Manawatu Standard

Book of the week

The Sea Journal by Huw Lewis-jones (Thames & Hudson, $65)

-

Don Walsh is both a perfect choice and a strange one as the author of the foreword to The Sea Journal: Seafarers’ Sketchbook­s. Perfect because he’s been a seafarer for nearly 70 years, first in the US navy, then as a marine explorer who, in 1960, with the Swiss engineer Jacques Piccard, went deeper in an ocean than anyone had been before: seven miles down in a cramped steel sphere in the Mariana Trench, east of the Philippine­s. Strange, because he says that these days he keeps most of his notes in his head, and The Sea Journal is a treasury of records put down in a more readily accessible form of voyages across the seas and through the ages.

Edited by Huw Lewis-jones, a historian and expedition guide who spends much of his time navigating small boats in Antarctica and the Pacific, the voyagers are arranged in alphabetic­al order. Thus Francis Beaufort (1774-1857), who is synonymous with the wind scale, is preceded by Jeanne Baret (1740-1807), who ought to be synonymous with deception and daring: she joined a French scientific expedition disguised as her lover’s valet, and so became the first woman to circumnavi­gate the world. Besides famously nautical names – Da Gama and Nelson, Chichester and

Bligh – the voyagers include a whaler’s wife and a cabin boy, a French botanist and a Tahitian priest, as well as pirates and artists. Most of those featured set forth, as Lewis-jones has it, ‘‘to venture, to hazard’’ and to bring back ‘‘proofs of marvels’’. Among the proofs are the Venetian scholar Antonio Pigafetta’s account of the first circumnavi­gation of the world (1519-1522), during which Magellan died, and the first charts to show the coast of Antarctica and the Arctic archipelag­o of Franzjosef Land.

There’s the survival story of Frank Hurley, stained in places with blubber from the stoves, detailing in words and pictures how 22 men lived for four months in 1916 under two upturned boats in the Antarctic. There are the handwritte­n notes of William Bligh, which read like a draft of a wanted poster on the mutineers who cast him adrift in 1789 from the Bounty (‘‘Fletcher Christian. Aged 24 years, 5 feet 9in high. Dark swarthy complexion.’’)

There are the fantastica­l images of sea creatures off Bermuda painted by the German-born artist Else Bostelmann (1882-1961), whose methods of working seem equally fantastica­l.

For initial sketches, she went down in a copper diving helmet and scratched a steel pin on a zinc engraver’s plate. ‘‘On subsequent dives an iron music stand was lowered... on which she tied a canvas and a lead-weighted palette daubed with oil paint. Her brushes floated with their handles upright, tugging lightly at their strings.’’

This is a book to dip into rather than read straight through, but an endlessly diverting and beautifull­y produced one.

It’s a reminder, too, in this age of the Galileo satellite and the gyro compass, of the extent of uncharted waters. With only 15 per cent of our oceans explored, Walsh points out, there’s still plenty to do, ‘‘and yet we want to return to the moon and land people on Mars... I’d say it’s more important to understand how [this planet] works and try to repair the damage we’re doing.’’

– Michael Kerr, The Telegraph

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand