登陆注册
19683800000027

第27章 CHAPTER VIII(1)

THE SECOND EXPEDITION SAILS FROM CADIZ AT CANARYISLANDS--DISCOVERY OF DOMINICA AND GUADELOUPE--SKIRMISHES WITHTHE CARIBS--PORTO RICO DISCOVERED--HISPANIOLA--THE FATE OF THECOLONY AT LA NAVIDAD.

There is not in history a sharper contrast, or one more dramatic, than that between the first voyage of Columbus and the second. In the first voyage, three little ships left the port of Palos, most of the men of their crews unwilling, after infinite difficulty in preparation, and in the midst of the fears of all who stayed behind.

In the second voyage, a magnificent fleet, equipped with all that the royal service could command, crowded with eager adventurers who are excited by expectations of romance and of success, goes on the very same adventure.

In the first voyage, Columbus has but just turned the corner after the struggles and failures of eight years. He is a penniless adventurer who has staked all his reputation on a scheme in which he has hardly any support. In the second case, Columbus is the governor-general, for aught he knows, of half the world, of all the countries he is to discover; and he knows enough, and all men around him know enough, to see that his domain may be a principality indeed.

Success brings with it its disadvantages. The world has learned since, if it did not know it then, that one hundred and fifty sailors, used to the hard work and deprivations of a seafaring life, would be a much more efficient force for purposes of discovery, than a thousand and more courtiers who have left the presence of the king and queen in the hope of personal advancement or of romantic adventure. Those dainty people, who would have been soldiers if there were no gunpowder, are not men to found states; and the men who have lived in the ante-chambers of courts are not people who co-operate sympathetically with an experienced man of affairs like Columbus.

From this time forward this is to be but a sad history, and the sadness, nay, the cruelty of the story, results largely from the composition of the body of men whom Columbus took with him on this occasion. It is no longer coopers and blacksmiths and boatswains and sailmakers who surround him. These were officers of court, whose titles even cannot be translated into modern language, so artificial were their habits and so conventional the duties to which they had been accustomed. Such men it was, who made poor Columbus endless trouble. Such men it was, who, at the last, dragged him down from his noble position, so that he died unhonored, dispirited and poor. To the same misfortune, probably, do we owe it that, for a history of this voyage, we have no longer authority so charming as the simple, gossipy journal which Columbus kept through the first voyage, of which the greater part has happily been preserved. It may be that he was too much pressed by his varied duties to keep up such a journal. For it is alas! an unfortunate condition of human life, that men are most apt to write journals when they have nothing to tell, and that in the midst of high activity, the record of that activity is not made by the actor. In the present case, a certain Doctor Chanca, a native of Seville, had been taken on board Columbus's ship, perhaps with the wish that he should be the historian of the expedition. It may be that in the fact that his journal was sent home is the reason why the Admiral's, if he kept one, has never been preserved. Doctor Chanca's narrative is our principal contemporary account of the voyage. From later authorities much can be added to it, but all of them put together are not, for the purposes of history, equal to the simple contemporaneous statement which we could have had, had Columbus's own journal been preserved.

The great fleet sailed from Cadiz on the twenty-fifth day of September, in the year 1493, rather more than thirteen months after the sailing of the little fleet from Palos of the year before. They touched at the Grand Canary as before, but at this time their vessels were in good condition and there was no dissatisfaction among the crews. From this time the voyage across the ocean was short. On the third day of November, 11 the Sunday after All Saints Day had dawned, a pilot on the ship cried out to the captain that he saw land. So great was the joy among the people, that it was marvellous to hear the shouts of pleasure on all hands. And for this there was much reason because the people were so much fatigued by the hard life and by the water which they drank that they all hoped for land with much desire."The reader will see that this is the ejaculation of a tired landsman; one might say, of a tired scholar, who was glad that even the short voyage was at an end. Some of the pilots supposed that the distance which they had run was eight hundred leagues from Ferro; others thought it was seven hundred and eighty. As the light increased, there were two islands in sight the first was mountainous, being the island of "Dominica," which still retains that name, of the Sunday when it was discovered; the other, the island of Maria Galante, is more level, but like the first, as it is described by Dr. Chanca, it was well wooded. The island received its name from the ship that Columbus commanded.

In all, they discovered six islands on this day.

Finding no harbor which satisfied him in Dominica, Columbus landed on the island of Maria Galante, and took possession of it in the name of the king and queen. Dr. Chanca expresses the amazement which everyone had felt on the other voyage, at the immense variety of trees, of fruits and of flowers, which to this hour is the joy of the traveller in the West Indies.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 重生之弃妇的美好时光

    重生之弃妇的美好时光

    她是知名的服装设计师,自强自信、干练泼辣,有爱自己的家人,还有谈婚论嫁的男友,生活美好。世事难料,居然撞破了男友和别人的欢爱,更是大言不惭,她太保守,他是正常男人有需求。骄傲坍塌,开车狂奔,意外车祸,灵魂飘起,红颜陨落。重生归来,她是懦弱的私生女,自杀未遂,沦为豪门弃妇,面对上门挑衅的母女,一不做二不休,脱离关系,自立门户。她是时尚界的新秀,一双巧手生花,设计的衣服万金难求。弃妇逆袭,华丽丽晃瞎某些人的狗眼。爱否?配否?他说:“三十二年,等来了你这颗嫩草怎能不爱!就算你是杀人犯的女儿,离婚带着孩子我也爱。”本以为再世为人,可以做娇弱的小女人,受尽宠爱。奈何男人太优秀,还要赶得走豺狼虎豹。看来弃妇的美好时光,还要扫清很多障碍、、、、、、、
  • 异界虫生

    异界虫生

    侯孙宝----一个21世纪的废材大学生,意外流落异界,乐观豁达的他性格在这里被改变.他又是一个骨灰级的虫子饲养爱好者,穿越异界的他获得了随身携带的各类虫子的奇特能力,这些能力将在他的成长历程中相继觉醒.奇妙的异世界,狰狞的魔兽、多姿的美女、纷繁的战争、绚丽的魔法、强横的武技,这一切见证了主角的成长,埋藏在体内的异能何时觉醒?流落在异世界的他将如何生存?这个故事,就从他收到了一封奇怪的招聘信开始......(为方便大家第一时间看到更新,请加本书QQ群:41751013)
  • 老友记

    老友记

    社会洗礼。当多年以后相见,你们都已不再一样。当初的苦心坚持,如今都已化作变成追逐名利的野心。兄弟,到底应该怎么做?
  • 糖与香料

    糖与香料

    《糖和香料》被称为“最后的禁忌”,“英国图书市场上的惊雷”,是一本备受争议的畅销惊悚罪案小说。根据连环杀人案凶手罗伯特?布雷克犯罪、被捕的真实故事改编,一经发表便荣获“RedAdept”奖。你会信任一个有“性侵犯”案底的人,让他帮你寻找杀死你女儿的凶手吗?克莱尔却这么做了……本书的创作灵感来源于一则新闻报道,其中犯罪被捕的男子不断哀求法官多判他几年,因为他知道,要是没有改造好就释放出来,自己肯定会再次作恶。《糖和香料》严谨精密,血淋林地暴露了世人讳莫如深的问题。本书挑衅传统、令人不安,直击人的灵魂。每个人心里都有一只魔鬼。当你无力再抑制它的蠢动时,你会如何抉择?
  • 中国人一定要知道的历史常识

    中国人一定要知道的历史常识

    在数千年的进程中,中华民族以不屈不挠的顽强意志和勇于探索的精神风貌,为自己谱写下了波澜壮阔的辉煌画卷。本书内容有:不朽的辉煌建筑,像万里长城、大运河、皇家故宫等;惊叹世人的文明创造,像指南针、造纸术、火药、印刷术等;让人感怀不已的英雄人物,像蔺相如、项羽、卫青、岳飞等。你想了解这些知识吗?那就不妨翻开本书会心一阅。
  • 解答乙肝患者最关心的问题

    解答乙肝患者最关心的问题

    如何识别乙肝病毒携带者,防治“大三阳”和“小三阳”的正确方法是什么,乙肝的预防和治疗方法有哪些,如何避免乙肝的过度诊(治)疗,乙肝难治、复发的原因及对策,乙肝的疗效如何判定等,都是乙肝患者最关心的问题,这些也是本书作者详尽客观阐述的内容。专家认为,科学认识乙肝,消除乙肝歧视,树立正确的治疗理念并规范治疗行为,才是乙肝防治的当务之急。
  • 错误的喜剧

    错误的喜剧

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 七忆衫

    七忆衫

    七个不同性格的人,构造了一段美好的光阴,七种不同的关系,使得七个人有了不一样的人生。
  • 渐悟集

    渐悟集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 天使启示录:育儿纪实

    天使启示录:育儿纪实

    本书介绍了作者的育儿心经,共分四部分:我心中的太阳、初升的太阳、阳光岁月、最初的炼狱。