It Is Very Plain From Hence, That Captain Tasman Had Now Laid Aside
All Thoughts Of Discovering Farther, And I
Think it is not difficult
to guess at the reason; when he was in this latitude, line was
morally certain
That he could, without further difficulty, sail
round by the coast of New Guinea, and so back again to the East
Indies. It is therefore extremely probable that he was directed by
his instructions to coast round that great southern continent
already discovered, in order to arrive at a certainty whether it was
joined to any other part of the world, or whether, notwithstanding
its vast extent, viz., from the equator to 43 degrees of south
latitude, and from the longitude of 123 degrees to near 190 degrees,
it was, notwithstanding, an island. This, I say, was in all
appearance the true design of his voyage, and the reason of it seems
to be this: that an exact chart being drawn from his discoveries,
the East India Company might have perfect intelligence of the extent
and situation of this now-found country before they executed the
plan they were then contriving for preventing its being visited or
farther discovered by their own or any other nation; and this too
accounts for the care taken in laying down the map of this country
on the pavement of the new stadthouse at Amsterdam; for as this
county was henceforward to remain as a kind of deposit or land of
reserve in the hands of the East India Company, they took this
method of intimating as much to their countrymen, so that, while
strangers are gaping at this map as a curiosity, every intelligent
Dutchman may say to himself, "Behold the wisdom of the East India
Company. By their present empire they support the authority of this
republic abroad, and by their extensive commerce enrich its subjects
at home, and at the same time show us here what a reserve they have
made for the benefit of posterity, whenever, through the
vicissitudes to which all sublunary things are liable, their present
sources of power and grandeur shall fail."
I cannot help supporting my opinion in this respect, by putting the
reader in mind of a very curious piece of ancient history, which
furnishes us with the like instance in the conduct of another
republic. Diodorus Siculus, in the fifth book of his Historical
Library, informs us that in the African Ocean, some days' sail west
from Libya, there had been discovered an island, the soil of which
was exceedingly fertile and the country no less pleasant, all the
land being finely diversified by mountains and plains, the former
thick clothed with trees, the latter abounding with fruits and
flowers, the whole watered by innumerable rivulets, and affording so
pleasant an habitation that a finer or more delightful country fancy
itself could not feign; yet he assures us, the Carthagenians, those
great masters of maritime power and commerce, though they had
discovered this admirable island, would never suffer it to be
planted, but reserved it as a sanctuary to which they might fly,
whenever the ruin of their own republic left them no other resource.
This tallies exactly with the policy of the Dutch East India
Company, who, if they should at any time be driven from their
possessions in Java, Ceylon, and other places in that neighbourhood,
would without doubt retire back into the Moluccas, and avail
themselves effectually of this noble discovery, which lies open to
them, and has been hitherto close shut up to all the world beside.
But to proceed.
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