CHAPTER II.
WHAT PEOPLE THOUGHT OF THE IDEA.
I do not wish you to think that Columbus was the first man to say that
the earth was round, or the first to sail to the West over the Atlantic
Ocean. He was not. Other men had said that they believed the earth was
round; other men had sailed out into the Atlantic Ocean. But no sailor
who believed the earth was round had ever yet tried to prove that it was
by crossing the Atlantic. So, you see, Columbus was really the first
man to say, I believe the earth is round and I will show you that it is by
sailing to the lands that are on the other side of the earth.
He even figured out how far it was around the world. Your geography,
you know, tells you now that what is called the circumference of the
earth--that is, a straight line drawn right around it--is nearly twenty-five
thousand miles. Columbus had figured it up pretty carefully and he
thought it was about twenty thousand miles. If I could start from Genoa,
he said, and walk straight ahead until I got back to Genoa again, I
should walk about twenty thousand miles. Cathay, he thought, would
take up so much land on the other side of the world that, if he went
west instead of east, he would only need to sail about twenty-five
hundred or three thousand miles.
If you have studied your geography carefully you will see what a
mistake he made.
It is really about twelve thousand miles from Spain to China (or Cathay
as he called it). But America is just about three thousand miles from
Spain, and if you read all this story you will see how Columbus's
mistake really helped him to discover America.
I have told you that Columbus had a longing to do something great
from the time when, as a little boy, he had hung around the wharves in
Genoa and looked at the ships sailing east and west and talked with the
sailors and wished that he could go to sea. Perhaps what he had learned
at school-- how some men said that the earth was round--and what he
had heard on the wharves about the wonders of Cathay set him to
thinking and to dreaming that it might be possible for a ship to sail
around the world without falling off. At any rate, he kept on thinking
and dreaming and longing until, at last, he began doing.
Some of the sailors sent out by Prince Henry of Portugal, of whom I
have told you, in their trying to sail around Africa discovered two
groups of islands out in the Atlantic that they called the Azores, or Isles
of Hawks, and the Canaries, or Isles of Dogs. When Columbus was in
Portugal in 1470 he became acquainted with a young woman whose
name was Philippa Perestrelo. In 1473 he married her.
Now Philippa's father, before his death, had been governor of Porto
Santo, one of the Azores, and Columbus and his wife went off there to
live. In the governor's house Columbus found a lot of charts and maps
that told him about parts of the ocean that he had never before seen, and
made him feel certain that he was right in saying that if he sailed away
to the West he should find Cathay.
At that time there was an old man who lived in Florence, a city of Italy.
His name was Toscanelli. He was a great scholar and studied the stars
and made maps, and was a very wise man. Columbus knew what a wise
old scholar Toscanelli was, for Florence is not very far from Genoa. So
while he was living in the Azores he wrote to this old scholar asking
him what he thought about his idea that a man could sail around the
world until he reached the land called the Indies and at last found
Cathay.
Toscanelli wrote to Columbus saying that he believed his idea was the
right one, and he said it would be a grand thing to do, if Columbus
dared to try it. Perhaps, he said, you can find all those splendid things
that I know are in Cathay--the great cities with marble bridges, the
houses of marble covered with gold, the jewels and the spices and the
precious stones, and all the other wonderful and magnificent things. I
do not wonder you wish to try, he said, for if you find Cathay it will be
a wonderful thing for you and for Portugal.
That settled it with Columbus. If this wise old scholar said he was right,
he must be right. So he left his home in the Azores and went to
Portugal. This was
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.