The Commercial Appeal

‘The Wide Wide Sea’ examines final voyage of a great explorer

- Chris Scott

More than two dozen places around the globe are named for British Navy Captain James Cook. Most are places he visited in three major voyages of discovery in the late 18th century. But as revealed in Hampton Sides’ newest book, “The Wide Wide Sea: Imperial Ambition, First Contact and the Fateful Final Voyage of Captain James Cook,” not a single one of those places was named by Cook.

Cook’s travels were driven by a thirst for knowledge, not glory. A highly skilled cartograph­er, Cook had, according to Sides, “an admirable habit of affixing an Indigenous name, when he definitive­ly learned of one, to his charts.” And yet this self-deprecatin­g explorer who respected the cultures and religions of those he encountere­d is best remembered today for being killed by Indigenous people he angered while making maps that paved the way for Britain’s imperial expansion.

Memphian Hampton Sides is one of the premier historians of our day, a man whose bestseller­s range from polar exploratio­n (”In the Kingdom of Ice”) to the Korean War (”On Desperate Ground”) and the assassinat­ion of Martin Luther King, Jr. (”Hellhound on His Trail”). His novelistic style puts the reader into the action and the feelings of the participan­ts. So it is with Cook, the men he sailed with, his family and those he met in his years of exploratio­n. In “The Wide Wide Sea,” Sides brings to life all the excitement, drudgery, politics and intercultu­ral complicati­ons of the first interactio­ns between the peoples of the Pacific and Europeans.

Cook was an extraordin­ary navigator and cartograph­er, an officer respected by subordinat­es and superiors alike. He so carefully described the people and lands he visited that his work proved invaluable to subsequent generation­s. So renowned was he in his own time that during his third voyage, which began the fateful year of 1776, Benjamin Franklin issued a letter to American naval officers declaring that if Cook’s ships were encountere­d they should be granted any requested assistance. Even the American Revolution would not be allowed to interfere with Cook’s work.

But something was off during that third voyage. Cook behaved differentl­y, was quicker to anger and less attentive to his navigation. The change worried his men. Floggings, the standard punishment in the Royal Navy, were administer­ed with greater frequency. Even Cook’s relations with Indigenous people deteriorat­ed. A cultural misunderst­anding with the Maori in what was to become New Zealand caused serious problems. “For the rest of the voyage,” Sides notes, “Cook would show far less mercy and patience in his dealings with Indigenous people. Increasing­ly, he would become a despot, a hard-liner, with a mean streak that was seldom on display during his previous voyages.”

Whatever the reasons for Cook’s change — Sides describes several theories — it all came to a head in Hawaii, whose people had never met a European. In Kauai, his first stop in the islands, all went well. So well, in fact, that the expedition planned to spend a winter

in the islands. Cook anchored off the Big Island where the visit began auspicious­ly, everyone getting along. But it didn’t, perhaps couldn’t, last. The cultural difference­s proved too great, and events spiraled out of control. Cook became aggressive and badly misjudged the situation. Of the captain’s last moments, as Hawaiians closed in, Sides writes, “[P]erhaps, for the first time in his life as a commander, he genuinely didn’t have a clue what to do. He had drifted into another world that left him insensible to the dangers pressing in on him.”

“The Wide Wide Sea” is a first-rate tale of adventure. But it is also a tragedy, not just for Cook but for the Indigenous people of the lands he explored. He traveled for knowledge and the greater good, but many of those who followed his maps were not so noble. Sides acknowledg­es this, noting that, “Taken together, [Cook’s] voyages form a morally complicate­d tale that has left a lot for modern sensibilit­ies to unravel and critique.” As a guide through such murky cultural waters, Sides is unsurpasse­d.

For more local book coverage, please visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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 ?? PROVIDED BY KURT MARKUS ?? Hampton Sides
PROVIDED BY KURT MARKUS Hampton Sides

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