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Columbus before Ferdinand and Isabella

Columbus before Ferdinand and Isabella.jpg Columbus casting a barrel into the seaThumbnailsColumbus and CabotColumbus casting a barrel into the seaThumbnailsColumbus and CabotColumbus casting a barrel into the seaThumbnailsColumbus and CabotColumbus casting a barrel into the seaThumbnailsColumbus and CabotColumbus casting a barrel into the seaThumbnailsColumbus and Cabot
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With this grand object before him, he first submitted his theory of a western route to the Indies, to John the Second, king of Portugal. He met with no countenance from this quarter. His project, in its vastness, was in advance of the comprehension of the age. John was not unwilling clandestinely to avail himself of information communicated to him by Columbus, but he would enter into no stipulation to aid him in the enterprise. Leaving the court of Lisbon in disgust, in the latter part of 1484, Columbus repaired to the Spanish sovereigns, Ferdinand and Isabella. The time of the application was peculiarly unfavorable, as the nation was then in the midst of the Moorish war, and needed for its prosecution all the pecuniary resources of the state. The persons of influence also in the court, were destitute of those enlarged views, which are essential to a just appreciation of the scheme that fired the great mind of Columbus. With these causes of discouragement, and the submission of his proposal on the part of the sovereigns to a council chiefly of ecclesiastics, he had little reason to expect a favorable issue. After waiting years in the most agitating suspense and doubt (for the council would come to no decision), he was preparing to abandon the suit. Pressing the court for a definite answer at that juncture, they at last gave him to understand, that his scheme was "vain, impracticable, and resting on grounds too weak to merit the support of the government." In deep despondency he quitted the court, and took his way to the south, as if in desperation, to seek other patronage in other quarters.

Author
Great Events in the History of North and South America
Charles A. Goodrich
Published in 1851
Available from gutenberg.org
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