“at once the most perceptive and the most literary” (Fitzhardinge)
A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson, in New South Wales,
including an Accurate Description of the Situation of the Colony; of the Natives; and of its Natural Productions: Taken on the Spot, by Captain Watkin Tench, of the Marines.
London,
Sold by G Nicol, Pall-Mall; and J. Sewell, Cornhill,
1793.
First edition. Quarto (275 by 215mm), xvi, folding engraved map, 212pp., nineteenth century half tan calf, maroon cloth, gilt, worn.
23352
notes:
In 1786, the young Wtakin Tench (c1758-1833) volunteered for three years' service in the coloney of Botany Bay. In two books, of which this is the second, he described the "voyage to and the early years of the settlement in New South Wales, at once the most perceptive and the most literary of the contemporary accounts. Less detailed than David Collins, less matter of fact than Arthur Phillip or John White, Watkin Tench was the first to mould Australian experience into a wor...
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