Peter Parley's Tales About America and Australia by Samuel G. (Samuel Griswold) Goodrich
page 38 of 124 (30%)
page 38 of 124 (30%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
of the voyage he had made, and a description of the new continent which
he had discovered, together with a chart of the coast of Paria and Cumana, along which he had sailed. This journal, with the charts and description, and Columbus' letters on the subject, were placed in the custody of Fonseca, he being minister for Indian affairs. No sooner had the particulars of this discovery been communicated by Columbus, than a separate commission of discovery, signed by Fonseca, but not by the sovereigns, was granted to Alonzo de Ojeda, who had accompanied Columbus on his second voyage, and whom Columbus had instructed in all his plans. Ojeda was accompanied on this voyage by a Florentine, whose name was Amerigo Vespucci. To these adventurers Fonseca communicated Columbus' journal, his description of the country, his charts, and all his private letters. This expedition sailed from Spain while Columbus was still at Hispaniola, and wholly ignorant of what was taking place; and Ojeda, without touching at the colony, steered his course direct for Paria, following the very track which Columbus had marked out. Having extended their discoveries very little farther than Columbus had gone before them, Vespucci, on returning to Spain, published an account of his adventures and discoveries, and had the address and confidence so to frame his narrative, as to make it appear that the glory of having discovered the new continent belonged to him. Thus the bold pretensions of an impostor have robbed the discoverer of |
|