[The Life of Christopher Columbus from his own Letters and Journals by Edward Everett Hale]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of Christopher Columbus from his own Letters and Journals CHAPTER XI 12/13
God himself had opened his eyes that he might make the great discovery, which has reflected such honor upon them and theirs. "If his hopes had been answered," says a Catholic writer, "the modern question of holy places, which is the Gordian knot of the religious politics of the future, would have been solved long ago by the gold of the new world, or would have been cut by the sword of its discoverer. We should not have seen nations which are separated from the Roman communion, both Protestant and Pantheistic governments, coming audaciously into contest for privileges, which, by the rights of old possession, by the rights of martyrdom and chivalry, belong to the Holy Catholic Church, the Apostolic Church, the Roman Church, and after her to France, her oldest daughter." Columbus now supposed that the share of the western wealth which would belong to him would be sufficient for him to equip and arm a hundred thousand infantry and ten thousand horsemen. At the moment when the Christian hero made this pious calculation he had not enough of this revenue with which "to buy a cloak," This is the remark of the enthusiastic biographer from whom we have already quoted. It is not literally true, but it is true that Columbus was living in the most modest way at the time when he was pressing his ambitious schemes upon the court.
At the same time, he wrote a poem with which he undertook to press the same great enterprise upon his readers.
It was called "The End of Man," "Memorare novissima tua, et non peccabis in eternum." In his letter to the king and queen he says, "Animated as by a heavenly fire, I came to your Highnesses; all who heard of my enterprise mocked it; all the sciences I had acquired profited me as nothing; seven years did I pass in your royal court, disputing the case with persons of great authority and learned in all the arts, and in the end they decided that all was vain.
In your Highnesses alone remained faith and constancy.
Who will doubt that this light was from the Holy Scriptures, illumining you, as well as myself, with rays of marvellous brightness." It is probable that the king and queen were, to a certain extent, influenced by his enthusiasm.
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