A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 2 - By Robert Kerr


















































































































 -  With
some difficulty he prevailed on the people to continue their course about
twenty-five leagues farther on, as he - Page 437
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With Some Difficulty He Prevailed On The People To Continue Their Course About Twenty-Five Leagues Farther On, As He Felt Exceedingly Mortified At The Idea Of Returning To His Sovereign Without Accomplishing The Discovery On Which He Was Sent.

They accordingly reached the mouth of a river, which was discovered by Juan Infante, and was called from him, _Rio del Infante_, now known by the name of Great-Fish River, in about lat.

33 deg.27' N. long. 28 deg.20'E. The coast still trended towards the eastwards, with a slight inclination towards the north; so that, in an eastern course of about thirteen degrees, they had neared the north about six degrees, though still unsatisfied of having absolutely cleared the southern point of Africa.

From this river, the extreme boundary of the present voyage, Diaz commenced his return homewards, and discovered, with great joy and astonishment, on their passage back, the long sought for and tremendous promontory, which had been the grand object of the hopes and wishes of Portuguese navigation during _seventy-four_ years, ever since the year 1412, when the illustrious Don Henry first began to direct and incite his countrymen to the prosecution of discoveries along the western shores of Africa. Either from the distance which the caravels had been from the land, when they first altered their course to the eastwards, or from the cape having been concealed in thick fogs, it had escaped notice in the preceding part of the voyage. At this place Diaz erected a stone cross in memory of his discovery; and, owing to heavy tempests, which he experienced off the high table land of the Cape, he named it _Cabo dos Tormentos_, or Cape of storms; but the satisfaction which King John derived from this memorable discovery, on the return of Diaz to Portugal in 1487, and the hope which it imparted of having opened a sure passage by sea from Europe through the Atlantic into the Indian ocean, by which his subjects would now reap the abundant harvest of all their long and arduous labours, induced that sovereign to change this inauspicious appellation for one of a more happy omen, and he accordingly ordered that it should in future be called, _Cabo de boa Esperanca_, or Cape of Good Hope, which it has ever since retained.

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