Historic Tales, Vol. 1 (of 15) eBook

Charles W. Morris
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 307 pages of information about Historic Tales, Vol. 1 (of 15).

Historic Tales, Vol. 1 (of 15) eBook

Charles W. Morris
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 307 pages of information about Historic Tales, Vol. 1 (of 15).

“I did not go much farther than you,” he at length called out, in their own tongue “and if I am late I have a good excuse.  I can tell you news.”

“What are they?”

“I have made a grand discovery.  See, I have found vines and grapes,” and he showed them his hands filled with the purple fruit.  “I was born in a land where grapes grow in plenty.  And this land bears them!  Behold what I bring you!”

The memory of his childhood had driven for the time all memory of the Norse language from his brain.  Grapes he had not seen for many years, and the sight of them made him a child again.  The others beheld the prize with little less joy.  They slept where they were that night, and in the morning followed Tyrker to the scene of his discovery, where he gladly pointed to the arbor-like vines, laden thickly with wild grapes, a fruit delicious to their unaccustomed palates.

“This is a glorious find,” cried Leif.  “We must take some of this splendid fruit north.  There are two kinds of work now to be done.  One day you shall gather grapes the next you shall cut timber to freight the ship.  We must show our friends north what a country we have found.  As for this land, I have a new name for it.  Let it be called Vineland, the land of grapes and wine.”

After this discovery there is little of interest to record.  The winter, which proved to be a very mild one, passed away, and in the spring they set sail again for Greenland, their ship laden deeply with timber, so useful a treasure in their treeless northern home, while the long-boat was filled to the gunwale with the grapes they had gathered and dried.

Such is the story of the first discovery of America, as told in the sagas of the North.  Leif the Lucky was the name given the discoverer from that time forward.  He made no more visits to Vineland, for during the next winter his father died, and he became the governing head of the Greenland settlements.

But the adventurous Northmen were not the men to rest at ease with an untrodden continent so near at hand.  Thorvald, Leif’s brother, one of the boldest of his race, determined to see for himself the wonders of Vineland.  In the spring of 1002 he set sail with thirty companions, in the pioneer ship of American discovery, the same vessel which Biarni and Leif had made famous in that service.  Unluckily the records fail to give us the name of this notable ship.

Steering southward, they reached in due time the lake on whose shores Leif and his crew had passed the winter.  The buildings stood unharmed, and the new crew passed a winter here, most of their time being spent in catching and drying the delicious salmon which thronged river and lake.  In the spring they set sail again, and explored the coast for a long distance to the south.  How far they went we cannot tell, for all we know of their voyage is that nearly everywhere they found white sandy shores and a background of unbroken forest.  Like Leif, they saw no men.

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Historic Tales, Vol. 1 (of 15) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.