Rare Book Monthly

Articles - June - 2026 Issue

The Ugly Voyages of Jean Mocquet

Jean Mocquet (1575-1617) travelled the world, and he came back with an outstanding book full of pain, cannibalism and violence—and a few irresistible engravings. Do you think the world we’re living in is brutal? Then read Mocquet, and think again.
 

Drawn on the spot

 

The book itself is a classic—first published in Paris in 1617 under the title of Voyages en Afrique, Asie, Indes Orientales & Occidentales, it was reprinted in 1654 (Rouen), 1665 (Rouen), and even in 1830 (Paris)—it was translated into English in 1696 as Travels and Voyages Into Africa, Asia, And America... (Newton, Shelton & Chandler). We don’t know exactly who Jean Mocquet was, but he wasn’t exactly a nobody—in 1601, he was Henri IV’s apothecary, and close enough to the king to witness the latter’s clyster! His book is sought after nowadays, especially for the six wonderful engravings that come with it. They represent people Mocquet actually met, including some cannibal Caribe Indians feasting on severed human members—with the remains cooking in the background! As we speak, the French bookseller Camille Sourget offers an incredible copy for sale for €21,000 with gorgeous contemporary hand-coloured engravings—a rarity! 
 

The 1830 Unusual Edition

 

In 2026, Galerie Bassenge sold a regular copy for €1,250 (Rare Book Transaction History Search Results); Forum Actions sold a 1617 edition for GBP 800 while an English version was sold by Bonhams in 2012 for $3,500. The other day, I came across the unexpected 1830 edition! I had never heard about it—printed in Paris “At The Government’s Expense to Provide the Typographic Workers With Work—August 1830.” Unusual, to say the least. But August 1830 is the beginning of a new regime in France, La Monarchie de Juillet (1830-1848). Following the bloody July Revolution, Charles X is chased from power and replaced by Louis-Philippe. Those chaotic events had apparently put many printers out of work, and the new government was trying to help. The same mention appears on the reprint of Voyage du Sieur Champlain, ou Journal ès découvertes de la Nouvelle France (Paris, Août 1830). Unfortunately, those editions come with no plate. That actually stopped me from buying Mocquet’s book for a while. Plus, I feared he had remained on the surface of things—less than 400 pages for so many voyages? Come on... Yet the condition was attractive; so was the price—less than €100 when another professional offers it for €800 on his website. So I ordered it, and waited for it with low expectations. And then I started to read it. 
 

Human Affairs

 

Mocquet didn’t travel for the sake of geography, but to report about human affairs. First, travelling at the time meant putting your life at risk. On his way to the East Indies in 1607, he wrote: “I suffered from the “louende” disease—the Portuguese call it “berber” and the Dutch “scurvy”—and my gums were all rotten, and bled a dark and smelly blood (...). Every day I had to cut my gums to let this bad blood run out. I’d also cut the gums above my teeth, going on the desk and holding a small mirror to see which parts I had to cut off. Once the bad flesh removed, I’d wash my teeth with my urine.” He miraculously survived, unlike other sailors “most of whom died helplessly behind some trunk on the deck, where the rats would eat off their eyes and the soles of their feet.” In the West Indies, he spent the night at King Camaria’s, a Caribe chief; and the sailor who went with him “couldn’t sleep at all, always fearing they’d come to eat us up.” Mocquet didn’t sleep that well either, he admitted, remembering the day when a woman from Camaria’s tribe “offered our captain a roasted human hand to eat, which he immediately pushed away.” Mocquet was also taken as a slave, beaten up, caught in the middle of sea battles, and nearly lost his life a dozen times—business as usual for a 17th century traveller.
 

Wicked From East to West
 

From East to West, Jean Mocquet met but wicked people: thieves in Africa, cannibals in America, murderers everywhere, and the Portuguese in Goa. Little is said about their slaves, but they went through hell. “The Portuguese tie them in irons and give them not 20 or 30, but up to 50 strokes! (...) At night in my room in Goa, I could hear the beating going on and the muffled cries of the victims whom they nag (...). Then they cut them with a razor blade and rub the wounds with salt and vinegar to prevent the worms to appear. They also have what they call “pingar vine”, which consists in cooking some bacon in a red-hot pan directly on the naked body of their victims (...). I’ve witnessed some of those cruelties with my own two eyes, and they deeply moved me—I’m still horrified by the sole thought of them.” PTS is a new name, but it has always existed. 
 

Beware! This book might leave you with a PTS indeed, as it displays the raw truth. Men living like beasts, from the West to the East. And all things considered, no need to draw us an engraving here—we all know what Mocquet was talking about.

 

Thibault Ehrengardt


 

Rare Book Monthly

  • Sotheby’s
    Shelf Life: Books, Manuscripts and Works on Paper from the Library of Stanley J. Seeger and Christopher Cone
    25 June – July 7
    Sotheby’s, July 7: Ludwig van Beethoven. Autograph sketches for the overture "Die Weihe des Hauses", op.124, [1822], UNPUBLISHED. £150,000 to £200,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 7: Jane Austen. Pride and Prejudice, 1813, first edition, 3 volumes, contemporary half calf. £50,000 to £70,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 7: Walt Whitman. Leaves of Grass, Brooklyn, 1855, first edition, first issue, original green cloth, the Doheny copy. £50,000 to £70,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 7: Binding—Sangorski & Sutcliffe—Omar Khayyam. Rubaiyat, London, 1872, third edition, in a magnificent jewelled Peacock binding. £15,000 to £20,000.
    Sotheby’s, July 7: George Eliot. Middlemarch, Edinburgh and London, 1871, first edition in the original parts. £20,000 to £30,000.
  • Forum Auctions
    The Private Library:
    Fine Printing & Private Press books, the collection of the late David Chambers
    July 9, 2026
    Forum, July 9: Hassall (Joan) A large collection of over 300 original woodblocks of engravings for various books, v.d., with Hassall's engraver's glass water-globe (Qty) - Est. £10,000-15,000
    Forum, July 9: Eragny Press.- [Bradley (Katherine Harris) & Edith Emma Cooper], "Michael Field." Whym Chow, Flame of Love, one of only 27 copies, inscribed by Bradley, the rarest book from the press, 1914. - Est. £3,000-4,000
    Forum, July 9: [Moore (Thomas Sturge)] [Wood Engravings], 71 wood-engravings printed by David Chambers from the original blocks, the only set on Japanese Hosho paper, from an edition of 5 sets, [1970]. - Est. £3,000-4,000
    Forum Auctions
    The Private Library:
    Fine Printing & Private Press books, the collection of the late David Chambers
    July 9, 2026
    Forum, July 9: La Fontaine (Jean de) Contes et Nouvelles en vers, 2 vol., engraved plates after Eisen, fine early 19th century blue morocco, gilt, by Bradel l'ainé, Amsterdam [Paris], 1762. - Est. £2,000-3,000
    Forum, July 9: Erotica.- Prostitution.- Pretty Women of Paris (The); Their Names and Addresses, Qualities and Faults..., [Paris], privately printed at the Press of the Prefecture de Police, 1883. - Est. £3,000-4,000
    Forum, July 9: Vale Press.- Ricketts (Charles) & Lucien Pissarro. De la Typographie et de l'Harmonie de la Page Imprimée…, [one of 216 copies], bound in dark blue morocco tooled in gilt, by Sarah T.Prideaux, 1898. - Est. £1,000-1,500
    Forum Auctions
    The Private Library:
    Fine Printing & Private Press books, the collection of the late David Chambers
    July 9, 2026
    Forum, July 9: Martin (John) Illustrations of the Bible, complete set of 20 mezzotints, good impressions, rarely found in early states, [c.1831-1835]. - Est. £1,000-1,500
    Forum, July 9: Golden Cockerel Press.- Four Gospels of the Lord Jesus Christ (The), one of 500 copies, Mary Gill's copy, Waltham St. Lawrence, 1931 with a signed proof of engraving on japon numbered 10/10 (2) - Est. £5,000-7,000
    Forum, July 9: Boccaccio (Giovanni) The Decameron, 3 vol., vol.1 extra-illustrated by John Buckland Wright with c.150 erotic original drawings in pen & ink and pencil, 1886 [extra-illustrated c.1940]. - Est. £10,000-15,000
    Forum Auctions
    The Private Library:
    Fine Printing & Private Press books, the collection of the late David Chambers
    July 9, 2026
    Forum, July 9: Cox (Morris) Collection of Gogmagog Press Books, 35 vol., rare complete collection of printed books issued by the press, limited editions, most signed by Cox, 1957-83. - Est. £10,000-15,000
    Forum, July 9: Wynkyn de Worde.- [Terentius Afer (Publius)] [Comedie...], [Paris, Josse Badius: sold in London by Wynkyn de Worde, & others], [15 July 1504]. - Est. £4,000-6,000
    Forum, July 9: Mosley (James) Ornamented Types. Twenty-Three Alphabets from the Foundry of Louis John Pouchée, 2 vol., one of 10 copies for presentation, from an edition of 210, 1992-93. - Est. £1,000-2,000
  • Freeman’s, June 30. Thomas Jefferson’s “Birth of the New Nation” letter, carried to Paris with the Treaty of Peace, by a Jewish patriot. $100,000-200,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. “The rockets’ red glare.” A British midshipman’s log recording the bombardment of Fort McHenry. $60,000-80,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. The Critical Promotion of a Naval Hero, Oliver Hazard Perry Commission signed by James Madison, 1812. $40,000-60,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. Born in the USA: First Day of Printing in the United States, July 4, 1776. $15,000-25,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. One of the Earliest Printed Announcements of American Independence, in the Exceedingly Rare Original Wrappers, 1776. $10,000-15,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. "The Two Big Guns of the N.Y. Yanks": A Striking Type 1 Press Photograph of Lou Gehrig's Hands. $8,000-12,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. A Unique Contemporary Manuscript Account of Joseph Smith's Final Words to His Followers, the Day Before his Violent Death. $8,000-12,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. The State of Minnesota Officially Certifies the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution Of the United States. $8,000-12,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. Extraordinarily Large Manuscript Petition Signed by a Who's Who of Colonial New York to Queen Anne from the Colony of New York. $8,000-12,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. Mickey Mantle's First Cover: The Earliest Front-Page Newspaper Image of Mickey Mantle, "Something Good from Joplin". $8,000-12,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. A Call to Arms in the Months Following the Declaration of Independence: An Early Continental Army Recruitment Poster. $6,000-9,000.
    Freeman’s, June 30. Samuel Jones, the Statesman Behind the Newly Discovered "Jones Declaration": His Annotated Set Used in His Working Law Library. $6,000-9,000.

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