Page:History of merchant shipping and ancient commerce (Volume 2).djvu/87

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

"By this it appeareth, your Grace hath not onely a great advantage of the riches, but also your subjects shall not travell halfe of the way that other doe, which goe round about as aforesayd."

Mr. Thorne further explains that as the Spaniards and Portuguese had found a way by the south to the rich lands of the East, and had thus gained a material advantage over English traders, his Majesty ought not to rest until a way was found by the north, "because the situation of this your realme is thereunto nearest and aptest of all other; and also for that you have already taken it in hand.[1] And in mine opinion it will not seeme well to leave so great and profitable an enterprise, seeing it may so easily, and with so little cost, labour, and danger, be followed and obtayned." "The labour is much lesse," he goes on to say, "yea, nothing at all where so great honour and glory is hoped for; and considering well the courses, truly the danger and way, shorter to us than to Spain or Portugal, as by evident reasons appeareth."

Such were the arguments which had been used in the sixteenth century to induce the crown of England to fit out another expedition and discover an easier route to the world of "gold, balmes, and spices;" but beyond the failure of Cabot's enterprise, a fearful scourge, the sweating sickness, had, from July to December of the year 1517, spread death and dismay, not only through the English court and city of London, but throughout the whole kingdom.[2]*

  1. A note on the margin of Hakluyt (vol. i. p. 213) adds, "in the eighth year of his reigne" i. e. 1516-7. This letter is not dated, but cannot be earlier than 1517, when Henry VIIIth's voyage of discovery was undertaken.
  2. This malady had broken out before. It appears from the history