Selkirk's Island by Diana Souhami (best color ebook reader txt) π
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- Author: Diana Souhami
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Selkirkβs Cave (Juan Fernandez), 22n, 216
Selkirkβs Lookout (Juan Fernandez), 23
Serrano, Pedro de, 93
sex: sailorsβ, 35, 40, 107; Selkirkβs on Island, 106β7, 201
Sharp, Captain Bartholomew, 30n, 39β40
Sheltram, William, 114β15, 183β4
shipboard life, 46β8, 56, 60β3, 65β6, 147β9, 151, 160; see also scurvy
shipworms (Teredo navalis), 83β4 & n, 100β1, 122, 161, 182
Shuter, Christopher, 122
Sidirie, Jaimie, 107n
Skottsberg, Carl, 21n, 219
Sotomayor, Don Alonso de, 43
South Sea Company, 165, 184β6
Spain: monopoly on trade in South Seas, 30β1, 115, 122; war with Britain, 32, 115; closes South Sea ports to foreigners, 46; opposes Scots Darien scheme, 51β2; sailors land on Island, 116; on Guam, 160; threat to Batchelor on return voyage, 163; peace settlements with Britain, (1712), 184; (1748), 214; and Chilean independence, 215
Spectator (journal), 170
Speedwell (privateer), 214
Starkey, David J.: British Privateering Enterprise in the Eighteenth Century, 179n
Steele, Sir Richard: Rogers meets and consults on return, 170, 173β4; physical condition, 173 & n; Selkirk meets, 173β4, 189; debts, 175β6, 194; journalism, 176; writes on Selkirk, 176β8; home life, 177β8
Stradling, Thomas: sails on Cinque Ports, 48; and Dampierβs quarrel with Huxford, 60; takes command of Cinque Ports, 63β4; secretiveness, 65; at Island, 67β8; criticised and mistrusted by crew, 67, 72; in attack on Santa Maria, 77β9; quarrel with and separation from Dampier, 80β2; captures and burns Manta de Cristo, 81β2; returns to Island for repairs, 82; quarrels with and abandons Selkirk on Island, 83β4, 90, 94β5, 129, 134, 136; escapes from sinking Cinque Ports, 101; imprisonment, escape and return to Britain, 101β2, 150n; Selkirk condemns, 182
Stretton, Lieut. William, 127, 146
Swift, Jonathan, 36, 176
Tatler (journal), 176n
tattoos, 36β8
Tenerife, 126
Texel, 164, 166
tortoises, giant, 150β1
Trinity (ship), 39, 41, 51
UNESCO, 220β1
Unicorn (ship), 52β4
Utrecht, Treaty of (1712), 185
Valparaiso, 43, 93, 130, 217β18
Vanbrugh, Carleton: sails on 1708/9 expedition, 123; detained in Tenerife, 126; hostility with Rogers, 127, 162; shoots and kills slave, 128; at rescue of Selkirk, 134; Rogers accuses of cowardice at Guayaquil, 147; burned in attack on Begona, 157; on quarrels among officers, 162; death, 163
Vera Cruz, Mexico, 31
Vos, Admiral Pieter de, 164
Wafer, Lionel, 51β3
Waghenaer, L.J., 30n
Wasse, James, 123, 146, 148; death, 163
Watling, John, 40β1
Welbe, John: on Dampierβs quarrels with Huxford, 59β60; and Dampierβs attack on French merchantman, 71; complains of Dampier and Stradling, 72; on Dampierβs egotism, 77; in fight against Spanish warship, 103; in attack on Rosario, 104β5; deserts Dampier, 112
Weymouth, HMS, 201, 203β8
Whetstone, Admiral William, 122, 173
Will (Miskito Indian), 40β2, 93, 130
Woolf, Virginia, 199
Acknowledgments
ALL THANKS to Peter Campbell for his illumining design, to Rebecca Wilson at Weidenfeld for her publishing skills, and to my agent Georgina Capel for her acumen and watchful eye. Thanks, too, to Pat Chetwyn for copy editing the manuscript, and to Douglas Matthews, who compiled the index.
I am indebted to Peter LeFevre for rescuing me in the archives of the Public Record Office at Kew. He steered me through shipsβ logs, muster rolls, depositions, Letters of Marque and worse. And when I struggled with seemingly illegible manuscripts, he deciphered them with ease.
I have pillaged from the faultless scholarship of the maritime historian Glyn Williams, author of The Great South Sea and The Prize of All the Oceans. I am grateful for essential help to librarians at the Wellcome Institute, the Royal Geographical Society, the London Library, the British Library and the Natural History Museum, and to Brian Thynne, Curator of Hydrography at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, for making eighteenth-century charts and sailing directions available to me.
On the island I thank Pedro and Fabiana Niada for guided treks over impossible terrain, and for a memorable millennium-eve party; Manolo Chamorro for renting me a log cabin that looked out over the Pacific Ocean at the point where Selkirk was abandoned and rescued; Jaimie Sidirie who became my protector and translator; the painter Valeria Saltzman for her profound conversations; Ilke Paulentz for taking me on a terrifying journey in a small boat on Christmas Day to The Islandβs seal colonies; Ivan Leiva Silva at CONAF for explaining conservation issues to me; Oscar the chivalrous cook on the supply ship Navarino for looking after me on a two-day voyage to remote parts of the archipelago; Diamante at the CafΓ© Remo for cooking me so many fishes, and her husband for mixing those amazing pisco sours.
Back home, my deep thanks to Sheila Owen-Jones for rescuing me from the island when I felt powerless to leave, and for encouraging me through dark times as well as good. And once more and of course, for her unstinting kindness, my heartfelt thanks to Naomi Narod, my best friend for is it really thirty-four years.
Footnotes of passing interest are marked with an asterisk and appear on the text pages. References are marked with a dagger and appear as endnotes, beginning on page 223. Most of the engravings are taken from A Voyage Round the World by William Funnell (1707).
About the Author
Diana Souhami is the author of many highly acclaimed books: Selkirkβs Island, winner of the 2001 Whitbread Biography Award; The Trials of Radclyffe Hall, shortlisted for the James Tait
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