登陆注册
5485800000010

第10章 CHAPTER III(1)

THE GREAT VOYAGE.

THE SQUADRON SAILS--REFITS AT CANARY ISLANDS--HOPES AND FEARS OFTHE VOYAGE--THE DOUBTS OF THE CREW--LAND DISCOVERED.

At last all was ready. That is to say, the fleet was so far ready that Columbus was ready to start. The vessels were small, as we think of vessels, but he was not dissatisfied. He says in the beginning of his journal, "I armed three vessels very fit for such an enterprise." He had left Grenada as late as the twelfth of May. He had crossed Spain to Palos,[*] and in less than three months had fitted out the ships and was ready for sea.

[*] Palos is now so insignificant a place that on some important maps of Spain it will not be found. It is on the east side of the Tinto river; and Huelva, on the west side, has taken its place.

The harbor of Palos is now ruined. Mud and gravel, brought down by the River Tinto, have filled up the bay, so that even small boats cannot approach the shore. The traveler finds, however, the island of Saltes, quite outside the bay, much as Columbus left it. It is a small spit of sand, covered with shells and with a few seashore herbs. His own account of the great voyage begins with the words:

"Friday, August 3, 1492. Set sail from the bar of Saltes at 8o'clock, and proceeded with a strong breeze till sunset sixty miles, or fifteen leagues south, afterward southwest and south by west, which is in the direction of the Canaries."It appears, therefore, that the great voyage, the most important and successful ever made, began on Friday, the day which is said to be so much disliked by sailors. Columbus never alludes to this superstition.

He had always meant to sail first for the Canaries, which were the most western land then known in the latitude of his voyage.

From Lisbon to the famous city of "Quisay," or "Quinsay," in Asia, Toscanelli, his learned correspondent, supposed the distance to be less than one thousand leagues westward. From the Canary islands, on that supposition, the distance would be ten degrees less. The distance to Cipango, or Japan, would be much less.

As it proved, the squadron had to make some stay at the Canaries.

The rudder of the Pinta was disabled, and she proved leaky. It was suspected that the owners, from whom she had been forcibly taken, had intentionally disabled her, or that possibly the crew had injured her. But Columbus says in his journal that Martin Alonso Pinzon, captain of the Pinta, was a man of capacity and courage, and that this quieted his apprehensions. From the ninth of August to the second of September, nearly four weeks were spent by the Pinta and her crew at the Grand Canary island, and she was repaired. She proved afterwards a serviceable vessel, the fastest of the fleet. At the Canaries they heard stories of lands seen to the westward, to which Columbus refers in his journal. On the sixth of September they sailed from Gomera and on the eighth they lost sight of land. Nor did they see land again for thirty-three days. Such was the length of the great voyage. All the time, most naturally, they were wishing for signs, not of land perhaps, but which might show whether this great ocean were really different from other seas. On the whole the voyage was not a dangerous one.

According to the Admiral's reckoning--and in his own journal Columbus always calls himself the Admiral--its length was one thousand and eighty-nine leagues. This was not far from right, the real distance being, in a direct line, three thousand one hundred and forty nautical miles, or three thousand six hundred and twenty statute miles.[*] It would not be considered a very long voyage for small vessels now. In general the course was west. Sometimes, for special reasons, they sailed south of west.

If they had sailed precisely west they would have struck the shore of the United States a little north of the spot where St.

Augustine now is, about the northern line of Florida.

[*] The computations from Santa Cruz, in the Canaries, to San Salvador give this result, as kindly made for us by Lieutenant Mozer, of the United States navy.

Had the coast of Asia been, indeed, as near as Toscanelli and Columbus supposed, this latitude of the Canary islands would have been quite near the mouth of the Yang-tse-Kiang river, in China, which was what Columbus was seeking. For nearly a generation afterwards he and his followers supposed that the coast of that region was what they had found.

It was on Saturday, the eighth of September, that they lost sight of Teneriffe. On the eleventh they saw a large piece of the mast of a ship afloat. On the fourteenth they saw a "tropic-bird,"which the sailors thought was never seen more than twenty-five leagues from land; but it must be remembered, that, outside of the Mediterranean, few of the sailors had ever been farther themselves. On the sixteenth they began to meet "large patches of weeds, very green, which appeared to have been recently washed away from land." This was their first knowledge of the "Sargasso sea," a curious tract in mid-Atlantic which is always green with floating seaweeds. "The continent we shall find farther on,"wrote the confident Admiral.

An observation of the sun on the seventeenth proved what had been suspected before, that the needles of the compasses were not pointing precisely to the north. The variation of the needle, since that time, has been a recognized fact. But this observation at so critical a time first disclosed it. The crew were naturally alarmed. Here was evidence that, in the great ocean, common laws were not to be relied upon. But they had great respect for Columbus's knowledge of such subjects. He told them that it was not the north which had changed, nor the needle, which was true to the north, but the polar star revolved, like other stars, and for the time they were satisfied.

The same day they saw weeds which he was sure were land weeds.

同类推荐
  • 太上九天延祥涤厄四圣妙经

    太上九天延祥涤厄四圣妙经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 庚申君遗事

    庚申君遗事

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 燮云玑禅师国清无畏堂语录

    燮云玑禅师国清无畏堂语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Steep Trails

    Steep Trails

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 柳南随笔

    柳南随笔

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 快穿之还愿人生路

    快穿之还愿人生路

    人生总会遇到很多困难,也会遇到过不去的坎,而我们的职责,就去帮你去解决那些困难,把你颓废人生,活出不一样的精彩!但是我们不是无偿服务的,每一个任务者会根据自己的需要,从你身上拿出自己想要的东西,你可以选择交换,或者不交换……现代版的8号当铺,不过我们比8号当铺更仁慈,而且我们比8号当铺做得更贴心,而且我们的酬金也比8号当铺少!这是一本快穿文,讲送女主去各个时空,帮助那些遇到困难的人,替他们解决困难,帮助他们获得不一样的人生! QQ群:593200119 新书《欢喜农家:腹黑相公娇俏妻》求收藏
  • 我们共同走过

    我们共同走过

    六十年,在历史的长河中,不过是白驹过隙,但对今天我们这所学校来说,却是她的全部。六十年,足以使她桃李满天下、英才遍神州。从百废待兴齐声唤的建国初创,到只争朝夕谋发展的盛世中国,沈阳化工大学始终和祖国的命运紧紧联系在一起。从沈阳西郊尚武街的荒凉春秋,到搬迁抚顺的峥嵘岁月;从返回旧址重整旗鼓,到沈阳西部的日夜奋战,沈阳化工大学虽然命运多舛、屡经磨难,但始终坚不可摧、弦歌不辍,彰显出自强不息、坚韧不拔的雄浑气节和顽强精神。
  • 马家寨

    马家寨

    渭北高原马家寨马冯两族素有积怨。马家后生马天寿垂涎冯家大户冯仁乾的小妾,莽撞冒犯引来杀身大祸,幸得永寿常医师金大先生拼力相救。天寿逼上北莽山落草成寇,意气风发与冯家对峙,掳小妾,砸店铺,抢钱粮。冯家串通地方驻军借剿匪之名血洗马家寨,五百余乡民以血肉身躯勇护家园。
  • 神医妖妃

    神医妖妃

    【原书名《妖妃难追:夙帝,放肆宠》】简洁版文案:她如初见时一般,一身红衣,缭乱了他的心。自此,生死相随。新书《我家魅妃超皮哒》连载中~
  • 青磷屑

    青磷屑

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 闪婚深宠,竹马老公太迷人

    闪婚深宠,竹马老公太迷人

    一夜沉迷,被跟在身后十年的小尾巴逼迫着离开......一朝梦醒,宠着自己十年的大哥哥狠心抛弃......甜文甜文真的是甜文!
  • 寒少,你家宠妻爱撒谎

    寒少,你家宠妻爱撒谎

    寒少第一次见到她时,她闯进房间里说:“寒少,请你演女主角!”他以为,这是第一次见到她。都说寒少集才华容貌金钱权势于一身,都说他心止如水不会真正心动……都说他对她悠悠特别。特别到,她差点骗过自己,他从前是怎样的喜欢另外一个女孩,又是怎么样的恨过她……他说:“我的狠又怎么比得上你。”她想,是啊,怎么比得上她……让他失去那个温柔似水的女子。那时,她说:“寒陌尘,我讨厌你。”晚些,她说:“寒陌尘,你要走就走。”后来,她说:“寒陌尘,我恨你。”其实啊,她是个骗子,她一直都想说:“寒陌尘,我怎么样才能不喜欢你?”
  • 匿踪神猎

    匿踪神猎

    龙星是如何从内功废柴,到拥有过千年寿元的顶级神星;从穷小子到万亿富翁;从社会最低层到权力颠峰,本书试图用数百个充满生活气息的故事情节,将这个本是幻想的过程,讲得貌似真正的生命经历。书中有众多的阴谋,谍战,暗杀,血拼,战争;有兄弟的忠诚和隐秘的背叛;既有感情的地域,也有爱情的天堂。每一个情节都力求新意,曲折后会有合理的结果,尽力将逻辑性和玄奇性融合在一起,给读者一部很有真实感的玄幻小说。
  • 全职猎人探险家

    全职猎人探险家

    全球首屈一指的荒野求生大师——纯·简拉基·茨德·伊泽·皮断腿·瑞尔。不幸在一次直播的意外中丧生穿越到全职猎人的世界。在这个强者如云念能力百花齐放的猎人世界里,是在危险中沉沦还是在逆境里成长?(非特质系,非流星街,不搞暧昧。)
  • 高冷男神带回家之相爱100天

    高冷男神带回家之相爱100天

    他和她在大学中认识,他冷酷如冰去唯独对她一人一往情深。