and Walter Raleigh on his left; the three talk together
in a low voice on the chance of there being vast and
rich countries still undiscovered between Florida
and the River of Canada. Raleigh’s half-scientific
declamation and his often quotations of Doctor Dee
the conjuror, have less effect on Osborne than on
Cumberland (who tried many an adventure to foreign
parts, and failed in all of them; apparently for the
simple reason that, instead of going himself, he sent
other people), and Raleigh is fain to call to his
help the quiet student who sits on his left hand,
Richard Hakluyt, of Oxford. But he is deep in
talk with a reverend elder, whose long white beard
flows almost to his waist, and whose face is furrowed
by a thousand storms; Anthony Jenkinson by name, the
great Asiatic traveller, who is discoursing to the
Christ-church virtuoso of reindeer sledges and Siberian
steppes, and of the fossil ivory, plain proof of Noah’s
flood, which the Tungoos dig from the ice-cliffs of
the Arctic sea. Next to him is Christopher Carlile,
Walsingham’s son-in-law (as Sidney also is now),
a valiant captain, afterwards general of the soldiery
in Drake’s triumphant West Indian raid of 1585,
with whom a certain Bishop of Carthagena will hereafter
drink good wine. He is now busy talking with Alderman
Hart the grocer, Sheriff Spencer the clothworker,
and Charles Leigh (Amyas’s merchant-cousin),
and with Aldworth the mayor of Bristol, and William
Salterne, alderman thereof, and cousin of our friend
at Bideford. For Carlile, and Secretary Walsingham
also, have been helping them heart and soul for the
last two years to collect money for Humphrey and Adrian
Gilbert’s great adventures to the North-West,
on one of which Carlile was indeed to have sailed
himself, but did not go after all; I never could discover
for what reason.
On the opposite side of the table is a group, scarcely
less interesting. Martin Frobisher and John Davis,
the pioneers of the North-West passage, are talking
with Alderman Sanderson, the great geographer and “setter
forth of globes;” with Mr. Towerson, Sir Gilbert
Peckham, our old acquaintance Captain John Winter,
and last, but not least, with Philip Sidney himself,
who, with his accustomed courtesy; has given up his
rightful place toward the head of the table that he
may have a knot of virtuosi all to himself; and has
brought with him, of course, his two especial intimates,
Mr. Edward Dyer and Mr. Francis Leigh. They too
are talking of the North-West passage: and Sidney
is lamenting that he is tied to diplomacy and courts,
and expressing his envy of old Martin Frobisher in
all sorts of pretty compliments; to which the other
replies that,
“It’s all very fine to talk of here, a
sailing on dry land with a good glass of wine before
you; but you’d find it another guess sort of
business, knocking about among the icebergs with your
beard frozen fast to your ruff, Sir Philip, specially
if you were a bit squeamish about the stomach.”