Page:Legendaryislands00babcuoft.djvu/186

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168 CORVO is true that Phoenician vessels sailing northward in the tin or amber traffic would hardly be likely to be storm-driven so far northwestward as Corvo; St. Michael would have been a more natural involuntary landfall. This objection does not apply, however, if we suppose the deposit to be the work not of accident, but of full intention and deliberation, as the alleged edifice and vault would certainly tend to show. If these coins were deposited by Phoenicians who erected permanent buildings, the remoteness of the island would be only an added reason for commemoration. The coins might have been immured in the vault for safe keeping or might have been enclosed in the corner stone, in accordance with the general custom of placing coins and records in the corner stones of notable structures. Of course these details cannot be confidently accepted. As Humboldt suggests, it is to be regretted that we are without information as to the period or character of the edifice in ques- tion. But at least it seems most probable that Phoenicians occu- pied or at any rate visited this island and deposited coins of Carthage. EQUESTRIAN STATUES Furthermore, Corvo is one of several Atlantic islands reputed to have been marked by monuments generally of one type. Edrisi 10 knows of them in Al-Khalidat, the Fortunate Isles bronze westward-facing statues on tall columnar pedestals. There are said to have been six such in all, the nearest being at Cadiz. Tradition places an equestrian statue also on the island of Terceira, as repeated in a much more modern work. 11 The Pizigani map of 1367, it will be remembered, shows (Fig. 2) near where Corvo should be the colossal figure of a saint warning mar- iners backward, with a confused inscription declaring westward navigation impracticable beyond this point by reason of obstruc- tions and announcing that the statue is erected on the shore of Edrisi, (Dozy and De Goeje), p. I. 11 S. Morewood: Philosophic and Statistical History of Inventions and Customs, . . . Inebriating Liquors, Dublin, 1838, p. 322.