
A vivid tapestry of early Arctic ambition, this volume brings together the daring chronicles of Elizabethan mariners and later explorers as they chased the elusive Northwest Passage. From the cramped decks of phantom vessels to the icy coasts of Norway and Spitzbergen, the narratives capture the raw determination that propelled ships into uncharted, frozen seas. Readers hear the echo of centuries‑old ambitions, the clash of national claims, and the relentless push toward the Behring Strait.
Interwoven with these grand quests are stark, personal vignettes of life on the ice—whalers battling dwindling catches, crews battling scurvy, and the desperate struggle to survive brutal winters. Tales of stranded sailors, makeshift graves, and the haunting sound of a mountain splitting in half lend a haunting realism. The collection offers a compelling glimpse into a world where exploration, hardship, and the lure of discovery were inseparable, inviting listeners to experience the peril and wonder of those early voyages.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (275K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2002-10-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

d. 1616
A clergyman and writer at the center of England’s age of exploration, he gathered the travel accounts that helped shape how his country imagined the wider world. His great collections of voyages remain one of the richest windows into Elizabethan seafaring and colonial ambition.
View all books