Rare c.18th engraving from the official British Admiralty sanctioned edition of the accounts of Captain Cook’s third and final voyage depicting a dance at Matavia Bay, Tahiti.
All other copies made of this image by other publishers are usually smaller and on inferior quality paper.
Cook arrived at Matavia Bay, Tahiti on 24th August and stayed until 30 September, 1777. On their visit Cook and his men witnessed a number of heiva’s.
‘We landed in the evening and walk’d through a great part of Parre, a pleasant fertile district near Mattavy, meeting our road with a kind of private Heeva or amusement, which consisted of about a hundred of the inhabitants of the neighbourhood who wer[e] sitting in a house and in the midst of them two women with an old man behind, each beating very gently upon a drum, and the women at intervals singing in a softer manner than I have ever heard at their other diversions.’ Cook, Journals III, 2, 985.
From: Cook & King, A Voyage to the Pacific Ocean, for making Discoveries in the Northern Hemisphere. Performed under the Direction of Captains Cook, Clerke, and Gore, in His Majesty’s Ships the Resolution and Discovery; in the Years 1776, 1777, 1778, 1779, and 1780.
References:
Beddie, M. Bibliography of Captain James Cook, RN,FRS, Circumnavigator. Sydney 1970 1543 & 1743-6, p.339.
Joppien,R. & Smith, B. The Art of Captain Cook’s Voyages; Vol. I, II & III. Melbourne 1985-1987 3.10A, ill.p.272.
Forbes, D. Hawaiian National Bibliography 1780- 1830. Honolulu /Sydney, 1999/2003 62; cf.
Carter, J. & Muir, P. Printing and the Mind of Man London 1983 223.
Sabin, J. A Dictionary of Books Relating to America, from its Discovery to the Present Time. New York. (1936) 1967. 16250.
Hill, J. The Hill Collection of Pacific Voyages. San Diego 1974 321.
Collections:
State Library New South Wales: CALL NUMBERS RB/F990A/9
State Library Victoria: RARELT 910.41 C773VS
State Library South Australia: Special Collection: 919 C771