the course of commerce, were examined by him with
minuteness, accuracy, and breadth of vision.
He was neither a trader nor a sailor, but a man of
letters, a scientific and professional traveller.
But it was obvious when he returned, rich with the
spoils of oriental study during thirteen years of
life, that the results of his researches were worthy
of a wider circulation than that which he had originally
contemplated. His work was given to the public
in the year 1596, and was studied with avidity not
only by men of science but by merchants and seafarers.
He also added to the record of his Indian experiences
a practical manual for navigators. He described
the course of the voyage from Lisbon to the East, the
currents, the trade-winds and monsoons, the harbours,
the islands, the shoals, the sunken rocks and dangerous
quicksands, and he accompanied his work with various
maps and charts, both general and special, of land
and water, rarely delineated before his day, as well
as by various astronomical and mathematical calculations.
Already a countryman of his own, Wagenaar of Zeeland,
had laid the mariners of the world under special obligation
by a manual which came into such universal use that
for centuries afterwards the sailors of England and
of other countries called their indispensable ‘vade-mecum’
a Wagenaar. But in that text-book but little
information was afforded to eastern voyagers, because,
before the enterprise of Linschoten, little was known
of the Orient except to the Portuguese and Spaniards,
by whom nothing was communicated.
The work of Linschoten was a source of wealth, both
from the scientific treasures which it diffused among
an active and intelligent people, and the impulse
which it gave to that direct trade between the Netherlands
and the East which had been so long deferred, and which
now came to relieve the commerce of the republic,
and therefore the republic itself, from the danger
of positive annihilation.
It is not necessary for my purpose to describe in
detail the series of voyages by way of the Cape of
Good Hope which, beginning with the adventures of
the brothers Houtmann at this period, and with the
circumnavigation of the world by Olivier van Noord,
made the Dutch for a long time the leading Christian
nation in those golden regions, and which carried
the United Netherlands to the highest point of prosperity
and power. The Spanish monopoly of the Indian
and the Pacific Ocean was effectually disposed of,
but the road was not a new road, nor did any striking
discoveries at this immediate epoch illustrate the
enterprise of Holland in the East. In the age
just opening the homely names most dear to the young
republic were to be inscribed on capes, islands, and
promontories, seas, bays, and continents. There
was soon to be a “Staten Island” both
in the frozen circles of the northern and of the southern
pole, as well as in that favoured region where now
the mighty current of a worldwide commerce flows through