What could this common Sherlock Holmes metaphor have to do with the mutiny on HMAV Bounty in the middle of the Pacific Ocean? An alternative expression for the concept could be ‘the absence of the dog’s bark’, signifying when a statement relies on factual correspondence for its truth, the lack of pertinent facts suggests a […]
Read More and CommentLieutenant Bligh’s Imperial Breadfruit. Extract: “1787 was a time when freedom for Jamaican slaves was still some years away, an epoch of struggle confronted abolitionists, sugar planters owed their prosperity to humans under bondage, and China teas were being sweetened but at a bitter human cost. For those who connived to keep the trade acceptable, […]
Read More and CommentThe Man Who Ate An Innocent Albatross The center illustration shown here is cliché art, olden day disinformation spin of a blundering spiritless Governor Bligh, his diplomatic acumen tested and broken. Whether accurate or not the historic artwork, “The Arrest of Governor Bligh”, held by the National Museum of Australia of Bligh being dragged from […]
Read More and CommentMy works about William Bligh and Joseph Banks are written from the strategic side of the breadfruit voyages. This Afterword is from the botanic side of the beach with Banks wearing two social hats: one as the naturalist and the other as the facilitator. Did the plan to feed breadfruit to slaves have any basis […]
Read More and CommentCAPTAIN BLIGH’S FACEBOOK FANTASY If Lieutenant William Bligh had access to Facebook how might he have designed his Profile? This steampunk caricature may well have triggered Bligh’s weird alter ego. Someone once opened a Facebook account in my own name and threw in a hundred incognito Friends to boot. Facebook eventually, reluctantly, took it down, […]
Read More and CommentDR ROBERTO E. CORONEL (1939/2016) The sleuth who unearthed Bligh’s “Big Breadfruit Lie” RIP: Dr Roberto Coronel — eminent Research Professor of tropical and sub-tropical fruits, College of Agriculture, University of the Philippines. On 24 March 2016 a humanitarian, and friend, passed away. My sincere condolences go out to the family and friends of Dr […]
Read More and CommentA HOWLER BEHIND THE MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY ! Seeds of failure of the Bounty expedition were sown before Bligh stepped onboard at Deptford. By then, Joseph Banks, operative manager of the expedition, in breaking convention gave authority to the leading gardener David Nelson, a supernumerary on HMAV Bounty, to supervise carpenters in refitting the […]
Read More and CommentCould William Bligh ‘the Liar’ or Fletcher Christian ‘the Lecher’ be my great-great-great-great uncle of my great-great-great-great grandfather’s third cousin thrice removed? If I knew that I could brag to unlettered folk and even be throned the wise uncle at Christmas parties. However, ethically thinking, should I be proud or ashamed if it means making […]
Read More and CommentBreadfruit and other Bounties Was Bligh a forerunner of Johnny [Appleseed] Chapman? ‘In a strange mixture of tropical and temperate crops, the legend to this John Prezioso painting explains that this Bligh-like figure consists of northern fruits like the apple and peach (his eyelid and upper lip), as well as equatorial tree products such as […]
Read More and CommentAn editor’s cut from Karl Lorbach’s first exposé on Bligh and Banks The Great Bounty Conspiracy — Bligh and his Breadfruit Chapter Five Of visionary things and gentleman’s schemes Between 26 October 1788 and 5 April 1789, it was mostly the wet season in Tahiti. This was when the Bounty was anchored at Matavai Bay […]
Read More and CommentConspiracy on the Bounty — Bligh’s Convenient Mutiny: a factual book crammed with fresh supportive material. Bligh was greatly troubled by the French ahead: After the Bounty departed Tahiti and sailed towards Tonga, not only was Bligh confronted with the daily failure of his breadfruits, he was in dread of the French having already arrived […]
Read More and CommentBligh’s (made-to-order) Convenient Mutiny Question — “If you could have asked Fletcher Christian one question, what would that question be”? * Answer — “Considering that William Bligh made fame and fortune through adversity, and observing that his passive response to his arrest and the mutiny, was most uncharacteristic of Lieutenant Bligh, how much Mr Christian […]
Read More and CommentDEMYSTIFYING the MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY Following discussion outlining how breadfruit was but a subsidiary theme of Bligh’s Admiralty Orders: The “Bounty” myth or legend should not be forced upon generations of inquiring minds. There must be freedom to appreciate and acknowledge how science, as it habitually does, confirms, disproves, and or challenges historic accounts […]
Read More and CommentWhat Really Bedeviled Bligh: Two counter-rotating propellers a symbol of non-scientific Bligh-verses-Christian, Christian-verses-Bligh, skewed forms of Hollywood history. Now one simple incontrovertible fact has left the cliché “Captain Bligh” in need of a new resume. All that’s been written that endeavors to account for Bligh’s violent outbursts, especially towards his officers, and particularly Fletcher Christian […]
Read More and CommentBligh was not a victim in the Bounty mutiny: In January 1989 as the bi-centenary of the Bounty mutiny gathered momentum, a ‘New Yorker’ cartoon showed Captain Bligh drifting away from the Bounty in a rowboat and shouting, “So, Mr. Christian! You propose to unceremoniously cast me adrift?” A lampoon of the famous painting by […]
Read More and CommentBountiana in Decline: It is a sad fact that the story of Lieutenant Bligh’s historic launch voyage has been relegated to a trashy reality television show. On 10 July 2017 Australian SBS television re-aired Channel 4’s first episode of “Mutiny”, a five part UK series in which SAS — Who Dares Wins — instructor Anthony […]
Read More and CommentAs pressure was mounting on Bligh, on 19 April 1789 he made this curious remark in his journal: ‘Mustered all Hands to their Stations and Saw them Clean and I afterwards exercised them at Maneuvering the Ship’. To halt the ship’s progress, way out in the Pacific Ocean, to carry out exercises to maneuver the […]
Read More and CommentYet another case of a disappearing journal: Following the mutiny on the Bounty, after Bligh returned safely to England, and before Bligh received his commission to the Providence, Governor Phillip in Sydney Cove was seething. He had discovered that eleven convicts and settlers had absconded in his fishing boat, a ship’s gig – an open […]
Read More and CommentControversies Surrounding Bligh’s Bounty Logbooks Resurface: Consistent with findings in Conspiracy on the Bounty a commission to examine and conserve Bligh’s surviving logbooks failed to demonstrate that one of them was the original journal that Bligh had penned. The official position of the State Library of New South Wales (where the journal is held) “is […]
Read More and Comment‘A ROYAL BOTANIST IN THE PHILIPPINES’ and CAPTAIN BLIGH’S ROLE IN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY BREADFRUIT MYTHMAKING ! Almost two years before HMS Bounty set sail for Tahiti, Juan de Cuéllar, having been appointed Royal Botanist in the service of the Real Compañía de Filipinas, embarked from Cádiz on board the Águila Imperial heading for the Philippines. […]
Read More and CommentSailing master, and rookie Freemason, twenty-two years William Bligh, seen posing here in silk cravat and bob-wig civilian aplomb; his shirt pinned with a masonic square and compass badge (enlarged). * Bligh’s patron at The Royal Society, Sir Joseph Banks, is known to have been a Freemason. Likewise Bligh’s business friend and protégé, Duncan Campbell, […]
Read More and CommentTHE VERDICT ‘Conspiracy on the Bounty’ tables a great deal more on Bligh, Christian, and the Bounty than was ever published, indeed was ever known before. Without heading into a labyrinth of critiques let us compare the verdicts of five recognized works: 1. Caroline Alexander’s exhaustive ‘The Bounty’ is a well-written 450-page book of what’s […]
Read More and CommentAdmiral John Byng’s Execution. Voltaire quipped, “In this country (England) it is wise to kill an admiral from time to time so to encourage the others.” Ever since 14 March 1757, the execution of Admiral Byng by a platoon of royal marines was etched firmly on the minds of commissioned officers. The execution took place […]
Read More and CommentThe Recherche and Espérance: 1791–1794. An expedition to find two missing vessels commanded by Jean-François de La Pérouse (1741–1788). On 9 April 1793, under Commodore d’Entrecasteaux in the Recherche and the Espérance, the plant naturalist, Labillardière, sailed from Tonga for New Caledonia with a collection of two hundred A. altilis (seedless) breadfruit transplants. Despite Labillardière […]
Read More and Comment“Not to read it would be un-Australian”! For those interested in William Bligh, the man, whatever historic record hasn’t already been corrected about Bligh in Conspiracy on the Bounty is boldly laid bare in David Hunt’s popular witty book, Girt — the Unauthorized History of Australia. Doing away with euphemisms, Hunt has cited material or […]
Read More and CommentMore often than not we refer to a ship, boat, yacht, as “She”. Arguments abound as to why this is so? One source suggests that a ship “was nearer and dearer to the sailor than anyone except his mother.” Therefore what better reason to call his ship “she”? Another source suggests “the use of ‘she’ […]
Read More and CommentThe Bounty screenplay 1984. A seemingly unnecessary disclaimer during the end credits of this classic movie states that 35 years later, only John Adams and his new English-Tahitian mixed race family was found on Pitcairn Island by a passing British warship. The descendants of the HMS Bounty mutineers continue to live on Pitcairn Island. The […]
Read More and CommentInside Bligh’s Cabin. Richard Hough, author of Captain Bligh and Mister Christian, argues that Christian’s love was requited by Bligh on a regular basis and that the mutiny was sweet man-love turned sour’! (ref: David Hunt, “Girt”)
Read More and CommentWho Caused the Mutiny on the Bounty — Madge Darby 1964. A curious variation is Darby’s somewhat Freudian contention that Christian became demented on realizing that he loved Bligh rather than his Tahitian consort Isabella. Bligh, ten years older than Christian took the younger man ‘not only as his protégé but also as his lover’.
Read More and CommentMr Bligh’s Bad Language — Greg Dening 1994. Here Dening psychoanalyses Bligh as ‘a man bedeviled by nothing so much as his own vaguely homosexual jealousies’. Oscar Wilde once said, ‘everything in the world is about sex except sex. Sex is about power.’ If Bligh’s bedevilment wasn’t so vague, and he and Christian allowed each […]
Read More and CommentBeyond seduction, suffering self-denial, or having a whale of a time living a bisexual lifestyle? Satirical Wiki artist shows Bligh giving the sign-of-the-horns small and index finger gesture, a familiar symbol of cuckoldry during Bligh’s time!
Read More and CommentThis fifth film dramatization of the 1789 mutiny aboard the HMS Bounty is based on Richard Hough’s novel Captain Bligh and Mr. Christian. The socially impotent Captain Bligh is as strict a disciplinarian as ever. Mr. Christian, formerly Bligh’s friend, becomes the leader of the mutiny virtually in spite of himself! Excellent performance with Mel […]
Read More and CommentColourful remake of MGM’s 1935 version three. ‘Tarita Teriipia and Brando shooting love scenes. Tarita later had two children with Brando, including a troubled daughter, Cheyenne, who committed suicide in 1995.’ (Hollywood-Elsewhere & Roy Frumkes). Notably in the 1962 production, which ran for a mighty 163 minutes, there’s just 4 minutes of scenes concerning breadfruit.
Read More and CommentGauguin’s erotic Tahiti idyll exposed as a sham. Paul Gauguin, renowned for his paintings of exotic idylls and Polynesian beauties, was a sadist who battered his wife, exploited his friends and lied to the world about the erotic Eden he claimed to have discovered on the South Sea island of Tahiti. The most exhaustive study […]
Read More and Comment‘Paul Gauguin fled what he called “filthy Europe” in 1891 to what he hoped would be an unspoiled paradise, Tahiti. He painted 66 magnificent canvases during the first two years he spent there and kept notes from which he later wrote Noa Noa — a journal recording his thoughts and impressions of that time’ (Amazon).
Read More and CommentTo help support the great work of the NTBG Breadfruit Institute, and breadfruit tree-planting projects, visit http://ntbg.org/breadfruit/donate/plantatree.php. For information on Global Breadfruit and how you can help, visit http://www.globalbreadfruit.com
Read More and CommentThe “Bounty” industry has been servicing our imaginings since Gauguin sailed from Marseilles for Tahiti on the Océanien in April 1891 — http://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/entry/taschen-tiki-pop-sven-kirsten_n_5640183
Read More and CommentThe “Bounty” industry has been servicing our imaginings since Gauguin sailed from Marseilles for Tahiti on the Océanien in April 1891 — http://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/entry/taschen-tiki-pop-sven-kirsten_n_5640183
Read More and Comment“These three pieces of musical majesty by Vangelis generate an awareness of the ominous force, yet serene tranquility of the sea. The vastness of the ocean surges against the coastline and reminds us that beneath the sparkling allure of the waves lies a terrible strength, ready to rise up with overwhelming power. My (rovingrepairbot) photos […]
Read More and CommentFACEBOOK FLASHBACK: HMS Bounty – Conspiracy on the Bounty [15 February 2015] Similar to HMS Bounty myths, many Titanic myths have been spread by films. “It is the tragic story that everybody knows the end to – the doomed Titanic sinks. Its final hours have become the stuff of myth – but how much have […]
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