William Jardine Proudfoot (c.18041887) published his critique of Sir John Barrow''s Travels in China (1804; also reissued in this series) with the agenda of exposing the latter as unreliable and unjust. Barrow had accompanied Lord Macartney on the first British mission to the Chinese Imperial Court (17924) in a party that also included the official astronomer Dr James Dinwiddie Proudfoot''s grandfather. Comparing Barrow''s account to that found in other records Proudfoot concludes that the earlier work was ''a great humbug'' ascribing to Barrow the ''powerful motive'' of self-promotion. In a work full of vitriol against its subject Proudfoot''s concern is to honour the memory of the mission''s members whom he felt Barrow belittled and vilified and also to point out factual inaccuracies accusing him of seeking amusement rather than truth in his anecdotes. Read alongside Barrow''s work it makes for an interesting scornful and often entertaining counter.
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