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The Life of Columbus; in his own words by Edward Everett Hale
page 11 of 186 (05%)
danger of an explosion, and Columbus himself, seeing this danger, flung
himself into the sea, seized a floating oar, and thus gained the shore.
He was not far from Lisbon, and from this time made Lisbon his home for
many years.(*)

(*) The critics challenge these dates, but there seems to be
good foundation for the story.

It seems clear that, from the time when he arrived in Lisbon, for
more than twenty years, he was at work trying to interest people in his
"great design," of western discovery. He says himself, "I was constantly
corresponding with learned men, some ecclesiastics and some laymen,
some Latin and some Greek, some Jews and some Moors." The astronomer
Toscanelli was one of these correspondents.

We must not suppose that the idea of the roundness of the earth was
invented by Columbus. Although there were other theories about its
shape, many intelligent men well understood that the earth was a globe,
and that the Indies, though they were always reached from Europe by
going to the East, must be on the west of Europe also. There is a
very funny story in the travels of Mandeville, in which a traveler is
represented as having gone, mostly on foot, through all the countries
of Asia, but finally determines to return to Norway, his home. In his
farthest eastern investigation, he hears some people calling their
cattle by a peculiar cry, which he had never heard before. After he
returned home, it was necessary for him to take a day's journey westward
to look after some cattle he had lost. Finding these cattle, he also
heard the same cry of people calling cattle, which he had heard in the
extreme East, and now learned, for the first time, that he had gone
round the world on foot, to turn and come back by the same route, when
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