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Columbus casting a barrel into the sea

Columbus casting a barrel into the sea.jpg Columbus sets sailThumbnailsNelson's VictoryColumbus sets sailThumbnailsNelson's VictoryColumbus sets sailThumbnailsNelson's VictoryColumbus sets sailThumbnailsNelson's VictoryColumbus sets sailThumbnailsNelson's Victory

The Pinta, being separated from the Nina, was supposed to have been lost; but this proved to have been a mistake, as she reached Spain nearly at the same time with the other caravel. At the time of their greatest extremity, when all hope of safety had departed, Columbus, anxious that the knowledge of his discovery might be communicated to the world, wrote a brief account of his voyage; and having properly secured it in a barrel, committed the latter to the ocean, in the hope that it might afterward be found, should he and his crew never see land again. But they were mercifully preserved, as the storm at length subsided, and, within a few days, they reached the island of St. Mary's, one of the Azores.