Henry Hudson - A Brief Statement of His Aims and His Achievements by Thomas A. (Thomas Allibone) Janvier
page 28 of 81 (34%)
page 28 of 81 (34%)
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confirmed by stories about a great sea not far westward (the great
lakes) which he heard from the Indians. But the starting point of this geographical error is immaterial. The important fact is that Hudson entertained it: and so was led to offer for first choice to his mutinous crew that they should "go to the coast of America in the latitude of forty degrees." His readiness with that proposition, when the chance to make it came, confirms my belief that his own desire was to sail westward, and that he made the most of his opportunity. And the essential point, after all, is not whether the mutiny forced him to change, or merely gave him an excuse for changing, his ordered course: it is that he was equal to the emergency when the mutiny came, and so controlled it that--instead of going back, defeated of his purpose, to Holland--he deliberately took the risk of personal loss that attended breaking his contract and traversing his orders, and continued on new lines his exploring voyage. It is indicative of Hudson's character that he met that cast of fate against him most resolutely; and most resolutely played up to it with a strong hand. VII As the direct result of breaking his orders, Hudson was the discoverer of our river--to which, therefore, his name properly has been given--and also was the first navigator by whom our harbor effectively was found. I use advisedly these precisely |
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