A Narrative of a Nine Months' Residence in New Zealand in 1827
The author of this account of New Zealand in the year 1827 was an artist by profession. A love of roving and adventure, he states, tempted him, at an early age, to sea. In 1815 he procured a passage on board a storeship bound for Sicily and Malta, where he had a brother stationed who was a captain in the navy. He visited many parts of the Mediterranean, accompanying Lord Exmouth's fleet in his brother's gunboat on his Lordship's first expedition against the Barbary States. He afterwards visited the ruins of Carthage and the remains of the ancient city of Ptolomea, or Lepida, situated in ancient Libya. Returning to Malta, he passed through Sicily, and ascended Mount Etna. In 1818 he left England for the United States, and spent nearly two years in rambling through that country. Thence he proceeded to Brazil and Chile, returning to Rio de Janeiro, where he practised his art until the commencement of 1824. Having received letters of introduction to Lord Amherst, who had left England to undertake the government of India, Mr. Earle left Rio for the Cape of Good Hope, intending to take his passage thence to Calcutta. On the voyage to the Cape the vessel by which he was a passenger touched at Tristan d'Acunha, and was driven off that island in a gale while Mr. Earle was ashore, leaving him stranded in that desolate land, where he remained for six months, when he was rescued by a passing ship, the Admiral Cockburn, bound for Van Diemen's Land, whence he visited New South Wales and New Zealand, returning again to Sydney. In pursuance of his original resolution to visit India, he left Sydney in The Rainbow, touching at the Caroline Islands, Manilla, and Singapore. After spending some time in Madras, where he executed many original drawings, which were afterwards copied and exhibited in a panorama, he set out for England by a French vessel, which was compelled by stress of weather to put into Mauritius, where she was condemned. Mr. Earle ultimately reached England in a vessel named the Resource, but, being still animated by the desire for travel, he accepted the situation of draughtsman on His Majesty's ship Beagle, commanded by Captain Fitzroy, which in the year 1831 left on a voyage of discovery that has been made famous by the observations of Charles Darwin, who accompanied the expedition in the capacity of naturalist.
Augustus Earle
A NARRATIVE OF A NINE MONTHS' RESIDENCE IN NEW ZEALAND
IN 1827
AUGUSTUS EARLE
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I
VOYAGE FROM SYDNEY
CHAPTER II
RECEPTION BY THE NATIVES
CHAPTER III
A RAMBLE ASHORE
CHAPTER IV
THE HOKIANGA RIVER EIGHTY YEARS AGO
CHAPTER V
JOURNEY OVERLAND TO BAY OF ISLANDS
CHAPTER VI
MEETING WITH THE CHIEF PATUONE
CHAPTER VII
A MAORI VILLAGE
CHAPTER VIII
TOILSOME JOURNEY THROUGH THE FOREST
CHAPTER IX
THE MISSIONARY SETTLEMENT AT KERIKERI
CHAPTER X
THE BAY OF ISLANDS
CHAPTER XI
THE MASSACRE OF THE "BOYD"
CHAPTER XII
THE FIRST SETTLEMENT AT KORORAREKA
CHAPTER XIII
MAORI NON-PROGRESSIVENESS
CHAPTER XIV
A MISSION SETTLEMENT
CHAPTER XV
A VISIT FROM HONGI
CHAPTER XVI
INTERVIEW WITH THE GREAT MAORI CONQUEROR
CHAPTER XVII
A MAORI WELCOME
CHAPTER XVIII
EXCURSIONS IN THE INTERIOR
CHAPTER XIX
ENTERTAINED BY MAORI WOMEN
CHAPTER XX
LOADING SPARS AT HOKIANGA
CHAPTER XXI
DEATH OF A GREAT CHIEF
CHAPTER XXII
BRUTAL MURDER OF A WIFE
CHAPTER XXIII
ANOTHER JOURNEY TO BAY OF ISLANDS
CHAPTER XXIV
VISIT OF A WAR PARTY
CHAPTER XXV
BURNED OUT OF HOUSE AND HOME
CHAPTER XXVI
A HOSTILE DEMONSTRATION
CHAPTER XXVII
THE LAW OF RETALIATION
CHAPTER XXVIII
A WAR EXPEDITION AND A CANNIBAL FEAST
CHAPTER XXIX
SLAVERY AMONG THE MAORIS
CHAPTER XXX
PIRATICAL SEIZURE OF A VESSEL
CHAPTER XXXI
THE CLIMATE AND PRODUCTIONS
CHAPTER XXXII
THE ART OF TATTOOING
CHAPTER XXXIII
TRIBAL GOVERNMENT AND RELIGION
CHAPTER XXXIV
THE MAORI VIEW OF CHRISTIANITY
CHAPTER XXXV
THREATENED INVASION BY HONGI
CHAPTER XXXVI
ARRIVAL OF A WARSHIP
CHAPTER XXXVII
THE WHALERS AND THE MISSIONARIES
CHAPTER XXXVIII
THREATENED WAR
CHAPTER XXXIX
CONSTRUCTION OF A PA
CHAPTER XL
A SHAM FIGHT
CHAPTER XLI
RETURN OF THE BRIG.—AN EXCITING INCIDENT
CHAPTER XLII
WAR-LIKE EXPEDITION TO THE THAMES
CHAPTER XLIII
VISITS OF WHALERS
CHAPTER XLIV
VISIT OF TWO SOUTH SEA ISLANDERS
CHAPTER XLV
THE DEATH OF HONGI
CHAPTER XLVI
A TRIBAL CONFLICT
CHAPTER XLVII
THE DEATH OF KING GEORGE AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
CHAPTER XLVIII
DEPARTURE FROM BAY OF ISLANDS
CHAPTER XLIX
THE JOURNEY TO HOKIANGA
CHAPTER L
EUROPEAN PREPARATIONS FOR DEFENCE
CHAPTER LI
OBSERVATIONS ON THE SOCIAL CONDITIONS OF THE MAORIS
CHAPTER LII
A MAORI TANGI
CHAPTER LIII
CHARACTER OF THE NEW ZEALANDERS
CHAPTER LIV
THE SETTLEMENT AND TRADE OF HOKIANGA
CHAPTER LV
MASSACRE OF A SCHOONER'S CREW
CHAPTER LVI
FAREWELL TO NEW ZEALAND
APPENDIX I
APPENDIX II
THE DEATH OF WHAREUMU (KING GEORGE)