The Voyage of Verrazzano eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 213 pages of information about The Voyage of Verrazzano.

The Voyage of Verrazzano eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 213 pages of information about The Voyage of Verrazzano.
as of the four ships, Charlevoix expressly refers to Ramusio as his authority and Mr. Brevoort makes a paraphrase from the Carli and Ramusio versions combined. (Notes on the Verrazzano Map in Journal of the Am.  Geog.  Society of New York, vol.  Iv, pp. 172-3)] On leaving Madeira they pursued a westerly course for eight hundred leagues and then, inclining a little to the north, ran four hundred leagues more, when on the 7th of March [Footnote:  There is some ambiguity in the account, as to the time when they first saw land.  The letter reads as follows:  “On the 17th of last January we set sail from a desolate rock near the island of Madeira, and sailing westward, in twenty-five days we ran eight hundred leagues.  On the 24th of February, we encountered as violent a hurricane as any ship ever weathered.  Pursuing our voyage toward the west, a little northwardly, in twenty-four days more, have run four hundred leagues, we reached a new country,” &c.  If the twenty-four days be calculated from the 24th of February, the landfall would have taken place on the 20th of March; but if reckoned from the first twenty-five days run, it would have been on the 7th of that month.  Ramusio changes the distance first sailed from 800 to 500 leagues; the day when they encountered the storm from the 24th to the 20th of February; and the twenty-four days last run to twenty-five; making the landfall occur on the 17th or 10th of March according to the mode of calculating the days last run.  As it is stated, afterwards, that they encountered a gale while at anchor on the coast, early in March, the 7th of that month must be taken as the time of the landfall.] It seemed very low and stretched to the south, in which direction they sailed along it for the purpose of finding a harbor wherein their ship might ride in safety; but discovering none in a distance of fifty leagues, they retraced their course, and ran to the north with no better success.  They therefore drew in with the land and sent a boat ashore, and had their first communication with the inhabitants, who regarded them with wonder.  These people are described as going naked, except around their loins, and as being black.  The land, rising somewhat from the shore, was covered with thick forests, which sent forth the sweetest fragrance to a great distance.  They supposed it adjoined the Orient, and for that reason was not devoid of medicinal and aromatic drugs and gold; and being in latitude 34 Degrees N., was possessed of a pure, salubrious and healthy climate.  They sailed thence westerly for a short distance and then northerly, when at the end of fifty leagues they arrived before a land of great forests, where they landed and found luxuriant vines entwining the trees and producing sweet and luscious grapes of which they ate, tasting not unlike their own; and from whence they carried off a boy about eight
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The Voyage of Verrazzano from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.