that have been made to glorify him socially—attempts,
it must be remembered, in which he himself and his
sons were in after years the leaders—are
entirely mistaken. That strange instinct for
consistency which makes people desire to see the outward
man correspond, in terms of momentary and arbitrary
credit, with the inner and hidden man of the heart,
has in truth led to more biographical injustice than
is fully realised. If Columbus had been the
man some of his biographers would like to make him
out—the nephew or descendant of a famous
French Admiral, educated at the University of Pavia,
belonging to a family of noble birth and high social
esteem in Genoa, chosen by King Rene to be the commander
of naval expeditions, learned in scientific lore, in
the classics, in astronomy and in cosmography, the
friend and correspondent of Toscanelli and other learned
scientists—we should find it hard indeed
to forgive him the shifts and deceits that he practised.
It is far more interesting to think of him as a common
craftsman, of a lowly condition and poor circumstances,
who had to earn his living during the formative period
of his life by the simplest and hardest labour of the
hand. The qualities that made him what he was
were of a very simple kind, and his character owed
its strength, not to any complexity or subtlety of
training and education, but rather to that very bareness
and simplicity of circumstance that made him a man
of single rather than manifold ideas. He was
not capable of seeing both sides of a question; he
saw only one side. But he came of a great race;
and it was the qualities of his race, combined with
this simplicity and even perhaps vacancy of mind, that
gave to his idea, when once the seed of it had lodged
in his mind, so much vigour in growth and room for
expansion. Think of him, then, at the age of
twenty-five as a typical plebeian Genoese, bearing
all the characteristic traits of his century and people—the
spirit of adventure, the love of gold and of power,
a spirit of mysticism, and more than a touch of crafty
and elaborate dissimulation, when that should be necessary.
He had been at sea for ten or eleven years, making voyages to and from Genoa, with an occasional spell ashore and plunge into the paternal affairs, when in the year 1476 he found himself on board a Genoese vessel which formed one of a convoy going, to Lisbon. This convoy was attacked off Cape St. Vincent by Colombo, or Colomb, the famous French corsair, of whom Christopher himself has quite falsely been called a relative. Only two of the Genoese vessels escaped, and one of these two was the ship which carried Columbus. It arrived at Lisbon, where Columbus went ashore and took up his abode.