友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
热门书库 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

the life of christopher columbus-第42章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



 black boobies the other; neither intermingles。

The island is now uninhabited; but arrow heads and stone hatchets are sometimes found; and in places there are piles of stones supposed to have been made by the aborigines。 Most of the growth is scrubby; with a few scattered trees。

The Nassau vessels enter an opening through the reef on the south side of the island and find a very comfortable little harbor with from two to two and a half fathoms of water。 From here they send their boats on shore to 〃strip〃 guano; and cut satin; dye woods and bark。


When Columbus discovered Guanahani; the journal called it a 〃little island。〃 After landing he speaks of it as 〃bien grande;〃 〃very large;〃 which some translate; tolerably; or pretty large。 November 20; 1492 (Navarette; first edition; p。 61); the journal refers to Isabella; a larger island than Guanahani; as 〃little island;〃 and the fifth of January following (p。 125) San Salvador is again called 〃little island。〃

The Bahamas have an area of about 37;000 square miles; six per cent of which may be land; enumerated as 36 islands; 687 keys; and 2;414 rocks。 The submarine bank upon which these rest underlies Florida also。 But this peninsula is wave…formed upon living corals; whose growth and gradual stretch toward the south has been made known by Agassiz。

I had an unsuccessful search for a similar story of the Bahamas; to learn whether there were any probable changes within so recent a period as four hundred years。

The common mind can see that all the rock there is coral; none of which is in position。 The surface; the caves; the chinks; and the numerous pot…holes are compact limestone; often quite crystalline; while beneath it is oolitic; either friable or hard enough to be used for buildings。 The hills are sand…blown; not upheaved。 On a majority of the maps of the sixteenth century there were islands on Mouchoir; and on Silver Banks; where now are rocks 〃awash;〃 and the Dutch and the Severn Shoals; which lay to the east; have disappeared。

It is difficult to resist the impression that the shoal banks; and the reefs of the Bahamas; were formerly covered with land; and that for a geological age waste has been going on; and; perhaps; subsidence。 The coral polyp seems to be doing only desultory work; and that mostly on the northeast or Atlantic side of the islands; everywhere else it has abandoned the field to the erosive action of the waves。

Columbus said that Guanahani had abundance of water and a very large lagoon in the middle of it。 He used the word lagunalagoon; not lagolake。 His arrival in the Bahamas was at the height of the rainy season。 Governor Rawson's Report on the Bahamas; 1864; page 92; Appendix 4; gives the annual rainfall at Nassau for ten years; 1855'64; as sixty…four inches。 From May 1; to November 1 is the wet season; during which 44。7 inches fall; the other six months 19。3 only。 The most is in October; 8。5 inches。

Andros; the largest island; 1;600 square miles; is the only one that has a stream of water。 The subdivision of the land into so many islands and keys; the absence of mountains; the showery characteristic of the rainfall; the porosity of the rock; and the great heat reflected from the white coral; are the chief causes for the want of running water。 During the rainy season the 〃abundance of water〃 collects in the low places; making ponds and lagoons; that afterward are soaked up by the rock and evaporated by the sun。

Turk and Watling have lagoons of a more permanent condition; because they are maintained from the ocean by permeation。 The lagoon which Columbus found at Guanahani had certainly undrinkable water; or he would have gotten some for his vessels; instead of putting it off until he reached the third island。

There is nothing in the journal to indicate that the lagoon at Guanahani was aught but the flooding of the low grounds by excessive rains; and even if it was one communicating with the ocean; its absence now may be referred to the effect of those agencies which are working incessantly to reshape the soft structure of the Bahamas。

Samana has a range of hills on the southwest side about one hundred feet high; and on the northeast another; lower。 Between them; and also along the north shore; the land is low; and during the season of rains there is a row of ponds parallel to the shore。 On the south side a conspicuous white bluff looks to the southward and eastward。

The two keys; lying respectively half a mile and three miles east of the island; and possibly the outer breaker; which is four miles; all might have been connected with each other; and with the island; four hundred years ago。 In that event the most convenient place for Columbus to anchor in the strong northeast trade…wind; was where I have put an anchor on the sub…sketch of Samana。

'In a subsequent passage Admiral Fox says:'

There is a common belief that the first landing place is settled by one or another of the authors cited here。 Nevertheless; I trust to have shown; paragraph by paragraph; wherein their several tracks are contrary to the journal; inconsistent with the true cartography of the neighborhood; and to the discredit; measurably; both of Columbus and of Las Casas。 The obscurity and the carelessness which appear in part of the diary through the Bahamas offer no obstacle to this demonstration; provided that they do not extend to the 〃log;〃 or nautical part。

Columbus went to sea when he was fourteen years of age; and served there almost continuously for twenty…three years。 The strain of a sea…faring life; from so tender an age; is not conducive to literary exactness。 Still; for the very reason of this sea experience; the 〃log〃 should be correct。

This is composed of the courses steered; distances sailed over; bearings of islands from one another; trend of shores; etc。 The recording of these is the daily business of seamen; and here the entries were by Columbus himself; chiefly to enable him; on his return to Spain; to construct that nautical map; which is promised in the prologue of the first voyage。

In crossing the Atlantic the Admiral understated to the crew each day's run; so that they should not know how far they had gone into an unknown ocean。 Las Casas was aware of this counterfeit 〃log;〃 but his abridgment is from that one which Columbus kept for his own use。

If the complicated courses and distances in this were originally wrong; or if the copy of them is false; it is obvious that they cannot be 〃plotted 〃 upon a correct chart。 Conversely; if they ARE made to conform to a succession of islands among which he is known to have sailed; it is evident that this is a genuine transcript of the authentic 〃log〃 of Columbus; and; reciprocally; that we have the true track; the beginning of which is the eventful landfall of October 12; 1492。

The student or critical reader; and the seaman; will have to determine whether the writer has established this conformity。 The public; probably; desires to have the question settled; but it will hardly take any interest in a discussion that has no practical bearing; and which; for its elucidation; leans so much upon the jargon or the sea。

It is not flattering to the English or Spanish speaking people
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!