
THIRD VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
Summary
Narrative, of the Voyage which Don Christopher Columbus made the third time that he came to the Indies, when he discovered terra firma, as he sent it to their Majesties from the Island of Hispaniola.
Most serene and most exalted and powerful Princes, the King and Queen, our Sovereigns: The Blessed Trinitymoved your Highnesses to this enterprise of the Indies; and of His Infinite goodness has chosen me to proclaim it to you; wherefore as His ambassador I approached your royal presence, moved by the consideration that I was appealing to the most exalted monarchs in Christendom, who exercised so great an influence over the Christian faith, and its advancement in the world. Those who heard of it looked upon it as impossible, for they fixed all their hopes on the favours of fortune, and pinned their faith solely upon chance. I gave to the subject six or seven years of great anxiety, explaining, to the best of my ability, how great service might be done to our Lord, by this undertaking, in promulgating His sacred name and our holy faith among so many nations;—an enterprise so exalted in itself, and so calculated to enhance the glory and immortalise the renown of great sovereigns. It was also requisite to refer to the temporal prosperity which was foretold in the writings of so many trustworthy and wise historians, who related that great riches were to be found in these parts.
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- Select Letters of Christopher ColumbusWith Other Original Documents, Relating to his Four Voyages to the New World, pp. 108 - 174Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1870