Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- MEMOIR
- INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
- CHAPTER I BOMBAY TO JUBBULPORE
- CHAPTER II HYDERABAD AND POONA
- CHAPTER III BOMBAY
- CHAPTER IV BOMBAY TO GOA
- CHAPTER V COLOMBO
- CHAPTER VI RANGOON
- CHAPTER VII LABUAN
- CHAPTER VIII ELEOPURA
- CHAPTER IX CELEBES
- X WESTERN AUSTRALIA
- XI ALBANY TO ADELAIDE
- XII ADELAIDE
- XIII VICTORIA
- XIV NEW SOUTH WALES
- XV NEW SOUTH WALES (continued)
- XVI QUEENSLAND
- XVII THE EAST COAST
- XVIII EAST COAST (continued)
- XIX PRINCE OF WALES' ISLAND
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- MEMOIR
- INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
- CHAPTER I BOMBAY TO JUBBULPORE
- CHAPTER II HYDERABAD AND POONA
- CHAPTER III BOMBAY
- CHAPTER IV BOMBAY TO GOA
- CHAPTER V COLOMBO
- CHAPTER VI RANGOON
- CHAPTER VII LABUAN
- CHAPTER VIII ELEOPURA
- CHAPTER IX CELEBES
- X WESTERN AUSTRALIA
- XI ALBANY TO ADELAIDE
- XII ADELAIDE
- XIII VICTORIA
- XIV NEW SOUTH WALES
- XV NEW SOUTH WALES (continued)
- XVI QUEENSLAND
- XVII THE EAST COAST
- XVIII EAST COAST (continued)
- XIX PRINCE OF WALES' ISLAND
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
In giving to the reading world these pages of the last Journal of one of the most popular writers of our day, no apology can be needed, and but little explanation.
A word had better perhaps be said, and said here, as to my share in its composition. It is now twelve years ago since my friend–then Mrs. Brassey–asked my advice and assistance in arranging the Diary she had kept during the eleven months' cruise of the ‘Sunbeam.’ This assistance I gladly gave, and she and I worked together, chiefly at reducing the mass of information gathered during the voyage. I often felt it hard to have to do away with interesting and amusing matter in order to reduce the book even to the size in which it appeared. It was a very pleasant and easy task, and I think the only difference of opinion which ever arose between us was as to the intrinsic merit of the manuscript. No one could have been more diffident than the writer of those charming pages; and it needed all the encouragement which both I and her friend and publisher, Mr. T. Norton Longman, could offer, to induce her to use many of the simple little details of her life, literally ‘on the ocean wave.’
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- The Last Voyage, to India and Australia, in the Sunbeam , pp. iii - viPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1889