
       represented the principal of humanity by which the captain was
       actuated in his undertakings.
       "Ye, who ere while for Cook's illustrious brow
       Pluck'd the green laurel and the oaken bough,
       Hung the gay garlands on the trophied oars,
       And pour'd his fame along a thousand shores.
       Strike the slow death-bell!--weave the sacred verse,
       And strew the cypress o'er his honour'd hearse;
       In sad procession wander round the shrine,
       And weep him mortal, whom ye sung divine!
       "Say first, what Pow'r inspir'd his dauntless breast
       With scorn of danger, and inglorious rest,
       To quit imperial London's gorgeous plains,
       Where, rob'd in thousand tints, bright Pleasure reigns!
       What Pow'r inspir'd his dauntless breast to brave
       The scorch'd Equator, and th' Antarctic wave?
       Climes, where fierce suns in cloudless ardours shine,
       And pour the dazzling deluge round the Line;
       The realms of frost, where icy mountains rise,
       'Mid the pale summer of the polar skies?--
       _It was Humanity!_--on coasts unknown,
       The shiv'ring natives of the frozen zone,
       And the swart Indian, as he faintly strays
       'Where Cancer reddens in the solar blaze,'
       She bade him seek;--on each inclement shore
       Plant the rich seeds of her exhaustless store;
       Unite the savage hearts, and hostile hands,
       In the firm compact of her gentle bands;
       Strew her soft comforts o'er the barren plain,
       Sing her sweet lays, and consecrate her fane.
       "_It was Humanity!_--O Nymph divine!
       I see thy light step print the burning Line!
       There thy bright eye the dubious pilot guides,
       The faint oar struggling with the scalding tides--
       On as thou lead'st the bold, the glorious prow,
       Mild, and more mild, the sloping sunbeams glow;
       Now weak and pale the lessen'd lustres play,
       As round th' horizon rolls the timid day;
       Barb'd with the sleeted snow, the driving hail,
       Rush the fierce arrows of the polar gale;
       And through the dim, unvaried, ling'ring hours,
       Wide o'er the waves incumbent horror lours."
       Captain Cook's endeavours to serve the inhabitants of New Zealand, by
       the vegetables and animals he left among them, are thus described:
       "To these the hero leads his living store,
       And pours new wonders on th' uncultur'd shore;
       The silky fleece, fair fruit, and golden grain;
       And future herds and harvests bless the plain,
       O'er the green soil his kids exulting play,
       And sounds his clarion loud the bird of day;
       The downy goose her ruffled bosom laves,
       Trims her white wing, and wantons in the waves;
       Stern moves the bull along th' affrighted shores,
       And countless nations tremble as he roars."
       I shall only add the pathetic and animated conclusion of this fine
       poem:
       "But ah!--aloft on Albion's rocky steep,
       That frowns incumbent o'er the boiling deep,
       Solicitous, and sad, a softer form
       Eyes the lone flood, and deprecates the storm.--
       Ill fated matron!--for, alas! in vain
       Thy eager glances wander o'er the main!
       Tis the vex'd billows, that insurgent rave,
       Their white foam silvers yonder distant wave,
       Tis not his sails! thy husband comes no more!
       His bones now whiten an accursed shore!--
       Retire,--for hark! the seagull shrieking soars,
       The lurid atmosphere portentous lours;
       Night's sullen spirit groans in every gale,
       And o'er the waters draws the darkling veil,
       Sighs in thy hair, and chills thy throbbing breast--
       Go wretched mourner!--weep thy griefs to rest!
       "Yet, though through life is lost each fond delight,
       Though set thy earthly sun in dreary night,
       Oh! raise thy thoughts to yonder starry plain,
       And own thy sorrow selfish, weak, and vain:
       Since, while Britannia, to his virtues just,
       Twines the bright wreath, and rears th' immortal bust;
       While on each wind of heaven his fame shall rise,
       In endless incense to the smiling skies;
       _The attendant Power_, that bade his sails expand,
       And waft her blessings to each barren land,
       Now raptur'd bears him to th' immortal plains,
       Where Mercy hails him with congenial strains;
       Where soars, on Joy's white plume, his spirit free,
       And angels choir him, while he waits for _Thee_."
       Captain Cook's discoveries, among other effects, have opened new
       scenes for a poetical fancy to range in, and presented new images to
       the selection of genius and taste. The morals, in particular, of the
       inhabitants of the South Sea Islands, afford a fine subject for the
       exercise of a plaintive Muse. Such a Muse hath seized upon the
       subject; and, at the same time, has added another wreath to the memory
       of our navigator. I refer to a lady, who hath already, in many
       passages of her 'Peru,' in her 'Ode on the Peace.' and, above all, in
       her 'Irregular Fragment,' amply proved to the world, that she
       possesses not only the talent of elegant and harmonious versification,
       but the spirit of true poetry. The poem, which I have now the pleasure
       of giving for the first time to the public, and which was written at
       my request, will be found in the Appendix. It is some what remarkable,
       that female poets have hitherto been the chief celebrators of Captain
       Cook in this country. Perhaps a subject which would furnish materials
       for as rich a production as Camoen's Lusiad, and which would adorn the
       pen of a Hayley or a Cowper, may hereafter call forth the genius of
       some poet of the stronger sex.
       The Royal Society of London could not lose such a member of their body
       as Captain Cook, without being anxious to honour his name and memory
       by a particular mark of respect. Accordingly, it was resolved to do
       this by a medal; and a voluntary subscription was opened for the
       purpose. To such of the fellows of the society as subscribed twenty
       guineas, a gold medal was appropriated: silver medals were assigned to
       those who contributed a smaller sum; and to each of the other members
       one in bronze was given. The subscribers of twenty guineas were, Sir
       Joseph Banks, president; the Prince of Anspach, the Duke of Montague,
       Lord Mulgrave and Mr. Cavendish, Mr. Peachy, Mr. Perrin, Mr. Poli, and
       Mr. Shuttleworth. Many designs, as might be expected, were proposed on
       the occasion. The medal which was actually struck contains, on one
       side, the head of Captain Cook in profile, and round it, JAC. COOK
       OCEANI INVESTIGATOR ACERRIMUS; and on the exergue, REG. SOC. LOND.
       SOCIO SUO. On the reverse is a representation of Britannia holding a
       globe. Round her is inscribed NIL INTENTATUM NOSTRI LIQUERE: and on
       the exergue, AUSPICIIS GEORGII III.
       Of the gold medals which were struck on this occasion, one was
       presented to His Majesty, another to the Queen, and a third to the
       Prince of Wales. Two were sent abroad: the first to the French king on
       account of the protection he had granted to the ships under the
       command of Captain Cook; and a second to the Empress of Russia, in
       whose dominions the same ships had been received and treated with
       every degree of friendship and kindness. Both these presents were
       highly acceptable to the great personages to whom they were
       transmitted. The French king expressed his satisfaction in a very
       handsome letter to the Royal Society, signed by himself, and
       undersigned by the Marquis de Vergennes; and the Empress of Russia
       commissioned Count Osterman to signify to Mr. Fitzherbert the sense
       she entertained of the value of the present, and that she had caused
       it to be forthwith deposited in the Museum of the Imperial Academy of
       Sciences. As a farther testimony of the pleasure she derived from it,
       the Empress presented to the Royal Society a large and beautiful gold
       medal, containing on one side the effigies of herself, and on the
       reverse a representation of the statue of Peter the Great.
       After the general assignment of the medals (which took place in the
       spring of the year 1784), there being a surplus of money still
       remaining, the president and council resolved, that an additional
       number should be struck off in gold, to be disposed of as presents to
       Mrs. Cook, the Earl of Sandwich, Dr. Benjamin Franklin, Dr. Cooke,
       provost of King's College, Cambridge, and Mr. Planta. About the same
       time it was agreed, that Mr. Aubert should be allowed to have a gold
       medal of Captain Cook, on his paying for the gold, and the expense of
       striking it: in consideration of his intention to present it to the
       King of Poland.
       During the two visits of the Resolution and Discovery at Kamtschatka,
       it was from Colonel Behm, the commandant of that province, that the
       ships, and the officers and men belonging to them, had received every
       kind of assistance which it was in his power to bestow. His liberal
       and hospitable behaviour to the English navigators is related at large
       in Captain King's Voyage. Such was the sense entertained of it by the
       Lords of the Admiralty, that they determined to make a present to the
       colonel, of a magnificent piece of plate, with an inscription
       expressive of his humane and generous disposition and conduct. The
       elegant pen of Dr. Cooke was employed in drawing up the inscription,
       which, after it had been subjected to the opinion and correction of
       some gentlemen of the first eminence in classical taste, was as
       follows:
       'VIRO EGREGIO MANGO DE BEHM; qui Imperatricis Augustissimae Catherina
       auspiciis, summaque animi benignitate, saeva, quibus praeerat,
       Kamtschatkae littora, navibus nautisque Britannicis, hospita praebuit;
       eosque, in terminis, si qui essent Imperio Russico frustra,
       explorandis, mala multa perpessos, iterata, vice excepit, refecit,
       recreavit, et commeatu omni cumulate auctos dimisit; REI NAVALIS
       BRITANNICAE SEPTEMVIRI in aliquam benevolentiae tam insignis memoriam,
       amicissimo, gratissimoque animo, suo, patriaeque nomine, D. D. D. M.
       DCC. LXXXI.'
       Sir Hugh Palliser, who through life manifested an invariable regard
       and friendship for Captain Cook, has displayed a signal instance,
       since the Captain's decease, of the affection and esteem in which he
       holds his memory. At his estate in Buckinghamshire Sir Hugh hath
       constructed a small building, on which he has erected a pillar,
       containing the fine character of our great navigator that is given at
       the end of the Introduction to the last Voyage, and the principal part
       of which has been inserted in the present work. This character was
       drawn up by a most respectable gentleman, who has long been at the
       head of the naval profession, the honourable Admiral Forbes, admiral
       of the fleet, and general of marines; to whom Captain Cook was only
       known by his eminent merit and his extraordinary actions.
       Amidst the numerous testimonies of regard that have been paid to
       Captain Cook's merits and memory, the important object of providing
       for his family hath not been forgotten. Soon after the intelligence
       arrived of his unfortunate decease, this matter was taken up by the
       lords of the Admiralty, with a zeal and an effect, which the following
       authentic document will fully display:
       'At the Court at St. James's, the 2nd of February, 1780;
       '(L. S.) 'Present,
       'The KING's Most Excellent Majesty in Council.
       'Whereas there was this day read, at the Board, a memorial from the
       Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, dated the
       27th of last month, in the words following: viz.
       'Having received an authentic account of the death of that great
       Navigator, Captain James Cook, who has had the honour of being
       employed by Your Majesty, in three different voyages, for the
       discovery of unknown countries in the most distant parts of the globe;
       we think it our duty humbly to represent to Your Majesty, that this
       meritorious officer, after having received from Your Majesty's
       gracious benevolence, as a reward for his public services in two
       successful circumnavigations, a comfortable and honourable retreat,
       where he might have lived many years to benefit his family, he
       voluntarily relinquished that ease and emolument to undertake another
       of these voyages of discovery, in which the life of a commander, who
       does his duty, must always be particularly exposed, and in which, in
       the execution of that duty, he fell, leaving his family, whom his
       public spirit had led him to abandon, as a legacy to his country. We
       do therefore humbly propose, that Your Majesty will be graciously
       pleased to order a pension of two hundred pounds a year to be settled
       on the widow, and twenty-five pounds a year upon each of the three
       sons of the said Captain James Cook, and that the same be placed on
       the ordinary estimate of the navy.
       'His Majesty, taking the said memorial into his Royal consideration,
       was pleased, with the advice of His Privy Council, to order, as it is
       hereby ordered, that a pension of two hundred pounds a year be settled
       on the widow, and twenty-five pounds a year upon each of the three
       sons of the said Captain James Cook, and that the same be placed on
       the ordinary estimate of His Majesty's navy; and the Lords
       Commissioners of the Admiralty are to give the necessary directions
       herein accordingly.
       W. FAWKENER.'
       The preceding memorial to the king was signed by the Earl of Sandwich.
       Mr. Buller, the Earl of Lisburne, Mr. Penton, Lord Mulgrave, and Mr.
       Mann; and the several officers of the Board of Admiralty seconded the
       ardour of their superiors, by the speed and generosity with which his
       majesty's royal grant to Captain Cook's widow and children passed
       through the usual forms.
       Another occasion was afterwards seized of conferring a substantial
       benefit on the captain's family. The charts and plates belonging to
       the Voyage to the Pacific Ocean, were provided at the expense of
       government; the consequence of which was, that a large profit accrued
       from the sale of the publication. Of this profit, half was consigned,
       in trust, to Sir Hugh Palliser and Mr. Stephens, to be applied to the
       use of Mrs. Cook, during her natural life, and afterwards to be
       divided between her children.
       Honour as well as emolument, hath graciously been conferred by his
       majesty upon the descendants of Captain Cook. On the 3rd of September,
       1785, a coat of arms was granted to the family, of which a description
       will be given below.[19]
       [Footnote 19: Azure, between the two polar stars Or, a sphere on
       the plane of the meridian, north pole elevated, circles of
       latitude for every ten degrees, and of longitude for every
       fifteen, shewing the Pacific Ocean between sixty and two hundred
       and forty west, bounded on one side by America, on the other by
       Asia and New Holland, in memory of the discoveries made by him in
       that ocean, so very far beyond all former navigators. His track
       thereon is marked with red lines. And for crest, on a wreath of
       the colours, is an arm imbowed, vested in the uniform of a captain
       of the royal navy. In the hand is the union jack, on a staff
       Proper. The arm is encircled by a wreath of palm and laurel.]
       Our navigator had six children; James, Nathaniel, Elizabeth, Joseph,
       George, and Hugh. Of these, Joseph and George died soon after their
       birth, and Elizabeth in the fifth year of her age. James, the eldest
       son, who was born at St. Paul's, Shadwell, on the 13th of October,
       1763. is now a lieutenant in his majesty's navy. In a letter, written
       by Admiral Sir Richard Hughes, in 1785, from Grenada, to Mrs. Cook, he
       is spoken of in terms of high approbation. Nathaniel, who was born on
       the 14th of December, 1764, at Mile-End Old Town, was brought up
       likewise in the naval service, and was unfortunately lost on board his
       majesty's ship Thunderer, Commodore Walsingham, in the hurricane which
       happened at Jamaica, on the 3rd of October, 1730. He is said to have
       been a most promising youth. Hugh, the youngest, was born on the 22nd
       of May, 1776; and was so called after the name of his father's great
       friend, Sir Hugh Palliser.
       It hath often been mentioned, in terms of no small regret, that a
       monument hath not yet been erected to the memory of Captain Cook, in
       Westminster Abbey.
       The wish and the hope of such a monument are hinted at in the close of
       Dr. Douglas's Introduction to the government edition of the last
       voyage; and the same sentiment is expressed by the author of the
       Eulogium, at the end of that Introduction. Sir Hugh Palliser has also
       spoken to the like purpose, in a communication I received from him. It
       would certainly redound to the honour of the nation, to order a
       magnificent memorial of the abilities and services of our illustrious
       navigator; on which account, a tribute of that kind may be regarded as
       a desirable thing. But a monument in Westminster Abbey would be of
       little consequence to the reputation of Captain Cook. His fame stands
       upon a wider base, and will survive the comparatively perishing
       materials of brass, or stone, or marble. The name of Cook will be held
       in honour, and recited with applause, so long as the records of human
       events shall continue in the earth; nor is it possible to say, what
       may be the influence and rewards, which, in other worlds, shall be
       found to attend upon eminent examples of wisdom and of virtue. _