* o . o ' .V ,0 «. " X-. %.,.' ..•:^v. ".-.*■'* .'jFm-:- \.a' y.^-. iO* »'/•', V 0^ c«'^«'..'^o. .^.^^ "7*. A^ ^ -^^0^ ,-^0^ -^^0^ •m^.t:^,^v^o ^^ ^/^V <, 'o . . • 0^ 'o ... ^ V ^o.o^ ^V ,? . o > • .^ ^* .0 ^^-n^. •Jy' .' .x^* .-i^^^. X.^^ /Jlfe:-. ^^^.^^ :£$iM^ X.** : CHJUiXOl'UKli CuLUAiBUCi. HISTORIC AND PICTURESQUE Exploration, Discovery ^ Conquest OF THE NEW WORLD CONTAINING THE THRILLING ADVENTURES OF CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS, AMERICUS VESPUCIUS, JOHN AND SEBASTIAN CABOT, ETC. DESCRIBING THEIR VOYAGES IN UNKNOWN SEAS, ENCOUNTERS WITH TERRIBLE STORMS AND SHIPWRECKS, DISCOVERY OF STRANGE LANDS, CURIOUS PEOPLE AND RICH MINES ; THEIR DESPERATE COMBATS WITH SAVAGES AND WILD BEASTS, STRUGGLES WITH MUTINOUS CREWS, WANDERINGS IN SWAMPS AND FORESTS, UNVEILING THE GLORIES OF THE NEW WORLD TO THE ASTONISHED GAZE OF ALL NATIONS, ETC. By D. IVL. KKLSEY The WeII=known Historian Author of " Pioneer Heroes," "Stanley and the White Heroes in Africa," Etc. WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY HOIST. MURAT HALSTEAD Most Renowned Journalist and Columbian Student Embellished with a Great Many Historical Illustrations by the Best English and American Artists. ENTERED ACCORDING TO ACT OF CONGRESS IN THE YEAR 1810, BY GEO. W. BERTRON /HE OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS, AT WASHINGTON, D. C, ■• (gCI.A2654l6 PREFACE. F all studies, that of History is one of the most important and interesting. It satisfies a natural and laudable curi- osity as to what has taken place in the world, and makes some amends for the shortness of life by enabling us to live over, in thought, the days and scenes of the past, and to know, as by a second experience, the life and labors of those who have gone before us. So strong and universal is the desire to know about the times that are gone, as to their persons, events and progressive changes, that it may almost be called an instinct of the soul. And as Cicero says : " Not to know what has taken place in former times is to be always a child, for if no use is made of the labors of by-gone ages, the world must always remain in the infancy of knowledge." In the following pages it has been the aim of the writer to give a history of the discovery and earliest explorations of the New World. In these biographies, as found in the original form, there is much that is of little interest to the general reader ; and much of scientific importance, that is difficult to understand by those who have not a close acquaintance with the mysteries of seamanship and astronomi- cal observation. All these points have been condensed and written in such familiar language that no difficulty will be experienced, even by boys and girls who might otherwise be repelled by the appearance of difficulty. The original authorities have been consulted wherever practi- cable. A constant effort has been made to retain as much individual interest as possible ; and reference to the authorities from which this work has been gathered would only encumber the book without add- ing to its value ; for in many cases the materials for a single chapter have been collected from many and various sources, and woven laboriously into a single whole. INTRODUCTION. HE first chapter of this volume is a charming compilation of the legends of the discoveries of North America before the famous voyage of Columbus, in which the trade winds wafted his ships to the West Indies. The testimony seems so clear that it would be eccentric to declare strenuously against the conclusion upon cir- cumstancial evidence, that the Northmen repeatedly visited Green- land and were acquainted with Newfoundland, Nantucket, Long Island, and perhaps Rhode Island. There are traditions in Iceland that corroborate the legendary stories of the adventurous Northmen, and they add that Columbus visited Iceland fourteen years before he immortalized himself as the discoverer of the "new world." It is a part of the story of Colum- bus in Iceland that he became intimately acquainted with the antique lore of that American island. It is worth while to remember that the westward capes of Iceland are less than three hundred miles from Greenland, while the eastern capes are between nine hundred and a thousand miles from Norway. It is a plain proposition that in the course of the centuries the capital of Iceland was settled in 874. The writer visited that island one thousand years later, with Cyrus Field, Dr. I. I. Hayes, Bayard Taylor, Professors Magnusson and Kneeland and Mr. Henry Glad- stone, who imported a pony to Hawarden. The founding of the city was five hundred and eighteen years before the Columbus discovery. If it be true that Colum^ as visited Iceland fourteen years before he found the West Indies —the year of his visit was 1478 and Rej^k- javeek had then bee' . founded more than five hundred years, within easy sail in three or four days of Greenland. The people were largely competent navigators with sea-going craft, and the land westward could not have been unfamiliar to them. IX X INTRODUCTION. There was nothing strange or doubtful in using a fact made known freely that there was land in the West. It does not reduce the splendor of the achievement of Columbus that he heard the story. He made use of it. He found in the presence of land in the West a corroboration of his dreams, that gave a footing to his fancy. The Icelandic tradition is that a Bishop was maintained for a long time in Iceland, and that a gorge of ice massed on the coast that lasted forty years, and then there was only desolate silence. After the " Decline and Fall " of the Roman Empire, Northern Italy was celebrated for commercial supremacy, glories in art and cities of special splendors and power ; and for immortal authors, artists in literature, sculpture, architecture and painting. Rome remained when the Empire crumbled into mighty fragments, " The Eternal City ; " and though there was an Eastern Empire and a rival capital — Constantinople — to divide the immense inheritance, the swarms of Asiatic conquerors came after the capture of the Oriental metropolis and converted the magnificent dominant church, St. Sophia, into a veritable and memorable mosque — a citadel of Moham- med in Christendom ; and the m3^riads of Mohammedans seeking Paradise swept over Southern Spain, first bafiled at Vienna and av last beaten on the central plains of France, at Chalons. Unlike Alexander, when his legions marched to India and he grew weary of conquest and carousal, Rome encountered other uncon- quered worlds, and found material occupation in crusades and cathedrals and the marvelous organizations of the then new, now old Church of Rome. Naples survived the eruptions of Vesuvius, and the irruption of the barbarians from the heart of Europe, remained the Queen City of the Italian South, when Carthage, like T3^re, was buried in her own ruins. Rome and Greece, however, taught the new nations rising on the wiugs of stately ships, over the antiquities of Egypt, to open the road to India ; and opulent tradesmen, guided b}- those who lived in the shadows of the Alps, the lagoons of the Adriatic, the pleasant river Arno and the shores of the bright central waters of the Mediterranean, gave the sunny historic lands a larger life. When Rome was no longer the imperial throne of the world, the INTRODUCTION. xi camels, called cleverly the " ships of the deserts " in Africa, gave way to the fleets that represented world-wide sea powers, and gathered the golden harvest between the ends of the earth. The representative and commanding cities of the revival of civili- zation, when the sword of old Rome ceased to devour, and the later and fairer forms of progress became manifest, were four — Venice, Genoa, Pisa and Florence. Venice, the bride of the sea, was first in the illustrious capitals that became nations. Florence lacked the embrace of the sea to inspire her to be the home of wide dominion, and became the glorious city of the Beautiful, the star of the Appenines. Pisa was the rival of Genoa, as Genoa of Venice ; but was long lived and strong enough to be of the leaders of the Crusaders, and carried home from Palestine forty ship loads of the precious hills around Jerusalem, to heap her Campo Santo with sacred soil, and to this end disfigured, with the scars of excavation the landscapes over- looking Solomon's temple, the scene of the Cross of Christ ; and the sepulchre from the door of which the stone rolled away. When we remember the fleet of Pisa, laden with soil touched by the Saviour's feet to make holy a graveyard in Italy, we meet the thought that after all a higher intelligence could declare that skepticism of the " relics " ridiculed by unbelievers in mysteries, might reasonably be relaxed, in view of the stranger things we know have happened ; and that, as we see in these days, miracles of science we need not deny the existence of memorials of Christian- ity though obscured in detail by savagery in the gloom of the desolation that overtook the conquests, won in the sign of the cross, when the sword and torch of Mohammed prevailed and gave the memorials of Christians to graves and dust heaps. The Crusaders, the Greek Emperors, and the stately Italian cities, gathered a harvest with their armies of historical relics in the Holy Lands. Christopher Columbus is not believed by the people of Genoa to have been born in that city. The testimony, so far as we may use the word, where enlightenment compels the existence of uncertainty, is that the great navigator was born in a village on the shores of the Gulf of Genoa, north of the city and near the sea, in the midst of quarries that yielded red stone. xii INTRODUCTION. The exact location of the house that is loosel}- called the birthplace of Columbus, is uot known, but there is interesting truth. There is evidence that a house identified with the Columbus famil}^ was the propert}^ of his father, and the home of the child who gave the name distinction. The house bears marks, not recent, that it has been changed since the boy Christopher was of the humble home household. It has been dul}- photographed, after the examination of records, proving it the habitation of the Columbus family. It is on the south side of a steep and narrow street, running from the harbor to the hills. On one side, when the writer found it, was a wine shop, and on the other a tobacco shop. The present appearances are that the original house has been reconstructed, so far as the front is concerned, into two houses. The one the father of Columbus, the discoverer, lived in, is that on the left of the building as presented in engravings. The form of the windows, and the narrowness of each of the structures as they stand invite this theory. Legal documents exist proving the Columbus folk lived in this place for several generations, including the time of the birth of the man child of high destin3\ There is a photograph of the house taken by an iVmerican consul, who investigated the neighborhood and also the official pigeon holes that seemed to speak of the receptacles of man}^ secrets ; but the only fact discovered was that the '* house of Columbus " was the property and home of the people of which, in that place, Christopher Columbus was one of the children, and that it was for several generations the dwelling place of those who derived title from the navigator's father. There was not, in or near the grim place, a good pla}^ ground for the 3'oungsters, and it has the appearance of a promise that it will remain unchanged for the centuries to come, as during like periods in the past. When Columbus made the discovery identified with his name, the spirit of adventure was abroad in the world, and the art of navigation improving so rapidly that evidentl}' the appointed time was close at hand, for the revelation of the gigantic continents connected b}- a narrow but rugged isthmus, awaiting explorers to be announced as the new world. INTRODUCTION. xiii Clearly, Columbus was a man of extraordinary breadth of informa- tion and strength of character. He had deep convictions that there was land in the West. He knew substantially the shape of the world, the fact that it sloped off toward the poles, and that the farther North one sailed, the narrower were the seas measured East and West, and the longer and colder the winters grew. He knew the Atlantic ocean broadened southward, and had read of the far East of Asia. Cipango and Cathay were Japan and China. The travels and writings of them by Marco Polo, kindled the imagination of the hardy Genoese sailor, destined to the delivery of the stroke of an enchanter's wand, that prepared the way for other and broader discoveries, among them the realization of the magnitude of the globe. Dreamer that he was, Columbus never dreamed that the earth was great as appeared when the impulse given by his voyages led in a few years comparatively to the completion of circumnavigation of the globe. The first ship that sailed around the earth was that carrying the flag of Magellan's squadron. The ship returned, the last of the fleet, with its captain, but the commander in chief of the squadron was slain in attempting to conquer a beautiful island of the subse- quentl}^ named Phillippine archipelago. He fought to force the inhabitants to become the subjects of a Christian king, and was killed in the fight. When the flag ship arrived on the return to Africa, through the straits of Magellan, a day had been lost in the reckoning, but the demonstration was made that the world was round. Columbus had letters for the Mikado of the age, the Great Kahn imperial house of Japan had then been in power more than two thousand years. The enormous error had been made by the Genoese navigator that the island of Cuba was Cipango. He sent forth mes- sengers with letters of introduction to the sovereign of Japan, and they discovered a people of nakedness and innocence, smoking a strange herb they called " tabac." The discoverer followed the coast of Cuba in two of his voyages, until convinced he had struck the mainland of Asia. On his last voyage^ he saw the coast of South America, but did not land. In xiv INTRODUCTION. his calculations, believing the globe was round like an egg, he had omitted the Americas and the Pacific ocean. If he had lived to ascertain the bulk of the world, he would have been amazed at the prodigality of nature, in manufacturing worlds made of meteors. The West Indies, as the islands were named, Columbus actually discovered, turned out richer in natural resources than those of the East. It was the fortune of the navigator to have a spell of fair weather assigned him in the discovery of a far greater land than India, an island surpassing Cipango, in extent, fruitfulness and beauty, if we may count the unlimited ages, to find a bigger and more bountiful Cathay in Asia. The letters of the discoverer in describing his islands are poems in fact, and glow with the rapture of a wonderful achievement. They are beautiful in poetry and piety, penetrated with a deep sense of duty to Christianity, with devotion to his Church, and he was radiant in his writings about the incouJparable loveliness that environed him — the colors of the fish in the rivers rivaling the bloom of the wilder- ness that was a majestic and opulent orchard of fruit trees. There was waiting for him, as he beheld the dazzling landscapes disclosed, an awful enemy native to the voluptuous airs, destined to destroy navies, compared with which his caravels were as fishing boats, built to keep within view of hospitable shores. Columbus arrived in the West Indies in the cyclone season. The month of October in that clime especially experiences the terrible tempests that wreck the forests and rend the cities. It is the month of " the hurricane's eclipse of the sun." The discoverer lingered in the enchanted air, hurricane haunted, hoping to find Cipango, until he reluctantly departed from his own Paradise. There was peace while he waited. Everj^where he found surpassing beauties of sea and sky and shore. All the blandishments of the tropics were spread to banquet his senses to indulge the fascination of suspense and the fancies he painted of the coming time. The mighty whirlwinds that begin as bubbles of the languid atmosphere of the American Mediterranean and send forth their tornadoes like thunderbolts northward and north- westward, were stilled that sober October ; but storms overtook and INTRODUCTION. xv nearly overwhelmed the Conquering Hero, when, on the waters the trade winds had beguiled him westward. Despairing at last of escap- ing from the aroused Atlantic, he wrote a brief story of his " find " in the West, placed the parchment in a cake of wax, and the wax in a keg, and so fixed the scroll to float when his ship went down. There was a change from stormy to fair, and he returned to Spain to receive great honors, and slights, jealousies and treacheries, through which he endured labor and sorrow to the end of his life, and died to be four times buried — in San Domingo once, Cuba once, and Spain first and last. Counting his crossing the Atlantic living and dead, his voyages over that stormy sea, from side to side, were ten. His longest repose was in the cathedral of Havana, where he had an un- finished monument, like " an empty glass turned down," as Spain lost her last island that Colon found for Isabella and Ferdinand. CONTENTS. AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. Plan of Work— Divisions of History— Egyptian Knowledge of America— Other Legends — Carthagenian Discoveries — Records Found — A Grecian Tomb in America — Similarity of Picture Writing — Chinese Discoveries — Difficulties of Maritime Enterprises — Invention of the Compass — Irish Claims — The Welsh Discovery — Welsh-Speaking Indians — The Norse- men — Erik the E.ed — Discovery of Greenland — The Mainland — Leifs Voyage — The Round Tower — Vinland — The First Fight with the Indians — The First White Native American — The Dighton Rock — The Skeleton in Armor 25 COLUMBUS' LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. Date and Place of His Birth — A Poor Man's Son — Education — Geographical Knowledge of the Time — Ideas of India — Marco Polo — A Splendid Banquet — The Scoifers Rebuked — "Lord Millions" — The Story of his Travels — The Grand Khan — Cipango — Imprisoned at Genoa — Influence on Youths of Genoa — Columbus Sees Service — Deceiving a Mutinous Crew — Prince Henry of Portugal — Columbus at Lisbon — Marriage — An Honored Profession- Friends — Evidence of a World Beyond the Waters — Growth of his Great Idea — Toscanelli Consulted — Religious Character of Columbus — Application to Genoa — To Venice — Voyage to Iceland — Application to Portugal — A Scurvy Trick — Condition of European Countries — A Friend at Last — Disappointment — A Sketch of Spanish History — The War Against the Moors — Effect upon the Project of Columbus — Friends at Court — Received by King Ferdinand — The Great Council of Salamanca — The Folly of the Wise — The Arguments of Columbus — Delayed Decision — A Wandering Court — Invitation to Portugal — Letter from England — Re- ligious Ardor Strengthened — The Council's Decision — Columbus Sets Out for France — At the Convent Gate — Friends at Palos — Appeal to the Queen — Demands of Columbus Rejected — A Courageous Courtier — Columbus Recalled — Isabella's Independence — Articles of Agree- ment ' 40 THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. New Difficulties — Reluctant Seamen — The Three Vessels — A Town of 3Iourning — Sets Sail from Palos — Alarms — The Double Reckoning — Variation of the Compass — The Grassy Sea — Renewed Doubts — Indications of Land — Mutiny of the Crew — Hope Renewed — Confidence in Columbus — Night-Watch of the Admiral — Light through the Darkness — "LAND!" — The Landing of the Discoverer — Taking Possession — The Natives — Cruising — Self-Deception — Exploration of Cuba — Two Wonderful Plants — Desertion of the Pinta — Hayti Discovered — Visits from Native Chiefs — Guacanagari — The Santa Maria Wrecked — Assisted by Natives — Tribute of Columbus to their Character—The Indians' -First Aquaintance Avith Fire- Arms — xvii XVlll CONTENTS. Enviable Indians— Colony Projected— Eftbrts to Convert the Indians— Building the Fortress —Instructions to Colonists— Departure of Columbus — Rejoined by the P/u/a— Explanations- Armed Natives— Hostilities— Difficulties of Return Voyage— Storms— Piety of the Crew- Causes of the Admiral's Distress— Ills Precautions— Land Once More— Enmity of Portuguese —Liberated Prisoners— Departure— Storms Again— Off the Coast of Portugal— Reception in Portugal— The King's Advisers— Rejoicing at Palos— Arrival of the P int a— Tinzon's Treach- ery— His Death — Reception of Columbus at Court — Unparalleled Honors — Royal Thanksgiv- ing — -Jealousy of Courtiers— Columbus and the Egg— The Papal Bull— Preparations for a Sec- ond Voyage— Various Arrangements— The Golden Prime of Columbus, ... 79 THE SECOND VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. The Great Fleet— Precautions of Columbus — The Outward Voyage — Traces of Civilization —Evidences of Cannibalism— Hostilities— Doubts Confirmed— At Ancliorage— The Fate of the Garrison— Story of the Natives— Attacked by Caribs— A New Colony— The Building of Isabella— Sickness— Exploration of the Island— Ojeda's Expedition— Return of Vessels— Slave-Trading Proposed by Columbus — His Reasons -Dissatisfaction — A Conspiracy Discov- ered—Action of Columbus— Columbus Explores the Island— Fort St. Thomas— Necessities of the Colony—" Gentlemen " at Work— A Voyage of Discovery— Welcome Reports — Cuba Voted a Part of the Mainland— Dangerous Illness of Columbus— Return to Isabella— Adven- tures of Bartholomew Columbus— Margarite's Rebellion— Enemies— Siege of St. Thomas— Ojeda's Daring Enterprise— Spanish Cunning vs. Indian Cunning— Steel Bracelets— Spanish Cunning Wins— Condition of Colony— An Indian War— Victory— The Conqueror's Conditions —A Desperate Effort — Misrepresentations of Margarite — Isabella's Views on Slavery — Agua- do's Arrival— Wariness of Columbus— Discovery of Gold-Mines— Romantic Story— Return to Spain 128 THE LAST VOYAGES OF COLUMBUS. Arrival at Cadiz— Reception at Court—" Gold in Bars"— A Miserable Maker of Jokes— A Thoughtful Queen— Third A'oyage of Columbus— Departure from Spain— La Trinidad— The Continent Discovered— The Land of Pearls— The Earthly Paradise— Building of San Do- mingo—The Adelantado's Administration- Conspiracy of Indians— Roldan's Rebellion- Dangers of the Government — Indian Insurrection — Guarionex Captured — Roldan's Luck — Terms Made with the Rebels— Enemies of Columbus in Spain— His Sons Shamed— Official Action— Bobadilla in Ilispaniola— His Course— Uncertainty of Columbus— Return to San Domingo — Columbus in Chains— His Brothers Arrested— The " Reward of Services "—Em- barkation of Columbus — Arrival in Spain — Bobadilla's Action Disavowed — Ferdinand's Jeal- ousy and Distrust— Ovando Appointed Governor— Wrongs of the Indians— A Great Fleet- Columbus Plans a Crusade— Ferdinand's Substitute— Fourth Voyage of Columbus— Sails from Spain— Ovando Refuses Shelter— His Ships— The Predicted Storm— Results— Cruising— Adventures on Land — A Daring Messenger — Reaches Jamaica — Courage of Mendez — Anxiety of the Castaways — Mutiny of Porras — Columbus Predicts an Eclipse — Terror of the Natives — An Insolent Messenger — Tlie Mutiny Ended — Assistance Arrives — Columbus Reaches Spain — Death of Isabella — Illness of Columbus — Assistance of Vespucius — Ferdinand's Delay — A Compromise Proposed — Rejection — A Last Gleam of Hope — Death of Columbus — His Burial — Ceremonies attending the Removal to Havana 155 AMERICUS VESPUCIUS. Is "America" an Indian Word? — A City of Merchants — The Vespucci Family — Education — A Famil}" Misfortune — Americus in Spain — Connection with Columbus — First Voyage of Vespucius — South America Discovered — An American Venice — Attacked by Natives — An CONTENTS. xix Inland Visit — Friendly Natives — Repairing the Vessels — A Mission of Vengeance — A Desper- ate Conflict — Return to Spain — Disputes about the Voyages of Vespucius — Marriage — Visit to Court — Ojeda's Expedition — Second Voyage of Vespucius — Off the Coast of South America — Gentle Cannibals — Landing of the Spaniards Disputed — A Village of Giants — A Filthy Habit — Return to Spain — A Flattering Offer — His Third Voyage — A Stormy Passage — Land at Last — An Earthly Paradise — An Invitation Accepted — Murdered by Cannibals — Revenge Forbidden — Vespucius becomes Commander — Off the Coast of Africa — Return to Portugal— The Fourth Voyage of Vespucius — Misfortunes — An Anxious Condition — South America Again — A Colony Planted — Return to Lisbon — To Spain — Preparations for New Expedition — Causes of Delay — New Taslcs Proposed — Appointed Chief Pilot of Spain — Visits Florence — His Death — His Family — Foundations of his Fame — Accusations — Original Application of the Name America 196 SEBASTIAN CABOT, THE DISCOVERER OF NORTH AMERICA. John Cabot — Settles in England — His Sons — Residence in Venice — Return to England — The Cabot Boys' Interest in Columbus — Henry VII. — John Cabot Goes to Court — A Patent Granted — Expedition Sails from England — Touches at Iceland — Nova Scotia Discovered — The Sailors Insist on Returning — A Second Venture — Death of John Cabot — A Colony Pro- posed — Mutinous Sailors — Exploration — A King's Injustice — In Spain — Henry VIII. — Sebas- tian Cabot Summoned to England — To Spain Again — Grand Pilot — A Disappointment — Return to England — Voyage to America — Rebellious Followers — Summoned to Spain Again — Import- ance of the Moluccas — An Expedition Thither — Sealed Orders — Fault-Finding — Swift Retri- bution — La Plata — A Fort Built — Ascending the River — A Bloody Battle — Tracked Across the Ocean — A Polite Refusal — Pursued uptlae River — Cabot Defends Himself — Explorations — • Innocent and Guilty Confused — The Fort Stormed — Return to Spain — Cabot's Reputation — Return to England — Grand Pilot of England — Variation of the Needle Explained by Cabot — Proposed Expedition to the Northeast — The Stilyard — Sir Hugh Willoughby — Chancellor's Success — Willoughby's Death — Cabot's Commercial Importance — Accession and Marriage of Queen Marv — Cabot Resigns his Pension — A Lively Old Man — Pension Renewed — Worth- thington's L^nfaithfulness — Death of Cabot 227 ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE. OUl G enoa English and Spanish Contending for Supremacy in the New World Christopher Columbus. • , • ^, " •, Columbus Before Isabella and the Council. A Phoenician Vessel. . . , • , • ^ • A Fleet of Roman Galleys in the Mediterranean. Discovery of Greenland by Norse Ships. . Round Tower at Newport, Rhode Island. Lief and His Men Find Tyrker The Skeleton in Armor Birthplace of Columbus Sea Bishop and Mermaids The Phantoms of Fear. • , :. ,^- Marco Polo at the Court of Kuulai Khan . Marco Polo's Single Galley Attacked by Seventy fi The Years of Preparation. . . • • Diaz on His Way to the Cape. . Isabella in Armor. Columbus in the Royal Presence. Columbus Before the Council. . . • Columbus and His Son at the Monastery Ga^e Departure of Columbus from Palos, Spain. "Land! Land!" The Mutinv Columbus Watching for Land. . . Columbus Approaching San Salvador. Landing of Columbus at San Salvador. . The Fight with the Iguana. The Grateful Cacique. • • • • • , The Columbus Bronze Doors in the Capitol at Wash The Return of Columbus. . ', ' , ' Columbus' Men Throwing Over the Casks. A Pilgrimage of Grace. . ' ^ .; . * i Columbus Before the Sovereigns of Portugal. . The Triumphal Progress. . • • /. .'i. Reception of Columbus by Ferdinand and Isabella. Columbus and the Egg. • ; • „.•.,.•. ^ Columbus Relating His Discover.es to His I riend, 1 Evidences of Cannibalism. . . • • • Sailing Among the Islands Bartholomew Columbus. . • Spaniards Setting Dogs on Indians. . An Aboriginal Race Working in Mines. . Columbus Protecting the Indian Prisoners. "Gold in Bars" athe ington. Perez Full Page Full Page Full Page FuU Page Full Page Full Page Full Page Full Page Full Page Full Page Full Page Full Page Full Page IV v vi 27 28 32 35 36 38 40 43 44 47 48 51 53 63 65 66 72 78 82 86 88 90 92 97 100 Full Page 105 109 111 114 117 Full Page T20 Full Page 122 Full Page 124 126 130 Full Page 137 144 150 Full Page 153 Full Page 156 158 xxi XXU ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE. The Landing of Columbus at Trinidad 160 The Tidal Wave IGl Ruins of the House of Columbus at San Domingo 165 Riveting the Fetters upon Columbus 171 Columbus Returning to Spain in Chains Full Page 174 Hooted by the Mob 175 Ovando's Fleet Shattered in a Storm 178 Columbus' Caravels Aground. . . . \ 185 Columbus and the Eclipse ..,,... 188 Death of Columbus Full Paffe 192 Statue of Columbus on the Portico of the Capitol at Washington. , . . 195 Americas Yespucius 197 Vespucius Exploring the New Country 203 Natives of the Amazon 206 On the Orinoco 208 Lisbon in the Sixteenth Centurj-. 216 Shipwreclied. Full Page 218 John Cabot Full Page 226 Sebastian Cabot. 2;30 Cabot at Labrador Full Page 232 Cabot's Return to England. 234 Vovaging up the River 245 Great Ship of Henry the Eighth 250 Sebastian Cabot and the Cosmographers •?54 Exploration, Discovery and Conquest. CHAPTER I. AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. Plan of the Work — Divisions of History — Egyptian Knowledge of America — Other Legends -Carthagenian Discoveries — Records Found — A Grecian Tomb in America — Similarity of Picture Writing — Chinese Discoveries— Difficulties of Maritime Enterprises — invention of the Compass — Welsh-Speaking Indians — The Norsemen — Erik the Red — Discovery of Green- land — Leif's Voyage — The Round Tower— The First Fight with the Indians. IT is our purpose in this volume to trace the history of the great discov- eries beginning in the memorable year 1492; to show how not only Columbus labored and waited until his great opportunity came, but the adventures and hardships through wliich his contemporaries and successors sought out the mysteries surrounding that New World. Before entering upon this task, however, it will be well to consider the stories told of various seamen who had sought and found the far-off conti- nent, before Columbus. We shall also see what dim knowledge of a land beyond the great western ocean was current among the peoples of antiquity. History is usually divided into three parts. Ancient history ends with the fall of Rome, in 476 A. D.; the History of the Middle Ages then begins, and extends over a period of about ten centuries ; since the end of which, the re- cord is called Modern History. During the first period, there were certain traditions regarding a country which was probably America ; during the " second period there may have been some daring sailors who reached the New World ; the third period begins with the story of exploration, discovery and settlement in America. Solon, one of the seven wise men of Greece, who lived in the sixth and seventh centuries B.C., traveled into far countries, to learn all that the sages of other nations had to teach. When he reached Egypt, he thought to aston- ish the priests — the learned men of the country — by telling them of the his- tory of Greece, and particularly of Athens, of which city he was a native. "Solon, Solon!" exclaimed one of the oldest of them; "the Greeks are nothing but children, and an aged Greek there is none." (25) 26 AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. Much surprised at this, the traveler asked the priest what he meant ; and received in reply such an account of the knowledge which the Egyptians possessed of other peoples, as to make him accept for truth what had seemed but an idle boast. Among other things, the old priest told him of a vast island, or rather conti- nent, which once lay in the great ocean, to the west of Europe, and which was reached by a short voyage after the sailor had passed the Pillars of Her- cules, as the Strait of Gibraltar was then called. The people of this conti- nent had often made war upon those of Europe, and had been much dreaded by them; but a series of earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and similar calami^ ties, had caused this great island to sink into the waters of the ocean, with all its vast hordes of inhabitants; and the peoples of Europe had thus been saved from these terrible enemies. The sinking of this island, the priest added, had so blocked up the ocean with mud as to make it forever afterward impassable. The date of its destruction he iixed at a point about nine thousand years before his own time. Solon returned to Greece, bearing this information with him; but it does not seem to have been made public until the time of his descendant Plato, who lived about two hundred 3'ears later; and we have no means of knowing how much Plato added to the original story from the treasury of his own mind. It is from this source that Ave derive the classic fables of the Lost Atlantis. There were legends, too, of the Gardens of the Hesperides, and of the Fortunate Islands, and, later, of St. Brandan's Island and other favored places, far in the west ; but whether these had any connection with a belief in land beyond the Atlantic, or whether this was simply considered a conven- ient situation for the scene of such stories, since nobody knew enough of this region to say the islands were not there, we cannot pretend to say. It is possible that America was reached by the Phoenician and Carthagin- ian sailors, the most adventurous of antiquity. But the Phoenicians were early reduced to insignificance among the nations of the world, while the Carthaginians, whose city they had founded, rose into importance. But Carthage engaged in wars with Rome, and was finally wholly destroyed by the armies of that great city; and all record of her colonies and discoveries was thus lost. It is certain that Carthaginian sailors discovered the Canary Islands, which were then uninhabited ; and these islands were peopled from Carthage; yet, when they were re-discovered, the inhabitants had lost all tradition of their ancestors having come from another country, and thought themselves the only people in the world. Traditions which have survived the destruction of Carthage tell us that a vessel on the Mediterranean, which was sailing towards the Straits of Gib- raltar, the ancient Calpe, was driven by storms beyond it, and was heard of AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. 27 no more. Did it reach America? At a meeting of the Mexican Geographical Society, some few j^ears since, it was stated that some brass tablets had been discovered in the northern part of Brazil, covered with Phoenician inscrip- tions, w^hich tell of the discovery of America five centuries before the begin- ning of the Christian era. These are now in the museum at Rio Janeiro. They state that a Sidonian fleet sailed from a harbor in the Red Sea, and rounding the Cape of Good Hope, was driven by the south-east trade-winds, and then by the north-east, across the Atlantic. The number of the vessels, the number of seamen, and many other particulars are there given. A Phceniciax Vessel. In 1827, a farmer near Montevideo, in Uruguay, South America, is said to have discovered a flat stone which bore an inscription in a language un- known to him. Beneath it was a vault of masonry, in which was deposited two ancient swords, a helmet, and a shield. The stone which had covered the vault was taken to ]\Iontevideo, where it was found that the inscription was in most parts sufficiently legible to be deciphered. According to those learned men who examined it, it was in Greek, and read as follows: — " During the dominion of Alexander, the son of Philip, King of Macedon, in the sixty- third Olympiad, Ptolemais." On the handle of one of the swords was a man's portrait, supposed to be that of Alexander; the helmet was decorated with a fine sculpture represent- ing Achilles dragging the body of Hector around the walls of Troy. If this is indeed a relic of times before Columbus, it would indicate that during the reign of Alexander the Great, about 330 B. C, a party of Greeks had crossed the Atlantic. Why the arms should have been deposited in this vault we do not know ; it may have been that one of their number, Ptolemais, possibly their leader, died ; it may be that they found it impossible to carry out the cus- toms of their nation, and reduce the body to ashes ; and hence entombed it 28 AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. in this vault, with the arms which their leader had used during his lifetime. More than two thousand 3'ears had passed before it was opened; and in that time every trace of the body and its softer clothing had been destroyed, leav- ing only the imperishable metals. A Fleet of Roman Galleys in the Mediterkankan. These are the stories of ancient times in regard to America. It will be no- ticed that while there are accounts of men who reached the western shores of the Atlantic, it would seem that there are none of whom it is said that they returned. Yet the fables of Atlantis shows that at some time the people of the eastern continent must have known something of the western. It is a curious fact, in this connection, that recent investigations have shown that the monuments of Mexico and Central America are surprisingly similar to those of Egypt; and there is a still greater degree of similarity between the picture-writing of these two far-distant parts of the world. How much of the civilization of Mexico and Peru, which has long been the wonder of white men, came originally from Egypt, the mother of the arts and sciences known to Europe? At the very beginning of the Middle Ages, we find a claim of another dis- covery of America; but this time from the other coast. In 1761, Deguignes, AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. 29 a French scholar whose name is now almost unknown, announced to the world that the Chinese discovered America in the fifth century, A. D. He derived this information from the official annals of the Chinese Empire, to which, he claimed, he had gained access. He tells us that he found that in the year 499 A. D., a Chinese Buddhist priest returned to Siugan, the capital of China, from Tahan, or Khamschatka, saying that he had been to a coun- try twenty thousand li, or about seven thousand miles, beyond Tahan. It is supposed by Deguignes from this statement of the distance, that he had crossed Behring's Strait and journeyed southward to California, or perhaps as far as Mexico. The explorer called this country Fusang, from the fact that the maguey, or American aloe, so plentiful in that part of North Amer- ica, resembles the plant which the Chinese call fusang. Before considering at more length the stories of those navigators who are said to have preceded Columbus in the discovery of America, let us see what difficulties were in the way. In the first place, the vessels which served for coasting voyages were, in very many cases, small and ill-fitted for buffeting with the storms of the Atlantic. We shall see hereafter, however, that an experienced sailor did not consider certain ships as unfitted for his purpose because they were smaller than many of his day; and, perhaps, in comparing the ships of the two periods, we are apt to place too much stress on the fact that the vessels of to-day are large, and conclude that because of their size they are safer. Possibly the small craft in which the early navigators cross- ed the Atlantic were far safer and more manageable than larger vessels would have been, without the aid of steam to speed them on their way. A far greater difficulty lay in the ignorance of the sailors. Do we realize what it means to have no newspapers, no books except costly manuscripts, no schools except for those of high rank or who intended to enter the priest- hood? Can a modern sailor imagine what it would be to drift upon an un- known sea, without chart or compass? Yet that is what these early seamen did, when they ventured far to the west, in search of land of whose very ex- istence they were not sure. The mariner's compass was not known in Europe until about the twelfth century; although it had been in use much earlier than this in China. A learned Florentine, who visited England in 1258, wrote home a letter describ- ing one wonderful thing which he had seen. He had been to the great Univer- sity of Oxford, which had had a European renown for hundreds of years even then, and had been admitted to the study of Friar Roger Bacon, a man so wise that most persons thought he must have sold himself to the devil to learn all that he knew. One of the wonderful things which he saw was the power which a piece of magnetic iron ore possessed over iron and steel ; and the great friar, putting a long, slender bit of such ore on a piece of light wood, and letting it float on some water, showed the astonished traveler how ^0 AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. coDstantly one end of the rude needle pointed to the North Star. It was too strange a power to be wholly right, thought the people of that time; it could only be by Satanic direction that such powers could be given to a bit of senseless iron; how could a piece of metal know more than a Christian? And good, devout Catholics, in stormy weather, were often puzzled to know in what direction to look for the North Star. So the sailors refused to go in any vessel whose master was known to carry this magical contrivance; and it was only when they found that exorcisms and blessings and signs of the cross did not take away this power of the magnet, that they began to believe it did not come from the devil after all. This foolish prejudice against the mariner's compass once removed, a great ditficulty in the way of oceanic ex- ploration was smoothed away. If we may believe the claims of several nations, however, America was dis- covered more than once before the mariner's compass was in use among European sailors. There are some claims that the Irish, at a period which is not fixed, had sailed westward and reached the farther shores of the Atlan- tic; and the people of the northern part of Europe told of a country which they called Great Ireland, in very much the same way as the people of the southern part, at a little earlier day, told of Atlantis. It must be remember- ed in reading of this Irish voyage, that in very early times Ireland was a much more highly civilized country than England. The schools of Ireland were famous throughout Europe, before those of Oxford and Cambridge and Paris were dreamed of, and while the wolves yet howled around the sites of Heidelberg and Leipsic. Such a nation, then, would have many men who knew the story of Atlantis ; it might be told to some adventurous sailors, who would employ all the arts of the then civilized world in fitting out a vessel to voyage thither; and who might possibly accomplish the journey and return in safety. The next account which we shall notice is the story told by the Welsh bards, that in the twelfth century America was discovered by some of their countrymen. The bards, or poets, were the historians of Wales, before, in the fourteenth century, it was conquered by the king of England and made a part of his dominions; in their songs we find all that can be known of the history of Wales; and this is not contradicted by the written history of other nations, in those particular instances where they tell of the same event. According to them, the death of a king named Owen brought about great dissensions among his sons, who each desired the kingdom for himself, ex- cepting Madoc, who seems to have been a lover of peace. While the other brothers were fighting to decide this question, Madoc sailed away to the west- ward in search of a country where there was no war. Leaving Ireland to the north, he continued his course until he reached a beautiful and fertile coun- try, supposed, by those who fully accept the account, to have been the coast AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. 31 of the southern portion of the United States. But he was not content to enjoy this new-found paradise with the few who had come with him; he wished to share it with all who loved peace. He accordingly returned to Wales, and spread the story of his discovery far and wide. Three hundred answered his call, and with ten ships he sailed away again to the western land, but, sad to say, was never heard of more. In 1740, there appeared in the Gentleman's Magazine, an English period- ical of high standing, a letter dated more than fifty years before, narrating how the writer, a Welsh clergyman and a graduate of the University of Ox- ford, had, in company with some other persons, been captured by some In- dians of the Tuscarora tribe, near what is now called Cape Hatteras. This occurred about the beginning of the year 1661. The prisoners were in much danger from the Indians, but the reverend gentleman, much to his surprise, found that he could make them understand him by speaking in his native language, which was substantially the same as their own. By pleading with them in Welsh, he succeeded in making friends with them, and he and his companions were well treated during the four months that they remained with the Indians. He adds that he preached to the Indians in Welsh, three times a week during this period. To this communication the name of the Rev. Morgan Jones is signed. This testimony alone would be of little weight; for it was written twenty- five years after the occurrence, and published fifty-five years after it was written. Others, however, have told of the Indians who speak Welsh; and more than one Welshman, who knew no language except that and English, is said to have been able to talk to the Indians, and understand them, although they knew no language but their own. Mr. Jones describes the In- dians into whose hands he fell as being so light in color that he first took them for white men; and it is true that the Tuscaroras, who were the sixth of the famous Six Nations, were frequently called white Indians. It is said, also, that the Conestogas showed especial hatred to such whites as were of a fair complexion; and a red-haired, blue-eyed person, would be more cruelly treated by them than one with dark hair and eyes. An enthu- siastic Welshman declares that this was because their remote ancestors had had hard battles with Madoc and his followers, and they instinctively recog- nized persons of fair hair as bitter enemies. How much of the story of Madoc is true, we do not know, but it seems to fit in with what the Mexicans told the Spaniards : that they had been taught many things by white strangers from the east, who had gone back across the Atlantic, promising to return. If this were Madoc and his companions, it seems that they never reached America after leaving Wales the second time, but were lost to both continents. If, on the other hand, the ancestors of the Tuscaroras were Welshmen, Madoc's ten ships reached their destination, but 32 AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. those which tried to return were lost. One thing is certain : Madoc and his handful of men could not have civilized Mexico and settled North Carolina. One claim or the other must be given up. DiSCONTiRY OK GREENLAND BY NORSE SlIU'S. We come now to the account of the discovery of America by navigators from another country, whose claims to having actually reached the shores of the western continent are clearer and better proved than any of those who went before them. The discoveries of the Norsemen are recorded in their sagas; and being written history, these accounts deserve more credit than AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. 33 any mere traditions. The only question is, what hind was actually reached; was it a portion of the New England coast, or was it nearer the coast of Greenland? From the Saga of Erik the Red we condense and modernize the following account : — Thorvald and his son Erik removed from the southwestern coast of Nor- way to Iceland, in consequence of murder, after several colonies had been established in that island. Thorvald died there, and Erik married. Moving northward from where he first settled, Erik's name of " The Red " seems to have been merited by new deeds of violence; for shortly after the birth of his son Leif he was compelled to remove again, this time to the westward. Disputes between him and his new neighbors arose, as a result of which he was declared an outlaw. Gunnbjorn, a countryman of Erik's, had sailed to the westward and brought back word that there was land there; it is sup- posed that this land was Gunnbjarnasker, now concealed, or rendered inac- cessible, by the descent of Arctic ice. Erik said he would come back to his friend if he found the land, says the old chronicle; and it would appear from this that he was desperate; if he did not find land, he would perish in the waste of waters. He reached Greenland, seen then by European eyes for the first time, and touched at a point which he named Midjokul; the term jokid being applied to a mountain covered with snow. Reaching Greenland in the spring or summer, he remained there for two winters. The third summer he went to Iceland, and anchored his ship near the point from which he had sailed. He called the land which he had found Greenland, because, said he, "People will be attracted thither, if the land has a good name." Remaining in Iceland all winter, probably to get recruits for his new en- terprise, he sailed back to Greenland the next summer, with a fleet of thirty- five vessels ; but of these only fourteen reached their destination ; some were lost, and the others driven back. The saga places this settlement fifteen winters before Christianity was established by law in Iceland, or 985 A. D.; Iceland having been settled 874 A. D. One of the settlers who accompanied Erik was name(i Herjulf. His son, Bjarni, was a bold and daring sailor, who possessed his own ship while still a very young man. It was his custom to spend every second winter with hi? father, the remainder of the time being given to the sea. Accordingly, he set sail from Norway in the summer time, and arrived in Iceland only to find that his father had moved to Greenland. These tidings, the old chronicler says, appeared serious to Bjarni, and ho was unwilling to unload his ship. Then his seamen asked him what he would do: he answered that ho intended to continue his custom, and spend the 34 AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS. wiiitoiMvith his father; unci asked them if they wouhl accompan\ liiin to Greenhuul. They assented to this, though none of them had been in the " Greenhind Ocean." Putting to sea, they had fair weather for three days; but after that, fogs arose, and continued many days. Finally, they saw land. They were doubtful, however, if this was Greenland; and sailed closer before they could determine. Seeing that it was without mountains, but covered with wood, they decided that it could not be the country which they were seeking, and leaving it on the larboard side, sailed two days before they again saw land. This, again, did not answer the description, being a flat land cov- ered with Avood. The sailors, however, were tired of seeking a land the location of which they did not know, and wished to go ashore here; pretending, when Bjarni objected, that they were in need of wood and water. He stoutly refused to permit it, however, and at last they unwillingly turned the prow from the land. Sailing three days with a south-west wind, they saw. another laud, covered with mountains and ice-hills; but this did not appear inviting to Bjarni, and he forbade the sails to be lowered. As they kept on their course, they saw that this was an island. Once more putting out to sea, they sailed four days, when they saw the fourth land. It seemed to Bjarni that this answered the description of Cireenlaud, and putting about for shore, they chanced to land just at the point where Bjarni's father, Herjulf. had settled. What were the three lands that he saw? If we carefully trace his course on the map, remembering that the Norsemen reckoned a day's sail at about thirty geographical miles, and keeping in mind what is said of the direction of the wind, we can but come to the conclusion that the tirst land seen was Connecticut or Long Island, while the great island was doubtless Newfound- land ; the second land was some point between the two. This is the tirst written record which we have of the discovery of the mainland of America. The voyage was nuule at some time in the late sum- mer or autumn of 1»S.") ; ])ut. as we have seen, the Europeans did not attempt to land. Bjarni went back to Norway, where he boasted of his tliscovery; but the fact that he had refused to land became somewhat a matter of reproach to him. His exi)eriences, however, caused much talk about voyages of dis- covery, and Leif, the son of that (piarrelsome Erik the Red, who had tirst settled Greenland, sailed away to the south-west with thirty-five men. One of these is called in the saga a Southern; he was i)robably a German. But we will quote the simple old story itself: — "Now prepared they their ship, and sailed out into the sea when they were ready, and then found that land first which Bjarni had found last. There sailed they to the land, antl cast anchor, and put off boats, and went A.MKKKA HEFOKK ((H.l.MI'.r 35 ashore, and found there no grass. * * * * Then said Leif: 'AV^eliavc not done like Bjarni about this land, that we have not been upon il ; now will I give the land a name, and call it Helluland.' "Then went they on l)oard, and after that sailed out to sea, and found another land; they sailed again to the land, and cast anchoi-, then put off boats and went on shore. This land was flat, and covered with wood, and white sands were far around where they went, and the shore was low."' ^he country was accordingly named Markland, which means woodland in the Norse tongue. Returning to the ship, they sailed again into the open sea before a north-east wind. Two days later, they came to an island, sup- posed, from the distance and direction, to have been Nantucket ; thence their course lay along the coast until they reached Mt. Hope Bay. They noted that on the shortest day in winter — for they remained here all winter — the day was nine hours long; the sun rising at half-past seven and setting at half-past four. This circumstance confirms the conclusion drawn from the direction and length of their course over the seas; for the time of sunrise and sunset varies with the latitude; and the times given by them corres- pond with the actual length of the day at this point. Having determined to settle at this point, they ' ' built there large houses. " Was one of these buildings that Round Tower at Newport, the origin of which has been so much debated? Leif divided his party, sending half out upon journeys to explore the land, while the others remained at home. They did not go far, it being understood that they were always to be back at night-fall. Leif himself sometimes accompanied these expeditions; some- times stayed at home. "It happened one evening that a man of the party was missing, and this was Tyrker theGerman. This took Leif much to heart, for Tyrker had been long with his father and him, and loved Lief much in his childhood. Lief now took his people severely to task, and prepared to seek for Tyrker, and took twelve men with him. But when they had gotten a short way from the house, then came Tyrker toward them, and was joyfully received. Leif soon EouxD Tower at Ne^atokt, Khode Island. 3^ AMEKICA HKIOKK COLUMBUS. saw that his foster-father was not in his right senses. Tyrker had a high forehead, and unstead}^ eyes, was freckled in the face, small and mean in stature, but excellent in all kinds of artifice. Then said Leif to him: — " ' Why wert thou .so late, my fosterer, and separated from the party?' Lkif anm> Ills Men Fixd Tykkkr. " Tyrker now spoke first, for a long time, in German, and rolled his eyes about to different sides, and twisted his mouth, but they did not understand what he said. After a time he spoke Norse: - - " ' I have not been much further off, but still I have something new to tell of; I found wine-wood and wine-berries.' AMKRHA BKFORE COr.UMBUS. 37 '-' ' But is that true, my fosterer?' .said Leif. " ' Surely is it true,' replied he, ' for I was bred up in a laud where there is no want either of wine-wood or wine-berries.' "They slept now for the night, l)ut in the morning, Leif said to his sailors: " ' We will now set about two things, in that the one day we gather grapes, and the other day cut vines and fell trees, so from thenoe will be a loading < for my ship.' " And that was the counsel taken, and it is said their long boat was filled with grapes. Now was a cargo cut down for the ship, and when the spring came, they got ready and sailed away, and Lief gave the land a name after 1 its qualities, and called it Vinland."' The next voyage was made by Thorvald, the younger brother of Leif. These voyagers made for the point where Leif and his companions had spent the winter, but were less fortunate than they had been. Leaving these houses behind them, they started upon a further journey of discovery; and here we find the story of the first encounter between Indians and Europeans. Hav- ing landed, Thorvald and his men saw three skin-boats drawn up on the sand; they approached them, and found that there were three men under each. Dividing, they surrounded the natives, and attacked them,. One es- caped; eight were captured and put to death. Thus early did the wanton war upon the Indians begin. But the red man who had escaf)ed had carried the tidings to his tribe ; and that night, while Thorvald and his men were sleeping as peacefully as if they had not murdered their prisoners, were alarmed by the war-cry of the sav- ages. They were repulsed, but one of the white men being wounded. That one was Thorvald; and the wound was evidently with a poisoned arrow, for he died, and was buried at the cape where he thought it best to dwell. The next voyage was made by a third brother, Thorstein, who took his wife Gudrid with him. He died shortly after they returned to Greenland, and Gudrid married Thorfinn, an able seaman and merchant. Thorfinn fitted out a vessel to explore Vinland, and again Gudrid went with her husband to the new country. Here a son was born to them, whom they named Snorre — the first child of European parentage born on the western continent. Thorwaldsen, the great sculptor, and many other eminent Norwegians, claimed descent from Snorre Thorfinnson, born in America in 1007 A. D. Thorfinn and his party met the natives several times, but did not fight them, as the early explorers had done. They traded peaceably with them for awhile — cheating the Indians, of course — and thought there was no dan- ger from them. But the roaring of a bull which the strangers brought with them so frightened the natives that they fled at their utmost speed, and were not seen again for three weeks. Then they returned in force, attacking the 38 AMERICA BEFORE ((H.r.MmS. strangers, who were glad to withdraw to the houses which they had built. The Indians were repulsed, but the whites judged it wisest to leave a laud where there was such danger from the natives. It must be remembered that these early Norsemen did not have the advantage of fii-earms, as those who came in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries had. The Indians had knives and axes of stone; the Norsemen had weapons of iron, and this was the sole advantage which they possessed. Hopelessly outnumbered, there was nothing for them to do but withdraw. According to some authorities, one hundred of them refused to follow their leader back to Greenland, but remained in the new country, the land of corn and wine, as it truly seemed to these children of the frozen North. It is not certain, however, but what all of them went back to Greenland. There were some minor voyages after this time; but during the century to which we have now come, a terrible plague swept over Norway, and so de- creased the population that there was no need for the people to seek new homes beyond the sea. Perhaps the traditions of the terrible natives had something to do with this; or perhaps their energies w^ere turned in other di- rections. Certainly, the voyages of the Norsemen to the coast of North America had ceased long before the time of Columbus; and the records were stored away, to be brought to light again nearly a thousand years after the first of such journej's was made. We have already alluded to the Eouna Tower at Newport, which is sup- posed by many to be the work of the Norsemen ; antiquarians claiming that it resembles certain structures in the Old World, which are known to have been built by this people. Another cu- rious relic is found in what is called The Digh- ton Rock, which is situated about six and a half, miles from Taunton, Massachusetts. This rock, which is about eleven and a half feet long at the base, and about live feet high, is covered on one face with an inscription, which Norsemen claim is written in the Runic characters which their ancestors used. The name of Thorfinn and the number of his followers are about the only points which they have been able to make out. It is right to state here that their claim of its Norse origin is not undisputed. Schoolcraft, the best authority upon all matters relating to the American Indian, says it is an Indian picture-writing, and can be readily read by any one acquainted with their mode of expression. jNIany Americans are acquainted with Longfellow's poem of " The Skeleton in Armor." This skeleton was dug up in the vicinity of Fall River; was it the body of Thorvald? "We have no means of knowing. The Skeleton in Akmok. AMERICA BErORE COLUMBUS. 3H It iDusl be remembered that, in all these stories of the early discover}' of America there is much that is uncertain and conjectural. Even those heroes whose adventures are recorded in the sagas, have had their claims contested ; for they knew so little of geography that they could not clearly describe the po- sition of the lands which they discovered. The difference between the earlier and the later discoverers may be stated thus: Those persons who reached the shores of America before the middle of the fifteenth century, w^ere wild adventurers, knowing nothing of any means of preserving the record of their exploits but the wild songs of their native minstrels; Colum- bus and many of his successors were men of science, capable of observing and recording points which made patent to the world the facts of their achievements. Thus ends the story of those who claimed to have discovered the western Avorld before Columbus set out on his memorable voyage. We shall see, when we come to tell of his struggles to obtain recognition, whether he knew any- thing of what others had done before him by crossing the great Atlantic, CHAPTER ir. COLUMBUS- LEFE BEFORE THE DISOCA'ERY OF A^HTHCA. Date and Place of Hi? Birth — A Poor Mans Son — Education — Cieographical Knowledge of the Time — Ideas of India — Marco Polo — A Splendid Banquet — The Scoffers Rebuked — "'Lord ^Millions'' — The Story of His Travels — The Grand Khan— Cipango — Imprisoned at Genoa — Influence on Youths of Genua — Columbus See? Service — Deceiving a Mutinous Crew — Prince Henry of Portugal — Coltunb'us at Lisbon — Marriage— An Honored Profession — Friends — Evidence of a World Beyond the Waters — Cxrowth of His Great Idea — Toscanelli Consulted — Religious Character of Coliunbus — Application to Cienoa — To Venice — Voyage to Iceland — Aj'plication to Portugal — A Scurvy Trick — Condition of European C<:>untrie? — A Friend at Last — Disappointment — A Sketch of Spanish History — The War Agaiust the Moors — Effect upon the Project of ColumbiLs — Friends at Court — Received by King Ferdinand — The Great Council of Salamanca — The Folly of the Wise — The Arguments of Columbus — Delayed Decision — A Wandering Court — Invitation to Portugal — Letter from England — The Council's Decision — Columbus Sets out for France — At the Convent Gate — Friends at Palos — Appeal to the Queen — Demands of Coliunbus Rejected — A Courageous C<^>urtier — Coltunbus Recalled — Isabella's Independence — Articles of Agreement. AVIXG now renewed briefly the claims of those nations which are said to have discovered America before it was reached by the Geno- ese sailor with his Spanish followers, let us learn what we can of the early years of the great discoverer — not only of his birth, childhood and edu- cation, but of the ^veary wanderings from place to place, the lono; years of labor and waiting, before he found friends with minds sutficiently large, ami purses sutficiently filled, to assist him in this great undertaking. He was the son of a wool-comber of Genoa, and the oldest of four chil- dren. Nothing is known of his sister, except that she married an obscure man named Savarello : of his brothers. Bartholomew, and Diego or James, we shall hear more, particularly of the first-named. After Columbus grew famous, there were many etlbrts made to claim him as native of other places than Genoa : as it was said of the great Greek poet, "Seven Grecian cities strove for Homer dead, Through which the living Homer b^ged his bread." Had these places been as anxious to assist the struggling genius as they were to borrow some of his glory, there would be much less to tell about disap pointments and long wear}' waiting. The claims of Genoa are proved by the wording of the will of Columbus himself: " I was born there, and came from thence." (41) 4'2 lOMMius" i.iii: I'.KioKK riiK l)Is^'«.)^ KKV ok a.mkimca. It i-; i)rol)al)lo tluil, altlu)uy;li hi.s father was an luniible traelcsinaii or uie- clianio, the family hat! been one of some importauee. Genoa was a merean- tik* eity; and a wealthy family, retluoetl by misfortunes to poverty, would still retain friendship among those who were less unfortunate. AVe shall see, as we go on, that Columbus had some sueh friends; but just how imuli they ditl for him, and how much he won for himself, we eannot tell. This much is certain: he was a })oor man's son, born and brought up in a city the people of which derived their daily bread from trading. Look at the map of Italy, and remember that in those days there were not only no rail- roads, but no other roads that were safe and well kept; and you will readily see what part the sea played in tiie life of. every Genoese. The great salt- water highway was the only one for their commerce; and every Genoese boy learned something of seamanship as naturally as a duck learns to swim. His book education was supposed to be completed at the age of fourteen. He had then acquired a knowledge of the rudiments, reading, writing and arithmetic; he knew something of Latin, no hard study for an Italian, and had learned to draw. Some time had also been spent at the University of Pavia, where hestudied geography, geometry, astronomy and navigation. When we remember what parts of the earth have been discovered and ex- plored since the middle of the tifteenth century, it does not seem that there would be muchgeograi)hy for the boy Columbus to study. And there was not. Even the eastern continent was largely unknown to the geographers of that time. With the coast of Europe, from the northern point of Europe to the Strait of Gibraltar, and thence along the Mediterranean, they were thorough- ly well acquainted; of Africa, they knew only the northern coast and a small part of thew^estern, as far south as Cape Bojador, a name which means "The Outstretcher;" and of Asia they knew the Mediterranean coast, a part of the southern coast, and thought that they had reliable accounts of the part far- ther to the east. They were sure that the world was round, but thought it much smaller than it has since been proved to be. They reckoned that the known portions of the world covered about two hundred and twenty-five degrees of longitude, or about twice as great a proportion as modern geographers allow for it. The world, or rather the laud of the world, was wholly surrounded by the "Ocean Stream," beyond which lay, they thought, the path to the other world. The great salt sea to the south of Asia was probably no part of this, but was surrounded by land, the eastern coast of Africa turning to the east, and joining the south-eastern extremity of Asia; but opinions on this point varied, for some believed the Indian Sea, as it was called, to be a part of the ocean; and stoutly maintained that it would be possible to reach India by sailing around Africa. As to investigating the boundaries of the ocean, that wouhn>e the act of a madman; for countless dreadful and unknown dan- COL,U3IBUS LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. i'6 gem niu.st be faced, besides the absolute certainty that no one would ever be able to returny The earth is round, these wise men argued; and if one were to sail down from the summit, where we live, he would never be able to sail his ship up-hill, to reach home again. Sea Blshop am> Mkkmaid?. Besides, in and about that sea, in the dim light of fading day, crawled, seethed, fluttered and swam all the monsters that terror could conjure uj). The enormous nautilus, able with one stroke of its live oars to' capsize a ship; the sea-serpent, fifty leagues long, with a comb like a cock's; the sy- rens of Homer, ceaselessly pursued by the cruel sea-monk, which was still be- lieved in as late as 1^2»I; and, finally, the dreadful bishop of the sea, with his phosphorescent mitre. Harpies and winged chimeras skimmed this mo- Till, Phantoms ok Fkaij. (41) COLUMBUS' LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 45 i; tionless sea in pursuit of their prey; there were sou-elephants, lions, tigers and hippocampi, who grazed in vast fields of sea-weeds from which no ship could ever hope to extricate herself. Out of this chaotic sea arose a colossal hairy hand armed with claws — the hand of Satan, La Main JVoire; its existence could not be doubted — it was pictured on all the maps of the time. From the bottom of the abyss there appeared also, from time to time, at regular intervals, the back of the kraken, like a new island, some said twice, others three times, as large as Sicily. This huge polypus, who, with one of its suckers — and it had as many as the cuttle-fish — could arrest a ship in full sail, was in the habit of rising to the surface every day. From its vent-holes issued two water-spouts six times as high as the Giralda of Seville. When it had squirted out the water, it would draw in a corresponding supply of air, thereby creating a whirlwind in which a ship would have spun like a top. The kraken was not an evil-disposed monster; but it could not be denied that its enormous dimensions rendered it, to say the least, an unpleasant object. And even without the kraken, and supposing that the Black Hand of Satan did not dare to descend on a fleet whose royal ensign bore the im- age of Christ crucified, which had the ever-blessed Virgin for its patroness, how were they to escape from the two-headed eagle with its enormous wings, or from the formidable roc, which had seized and carried off in its talons, before the Arab traveler's eyes, a vessel equipped with a hundred and fifty men ? These were some of the things which the boy Columbus learned at the great and famous University of Padua; when he became a pupil in the Uni- versity of Hard Knocks, he acquired information that was quite different. But why was India considered of so much importance? For, we have seen that it was debated whether or not it would be possible to reach India by sea; and although w^e have not yet reached that point in telling the life of Columbus, there is not a reader of these pages but knows beforehand that he expected to reach India by sailing westward. For a long time the regions of the far east had been considered the home of luxury of every kind. Perhaps the stuffs which merchants brought from there had something to do with this belief; perhaps it was only because peo- ple wanted to tell themselves some kind of a marvelous story, and imagined these things. Some of these stories had come down from ancient times; others had been told by the Arabs and Moors, who had settled in Spain, and " with whom there was more or less intercourse. What we know as European Turkey was not in the hands of the Turks when Columbus was a school- boy, if we accept 1435 as the date of his birth ; so that nothing could have come from them. There were not wanting travelers' tales, to excite the popular curiosity re- i^ COLIMBUS" LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. garding the ca?^t. In the year 1205 there arrived at Venice three men, very shabbily dressed in travel-stained garments. The eldest of these declared that his name was Nicholas Polo, and that his companions were liis brother Maffeo and his son Marco. But the relatives of the Polos, who had started upon a commercial voyage to the east some forty years before, refused to recognize or invite these shabby strangers to their magniticent houses, for they were all rich and aristocratic. The Polos, however, managed to obtain possession of their own dwelling, and then invited all the prond relations to a banquet. Pcrhaj)s it was out of curiosity that all went ; such curiosity was most abundantly gratified. The three hosts, whose worn and travel-stained garments had so offended the ideas of the dainty Venetians, had been exthaiiged for rich robes of crimson satin, such as the nobles Mere in the habit of wearing upon state oc- casions. When, however, the guests had been received, these costly clothes were cut up and distributed among the servants, while the masters reappear- ed, robed in still richer costumes of crimson damask. These shared the fate of the other dresses, and the Polos arrayed themselves in crimson velvet. AVhcn the feast was over, they bade the servants bring in those robes in which they had returned to Venice; and ripping the seams, showed the as- tonished guests that these despised garments contained, thus hidden, jewels enough to have purchased the whole city of Venice. Marco Polo, the youngest of the three, seems to have come in contact with the people much more than his father or uncle; and he told them, day af- ter day, such stories of the magnificence of the princes whom they had vis- ited, always reckoning the income of each potentate as so many millions, that an irreverent American would have dubbed him "Old Millions;" the Venetians, more polite in their nicknaming, styled him Ser Jfilione — '* Lord Millions." So great an influence did these stories have upon Columbus, that we must here pause and learn what parts of the earth were visited by these three travelers. AVe have seen that they left Venice about 1255, bound on a com- mercial journey to the east. At Constantinopte, they sold the Italian goods which they had carried from home, and bought jewels with the proceeds. AVitli these they set out to trade with the Tartars, who had then overrun many parts of Asia and Europe, and Avere building cities on the A^olga. Here they were fortunate enough to meet Avith a Tartar prince who was extremely hon- I'st; they trusted him with their wealth; and in return for this trust were loaded with favors during the year they remained at his court. But war broke out between him and his neighbors: and the strangers found that they could not get home. They accordingly, after three years spent at Bokhara, joined an embassy which was going to the court of the Grand Khan, or King of Kings, the sovereign of all the Tartai's. COLUMBUS" LIFE HKFOKK THE DISUON EKV OF AMERICA. 47 This was situated at a city which Pok) called Cambalu, since identified as Pekin.' It was the capital of Cathay, of which wonderful stories had been told for many years; but the account which Marco Polo gave of its riches was still more wonderful. f ii^ I // Marco Polo at the Court ok Kubl.\i Khan. To the east of this rich country lay an island, the name of w^hich is vari- ously spelled by different writers; we shall use the form Cipango, since in that shape the name frequently occurs in the writings of Colum])us. The palace of the king of Cipango, the traveler asserted, was covered, not with sheets of lead or copper, as was the custom in Europe, but with sheets of liliii COLL'MBL■^■ JLIFE BEFORE THE DtJsCOVEKV OF AMEKK A. 49 gold; and the golden plateS u-sed for its inside adornment were, in .some cases, two inches thick. The island also produces pearls of fabulous size in large quantities, as well as great numbers of precious stones. It is so rich, he added, that even the mightv Khan, a prince far richer than any in Europe, had tried many times to conquer it, but had failed to do so, since the inhabi- tants had a secret by which they were enabled to make themselves secure against any kind of wound. The sea between Cathay and Cipango is studded with seven thousand four hundred and forty small islands, all of which produce perfumes and valua- ble woods most abundantly. The Great Khan, otherwise called Kublai Khan, was much pleased to re- ceive these strangers from the distant west. He prepared a feast for them, and asked, with much eagerness, for any information that they could give him of what was happening in Europe, requiring details of the government, of the various kings and em|)erors and their methods of making war. ^Maf- feo and Nicholas fortunately spoke the Tartar language fluently, so they could freely answer all the emperor's questions. This mighty prince of the East had also shown great interest in the doc- trines of Christianity, as taught by the Venetian merchants: and had re- quested them to take a message to the Pope, asking him to send at once a hundred learned men to instruct the wise men of Cathay in religion. All these statements were proved by the golden tablets with which the K3ian had furnished them as passports, and by the magnificent jewels which they showed as his gifts to them. How much of these stories was true? The contemporaries of the Polos regarded them as grossly exaggerated ; neither friends nor foes believed the half was true. It is said that when Marco Polo was on hLs death-bed, some of his friends, distressed at the idea of his dying with all these falsehoods on his soul, exhorted him to retract what he had published ; or, at least, to dis- avow such parts as were fictitious. The dying man raised himself and glared fiercely at them, as he replied that it was all true; only, he had not^ told half of the wonders that he saw. So much for the travels of ilarco Polo. How did they affect Columbus? Venice and Genoa are now close neighbors, cities of the same kingdom, their language and their laws alike. It was different then ; the few miles between them were multiplied by the dangers and difficulties of the way; they were under distinct governments, and occasionally at war with each other; how could the Genoese boy be influenced by the accounts given, a hundred and fiifty years before, by the Venetian traveler? It came about in this way. Shortly after the return of the wanderers, a Genoese fleet threatened part of the Venetian territory; it was necessary for Venice to defend herself. Of the fleet which was sent to oppose the enemy, 4 50 (X)LU.MHrs" LIFF, HKFOKK TlIK DISCOVERV Ol' A.AIFHICA. one guile}- was ooniniauded by Marco Polo. Advancing, the tirst vessel of the line, upon the enemy, he was soon hotly engaged in battle. For some reason, the others did not follow as promptly as they should have done; and Marco Polo's single galley was surrounded b}' the seventy from Genoa. Only the fate of the commander is matter of record; taken prisoner, he was thrown in irons, and carried to Genoa. Here he was detained a long time in prison, his captors refusing to accept any ransom. His prison was crowded dail}' with representatives of the nobility of the city, who came to hear the stories with which he had astonished Venice. At length, one of them prevailed upon him to write down the account of his travels. He consented; and sending to Venice for his papers and journals, produced the w'onderful record now preserved in literature. In those days, before the invention of printing, books were of course costly and rare articles; but the stories in this one were of such interest that the student who had access to the volume would tell them to his less fortunate companions; they again to others; and so on, until all Genoa knew the tale of Marco Polo, and how he had lived, a prisoner of their city, in that very building, and there written the story of what he had seen. And then, doubtless, the Genoese would talk among themselves of this wonderful Cathay and the island of Cipango, full of gold and jewels and rare woods and perfumes, and say to each other what a pity it was that no one should have made any effort to convert these heath- ens, though Kublai Khan had asked for missionaries. Then, perhaps, they would talk of Prester John, that wonderful Christian Prince, whose domin- ions were nobody knew exactly where, but to whom some messenger ought to be sent. Then they would get to talking of the ditiiculties in the way of these duties, and recount the terrors by land and by sea which would confront the traveler — great winged lions, giant cannibals, and tremendous sea-ser- pents. Did all this talk of far-off countries bear no fruit in Crenoa for a hundred and lifty years? There were many (lenoese youths who went from the city, about on seeing far-off lands; but until the days of Columbus there was not one who had an idea that India and Cathay and Cipango could be reached by sailing to the west. Others were content to follow; and the name of the one great leader is the only famous one among them all. In regard to the wanderings of the young men of Genoa, a historian of that city says that they go with the intention of returning when they shall have acquired the means of living comfortably and honorably in their native place; but, he adds, of twenty who go, scarce two return; either dying abroad, or marrying foreign wives and settling in their country, or finding some safer and more comfortable home for their declining age than their na- tive city. For a few months after his return from Pavia, the ])oy Coknnbus worked COLUMBUS LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 51 at his father's trade; but this could not last long. Soon he, too, followed the example of so many of his countrymen, and engaged in a seafaring life. His first sei'^'ice was under the command of a relative, a Colombo who had for some time past held the rank of an admiral. We cannot tell the de- gree of relationship; probably it was very distant: for, as we have seen, the father of the discoverer was a poor man, a mechanic. In the fifteenth cen- tury, a man who worked was thought very little of; quite below consider- ation, in fact; and perhaps the old admiral was not very proud of his poor relations. ;■,■.',! ] .,v.fe^.4^.A^.:V;y^jh The Years of Preparation. Cruising in the Mediterranean was then no child's play; for there was scarcely a part of the sea that was not beset with pirates; petty states were constantly at war, and frequently their vessels would seize those whose mas- 52 COLUMBUS' LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. ters were not engaged in war with any one. A merchant vessel had to carry arms, and be ready to use them at very short notice. Columbus, however, was not engaged in the merchant service. A French prince, John of Anjou, asserted his right to the kingdom of Naples, a small state in the south of Italy. The republic of Genoa was an ally, and sent ships and men to his assistance; the war lasted for about four years, and ended in the defeat of John of Anjou and his father, King Reinier of Provence. Columbus was assigned to no small post in the fleet commanded by his rel- ative; boy as he was, he had dangerous work to do. He tells us of his being sent to rescue a galley from the harbor of Tunis. " It happened to me that King Reinier — whom God has taken to himself — sent me to Tunis, to capture the galley Fernandina, and when I arrived off the island of San Pedro, in Sardinia, I was informed that there were two ships and a carrack with the galley; by which intelligence my crew were so troubled that they determined to proceed no further, but to return to Mar- seilles for another vessel and more people; as I could not by any means compel them, I assented apparently to their wishes, altering the point of the compass and spreading all sail. It was then evening, and next morning we were within the Cape of Carthagena, while all were firmly of opinion that they were sailing towards Marseilles." What the sailors said when they found out that he had deceived them as to the direction in which they were sailing by thus altering the point of the compass, does not appear; nor are we told the result of the cruise into the harbor of Tunis; probably the same bold and resolute spirit which had out- witted the crew gained a victory over the enemy. We shall see after awhile that he again deceived a crew, and again brought the voyage, by this de- ception, to a successful ending. Now and again we find some traces of Columbus in the history of the time ; but it is doubtful whether the person meant was the old admiral under whom the discoverer sailed as a boy, or a nephew called Colombo el Mozo, the Young- er, or the youngest and finally by far the most famous of the three. Prob- ably most of the exploits recorded are to be placed to the account of the first or the second, for Christopher was not likely to have attracted so much at- tention in these years. It is probable that he Avas early attracted to the capital of Portugal as a suitable i)lace for a nuin to live who was interested in adventures and ex- plorations by sea; for Lisbon was then the starting-point of many great ex- peditions. Prince Henry of Portugal was the first prominent person to en- gage in the work of carrying forward discovery; and during the first half of the fifteenth century, under his direction, Portuguese ships had ventured farther and farther along the coast of what is still the Dark Continent. Prince Henry died in 1463; but the work of discovery to which he had given COLUMBUS UIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 53 strength still went forward ; Diaz was sent to find, in the interior of Africa, the king who has already been mentioned, Prester John; he found, instead, the Cape of Good Hope. It is worthy of remark, that Bartholomew Colum- bus was one of the sailors who ventured on this long voyage. There is a story of the manner in which Christopher Columbus first came to Lisbon, which may here be set down. While the story is not without foundation, it should be remembered that Columbus was a resident of Lis- bon some time before this; so that he was but returning to a place where he Aad lived. Diaz ox Hls Way to the C.U'E. He was in command of a vessel of the squadron under the leadership of Colombo el Mozo, This admiral was really little better than a pirate; and having heard that four richly laden galleons were on their way from Fland- ers, as the Low Countries were thei^ called, to Venice, he gave orders to his captains to lie in wait for them off the coast of Portugal, between Lisbon and Cape St. Vincent. There was a desperate battle; the ships were lashed and grappled together; the sailors fought hand to hand, now on the deck of one, now of the other. The vessel commanded by Columbus was grappled with a huge galley of the Venetian fleet, the crew of which fought with even more 54 COLUMBrS* LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOAERY OF AMERICA. fierceues.s than their companions. A favorite form of warfare in that time consisted of throwing ticry darts and hand grenades; sometimes in throwing Greek fire, a nearly inextinguishable thing. Such missiles were thrown on this occasion; the ships took tire; they were too firndy grappled together to he unloosed, and burned to the water's edge, side by side, Venetian and Ge- noese. The crews had but one common hope of escape ; each man threw himself into the sea, grasping whatever wood was within reach. GoUimbus chanced to secure an oar, and although they were fully six miles from shore, succeeded in swimming to land. Thence he made his way to Lisbon, where lie found many of his countrymen living; perhaps he found there his brother Bartholomew, known for his bravery as a navigator since he had accom- panied Diaz in that perilous voyage far to the south, when the Cape of Good Hope had been discovered. Certainly he found such a welcome that he decided to remain there for some time to come, Columbus went to Portugal about the year 1470. Although at this time, if we accept the earliest date given for his birth, he was in the very prime of life, being but thirty-tive years old, his hair was as white as that of a very old man. In person, he Avas tall, well-formed and muscular: and he had achieved a victory over a naturally cpiick temper so completely as to mark his bear- ing with a grave and gentle dignity. Throughout his life, he had shown great regard for the church, strictly observing the fasts, vigils, and other forms of devotion prescribed by her priests; and this quality seems to have had fuller opportunity for development in the peaceful life at the Portu' guese capital than among the wild rovers of the sea. There is a certain convent in Lisbon, styled the Convent of All Saints, where 3oung ladies of rank and family Mere then, as now in similar institu- tions, received for instruction in all that a lady is supposed to learn at school. In addition to these inmates were some others, who boarded at the convent as a safe and proi)er shelter for women of their age and rank. One was a certain Dona Felipa de Perestrello, the daughter of a man who had won re- nown and reward as a leader of explorers in the time of Prince Henry; and had, indeed, colonized the island of Porto Santo, of which he had held the office of governor. But this very office was the cause of his ruin. It was conferred upon him as a reward for his long-continued services, and seemed to be full payment. But the colonists took some rabbits with them to the island; and the little animals multiplied so rapidly that before long it was tompletely overrun l)ythem. There was no demand for canned meats in those days, or knowledge of preparing them; or the unlucky colonists might have done as nineteenth century men have done under precisely the same circumstances — killed the rabbits and exported the canned Hesh, As it was, they fought the pests as long as they could: luit were tinally compelled to give up the contest, and leave the island to the ravages of the rabbits. COl-IMIilS I.IKK lilOFOKK TlIK DISCON EKV OF AMKHICA. .').) Perestrello returned to Portugal, a ruined man; for all that he had prev- iously acquired had been invested in property in this island. He died, leav- ing a widow and three daughters, one of whom, as mentioned above, was a boarder in this Convent of All Saints. The services in the chapel of this convent were regularly attended by a certain Genoese who had recently arrived at Lisbon ; and in some way, we cannot tell how, Christopher Columbus became accjuaiuted with the ruined governor's daughter. Of this romance of four hundred years ago, we only know that it began with a meeting in the convent chapel, and ended with a marriage in the same place. For a time, the newly-married couple lived with the bride's mother; and the husband added to the family income by making maps and charts, and il- luminating manuscripts. This work was not regarded then as it is now; then, the map-maker was a man of science and an artist combined, and was re- spected accordingly. It is recorded that the Venetians struck a medal in hon- or of one cosmographer, who had projected a universal map, esteemed the most accurate that had ever been made. It is also a matter of history, that Americus Vespucius paid a sum equivalent to $555 in our time for a "map of sea and land." Thus Columbus engaged in a work which was well-paid, and which placed the workman in a position of no small honor. Nor was his new life such as to hinder his advancement. His wife's father had left numerous notes and charts of his many voyages, and these were placed at his disposal, when Madam Perestrello saw that his character and skill justified her in so doing. Then, too, although the Perestrello family had become reduced to poverty, there were still many influential persons whose acquaintance they retained ; and by this means the Genoese wanderer re- ceived introductions to a higher circle than he could have reached unassisted; and was even received by the king himself. Once brought to their notice, he had no difficulty in retaining their regard by his own merits. In the meantime, a younger daughter of Madam Perestrello had married Don Pedro Correa; and he had been appointed governor of Porto Santo. De Belloy says that he inherited this government from his father-in-law ; but why the younger sister's husband should be the heir, does not appear; prob- ably his own influence was suflacient to procure the appointment, if the Peres- trellos were not against it. The two sons-in-law of the old governor appear to have been on excellent terms, and conversed much of the new lands which were constantly being discovered. Nor did Columbus only talk of them; he had, since his residence in Portugal, sailed occasionally in the expeditions to the Gulf of Guinea; and we may safely assume that he was well acquainted with the history of Portuguese discovery along the coast of that continent. Discovery was the great subject of interest in Portugal at that day ; and it was natural enough that when the learned map-maker Columbus was admitted 56 ton MBl s" LIFK HKFOKE THE D1S( ON KKV OF A.MKHICA. to the presence of nobles and princes, that they should inquire about his work, and remark upon recent changes. Perhaps they listened with interest to his accounts of his own voyages; perhaps he now and then unfolded some plan by which new routes to India and Cathay might be found. Certainly the King looked so kindly upon him, and showed so nuicli interest in the sub- ject which so absorbed the stranger's attention, that he entered into con- versation regarding indications of lands yet undiscovered, and showed Colum- bus reeds as large as those which grow in India, which had been picked up on the coast of the Azores. Nor was this the only indication that there was a world beyond the waters. Many mariners had told of islands, seen casually in the ocean; and the peo- ple of the Canaries told of an island Avhich was sometimes seen, in clear weather, to the westward of their islands; a vast stretch of earth, diversified with lofty mountains and deep valleys. So persuaded wove they of the real- ity of this island, that they asked and obtained the permission of the King of Portugal to discover it. Several expeditions were actually sent out, but not one succeeded in reaching the island; for it had been but a singular optical delusion. Then arose the story of St. Brandan's Isle, an island which, it was said, was sometimes reached by those who set out for another port, but were driven from their course by storms; but could never be approached by any who set out with the intention of going there. This imaginary island was, for many years, laid down in maps as lying far to the west of the Canaries; and its existence was never actually disproved until the southern Atlantic was thoroughly explored. Columbus, however, appears to have been but slightly impressed by this talk of islands in the Atlantic. He always considered that the talk was oc- casioned by the existence of rocky islets, which, under certain conditions of the atmosphere, may assume the appearance of nuich larger and more fer- tile islands. Or, he reasoned, they may be floating islands, where a mass of earth is supported by twisted roots, and borne along by the ocean currents and the winds. More conclusive evidence was found by him in the things that had drifted ashore. Great pines, unlike any known in Europe, had drifted ashore; pieces of wood, curiously and delicately carved, but unlike the handiwork of any known people, had been brought by the same agency to the coast of the Azores and the Madeiras; and the same shores had received, from the same westward direction, the bodies of two men of some strange race. ' These were the subjects on which he conversed wuth his brother-in-law, like himself a bold and clever seaman. Correa had seen these carvings, and perhaps added many a rumor to the stock of information which Colum- bus had gleaned from many different quarters. Direct testimony was not wanting. Martin Vicenti, a pilot in the service rOLL.MBLS LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 0< of the King of Portugal,- related to Columbus that after sailing four hundred and fift}- leagues to the west of Cape St. Vincent, he had taken from the water a wonderfully caned piece of wood, which must have drifted from the far west ; a mariner who had sailed from the port of St. Mary narrated how, in the course of a voyage to Ireland, he had seen land far in the west, which the crew took for some remote part of Tartary. There is also a story, which seems to have no good foundation, that a cer- tain pilot sought shelter in Columbus' hou.se, and finally died there, after having told him of an unknown land in the west, to which he had been driv- en by adverse winds; this pilot, says the story, left to Columbus the chart by which he had guided his vessel, and thus Columbus was enabled to cross the ocean by a path which had already been marked out, with the certainty of finding land at the end of his voyage. This story was mentioned by the first historian who gave it a place in his pages, as a vulgar, idle rumor; and he showed the falsity of it. Others, however, copied his summary of it, but not his contradiction; and a hundred and fiftj- years after it was said to have occurred, Garcilaso de la Vega told it, complete with names and cir- cumstances, as he had heard it told in his childhood by his father and other old men, who talked of it some seventy or eighty years after the death of the pilot. On such slender foundations does this attack upon the originality of Columbus re.-t. Columbus and his wife accompanied Don Pedro Correa and his wife to the island of Porto Santo, when the new governor went there to assume the du- ties of the office; and there the great navigator's eldest son, Diego, was born. His residence on this island was probably of but short duration; and was followed by voyages along the coast of Africa. In 1473 we find him at Savona, assisting his aged father, whom debt had compelled to flee from Genoa; before this time, he had contributed regularly to the support of his parents and the assistance of his younger brothers. All this time, there had been growing up in his mind the idea that it would be possible to reach India by sailing to the west. We have seen what trifles confirmed his theory that there was land beyond the Atlantic, while he rejected those widely-believed stories about islands that had been seen : this theory was drawn from a close study of the learned writers, and the re- ports of navigators, and the known shape of the earth. In the year 1474 these ideas were fully matured; but either they had not been unfolded to any one in Lisbon, or they had been coldly and contempt- uously received. Columbus determined to take the subject to the highest liv- ing authority upon such questions, and wrote to the learned Toscanelli, of Florence, submitting to him the question whether it would be possible to reach India by sailing in a westerly direction. Toscanelli showed his great- ness by appreciation of Columbus, and responded with a letter, applauding 58 COM MIU s' lAFK BEFORE THE DISCOA ERY OF AMERICA. the bold and original design of the Genoese. Nor was the letter all that was sent; there was also a chart, drawn by Toscanelli himself, partly from the ancient authority of Ptolemy, and partly from the descriptions of Marco Polo. In this chart, India, Cathay, and the longed-for Cipango, were depicted as lying directly to the west of Europe, and but a short distance away. This was in accordance with the i)revailing idea, before noticed, that the earth w;is much smaller than it has since been proved to be; and both Toscanelli and Columbus supposed Asia to be much larger than it really is. Thus two er- rors coml)ined to makc^ Columbus more ready to undertake his great work; had he known that the earth is more than twenty-five thousand miles in cir- cumference, and that Cipango, as he called Japan, is half way around the world from the Azores, he would not, in all probability, have dared venture to seek India by way of the west. At any rate, Avhatever his own boldness might have been willing to risk, he Avould have got neither ships nor men from any safe and prudent prince. Why slu)uld Columbus attach so nuich impoilance to I'caching India by a shorter and safer route than any which was then usedV His purpose was founded upon the deeply religious chai'acter of his mind. Vi'v Inive seen that Kublai Khan reijuested the Pope to send a hun(h-ed ieai'iied men to instruct his courtiers in the Christian religion ; this had never been done. Again, much wealth might be gained by trading Avith these countries; and while the many wars for the recovery of the Holy Land from the Mohammedans had failed, it might be that the country of Palestine could be bought from them, if a sufficiently large juice were offered. This motive explains many things in the life of Columbus which otherwise Avould not be clear. This plan was complete in his mind befoi-e MH); auath IxM ween the ^loorisli and the Christian king- doms; it was imj)ossible for both to continue in Spain. Isabella, howevei-, COLUMBUS' LIFT. BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 71 granted a perpetual annual gift of a thousand ducats in gold for the main- tenance of the convent, and sent a veil embroidered by herself to be hung before the shrine; then, dismissing the friars, turned to the prosecution of the war again. But their coming, and the message which they brought, had a great effect upon the minds of many soldiers of high rank; and particularly was Colum- bus alf eeted by it ; it was a new and stronger proof than ever of the need of finding the rich regions of the east, and bringing home treasure enough to pur- chase the Holy Sepulchre from the heathen who so persecuted Christians. Again we find a similar series of events filling the next year. Finally, in the spring of 1401, Columbus determined that he would wait no longer; he pressed for a reply to his suit. With some difficulty, the King was persuaded to tell Bishop Talavera that the learned men who had been so long in con- ference must render their decision. Their answer was ready, after some de- lay, and the King was gravely informed that the proposed scheme was vain and impossible, and that it did not become such great princes to engage in an enterprise of the kind on such weak grounds as had been advanced. Not all the members of the conference agreed in this report, however; there was what, in modern parlance, is called a minority report as well; and this, fortunately for Columbus, was rendered by Fray Diego de Deza, tutor to Prince Juan, who had access to the ear of the King and Queen when others were denied. But the most favorable answer that even this suitor could ob- tain was a message that the expenses of the long war had been so great that the King and Queen could not now engage in any new enterprise demanding money and men. Disheartened at this message, Columbus repaired to court, to learn from Ferdinand and Isabella themselves if this was really the answer they meant to give him, after keeping him waiting their pleasure for so many years. When he found that it was so, he thought that it was but a polite way of tell- ing him that they considered his schemes impracticable and visionary, and that they consequently had no intention of assisting him. He accordingly re- solved that he would leave Spain at once, and seek in the court of France the aid which had been refused him by the Most Catholic King. Before he went, however — and a journey from Spain to France was some- thing of an undertaking then — he must see and talk with Don Pedro Correa, who, it will be remembered, had married one of the Perestrello sisters, and was therefore, by courtesy, brother-in-law to Columbus; and who had been one of those Avhocomnmnicated to the future discoverer what signs of land to the west of the ocean had been perceived, from time to time, by those ac- quainted with the Avestern islands. He set out on foot; for his stock of money, never large, must be carefully husbanded; he could not tell when he should have anv more. COLUMBU.-*" LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 73 He was not alone onjthis journey: his son Diego, who was probably not more than fifteen years old, accompanied him; three-year-old Fernando, we may conjecture, remained in Cordova with his mother. We may easih- imagine the picture — father and son toiling along the lonely road from Sev- ille to Huelva, near the little seaport of Palos de Moguer. Half a league outside the walls of the last-named town, there is still stand- ing an ancient convent of the Franciscan order, dedicated to Santa Maria de Rabida. Before its gates, one day four hundred years ago, a stranger, lead- ing a boy by the hand, stopped, and asked for some bread and water for the child. There was nothing unusual in the request; for at that time there were no inns of any kind; and the traveler expected to find lodging and food in the castle or the convent. The request was granted as a matter of course; and while the child ate and drank, the prior of the convent, who chanced by, entered into a conversation with the father, whose plain garments did not conceal the evident distinction of the wearer. The prior had taken much interest in geographical and nautical science ; for the seaport of Palos sent many enterprising navigators out to explore unknown paths upon the ocean; but the stranger opened a new line of thought to him. India could be reached by sailing westward across the ocean, and there were no insuperable diflSculties in the way — that was the wonderful idea which the stranger unfolded to the prior, Juan Perez de Mar- chena. But the wanderer had more to tell than that he had conceived this idea. He told of long and patient waiting for help from the sovereigns of Spain, and their decision that the fulfillment of his hopes from them must be indefin- itely postponed ; and he told the prior how, disappointed, but not wholly disheartened, sure that the truth which he alone saw would be apparent to others could he but point it out, he was now on his way to the court of France, to offer to Charles VHI. the wonderful things which Ferdinand and Isabella had refused to accept from him. The good prior was dismayed to find that these things were to be lost to Spain; it must be that the petition of Columbus had not been rightly pre- sented. He knew of a power which he himself possessed; he had once been confessor to Queen Isabella, and knew that he could reach her ear at any time. But before he ventured to appeal to her — and his caution shows why the appeal was listened to when it was made — he determined not to trust altogether to his own judgment, which might have been led astray by the wonderful eloquence of the stranger. He accordingly detained Columbus and his son as his guests, and sent for his friend, Garcia Fernandez, a phy- sician of Palos. Fernandez came: and Columbus again explained his belief and aims. Like the prior, the physician was impressed by the boldness and originality of the 74 COLUMHls" LIFE BKKORE I UK 1)IS(()\EKV OK AMERICA. inarinor; and listened eagerly to all that he had to .say. But other friends must be found for him; the question must be submitted to the judgment of practical sailors, many of whom Mere to be found in Palos. Several veter- ans of the sea were invited to the convent, to talk with the mariner who had lately come there; one of these was Martin Alonzo Pinzon, the head of a family of rich and experienced seamen, who had made many adventurous ex- peditions. Kemembering how the Portuguese had won fame and wealth by voyages of discovery along the African coast, these experienced mariners saw no I'eason why, under the leadership of a man daring and original enough to l)lan and lead such an expedition, new worlds might not be opened up in an- other direction. What had been to churchmen a stumbling-block, and to philosophers foolishness, was to these practical, brave and generous sailors the highest wisdom. Pinzon, particularly, was so impressed with the genius of Columbus, that he offered to take part in such an expedition when it should be organized; and in the meantime, if Columbus would but renew his application to the Spanish court, to defray the expenses connected with doing so. The prior begged Columbus to remain in the convent until an answer could be received from the Queen ; and dispatched a letter to her by a trusty messenger. It was not difficult to prevail upon Columbus to stay; for he dreaded to be put off in France as he had already been in Spain. The Queen was at Santa Fe; and the messenger required only fourteen days for the journey of something like four hundred miles from Palos and return. Isabella had always been more favorably disposed toward Colum- bus than the wary and cold Ferdinand; and she now wrote kindly, bidding Perez come to court, leaving Christopher Columbus in confident hope until he should hear further from her. The prior at once set out, late at night as it was when the messenger returned; and alone, riding his good mule, the steed which the ideas of the day assigned to churchmen, he traversed the conquered territory of Granada, and entered the presence of the Queen. The friar pleaded the cause of Columbus eloquently and fearlessly. Be- fore this time, it is probable that Isabella had never heard the case fully stated; for it is Ferdinand whom we find active in receiving the reply of the learned conference, and deciding upon the case. The Queen listened with 'such interest that Perez felt great hopes of the result, even before she com- manded Columbus to return to court; and, with a true w^omanly attention to details, ordered that a sum equal, at the present day, to about three hundred dollars of United States money, be sent him for the expenses of the journey. The arrival of Columbus at the Spanish court was marked by what the men of that day considered one of the most important events in the history of Spain — the final downfall of the Mohammedan power in that country, COLUMBUS' LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. 75 and the surrender of the capital city of the Moors, Granada, to Ferdinand and Isabella. It was indeed an eventful time when Columbus arrived, for he came to offer still more extended empire, and multiplied wealth, to Spain ; he came, bringing in his hands the gift of a New World. We shall not dwell, as Irving does, upon the glittering magnificence of the scene of surrender at Granada; nor upon the rejoicings which followed it. Columbus obtained a hearing, and commissioners were appointed to consider the case. But his demands appeared to them exorbitant; this penniless for- eign adventurer demanded that he should be created admiral and viceroy of the provinces which he should discover, and receive one-tenth of all gains, either by trade or conquest. The proud Spanish nobles looked coldly upon the man who sought to raise himself to their rank, and remarked that it was a shrewd arrangement which he wished to make ; having nothing to lose, he demanded, in case of success, rank, honor and enormous wealth. Co- lumbus, nettled by the sneer, promptly offered to defray one-eighth of the cost of the expedition, if he might enjoy one-eighth of the profits. He had friends in Palos, he knew, who believed in him and his enterprise; and Mar- tin Alonzo Pinzou, if all others failed him, would bear him out in this proposition to the royal commissioners. By Talavera's advice, the Queen declined to accept his terms : and offered conditions which, while more moderate, were yet advantageous and honor- able; but Columbus would not yield an inch; and mounting a mule which he had bought for the journey from Palos to Santa Fe, he rode forth again, once more to seek the French court. But although Columbus had failed to convince Ferdinand and his more generous, enthusiastic wife, he had made many friends about the court who appreciated his powers of mind to the full. One of these was Luis de St. Angel, receiver of the ecclesiastical revenues of Arragon. Like others of high rank and place, he was tilled with dismay at seeing the great man de- part from Spain, to throw into the lap of another country what had been wantonly rejected by Arragon and Castile; and he had the courage to tell Isabella what he thought. He pictured not only the enormous addition to her revenue and dominions, as well as her fame among rulers; but he told, with impassioned fervor, of the religious aspect of the enterprise. He painted the millions in the realms of Kublai Khan, waiting eagerly to receive the gospel; and then prophesied of the honor in which they would hold the name of her who should carve out a path for the missionaries of the Cross to reach them. He showed what more this discovery might do for the exaltation of the Church ; how the boundless riches of Cathay would buy the Holy Sepulchre from the Mohammedans, and the most sacred spots on earth be forever free to the feet of the pilgrim. He told her how sound and practicable were the plans of Columbus ; that they had received the endorse- 76 COLUMBUS' LIFE BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. meut of veteran mariners; and that he was no idle visionary, but a man of wide scientific knowledge and .sound practical judgment. He told her that failure would bring uo disgrace upon her; for it was the business of princes to investigate such great questions as this; and then informed her that the expense of the expedition, of which so much had been said, would amount to no more than two vessels and about two thousand^ crowns. Isabella listened with renewed interest; but Ferdinand was at her side, ready to oppose any such unwise scheme. The war had drained the treas- ury of the united kingdoms; they must wait until it had been replenished. But Isabella was too deeply interested in the advancement of the Church; though she was the -wife of Ferdinand, she was also Quoon-Regnant of Cas- tile and Leon, a kingdom equal in importance and wealth to Arragon. "I undertake the enterprise," she answered St. Angel, after a short in- terval of suspense, "for my own crown of Castile, and will pledge my jew- els to raise the money for it." It is because of this speech on the part of the Queen that the famous verse reads: — " To Castile and Leon Columbus gave a new world."" Ferdinand had neither part nor lot in the enterprise. It is true that Isa- bella did not find it necessary to pledge her jewels to raise the necessary funds; that the sum required was taken from the treasury of Arragon; for that was not so emptied by the war as the King had implied; but the credit of the kingdom of Castile and Leon was pledged to repa}' this debt, and it was afterward repaid in full. Columbus had journeyed about two leagues — six miles — on his way back to Palos, thence to France, when this decision was reached. It was not known whether he had actually set out or not; but when this was found to be the case, a courier was dispatched to summon him back to Santa Fe. He did not return Avithout hesitation ; for his hopes had been raised often be- fore this; but he was told that the Queen had now positively promised to undertake the enterprise ; and his doubts thus removed, he turned his mule's head once again toward Santa Fe, and joyfully retraced his steps. The articles of agreement drawn up provided that Columbus should have for himself and his heirs, forever, the oifice of admiral, viceroy, and gov- ernor-general over all lands which he might discover; that he should be en- titled to one-tenth of all revenues from these lands, in whatever waj' obtained; and that he should, at any time, be entitled to contribute one- eighth of the expense of fitting out vessels, and receive one-eighth of the 13 ro fits. In accordance with this last-named privilege, Columbus, with the aid of Pinzon, added a third vessel to the armament of two which Isabella furnish- COLrMBUS' LIFE BF.FORE THE Dl8rO\ ER^ OF AMERICA. 77 ed. These articles were .signed by Ferdinand and Isabella, April 17,1492; for although Isabella bore the whole expense, the expedition was under the patronage of the united sovereigns of Spain ; and the signatures stand side by side on this important document : " I, the King," " I, the Queen." A letter of privilege, or commission, was granted to Columbus the last of the same month; confirming the offices mentioned to him and his heirs, and authorizing the use of the title Don by him and his descendants. A little later than this, the Queen issued letters-patent; appointing his son Diego a page in the household of her son, Prince Juan, This was an honor usually shown only to boys of high rank; and was thus a marked compliment to the Genoese traveler. ]May 12, 14ii2, Columbus set out for Palos, to make ready the vessels for his expedition. He was now in the fifty-sixth year of his age ; eighteen jears had passed since the, plan was matured in his own mind so far that he was ready to ask the advice of the learned Florentine; fully half of that time had been spent in waiting the convenience of the great ones of earth; but at last he who was really great was to venture his all upon three small vessels, scarcely sea-worthy. CHAPTER III. THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. New Difficulties — Reluctant Seamen — The Three Vessels — A Town of Mourning — Sets Sail from Palos— Alarms — The Double Reckoning — Variation of the Compass — the Grassy Sea — Renewed Doubts — Indications of Land — Mutiny of the Crew — Hope Renewed — Confidence in Columbus — Night-Watch of the Admiral — Light Through the Darkness — " LAND ! " — The Landing of the Discoverer — Taking Possession — The Natives — Cruising — Self-Deception — Exploration of Cuba — Two Wonderful Plants — Desertion of the Finta—Hayti Discovered — Visits from Native Chiefs — Guacanagari — The Santa Maria Wrecked — Assisted by Natives — Tribute of Columbus to their Character — The Indians' First Acquaintance with Firearms — Enviable Indians — Colony Projected — Efforts to Convert the Indians— Building the Fortress — Instructions to Colonists — Departure of Columbus — Rejoined by the Flnta — Explanations — Armed Natives— Hostilities — Difficulties of Return Voyage — Storms — Piety of the Crew — Causes of the Admiral's Distress — His Precautions — Land Once More — Enmity of Portuguese — Liberated Prisoners — Departure — Storms Again — OflF the Coast of Portugal — Reception in Portugal — The King's Advisers — Rejoicing at Palos — Arrival of the Pinta — Pinzon's Treach- ery — His Death — Reception of Columbus at Court — Unparalleled Honors — Royal Thanksgiv- ing — Jealousy of Courtiers — Columbus and the Egg — The Papal Bull — Preparations for a Sec- ond Voyage — Various Arrangements — The Golden Prime of Columbus. fHE port of Palos had committed some offense against the sovereigns ; in punishment for which it had been sentenced to furnish two cara- vels for royal use, for the period of one year. These were the ves- sels assigned for the use of Columbus, and he was empowered to procure and lit out a third vessel, at his own expense, in accordance with the terms of the agreement. Having reached Palos, and again become the guest of Fray Perez, Co- lumbus proceeded to the most public place in the town, the porch of the church of St. George ; and having caused the authorities and many of the inhabitants to assemble there, read to them the royal order that they should, within ten days, furnish him with the two caravels for the service of the Crown. The crews were to receive the ordinary wages of seamen, payable four months in advance; and the strictest orders were given in regard to the furnishing of such supplies as Columbus might require. Weeks passed, and not a vessel could be procured, nor a sailor to man it had one been found. Then a royal order was issued, and an officer of the royal household detailed to see that it was executed : any vessel belonging to Spanish subjects might be pressed into the service, and che masters and crews obliged to sail with Columbus wherever he might give orders. (79J 80 THE riHST NOVACK OK COIA'.MBT S. After the necessary ships were secured, aud the men engaged, there were many difficulties arising. The men employed to caulk the vessels, for in- stance, did their work so badly that they were ordered to do it over again ; whereupon they disappeared from Palos. Some of those who had volun- teered after tiie Pinzons had set the example, repented of what they had done, and deserted and hid. Had it not been for the example and influence of the Pinzons, Columbus would probably have found it impossi})le to tit out even the modest armament which he had required. The Santa Jfai'ia was prepared especially for the expedition, and was^the only one of the vessels that was decked. It was commanded by Columbus himself. The Pinta was commanded by Martin Alonzo Pinzon, and had his brother Francisco as pilot; the Nina w^as under the authority of Vicente Yauez Pinzon. There were three pilots besides Pinzon, a number of officers of the Crown, including a royal notary, Avho went along to take official notes of all transactions, a surgeon, some private adventurers, and ninety mariners — a total of one hundred and twenty persons. Before setting sail, each one, from Columbus to the meanest sailor, con- fessed himself and partook of the sacrament. They were looked upon by their kinsmen and friends as doomed men; Palos was a town of mourning; for nearly every household had some member or friend engaged in this dreadful enterprise. Nor was this feeling confined to those who remained onshore; it was fully shared by the sailors themselves; and when, half an hour before sunrise on the morning of Friday, August 3, 141)2, the little fleet sailed from the harbor of Palos, there was but one man on board who felt any certainty that they would ever see Spain again. Not three days had passed before Columbus had evidence of the ill-will of those who had furnished the expedition. On the third day out, the Pinto made signals of distress; and it was found that her rudder was broken. It was clearly due to the contrivance of her owners, who had thus tried to dis- able their vessel so that she might be left behind. Pinzon, who commanded the Pinta, secured the rudder with cords until the following day; when, the wind having lulled, the other ships lay to while the necessary temporary re- pairs were being made. But the vessel proved to be leaky; and Columbus decided that the^^ should put in at the Canary Islands until she should be repaired; return to Spain he was resolved that he would not. The pilots had asserted that the Can- aries were far distant from the point where the injuries of the Pinta were discovered; but Columbus differed from them. The event proved that he was right; and this added somewhat to their opinion of his knowledge and abilities. This new confidence in him enabled him to pacify the sailors wdien they became alarmed at seeing the volcano of Teneriffe sending forth flame and 'inE Fii:sT V()va(;k ok coLr.Mi'.rs. (SI smoke. He recalled the examples of Etna and A'e.suvius, which were well- known to them, and thus allayed their fears. But he himself became alarm- ed when he found that a Portuguese fleet had been seen hovering off the Canaries; he suspected the wily King of Portugal, who had thrown away his own chances of engaging in this great work of discovery, of being anx- ious to revenge himself upon Columbus for having entered the service of Spain. The Admiral, as Columbus may now be called, accordingly gave hasty orders that his ships should be put to sea at once. It was the morning of September 6 when they saw the heights of Fcrro gradually fade into a dim blue line upon the horizon, and knew that an un- explored ocean lay before them. As the sun rose higher, their hearts sank lower, and all three ships were filled with the complainings and lamentations of the sailors. Many of the most rugged were not ashamed to shed tears because of the land which, as they thought, they had left behind them for- ever. It required all the eloquence of Columbus to sooth them, even par- tially, with glowing Avord-pictures of the riches and magnificence of the countries to which he was conducting them. Columbus gave strict orders that, should the vessels by any mischance be separated, each should continue its course due westward; providing, that when they had gone seven hundred leagues, they should lay by from midnight until dawn, each night; for that was the distance at which he expected to find land. It was now that he resorted to his stratagem of concealing from the crew the true distance from Eu'rope; keeping two reckonings, one of which, intended for his own guidance, was correct; the other, published to the crews of the three vessels, considerably less than the truth. They had sailed five days after leaving the Canaries when they fell in with a spar, evidently part of the rigging of a vessel much larger than any of their own. Tliis did not tend to raise the spirits of the men, but was rather an indication of the fate which had befallen others, and which they might expect. Two days after this, Columbus noticed that the needle of the compass, hitherto considered an unfailing guide, no longer pointed exactlyto the north. This appears to have occasioned some alarm even to his courageous soul ; and he observed it attentively for three days, during which time the variation be- came greater and greater. At the end of that period, it w^as noticed by one of the pilots; and from him the alarm spread to his comrades, thence to the others. It was a fortunate thing that Columbus should have observed this so long before the others discovered it; for he had opportunity to consider the case, and reason out a theory to account for it. When the pilots, then, acquaint- ed him with their discovery, he assured them that the pole star is not a fixed Doint, but revolves around the pole like other stars; and thus the Columbus Watchixo fok Land. THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. 83 needle of the compass is-subject to variations. Ignorant as they were, the}' had a high opinion of his ability as an astronomer, and accepted this explan- ation. Columbus seems to have been well pleased with it himself; and there is no reason to suppose that he ever held any other theory regarding the variation of the needle. The next day they saw what they believed to be certain indications of land. Two birds of different species, neither of which they supposed would be found far from land, hovered about the ships. The next night, a great flame of fire, as Columbus describes it in his journal — presumably a meteor — fell from the sky about four or five leagues awa}'. As they sailed along, borne by the trade-winds through a sea of glass, they saw the surface of the water flecked, here and there, with great patches of sea-weed. These increased in number and size as they advanced; and Columbus recalled the accounts of certain mariners who were said to have been driven far to the west of the Canaries, and found themselves in the mist of a sea covered with great patches of weeds, resembling sunken is- lands. Some of these weeds were yellow and withered, while others were quite fresh and green ; and on one patch a live crab was found. Up to the eighteenth of September this favoring weather continued; and the sea, to use the words of Columbus, was as calm as the Guadalquivir at Seville. Great enthusiasm prevailed among his followers, lately so filled with fear; each ship tried to keep in advance of the others, and each sailor hoped to deserve the pension of ten thousand maravedis which had been promised to the first who saw land. September 11), Martin Alonzo Pinzon, whose vessel was in the lead, hailed the Santa Maria, and informed Columbus that from the flight of a great number of birds and from the appearance of the sky, he thought there was land to the north. But Columbus refused to turn from the course which he had marked out; he knew that land was to be reached by sailing due west, and in no other direction would he go. Every sailor knows how deceptive are the clouds, particularly at sunset; and he felt sure that Pinzon was but the victim of such an illusion as often deceives those on the lookout for land. As the enthusiasm of the sailors began to die down, doubts of the Admiral took its place: and they thought that they should never see home again. It is true that there had been many signs of land; but these had now been observed for many days, and still there was no land to be seen. Even the favoring wind became a cause for alarm; on a sea where the wind was forever from the east, how were they ever to sail away from the dreaded west? But the next day the wind veered, and there was a faint gleam of hope; small birds were also observed, singing, as if their strength was not exhausted bv their flight from the land where they had nested. 1 84 THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. The next day, there was no wind; hut the ships were in the midst of fields of weeds, which covered the surface of the water, and impeded the progress which might have been made had there been any wind. They began to recall some vague traditions which had reached even their untutored ears, about the lost Atlantis, and the sea made impassable by the submerged land. Their fears were not borne out, howeve?-, by the soundings; for a deep-sea line showed no bottom. Columbus was kept busy arguing against their fears; for as fast as one was allayed, another would take its place. If there was wind, they feared a storm; if there was none, they were forever becalmed; if there were no signs of land, they knew that they should never return ; if there were signs of land, they had been so often deceived that they could not trust again. One great source of alarm was the calmness of the sea, even when there was wind; and Columbus could not convince them that this was due to the presence of a large body of land in the quarter whence the wind blew; which had not, therefore, sufficient space to raise great waves in the ocean. Finally, on Sunday, September 25, there was a great swell of the sea, without any wind; and the sailors were reassured by this phenomenon, as by something familiar to them of old. Columl)us piously regarded it as a special miracle wrought to allay the rising clamors of his crew. But this was only temporary relief; the discontent among the crew contin- ued, and they resolved that they would go no farther. They had now- advanced far beyond the limit reached by other seamen, and would certainly be entitled to nuich respect from their acquaintanc^es should they return at once. As for Columbus, he had few friends, for he was but a foreigner any- how ; and even if they felt that they could not rely upon the many persons of influence who had opposed this enterprise, and who would be glad to learn that it had failed, they could easily get rid of the Admiral. If they took back the story that he had fallen overboard one night, while busy with his instruments and the stars, who but those Avho threw him into the sea were to know that the tale was not true? The wind again became favorable, and the ships were enabled to keep so close together that a conversation could be maintained between the com- manders of the Scotta Jfaria and the Pinta. While this was the state of affairs, and Columbus was busily studying a chart about which they had been talking, Martin Alonzo Pinzon suddenly cried out: — • "Land! Land! Senor, I claim my reward!" As he spoke, he pointed toward the southwest, where there was indeed an appearance of land. So strong were the indications, that even Columbus was deceived; and yielding to the insistence of the crews, gave orders that the three vessels should sail in the direction indicated by Pinzon. Morning came, after a night of much excitement and hopeful pressage, and showed THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBLS. 85 that what Pinzon had bebeld, was but "the baseless fabric of a vision," a sunset cloud which had passed away during the night. This occurred Sep- tember 2."i : and from this time forward, the sailors appear to have been some- what more hopeful; indeed, so frequently was the cry of "Land"' uttered chat Columbus found it necessary to rule that if any one gave such notice, and laud was not discovered within three days thereafter, he should forfeit all title to the reward, even should he afterward be the first to see land. By the first of October, according to the belief of the crew, they had reached a point five hundred and eighty-four leagues west of the Canary Islands; Columbus knew that they were in reality seven hundred and seven leagues from those islands, but he still kept this knowledge to himself. October 7, it was thought by those on L ard the J^lna that land lay in the west; and that vessel crowded all sail to follow the indications; for no one dared give notice to the Admiral, for fear of losing the reward. Pressing forward, it was not long before a flag was hoisted at the masthead of the little ship, and a gun boomed over t'.e waters — the preconcerted signal that land had been seen. As before, Columbus fell upon his knees, and repeated the Gloria in E.ccehis, in which he was joined by all his crew. But the end was not yet; as the Kina confidentl}' advanced, to follow up the great discovery, with the other vessels close in her wake, it was seen that there was no cause for exultation. Again the fancied land was seen to be nothing but a cloud on the horizon; and the flag which had been hoisted in such proud anticipation was slowly and regretfully hauled down. On the evening of this day, he determined to alter slightly the course to which he had held so rigidly, and proceed to the west-south-west. This was in accordance with the repeated solicitations of the Pinzons, and with his own recently conceived idea that there might have been some mistake in cal- culating the latitude of Cipango. The fleet kept this course for three days. It was the night of the tenth of October when the long repressed mutiny of the crew broke forth. Their fears were no longer to be controlled, and they demanded that the Admiral should at once return to Spain. It was in vain that he urged what signs of land appeared daily: they replied, surlily, that such had been seen a month before, and still the watery horizon was unbroken by anything but clouds. It is said that Columbus promised them that if land were not discovered within three days, he would consent to return; but there appears to be no good authorit.v for this story, which was probably invented to satisfy those who love to hear of marvelous coinci- dences. Nor does it seem likely that Columbus, who had persevered for eighteen years in seeking help to fit out this armament, should have been willing, after a voyage of but little more than two months, to compromise matters in this way. The story rests upon the testimony of a single historian, who is accused of many inaccuracies in other respects. S6 THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. Fiudiug soothing words and fair promises of no avail, Columbus was obliged to use a more decided tone. He told them that the expedition had been sent by the King and Queen to seek the Indies ; and that whatever might be the result, he was determined to persevere, until, by God's blessing, he should have fulfilled their commands. TlIK MlTIXY. Ha/ing no answer ready to oppose to these resolute words, the men drew away /rom the leader. We may imagine how they hung together in little knots, muttering deep curses against the folly of the man who had brought them hither, and almost wailing in their grief because they would never see their country again. How often during that night the old scheme of throw- ing Columbus into the sea was brought up, how often they debated whether THE FIKST \OVAGE OF COLL'-MBIS. 87 or not they might not keep him a prisoner until Spain was reached, how often they reckoned over their grievances and many causes for fear, no man knows. Morning found them sullen and despairing; their commander was still defiant. But as the day went on, those signs of land, which the sailors justly said had been seen so long as to be completely misleading, became more and more certain; fresh Aveeds, such as grow in rivers, were seen on the surface of the water; then a branch of thorn with berries on it; and finally, a reed, a small board and a staff of carved wood. Their gloom and rebellious feel- ing gave place to hope; and they were eagerly on the watch throughout the day. At sunset, the crew, according to their custom, sang the Salve Begina; after which Columbus addressed them again. He pointed out to them the goodness of God, who had given them, throughout their perilous voyage, favoring breezes and a summer sea; he reminded them that when they left the Canaries, he had given orders that after proceeding seven hundred leagues to the west, they should not sail after midnight — a proof, as he told them, that he had not gone farther than he had then thought it would be necessary. He told them that he thought it probable, from the indications seen that day, that they would make land that very night; and he gaAe orders that a vigilant look-out should be kept from the forecastle of each vessel; and he promised, in addition to the pension given by the sovereigns, to give a velvet doublet to the first who should discover land. As the evening closed in, Columbus took his station on the top of the castle or cabin on the high poop of his vessel, and kept an unwearied watch for land. Throughout the number of followers, there was the same excite- ment, greater than had ever before prevailed, even over the false alarms given by the Pinzons; for now the Admiral himself, for the first time, was confident that they were approaching land. The very failures of the others gave strength to their trust in Columbus; and they forgot their rebellious clamor of the previous night. It was about ten o'clock when Columbus first thought he saw a light glim- mering at a great distance — could it indeed be land? Literally, he could not believe his own eyes; but fearing that his hopes deceived him, he called to Pedro Gutierrez, a gentleman of the King's bedchamber, and asked him if he saw a light. The adventurer replied that he did; but still Columbus was not convinced. Eodrigo Sanchez was called, and the same question was asked him: he answered that he saw none; and both Columbus and Gutierrez saw that the light had disappeared. But in a moment more they saw it gleam forth again; and it continued to waver thus, as if it were a torch in a boat that was tossed on the waves or carried from one hut to another on shore. So uncertain was it, that the others were inclined to doubt its reality; COIvUMBUS ADDRESSING HIS Mi,N DURING THii MUTINY THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. 89 but Columbus, orce assured that it was not a fiction of his excited imagina- tion, considered these gleams of light as a certain sign that they were approaching an inhabited land. Contrary to the orders which he had given on leaving the Canaries, they did not pause during the night. It Avas two o'clock Avhen a gun from the Pinta gave the signal that land was actually descried. It was about two leagues a\vay, and had first been descried by a mariner named Kodrigo de Triana; but the pension was adjudged to Columbus himself, as having seen the light four hours before the signal was given from the smaller vessel. For more than three Avear^^ hours they lay to, the Avaves gently rocking the adventurous barks on the smooth Avarni Avaters. As day dawned, the dis- coverer saw before him a level island, Avell-Avooded, and apparently several leagues in area. The supposition of Columbus that they Avere approaching inhabited land proved to be correct; for the dusky inhabitants thronged the shore and stood gazing in wonder at the ships. The vessels had come to anchor; and Columbus, attired in a rich suit of scarlet, befitting the dignity of the Admiral and Viceroy of India, entered this boat, while the tAvo Pinzons entered those belonging to the vessels AA'hich they commanded. Each boat bore a banner on Avhich Avas a green cross and the initials of the soA-ereigns Ferdinand and Isabella, surmounted by a croAvn imperial. What effect did this splendor of color and glitter of armor produce upon the natives? When they first saw the ships, so huge in comparison Avith their OAvn slight canoes, they had been filled Avith wonder; as the day daAA^ned, they beheld the vessels more plainly, and that they were borne along, apparently Avithout effort, Avhile the great Avhite sails seemed to them like Avings. As the boats were launched, and came toAvard the shore, their astonishment Avas changed into terror of the strangers; and they fled into the woods. Meantime, Columbus had landed; and kneeling upon the earth, he kissed the soil of that new Avorld Avhich he had been first to discover, surrounded by his now devoted followers. Then he rose and drew his SAvord, and solemnly took possession of the ncAvly discovered country in the name of the sovereigns of Castile. He then called upon all his followers to take the oath of allegiance to him, as Viceroy and Admiral, the representative of these sovereigns. As the natives Avitnessed these ceremonies from their hiding-places on the edge of the woods, they gradually regained confidence, and drcAv a little nearer the strange Avhite men. When they saw that the new-comers seemed to have no intention of injuring them, they approached and made signs of frieiKlship. These were responded to, and the natives came still nearer, and .stroked the beards of the Spaniards and examined their hands and faces. THE FIRST ^■OV.\0E OF COLUMBUS. 91 evidently wondering at the whiteness of their skins. All these demonstra- tions were preceded and accompanied by frequent prostrations and other signs of adoration. To the simple-minded inhabitants of the island, it seemed that these men had come in their great winged vessels straight from the blue heaven which bent over their island, and touched the ocean all around them. As Columbus supposed that he had reached India, it was natural that he and his followers should speak of the natives of the newly discovered country as Indians ; a name which M'as so much used before it was fully ascertained that he had reached another continent, that reason has never been able to displace it. The Indians wore no clothing, but had their bodies painted with various colors. Their only arms were lances with heads of sharp flints or fish-bones, or hardened at the end by fire. They evidently had no knowledge of sharpened iron or steel, for one of them took hold of a sword by the edge and cut his hand. They received with eager gratitude the trifles which Columbus and his followers presented to them, offering in return balls of cotton yarn, tame parrots, and cassava bread. These, however, were not the articles of traffic which the Spaniards had come so far to procure; the small golden ornaments which some of the natives wove in their noses were of much greater interest than their twenty-pound balls of cotton, and Columbus at once made inquiry regarding the source from which they were derived. He learned that these precious ornaments came from the southwest, where there dwelt a king who was always served in vessels of fine gold. Much more has the great discoverer set down of the same kind, but it is probable that he deceived himself in much of what he understood them to tell him by signs. He felt assured that he had now reached the outlying islands of Asia, and was near the countries of fabulous riches of which Marco Polo had w^ritten; and he readily believed that the gestures of these naked Indians indicated much more than the savages tried to express. The island, which Columbus thoroughly explored, was named San Salvador. Around it lay beautiful and fertile islands, so that he was at a loss which to choose as the next to be explored. He set sail two days after landing, taking with him seven of the natives, to whom he proposed to teach the Spanish language, that they might serve as interpreters. As these became better able to communicate with him by signs, and understood more clearly what information he wished to obtain, he learned that he Avas in the midst of an archipelago, numbering more islands than the limited arithmetical skill of the savages could reckon. They enumerated more than a hundred, and gave him to understand that they were all well peopled, and that the inhabitants were frequently at war with each other. All this was in full accordance with what Columbus had heard of the islands about the eastern coast of Asia. THE FIRST VOYA(tE OI- COLl MBl S. 93 Several islands were visited in succession, but without finding the vast stores of gold which they had understood from the natives were in the pos- session of their neighbors. They learned, however, that their coming was regarded as a wonderful event by the natives, as a single Indian in a canoe was taken into one of the ships, and found to be a messenger dispatched to carry the news among the different islands. IIow many similar messengers were dispatched, the Spaniards did not know; but they w^e re less proud of their own courage in venturing across the ocean when they reflected that this naked savage h id entered upon a voyage of such length and danger in his frail canoe without a single companion to assist him in storms or tell of his fate if he should perish. Wherever he went, Columbus heard of an island of nmch greater extent than any that he had seen, called Cuba; and he determined that this must be the long-sought Cipango. He determined to set sail to this favored country; but his departure from the smaller islands was delayed for some days by calms and contrary winds. It was the 28th of October before he finally reached the coast of the Queen of the Antilles. In his journal, Columbus seems never tired of expatiating upon the beauty of the islands which were now seen by Europeans for the first time; their mild climate, the smoothness of the waters in which these jewels of ocean were set, the majesty of the forests, the beauty of the birds, the magnificence of the flowers, even the glittering sparkle of the insects, are constantly the subjects of his praise. While coasting along Cuba, Martin Alonzo Pinzon learned from some na- tives that there was a country in the interior called Cubanacan. Later re- searches have developed the fact that nacan is simply the native word mean- ing the interior, so that Cubanacan means only the interior part of Cuba; but the heated imagination of Pinzon connected this name with the w^ord Khan, and the amazing discovery w^as communicated to Columbus. The discoverer at once concluded that he was mistaken in supposing Cuba to be Cipango, or Japan; it was a part of the mainland, and he was now in the territories of the Great Khan. The Admiral settled it in his own mind that he was about a hundred leagues from the capital of this mighty potentate, and resolved to send embassadors to him at once. Two envoys were selected ; one of them a converted Jew, who was acquainted with Hebrew and Chaldaic, and had some knowledge of Arabic, in which language, it was supposed, he would-be able to communi- cate with some one in the court of the Khan. These embassadors were in- structed to inform the Khan that Columbus had been sent by the King and Queen of Spain, for the purpose of establishing friendly relations between the powers; they were tilso to ascertain exactly the situation of certain ports, provinces, and rivers; and they were to find out if certain drugs and si)ices, of which they were provided with samples, were produced in that country. 94 THK FIRST VOYAGK OF (OLl'M IIUS. Wliile awaiting the return of these embassadors, Columbus occupied him- self in attending to the necessary repairs of his vessels. Having arranged for this work, he spent some time in the exploration of the interior; and again received much remarkable information from the natives. We cannot help suspecting that the natives found Columbus such a willing listener that they indulged their imaginations considerably; for they gravely assured him that there were tribes at a distance, of men who had but one eye; that there were others who had the heads of dogs, and that there were still others who were cannibals, killing their victims by cutting their throats and drinking their blood. Mingled with these stories, were accounts of a place Avhich they called Bohio, where they declared that the people wore anklets and bracelets and necklaces of gold and pearls. While Columbus was being thus ably entertained by the Indians of the coast of Cuba, his embassadors had penetrated to the interior in search of the capital of Kublai Khan. They returned Nov. 6, having reached a point twelve leagues from the coast, and learned there that there was nothing of interest beyond it. The village which "was the capital of Cubanacan contained about fifty huts, and at least a thousand inhabitants. The envoys had been treated with courtesy and hospitality, though, to their surprise, they found that Hebrew and Arabic were but gibberish to the natives, and were obliged to rely upon the services of an Indian who had occompanied them, and who had picked up a little sniiittering of Spanish. They saw no gold or precious stones; and when the white men displayed their samples of cinnamon, pep- per, and similar commodities, they were informed that such things grew far off to the southwest. During their absence, Columbus had become acquainted with the proper- ties of a plant, which, one of his biographers justly observes, was destined to be of more real value to the people of the eastern continent than all the precious metals that have been mined in the New World. This was the po- tato. The embassadors sent into the interior saw in use a plant which has not, indeed, the wide usefulness of the potato, but which has become necessary to the comfort of many of the white race. This was tobacco, the name of which is derived from the Indian word designating a sort of rude cigar; the term being applied by the Spaniards to the plant and its dried leaves. The strangers at first regarded this practice of smoking as singular and nauseous; but as it is said of vice that — "We flr?t endure, then pity, then embrace," SO the white men were taught by curiosity to learn what the Indian found in tobacco that was pleasant, and speedily acquired the habit. Columbus was now convinced, by the report of his envoys, that he Avas not within such a short distance of the capital of the Khan. lie still listened THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. 95 eagerlj-, however, to the tales which the Indians had to tell of Babeque and Bohio, although he was not quite certain whether these terms applied to the same place or not. He decided to go in search of Babeque, which he hoped to find the name of some rich and populous island off the coast of Asia. Later researches into the language of the natives of these islands have not made it wholly clear what they intended to convey by these two words ; accord- ing to some authorities, they are names applied to the coast of the mainland; others that holiio means house, or populousness. November 12, the little fleet weighed anchor, and sailed eastward along the coast of Cuba. A storm obliged them to take refuge in a harbor to which Columbus gave the name of Puerto del Principe, and several days were spent in exploring that cluster of small and beautiful islands which have since been called El Jardin del Eey, " The Garden of the King." On the 19th, he again put to sea, and for two days made ineffectual efforts to reach an island which lay about twenty leagues to the eastward, supposing it to be Babeque. Find- ing this impossible, on the evening of the second day he put his ship about, and made signals for the others to do the same. The Pinta was considerably to the eastward of the Santa Maria and the N'ina, and, to the surprise of the Admiral, failed to answer the signals or comply with the commands which they indicated. He repeated the signals ; but still the Pinta paid no attention. Night came on; and hoisting signal lights at the masthead of the Santa Maria, so that the Pinta could easily follow through the darkness, he sailed on,ward. Morning came, but nothing wa ■> ^o be seen of the Pinta. Columbus was not a little disquieted by this action of Pinzon. The rich navigator of Palos,^ who had furnished a large ^x rt of the money required for the expedition, and without whose aid Columbu:' would probably have been obliged to seek assistance at some other court than that of Spain, was fully aware of the importance of the services which he iVzO. rendered to the Gen- oese adventurer. Thoroughly familiar with the theories of Columbus, he had adopted them as his own, and probably came gradually to consider them as much his property as they were the foreigner's. Several times, during the voyage, there had been serious differences of opinion between Columbus and his chief subordinate; and when the Admiral saw that the i^n?/« had thus deserted the flag-ship, he suspected that Pinzon intended to return to Spain at once and claim all the honors due to the successful prosecutor of this great enterprise. But Columbus was not to be deterred from his purpose of discovering the rich and populous parts of the far east; he continued coasting along the northern line of Cuba until, Dec. 5, he reached the eastern extremity, to which he gave the name of Alpha and Omega, supposing it to be the eastern point of Asia. He was now undetermined what course to pursue. Keturn to Spain would ])c unadvisable at this season of the year; and so far as the 96 THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. /*/»^ff was concerned, she 'Was SO much swifter sailer than the other vessels, and had the start of them by many hours, that it was useless to think of chas- ing her across the Atlantic. If he kept along the coast, following its trend to the southwest, he might find the country of the Khan ; but then he could not hope to reach Babeque, which his Indian guides now assured him lay to the northeast. Thus undecided, he continued cruising aimlessly for some days in the waters around the eastern end of Cuba; and at last descried land to the southeast, which he decided to make. The natives protested against his seeking to do so, assuring him that the people were fierce and cruel cannibals. But these remonstrances were unheeded, and Columbus steered toward Hayti. He anchored in a harbor at the western endof the island, to which he gave the name which it still retains — St. Nicholas. As they explored the northern coast of the island, they caught many fish, several species of which were sim- ilar to those which the sailors had taken in Spanish waters; they heard from the wooded shore the notes of song-birds which reminded them of the night- ingale and other birds of Andalusia; and they fancied they saw, in the beauti- fully diversified country, some resemblance to the more beautiful parts of Spain. Accordingly, Columbus named the island Hispaniola, or little Spain. AVhile exploring the island, Columbus found plants and birds of much different species and more abundant than those he had seen in Europe. Animals were also less rare, more various, and of greater size; amongst others the iguana, a sort of gigantic lizard, whose likeness to the crocodile, or at least to the representations of it then extant, made some of the crew mistake it for one of those dreadful monsters. Glad to make use of his courage in reassuring his men, who were frightened at everything that was new, Columbus did not hesitate to attack this beast; he rushed at him with uplifted sword, and pursuing him into the waters of the lake, did not come out until, to the universal satisfaction, he had made an end of him. The skin which he carried back with him to Europe, measured seven feet in length, much more than the average length. Columbus must have smiled at the recollection of this exploit, when he found out that this terrible-looking beast, with its enormous crop, its long and powerful tail, its spine notched like a saw, its sharp claws, is as harm- less as our common lizard, and is even esteemed a great delicacy by the In- dians. The natives had abandoned their villages and fled into the interior at the approach of the vessels, leaving their cultivated fields and large villages. Columbus sent well-armed parties in search of them, and one such party suc- ceeded in capturing a young woman, who was induced by presents of clothes, trifling ornaments, and trinkets, and by the kind treatment which she experi- enced, to act as embassador to hor i)oople. It was no diflicult mailer after THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. 97 this to secure the presence of large numbers of the natives, who were well disposed toward the strangers when they found that there need be no fear of them. The Fight with the Iguana. They were frequently visited by chiefs of various degrees of importance; and, Dec. 22, received a message from a chief named Guacanagari, borne by a number of natives, who filled one of the largest canoes that the Span- iards had as yet seen. This cacique, as the chiefs of these islands are called by Columbus, asked that the ships might be brought to a point opposite his village, which was a little farther east than the point where they then were. But the wind was not favorable, and Columbus had to content himself with sending a deputation to visit Guacanagari, by whom they were received with great state and honor. But, as before, the Spaniards learned from this chief 7 08 THK FIRST VOYAG?! OF COLLMBUS. nothing of the vaj^t stores of treasure for which they were seeking; and although the cacique and his followers freely gave them any of their few golden ornaments, it was evident that these were not drawn from any mine worked by Guacanagari and his tribe. The envojs returned, bearing the most friendly messages with them; and as soon as the wind proved favorable, Columbus gave orders that the two vessels should sail toward the village of Guacanagari. His hopes had again been raised by the statements of various minor caciques w'ho had visited him during the absence of his messengers, and who talked much of a place Avhieh they called Cibao, the cacique of which had banners of wrought gold. To the ears of the great discoverer this name Mas nearly enough like Cipango to mislead him completely; and he believed that at last he had conio upon the traces of that niagniticent prince mentioned l\v Marco Polo, whose wealth ex- ceeded even that of the ruler of Cathay. It Avas the morning of December 24 that the two vessels departed from their resting-place to proceed toward the residence of the cacique. The wind was so light as hardly to till the sails, and they made but little progress. At eleven o'clock that Christmas eve, they were about four or five miles from the harbor Avhere the cacique's village Avas situated; the sea was calm and smooth, and the coast had been so explored by the party of mes- sengers that Columbus felt no fears regarding rocks or other sources of danger. He according retired to the rest which he had earned by sleepless nights spent in Avatcliing the course of the vessels along an unknown coast. Scarcely had he fallen asleep, before the helmsman, in defiance of the com- mander's plain orders, gave the helm over to a boy, and himself went to sleep. It was not long before the whole crew of the Snnfa Maria was locked in slumber; the only wakeful one being the boy at the helm. The currents along this coast are swift and strong; and when the ship was once in the power of one of them, she was swept rajndly along. To older or more heedful ears the sound of the breakers would have given warning of the danger; but the boy thought nothing of what he was doing. Silently and swiftly the current bore the ship upon a sand-bank; suddenly the boy- helmsman felt the rudder strike, and heard the tumult of the rushing sea. Frighteiled, he called loudly for help; the Admiral, a light sleeper, and always feeling the responsibility Avhich rested upon him, was the first upon deck, followed hastily by the sailors who had been sleeping Avhen they should have watched, and by those others who were not on duty. He quickly gave orders to carry an anchor astern, that by this means the vessel might be w^arped off The boat was launched, and the men detailed for the pur- pose entered it; but either, insane from fright, they misunderstood the order, or purposely disobeyed it, by seeking their own safety first, and at once rowed off toward the other vessel, which lay half a league to windward. THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. \)y The Santa Maria had swung across the stream, and lay helpless, the water continually gaining upon her. The Admiral gave orders that the mast should be cut away; hoping to lighten her so that she would be carried off the bar before any more serious damage was done. The order was obeyed ; but the keel was too firmly bedded in the sand for this measure to prove effective. The shock had opened several seams, through which the water entered in large quantities. The breakers struck her with force again and again, until she lay over on her side. Had the weather been less calm, this vessel, the largest of the armament which a queen had fitted out for the dis- covery of a New World, would have gone to pieces on the shore of that far- away island. In the meantime, the boat had reached the caravel JSfina and given information of the condition of the larger vessel. The commander of the caravel reproached the sailors for their desertion of the leader in such mis- fortunes, and immediately dispatched a boat to his relief. Columbus and his crew took refuge on board the Xina until morning, and envoys were at once sent off to inform the cacique of what had happened. Guacauagari showed great distress at the misfortunes of his expected visitors; nor did he confine himself to mere words of sympathy and con- dolence, but showed himself active in measures for their relief. All the canoes that could be mustered were pressed into service, and all his people assisted in unloading the vessel. The lading was stored near the palace of the cacique, and an armed guard placed around it to prevent depredations; the cacique and his brothers having kept close watch while the work of unloading was going on, to prevent the helpers from being overcome by temptation to help themselves to these wonderful things. To Columbus and his companions, this course appeared unnecessary; so nmch sympathy with the shipwrecked sailors was shown by all Avho, at the command of the chief, were engaged in assisting them; and Columbus after- ward bore this testimony to their character, in his Journal: — "So loving, so tractable, so peaceable are these people that I swear to your majesties there is not in the world a better nation, nor a better land. They love their neighbors as themselves; and their discourse is ever sweet and gentle, and accompanied with a smile; and though it is true that they are naked, yet their manners are decorous and praiseworthy." The day after Christmas, Columbus was visited on board the JSTina by Guacanagari, who assured him again of his eagerness to render the Spaniards any assistance which lay in his power. The Admiral, who was at dinner when he came on board, observes in his journal with regard to this visit, that the cacique would not allow him when he entered the cabin to rise or use any ceremony, and that, when invited to partake of any dish, he took just as much as was necessary for him not to 100 THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. appear impolite. He did the same if anything was given him to drink; he put it to his lips, merely tasted it, and sent it to his followers. His air and his movements were remarkably grave and dignified. The Grateful Cacique. His dignity and discretion, however, were not proof against all the attrac- tions that surrounded him. While, with the help of the Indians he had brought wnth him as interpreters from San Salvador, Columbus was enter- taining his royal guest, he noticed that the cacique turned his eyes again and again, as if in spite of himself, on the quilt that covered his bed. Columbus, seeing this, hastened to present him with the coveted object, together w^ith a pair of red shoes and a necklace of amber beads. The gratitude of the cacique and his officers knew no bounds, and there is no doubt that these THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. lOl gifts did more to exalt the power and grandeur of Spain and her sovereigns in their eyes than all the words of Columbus and his interpreters on that subject. While they were conversing, a canoe arrived from another part of the island, bringing bits of gold to be exchanged for small bells, such as were worn by the hawk used at that time in hunting. To the Indians, these appeared the most desirable articles which the Spaniards had to distribute among them ; they hung the bells on their arms and legs when preparing for the dances of which they were so fond, and which were performed to the cadence of certain songs. They had found that the Spaniards valued gold more than anything which their savage treasuries contained, and readily brought all that they had to exchange for the wonderful musical bells. Sailors who had been on shore, trading, informed Columbus that gold was easily obtained in trade with the natives; and this restored the drooping spirits of the Admiral to something of their normal state. The cacique saw the change in his countenance, and inquired what good news the sailors had brought. He was told how desirous the Admiral was of obtaining the yellow metal; and replied that there was a place not far off, among the mountains, where it could be obtained in large quantities. He promised to get as much as Columbus might desire, the metal being there in such abundance, he said, that it was not held as very valuable. This place he called Cibao; and Columbus at once recognized this name, and again confounded it with Cipango. When Guacanagari had been entertained by Columbus, he insisted that the Admiral should be his guest onshore. The request was granted ; and the guest received such honor and sympathy as to make him admire the kindly yet dignified savage chieftain more than ever. In return for the cacique's efforts at entertaining him, he sent on board the ship for a skilled archer and his arms, and showed the assembled Indians the accuracy of such weapons. The people of Guacanagari were of so unwarlike a nature that they had no similar skill to display; but the cacique informed Columbus that the Caribs, who sometimes made forays upon them, had bows and arrows which they used with deadly precision. Columbus assured the chief that he had nothing more to fear from the Caribs, for the great monarchs of Spain had weapons far more terrible than these, which they would not hesitate to use in the de- fense of a people who had assisted their Admiral. To illustrate his words, he ordered an arquebus and a heavy cannon to be discharged. To the Indians, it seemed that a thunderbolt had fallen from a clear sky; and they fell prostrate on their faces in terror. When they had recovered a little, Columbus called their attention to the place where the cannon-ball had crashed through the trees, carrying away great branches; and they were filled with renewed dismay. But he assured them that these arms would not bo used against them, but for their protection against the cruel and dreaded 102 THK FIRST VOYAGK OF COLUMBUS. Caribs; and secure in the friendship of these children of liglit who were armed with thunder from their native skies, the simple savages were more than content. The fame of the hawx-r^^ns nad gone abroad, and there was not an Indian who had a golden ornament who was not more than willing to trade it for one of these precious articles. Las Casas, whose work is one of the chief authorities regarding this part of the life of Columbus, tells us that one In- dian offered a handful of gold-dust in exchange for one; and when the trade had been made, hurried off as fast as his feet would carry him, lest the Span- iards should regret that they had sold it so cheap. The Spaniards who had endured so many hardships and dangers became enamored of the easy, luxurious life which the Indians led; in a land where the earth produced, almost spontaneously, roots and fruits enough to feed more than the inhabitants, where there was evidently no winter to be feared, where shelter and clothing were looked upon as unnecessary, wdierethe main part of the day was passed in indolent repose, and the main part of the night in dancing to the music of their songs or the beating of their rude drums, the Indians were indeed creatures to be envied. Gradually the sailors came to long to share this life, so full of ease and enjoyment, and Columbus formed the idea of establishing a colony of those wdio wished to remain; while he, with his one vessel and a small crew, would return to Si3ain to carry the news of his discovery — unless he had been anticipated by the captain of the Pinta — and to procure the needed supplies and reinforcements. Had the natives been less peaceable and friendly, such a course would have been the height of madness; but armed as the Spaniards were with cannon and smaller fire- arms, and surrounded by those Avhose chief w^ish seemed to be to minister to the white strangers, there appeared to be no difficulty in the way. But he did not propose to take any unnecessary risks ; the stranded vessel was to be broken up to afford materials for a fortress ; and it was to be armed with her guns. Provisions enough could be spared from the general stock to maintain a small garrison for a year; so that whatever change there might be in the feelings of the natives, the white men who w^ere left behind w^ould be entirely safe. He intended that they should occupy themselves with explor- ing the island and becoming acquainted with the location and extent of the gold mines on which they all laid such stress, and in trading with the natives for whatever of the precious metal they might possess. At the same time, they could learn the language of the country more perfectly, so that com- nmnication would be easier and surer; and acquaintthemselves with the habits and customs of the people, so as to make future intercourse all the smoother. Columbus did not suppose that the fortress, except under very improbable circumstances, would be necessary for the defense of his followers from the natives; for the latter had too clearly proven their unwarlike nature and their THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. 103 friendly disposition; but he considered that some sort of military organiza- tion and round of required duties was necessary to keep the Spaniards in good order during the absence of a ruler specially appointed by the Crown, and to enable those who were disposed to do what was right by the natives to hold in check those who might otherwise have proved tyrannical, unprincipled, and cruel. For the discoverer, who was so enchanted with the beauty of nature and the character of the inhabitants in this New "World, entertained fond hopes that all these people would speedily be converted to the Christian faith. Wherever he had gone, he had found them of the same gentle, loving dispo' sition, ready to listen eagerly to whatever the strangers could make them un- derstand, and readily learning by rote such prayers as the sailors taught them, and making the sign of the cross with becoming devoutness of aspect. This is not the place to discuss the good done by pra3ers which are not understood by those who utter them; but it is a fact that these Spaniards of the fifteenth century thought they had done good when they taught an Indian the Latin words of a prayer, of the meaning of which the savage had not the slightest conception ; and which may have been rather hazy to the Spaniard. Columbus looked eagerly forward to the time when all these untaught savages should receive the rite of baptism, believing that that was all that was necessary to make them good Christians. Throughout the time that he had sought assist- ance in working out his theory, he had held fast to the idea of advancing the dominion of the Church; and this feeling was probably at the bottom of hia reasons for seeking assistance from Spain. Isabella was known for a de- vout Catholic, and ardent in the cause of religion; hence, although the country was convulsed with civil war, he sought assistance from her, rather than from the cold and crafty men vrho sat on the thrones of France and England. The project of building a fortress and leaving a colony was broached to the natives, who were enraptured with the plan. That the wonderful white men who had come from heaven with their thunderous weapons should remain to protect them from their dreaded enemies the Caribs, while the Admiral re- turned to the skies for more white men and hawks' bells, was almost too good to be true; and they eagerly assisted in building the fortress. A site was chosen, the wreck was broken up and brought to shore. A large vault was to be dug, and over this a strong wooden tower was to be erected : finally, the whole was to be surrounded by a wide and deep ditch, with the usual draw-bridge. In the vault were to be stored such supplies of arms, ammunition, and food as should be brought from the wreck, and could be spared by those who were about to undertake the homeward voyage. So industriously did the Spaniards push the work, and so eagerly did the many natives assist them, that the whole fortress was completed in ten days 104 THE FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS. from the time that Columbus had given orders to begin it. He gave it the name of La Navidad^ or the Nativity, because they had been rescued from the wreck of the vessel on Christmas Day. Having concluded the account of the building of this tower, the devout Admiral points out the care which Providence had exercised over his voyage; so that even the shipwreck, which appeared at the time to be such a great misfortune, was the cause of his find- ing what riches lay hid in the island, where otherwise he would only have touched at the coast and gone farther on. As seen more clearly by those who have a knowledge of later events, the wreck of the /Santa Maria appeals the misfortune w4iich it seemed at first; since because of it Columbus devoted so much of his time and attention, in lateryears, to this very island, and suffered much because of his connection with it. While they were engaged in building the fortress, some Indians brought word that a large vessel, like that of Columbus, had been seen in a harbor at the eastern end of the island. There could be but one explanation of this: it must be the Pinta. Columbus at once sent a Spaniard, with a crew of natives in a native canoe, to take a letter to Pinzon, urging him to join com- pany at once, but making no complaint regarding his desertion, or saying a word that was not entirely friendly. A close search, however, by these mes- sengers, failed to disclose the presence of any such vessel ; and they returned to the Admiral. Other rumors reached them of a ship like theirs, but Co- lumbus resolved to take no further steps toward searching for the lost vessel until something more definite should be heard. In the meantime, it was a subject of much anxiety to Columbus, how the voyage back to Spain would be accomplished. The Pinta, the swiftest of the ships, had deserted, and they knew nothing of her fate; she might have esQaped across the ocean, or she might have been Avrecked on the shore of some distant island, or she might have foundered at sea and gone down with all on board. The Santa Maria, the largest of his ships, had been wrecked and destroyed. There remained only the Nina, which really was fit only for coasting. Indeed, it was not wholly because Columbus had feared to demand large ships that he had accepted small ones; he had selected those which seemed to him best fitted for coasting and for tracing an intricate course in channels between islands. But the A7«a was not the vessel in which any sane sailor would have wished to cross the Atlantic without a consort; much less was it one to which a man who had labored and waited for a score of years to secure the realization of his dreams would wish to entrust the fulfil hnent of those dreams. For, should the Nina be lost on the homeward voyage, what record would remain of Columbus? It would only be known that he maintained a theory which the most learned men of Spain condemned as impracticable; that he had sailed into the western ocean, and had been lost there, as they had predicted. The Columbus Beoxze Doors i>,- the Capitol at WAaHtNoioA. (105) iOG TIIK I'IKST AOYAGE OK COLUMIUS. Return he must, however; and preparations for the homeward voyage were begun about the same time as the fortress. Thirty-nine persons were selected to remain behind at La Navidad, while the others, numbering a few more, sailed eastward again. Minute instructions were given the colonists, to treat the natives always with gentleness and justice, remembering how much the}' were indebted to Guacanagari ; to keep together, for mutual safety, and not stray beyond the territories of the cacique who had so befriended them; and to acquire a knowledge of the productions and mines of the island, to pro- cure as much gold and spice as possible by trading, and to seek a better situ- ation for a sett^ment, as this harbor was far from being a safe one. The boat of the /Sa)ifa Maria was left with them, as well as a variety of seeds to sow, and a quantity of articles to be used in traffic. A commandant of the post was appointed in the name of the sovereigns, and two lieutenants, upon whom, successively, the command was to devolve in case of his death. Having made all arrangements for the safety and well-being of the colony, as far as such arrangements could be made by any man, Columbus, on the 41 li of January, 1493, sailed from Hispaniola eastward across the broad ocean : five months and one day after he left Palos. The student of idle superstitions mT,y well remark the recurrence of a cer- tain day of the week in the history of this first voyage of Columbus ; it was on Friday that he set sail from Palos; it was on Friday that he first saw the shores of Guanahani, the first land of the New World on which his eyes rested; and it was on Friday that he left Hispaniola on his return. The sixth day of the week is far from being considered a day on which to begin great undertakings ; but the greatest event of modern times is thus associated with it. The first two days of the return voyage Avere without event; on the third, the lookout gave the cry that he saw the Pinta at a distance. The ropoil was an animating one; for there was not a man on board but fully realized the dangers of their long and lonely voyage. The Pinta hastened toward them as soon as the jSFina was descried b}' her lookout; and conversation proving imj^racticable by reason of the state of the weather, the two vessels, at the command of the leader of the expedition, put back to the bay a little west of what is now called Monte Christi. Here the Admiral and his chief subordinate landed, and here was told the story of the P^?^