Page:History of merchant shipping and ancient commerce (Volume 2).djvu/34

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Vasco De Gama disembarks, trade with Arabia and the cities of the West, in native and Arabian vessels. Hence among its merchants were many Moors,[1] who, holding in their hands the most profitable branches of the trade, naturally "perceived the great inconvenience and certain destruction which would fall upon them and upon their trade if the Portuguese should establish trade in Calicut."[2] These men therefore took counsel together, and at length succeeded in persuading the king's chief factor, and his minister of justice, that the strangers had been really sent to spy out the nature of the country, so that they might afterwards come and plunder it at their leisure. But, as Correa remarks, "it is notorious that officials take more pleasure in bribes than in the appointments of their offices," so the factor and the minister did not hesitate to receive bribes, both from the Moors and from the strangers, and recommended the king, whose interests were opposed to his fears, to open up a commercial intercourse with Vasco de Gama. Accompanied by twelve men, of "good appearance," composing his retinue, and taking with him numerous presents, De Gama at last presented himself on shore. The magnificent display of scarlet cloth, the crimson velvet, the yellow satin, the hand-basins and ewers chased and gilt, besides a splendid gilt mirror, fifty sheaths of knives of Flanders, with ivory handles and glittering blades, and many other objects of curiosity and novelty, banished, at least for the time,

  1. It should be remembered that with most of our early writers and navigators "Moor" was a generic name for Muhammedan. The governor of Calicut is called by the Portuguese "Zamorin," a corruption, probably, of "Samudri-Rajah."
  2. Correa, p. 156.