A story of trust won, lost, and offered again—on a narrow strip of sand where cultures clashed, misunderstood, and still tried to understand.
When Captain Cook’s HMS Resolution dropped anchor off the island of Ambrym in July 1774, the crew expected tension—but instead, they found green branches waving in peace. Hundreds of islanders gathered by the reef, chanting “Tomarr!” and exchanging arrows for Tahitian cloth. But not all arrows were alike—some were tipped with bone and coated in a black resin suspected to be poison.
Georg Forster describes the moment with both scientific precision and the troubling lens of Enlightenment-era anthropology. He sees not just difference—but reflects on the moral risk of dehumanizing others through theory and comparison.
What began as a peaceful contact escalated into a moment of high tension. A single arrow raised in anger provoked gunfire. Islander and captain stared each other down—until buckshot broke the standoff. Within seconds, islanders leapt from the ship’s windows and rigging, vanishing into the sea.
But the next morning brought an unexpected offering: a young pig, held out in reconciliation.
Map of the locations of this episode
The valcanoe island of Ambrym in Vanuatu
Pentecost Island/Vanuatu
My YouTube VIDEO channel, Voyage to Go, where I visit the places from this travel narrative
More Episodes of Voyage 2 Go History:
S1-E1: England: Departure around the world
S1-E5: Cape Colony: Ocean on Fire
S1-E9: Southern Ocean: Lost in the Ice
S1-E10: New Zealand: From Ice to Wilderness
S1-E16: New Zealand: Whirlwinds and Reunion
S1-E31: 'Eua: The Enchanted Island