From William Bligh's A Voyage to the South Sea Undertaken by
Command of His Majesty for the Purpose of Conveying the Bread-Fruit
Tree to the West Indies, in His Majesty's Ship the Bounty, Commanded by
Lieutenant William Bligh (1792). The object of all the former
voyages to the South Seas, undertaken by the command of his present
majesty, has been the advancement of science, and the increase of
knowledge. This voyage may be reckoned the first, the intention of
which has been to derive benefit from those distant discoveries. For
the more fully comprehending the nature and plan of the expedition, and
that the reader may be possessed of every information necessary for
entering on the following sheets, I shall here lay before him a copy of
the instructions I received from the admiralty, and likewise a short
description of the bread-fruit. By the Commissioners for executing the
office of Lord High Admiral WHEREAS the king, upon a
representation from the merchants and planters interested in his
majesty's West India possessions that the introduction of the
bread-fruit tree into the islands of those seas, to constitute an
article of food, would be of very essential benefit to the inhabitants,
hath, in order to promote the interests of so respectable a body of his
subjects (especially in an instance which promises general advantage)
thought fit that measures should be taken for the procuring some of
those trees, and conveying them to the said West India islands: And
whereas the vessel under your command hath, in consequence thereof,
been stored and victualled for that service, and fitted with proper
conveniences and necessaries for the preservation of as many of the
said trees as, from her size, can be taken on board her; and you have
been directed to receive on board her the two gardeners named in the
margin [David Nelson, William Brown.], who, from their knowledge of
trees and plants, have been hired for the purpose of selecting such as
shall appear to be of a proper species and size: You are, therefore, in
pursuance of his majesty's pleasure, signified to us by Lord Sydney,
one of his principal secretaries of state, hereby required and directed
to put to sea in the vessel you command, the first favourable
opportunity of wind and weather, and proceed with her, as expeditiously
as possible, round Cape Horn, to the Society Islands, situate in the
Southern ocean, in the latitude of about eighteen degrees South, and
longitude of about two hundred and ten degrees East from Greenwich,
where, according to the accounts given by the late Capt. Cook, and
persons who accompanied him during his voyages, the bread-fruit tree is
to be found in the most luxuriant state. Having arrived at the
above-mentioned islands, and taken on board as many trees and plants as
may be thought necessary (the better to enable you to do which, you
have already been furnished with such articles of merchandize and
trinkets as it is supposed will be wanted to satisfy the natives) you
are to proceed from thence through Endeavour Streights (which separate
New Holland from New Guinea) to Prince's Island, in the Streights of
Sunda, or, if it should happen to be more convenient, to pass on the
eastern side of Java to some port on the north side of that island,
where any breadfruit trees which may have been injured, or have died,
may be replaced by mangos teens, duriens, jacks, nancas, lansas, and
other fine fruit trees of that quarter, as well as the rice plant which
grows upon dry land; all of which species (or such of them as shall be
judged most eligible) you are to purchase on the best terms you can
from the inhabitants of that island, with the ducats with which you
have also been furnished for that purpose; taking care, however, if the
rice plants above-mentioned cannot be procured at Java, to touch at
Prince's Island for them, where they are regularly cultivated. From Prince's Island, or the
Island of Java, you are to proceed round the Cape of Good Hope to the
West Indies (calling on your way thither at any places which may be
thought necessary) and deposit one half of such of the above-mentioned
trees and plants as may be then alive at his majesty's botanical garden
at St. Vincent, for the benefit of the Windward Islands, and then go on
to Jamaica: and, having delivered the remainder to Mr. East, or such
person or persons as may be authorized by the governor and council of
that island to receive them; refreshed your people, and received on
board such provisions and stores as may be necessary for the voyage,
make the best of your way back to England; repairing to Spithead, and
sending to our secretary an account of your arrival and proceedings. And whereas you will receive
herewith a copy of the instructions which have been given to the
above-mentioned gardeners for their guidance, as well in procuring the
said trees and plants, and the management of them after they shall be
put on board, as for bringing to England a small sample of each
species, and such others as may be prepared by the superintendant of
the botanical garden at St. Vincent's, and by the said Mr. East, or
others, for his majesty's garden at Kew; you are hereby required and
directed to afford, and to give directions to your officers and company
to afford, the said gardeners every possible aid and assistance, not
only in the collecting of the said trees and plants at the places
before-mentioned, but for their preservation during their conveyance to
the places of their destination. Given under our hands the
20th November 1787. HOWE, To Lieut. Wm
Bligh, commanding By command of their
Lordships, In the foregoing orders it
is to be observed, that I was particularly directed to proceed round
Cape Horn; but, as the season was so far advanced, and we were so long
detained by contrary winds, I made application to the Admiralty for
discretional orders on that point; to which I received the following
answer: By the Commissioners for executing
the office of Lord High Admiral THE season of the year being
now so far advanced as to render it probable, that your arrival, with
the vessel you command, on the sourthern coast of America,
will be too late for your passing round Cape Horn without much
difficulty and hazard; you are, in that case, at liberty
(notwithstanding former orders) to proceed in her to Otaheite, round
the Cape of Good Hope.
Given under our hands the
18th December 1787. To Lieut. Wm Bligh, commanding By command of their
Lordships, THE BREAD-FRUIT is so well
known and described, that to attempt a new account of it would be
unnecessary and useless. However, as it may contribute to the
convenience of the reader, I have given the following extracts
respecting it, with the plate annexed.
Breadfruit
sections Extract from the account of Dampier's
Voyage round the world, performed in 1688. THE bread-fruit (as we call
it) grows on a large tree, as big and high as our largest apple-trees:
It hath a spreading head, full of branches and dark leaves. The fruit
grows on the boughs like apples; it is as big as a penny-loaf when
wheat is at five shillings the bushel; it is of a round shape, and hath
a thick tough rind. When the fruit is ripe, it is yellow and soft, and
the taste is sweet and pleasant. The natives of Guam use it for bread.
They gather it, when full-grown, while it is green and hard; then they
bake it in an oven, which scorcheth the rind and makes it black; but
they scrape off the outside black crust, and there remains a tender
thin crust; and the inside is soft, tender, and white like the crumb of
a penny-loaf. There is neither seed nor stone in the inside,
but all is of a pure substance, like bread. It must be eaten new; for,
if it is kept above twenty-four hours, it grows harsh and choaky; but
it is very pleasant before it is too stale. This fruit lasts in season eight
months in the year, during which the natives eat no other sort
of food of bread kind. I did never see of this fruit any where but
here. The natives told us, that there is plenty of this fruit growing
on the rest of the Ladrone islands: and I did never hear of it any
where else. Extract from the account of Lord Anson's
Voyage, THERE was, at Tinian, a kind
of fruit, peculiar to these (Ladrone) is lands, called by the Indians rhymay,
but by us the bread-fruit; for it was constantly eaten by us,
during our stay upon the island,':- instead of bread; and so universally
preferred, that no ship's bread was expended in that whole
interval. It grew upon a tree which is somewhat lofty, and which
towards the top divides into large and spreading branches. The leaves
of this tree are of a remarkable deep green, are notched about the
edges, and are generally from a foot to eighteen inches in length. The
fruit itself is found indifferently on all parts of the branches; it
is, in shape, rather elliptical than round; it is covered with a tough
rind, and is usually seven or eight inches long; each of them grows
singly, and not in clusters. This fruit is fittest to be used when it
is full-grown, but still green; in which state, after it is properly
prepared by being roasted in the embers, its taste has some distant
resemblance to that of an artichoke's bottom, and its texture is not
very different, for it is soft and spungy. Extracts from the account of the first
Voyage of Captain Cook. IN THE SOCIETY ISLANDS. THE bread-fruit grows on a
tree that is about the size of a middling oak; its leaves are
frequently a foot and a half long, of an oblong shape, deeply sinuated
like those of the fig-tree, which they resemble in consistence and
colour, and in the exuding of a white milky juice upon being broken.
The fruit is about the size and shape of a child's head, and the
surface is reticulated not much unlike a truffle: it is covered with a
thin skin, and has a core about as big as the handle of a small knife.
The eatable part lies between the skin and the core; it is as white as
snow, and somewhat of the consistence of new bread: it must be roasted
before it is eaten, being first divided into three or four parts. Its
taste is insipid, with a slight sweetness somewhat resembling that of
the crumb of wheaten bread mixed with a Jerusalem artichoke. OF the many vegetables that
have been mentioned already as serving them for food, the principal is
the bread-fruit, to procure which costs them no trouble or labour but
climbing a tree. The tree which produces it does not indeed shoot up
spontaneously; but, if a man plants ten of them in his life-time, which
he may do in about an hour, he will as completely fulfil his duty to
his own and future generations as the native of our less temperate
climate can do by ploughing in the cold winter, and reaping in the
summer's heat, as often as these seasons return; even if, after he has
procured bread for his present household, he should convert a surplus
into money, and lay it up for his children. It is true, indeed, that the
bread-fruit is not always in season; but cocoa-nuts, bananas,
plantains, and a great variety of other fruits, supply the deficiency. Extract from the account of
Captain Cook's last Voyage. IN THE SOCIETY ISLANDS. I (Captain Cook) have
inquired very carefully into their manner of cultivating the
bread-fruit tree at Otaheite; but was always answered, that they never
planted it. This, indeed, must be evident to everyone who will examine
the places where the young trees come up. It will be always observed,
that they spring from the roots of the old ones, which run along near
the surface of the ground. So that the bread fruit trees may be
reckoned those that would naturally cover the plains, even supposing
that the island was not inhabited; in the same manner that the
white-barked trees, found at Van Diemen's Land, constitute the forests
there. And from this we may observe, that the inhabitant of Otaheite,
instead of being obliged to plant his bread, will rather be under the
necessity of preventing its progress; which, I suppose, is sometimes
done, to give room for trees of another sort, to afford him some
variety in his food. IN THE SANDWICH ISLANDS.
THE bread-fruit trees are
planted, and flourish with great luxuriance, on rising grounds.-Where
the hills rise almost perpendicularly in a great variety of peaked
forms, their steep sides and the deep chasms between them are covered
with trees, amongst which those of the bread-fruit were observed
particularly to abound. Vol. III. p. 105 and 114, containing Captain
King's Narrative. THE climate of the Sandwich
Islands differs very little from that of the West India Islands, which
lie in the same latitude. Upon the whole, perhaps, it may be rather
more temperate. THE bread-fruit trees thrive
in these islands, not in such abundance, but produce double the
quantity of fruit they do on the rich plains of Otaheite. The trees are
nearly of the same height, but the branches begin to strike out from
the trunk much lower, and with greater luxuriance. The natives reckon eight
kinds of the bread-fruit tree, each of which they distinguish by a
different name. 1. Patteah. 2. Eroroo. 3. Awanna. 4. Mi-re. 5. Oree. 6.
Powerro. 7. Appeere. 8. Rowdeeah. In the first, fourth, and eighth
class, the leaf differs from the rest; the fourth is more sinuated; the
eighth has a large broad leaf, not at all sinuated. The difference of
the fruit is principally in the first and eighth class. In the first,
the fruit is rather larger and more of an oblong form: in the eighth,
it is round and not above half the size of the others. I enquired if
plants could be produced from the seed, and was told they could not,
but that they must be taken from the root. The plants are best
collected after wet weather, at which time the earth balls round the
roots, and they are not liable to suffer by being moved. THE BOUNTY MUTINEERS TRIAL HOMEPAGE |