The Isle Of Pines (1668), by 
Henry Neville 
 
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Title: The Isle Of Pines (1668) and An Essay in Bibliography by 
Worthington Chauncey Ford 
Author: Henry Neville 
Commentator: Worthington Chauncey Ford 
Release Date: May 9, 2007 [EBook #21410] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ISLE 
OF PINES (1668) *** 
 
Produced by David Widger 
 
THE ISLE OF PINES
By Henry Neville 
1668 
An Essay in Bibliography 
by WORTHINGTON CHAUNCEY FORD 
Boston 
The Club of Odd Volumes 1920 
 
COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY THE CLUB OF ODD VOLUMES 
TO 
Charles Lemuel Nichols 
lover of books 
colleague 
FRIEND 
ETEXT TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: Numbers enclosed in square 
brackets are the page numbers of the 1920 edition. Numbers enclosed 
in double curly brackets are the page numbers of the original 1668 
edition. A damaged and incomplete bibliography and index in several 
languages has not been included. The 1668 portion is a difficult read 
because of the use of the long "s" character which can only be 
displayed in text by using a unicode character set. In the present etext I 
have elected to replace the long "s" with the letter "f" which it most 
closely approximates in the ASCII and ISO-8859-1 charset, and which 
produces only a bit more difficulty to the reader than the long "s" itself. 
DW
PREFATORY NOTE 
My curiosity on the "Isle of Pines" was aroused by the sale of a copy in 
London and New Tork in 1917, and was increased by the discovery of 
two distinct issues in the Dowse Library, in the Massachusetts 
Historical Society. As my material grew in bulk and the history of this 
hoax perpetrated in the seventeenth century developed, I thought it of 
sufficient interest to communicate an outline of the story to the Club of 
Odd Volumes, of Boston, Oftober 23, 1918. The results of my 
investigations are more fully given in the present volume. I 
acknowledge my indebtedness to the essay of Max Hippe, "Eine 
vor-De-foe'sche Englische Robinsonade," published in Eugen Kölbing's 
"Englische Studien" xix. 66. 
WORTHINGTON CHAUNCEY FORD 
Boston, February, 1920 
 
THE ISLE OF PINES 
The ISLE of P I N E S, 
OR, 
A late Difcovery of a fourth ISLAND in 
Terra Auftralis, Incognita. 
BEING 
A True Relation of certain Englifh perfons, Who in the dayes of Queen 
Elizabeth making a Voyage to the Eaft India, were call' away, and 
wracked on the Ifland near to the Coaft of Auftralis, and all drowned, 
except one Man and four Women, whereof one was a Negro. And now 
lately Ann Dom. 1667, A Dutch Ship driven by foul weather there, by 
chance have found their Posterity (fpeaking good Englifh) to amount to 
ten or twelve thoufand perfons, as they suppofe. The whole Relation
follows, written, and left by the Man himfelf a little before his death, 
and declared to the Dutch by His Grandchild. 
 
THE ISLE OF PINES 
[ 2 ]The scene opens in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the year 1668, 
where in one of the college buildings a contest between two rival 
printers had been waged for some years. Marmaduke Johnson, a trained 
and experienced printer, to whose ability the Indian Bible is largely due, 
had ceased to be the printer of the corporation, or Society for the 
Propagation of the Gospel in New England, but still had a press and, 
what was better, a fresh outfit of type, sent over by the corporation and 
entrusted to the keeping of John Eliot, the Apostle. Samuel Green had 
become a printer, though without previous training, and was at this 
time printer to the college, a position of vantage against a rival, because 
it must have carried with it countenance from the authorities in Boston, 
and public printing then as now constituted an item to a press of some 
income and some perquisites. By seeking to marry Green's daughter 
before his English wife had ceased to be, Johnson had created a 
prejudice, public as well as private, against himself.{1} 
1 Mass. Hist Soc. Proceedings, xx. 265. 
Each wished to set up a press in Boston itself, but the General Court, 
probably for police reasons, had ordered that there should be no 
printing but at Cambridge, and that what was printed there should be 
approved by any two of four gentlemen appointed by the Court. It thus 
appeared that each printer possessed a certain superiority over his rival. 
In the matter of types Johnson was favored, as he had new types    
    
		
	
	
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