
Attribution
Ken McGooganPublication Details
Book1st Carrol & Graf edCarroll & Graf Publishers2004Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (LOWER LEVEL) F1060.7.H495 M34 2004 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
In 1766, Samuel Hearne, at just twenty-one and already a veteran of the Seven Years’ War, joined the Hudson’s Bay Company, which charged him with the unwieldy task of finding first a famed and long-lost copper mine?and then the great Northwest Passage. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
- Hearne, Samuel, — 1745-1792
- Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, — 1772-1834. — Rime of the ancient mariner
- Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, — 1772-1834 — Sources
- Explorers — Northwest, Canadian — Biography
- Explorers — Great Britain — Biography
- Indians of North America — Northwest, Canadian — History — 18th century
- Northwest, Canadian — Discovery and exploration — British
- Arctic Coast (Canada) — Discovery and exploration — British
- Northwest, Canadian — Description and travel
- Arctic Coast (Canada) — Description and travel
Places in this work
Notes
- "In addition to achieving an unnamed immortality in Coleridge’s epic poem, few people know that during a remarkable three-year odyssey British explorer Samuel Hearne became the first European to reach the Arctic Ocean and stand on the northernmost shore of the Americas. McGoogan skillfully demonstrates that Hearne was far more complex, accomplished, and influential than history has until now acknowledged." "Hearne’s posthumously published journal, the first book about an Arctic sojourn, describes a trek of 3,500 miles marked by hardship, hunger, and disappointment, and ameliorated only by his friendship with the indomitable Dene leader Matonabbee. Their epic journey culminated in the notorious massacre at "Bloody Falls," where the Dene preyed on a helpless band of Inuit. Hearne witnessed the slaughter, and it would haunt him for the rest of his life; indeed, his report of the brutal incident has influenced Western understanding of native peoples for two centuries." "In an inspired example of literary sleuthing, McGoogan determines that Samuel Taylor Coleridge, six years before writing "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," encountered Hearne, who spoke of his guilt at seeing so many murdered so brutally. As the poet heard the traveler’s painful stories, he was stirred to write about an old sailor haunted by his memories of a barbarous act."–BOOK JACKET
Contents
- Prologue: Coleridge at Work
- Pt. 1. Mr. Midshipman Hearne
- 1. The Boy from Beaminster
- 2. The Young Gentleman
- 3. Blood, Smoke, and Fire
- 4. Candide in London
- Pt. 2. Maker of History
- 5. Prince of Wales Fort
- 6. The Far-Off Metal River
- 7. Massacre at Bloody Falls
- 8. Return from the Arctic Coast
- 9. Cumberland House
- 10. The Governor’s Magic
- Pt. 3. Ancient Mariner
- 11. Voyaging with Nobility
- 12. A London Farewell
- 13. Life After Death
- Epilogue: Tracking the Mariner
ISBN
- 0786714891
- 0786713046
LCCN
Open Library ID
-

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