L I B RARY OF THE UNIVERSITY Of ILLINOIS 9772 v.7 IU.. HiST. SURVEY Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://archive.org/details/scienceofcolumbu79mill INDIANA HISTORICAL SOCIETY PUBLICATIONS VOL. 7 NO. 8 THE SCIENCE OF COLUMBUS BY ELIZABETH MILLER (Mrs. Oren S. Hack) Author of "The Yoke;' "Daybreak;' etc. GREENFIELD, IND. WILLIAM MITCHELL PRINTING CO. 1921 THE SCIENCE OF COLUMBUS. In order to preserve peace between nations, Pope Alexan- der VI in 1494 apportioned the State of Indiana and other territory to Spain. At that hour the wonderful North Amer- ican contintent lay behind the veil as yet unlifted. As far as Portugal or Castile and Leon were informed the welter of the grey Atlantic extended unbroken north of Cuba to the Pole. Inasmuch, however, as an Italian adventurer had brought forth a marvel from the west, the Kings of these European countries were prepared for any surprise from the unknown and they went to the arbiter of national disagreements to as- sign to each what should be his when it was discovered. The Line of Demarcation was drawn from Pole to Pole at 370 leagues to be measured in degrees or by another manner from the islands of Cape Verde to the west. Anything to be discovered or already discovered that lay east, north or south of this line was to belong to the King of Portugal and what- ever was west, north or south of this line was to belong to Spain. Should one or the other nation discover lands within the preserves of the other he was peaceably to relinquish such lands to that party in whose domain such discoveries were made. It was a beautiful arrangement and was cheerfully ignored as many beautiful national arrangements have always been. The blue-eyed Briton and the black-eyed Frenchman swarmed over the soil of North America planting flags and firing commemorative lombard shots which signalized pos- session as if the venerable Spaniard in the Vatican had not 450 The Science of Columbus 451 spoken. For that reason Indiana only belonged to Spain in an unreal way. In that much the title of Indiana to the people of the commonwealth is clouded. Spain, however, had failed to deliver to Christopher Columbus the value of his portion of the territory he had discovered, according to contract, and her title, also, is not immaculate. When the matter is traced to the source the original title lies between that Italian sailor and a copper-skinned race whose seed was planted here by the winds that scattered mankind over the earth when Time was young. When Ferdinand and Isabella entered into a contract with Christopher Columbus by which he was to set forth on a voy- age of discovery, they caused John de Coloma to write in La Capitulacion that; "Per quanto vos, Christoval Colon vades por nuestro man- dado a descobrir e ganar con cjertas fustas neustras a con neustras gentes ciertas ylas e terra firme enla mar oceana. — " (Forasmuch as you, Christopher Columbus are going by our command with some of our ships and with our subjects to discover and acquire certain islands and mainlands in the ocean — ,") they expected to make certain concessions to the Italian for his services. In these terms they set down plainly what they expected Columbus to discover upon representations made to them by the Italian sailor. The preamble of the Capitulation consisted of an extensive religious discussion with which most of the state documents of this royal pair opened, but the several clauses of the contract dealing directly with the expedition consisted of a straightforward bargain between an adventurer and a pair of acquisitive princes who had territory and in- creased revenues in mind. 452 The Science of Columbus Columbus had put forward arguments and inducements as many and diverse as the number and kind of people before whom he had laid his scheme. He had held out the rescue of the Holy Sepulchre and the financing of a great Crusade* to the religious ; he had told of spices and gems and merchandise to the commercial minded; of the Grand Khan and Prester John to the conquistador ; of a round world to the scientist. But in signing a contract he would bind himself to the most feasible task. He did not engage to prove the world was round, to find gold, gems or spices or to deliver the gorgeous Asiatic cities of Zaiton and Quinsay to his royal patrons. He bound himself by a legal instrument to deliver a landfall and nothing else. It indicates that he was sure of islands and mainlands in the ocean-sea. In the light of his positive as- surance, it is interesting to examine Columbus upon the. scope of his knowledge and the reach of his surmises. Christopher Columbus was born in Genoa in 1446 (circa). His parents were Domineco and Susanna, weavers, who owned two houses in Genoa at one time and at another had a mortgage foreclosed upon them. He had brothers and at least one sister. Weavers of doubtful fortune with a family in 1446 could hardly educate a child. Ferdinand Columbus, nat- ural and most admirable son of the Discoverer, declares that his father attended the University of Pavia. "I say, therefore," he writes in his "Historie" "that in his youth he learned letters and studied in Pavia enough to under- stand Cosmography, the teachings of which science greatly *Las Casas ; Historia. From the Journal of the Admiral, First Voyage, under the date of December 26, 1492. The Science of Columbus 453 delighted him ; and on account of which he studied Astrol- ogy* and Geometry since these sciences are so related to each other that one cannot be understood without the other and also because Ptolemy in the beginning of his Cosmography says that no one can be a good cosmographer if he is not also a good painter." Columbus makes a claim to education in a letter written to the monarchs of Spain, "In quefto tempo io ho veduto, & meffo ftudio in vedere tutti i libri di Cofmografia, d'Hiftoria, & di Filofoltia, & d'altre fcientie." ("In this time I saw and studied diligently all the books of cosmography, of history and of Philosophy and of other sciences.") *Frequently in the Admiral's writings he confirms this claim to a knowledge of Astrology as astronomy was called in the fifteenth cen- tury. For example on Sunday, January 13, 1493, he records the fol- lowing, transcribed in the Historia of Las Casas : "He (the Admiral) would have liked to have gone out of the har- bor, adverse winds preventing, in order to go to a better harbor be- cause that harbor was somewhat exposed and because he wished to observe the conjunction of the moon with the sun, which he expected to take place the 17th of this month and the opposition of the moon with Jupiter and conjunction with Mercury and the sun in opposition with Jupiter which is the cause of great winds." It is worth noting that the Journal beginning with the 17th de- tails a comparative calm for six days. On Monday, January 21, he writes : "He found the winds cooler and he expected, he says, to find them more so each day the more he went to the north and also because the nights were longer on account of the narrowing of the sphere." He is explaining here the diminishing length of the degrees, from the equator to the pole. These are not the words of a man merely guessing that the world is round. On his second voyage he attributes the daily shower on Jamaica in July to the dense groves fringing the islands, a scientific explanation three or four centuries in advance of the times. 454 The Science of Columbus If Ferdinand Columbus' statements are to be credited, the Discoverer was a student of cosmography, geometry, astrol- ogy, philosophy, history and other sciences before he was fourteen years old, at which time Columbus declares he went to sea.* The knowledge that made him the foremost explorer of all time and one of the world's greatest scientists bears too little of the academic imprint and too much of a self-acquired educa- tion to substantiate his son's claim. He began work as a weaver. During his years before the loom he might have as- sociated with some retired instructor of the University. His biography is bright with friendships among the educated men of the time. Every sign points to an education from associa- tion rather than from instruction. When his idea of a voyage to the East by the West entered his mind cannot be determined. Perhaps it grew as he read and his reading was of the order to inspire advanced thinking and high aims. Italian was his native language and he used it extensively in his correspond- ence. He must have known something of Latin. He could not have successfully sailed the seas without knowing collo- quial Portuguese. He knew Spanish and adopted it as his most familiar tongue. He mentions Ahmed-Ben-Kothair, the Arabic astronomer, and again Rabbi Samuel de Israel, Wol- fridus Strabo, the German, and Gerson of the University of Paris. It is improbable that he was acquainted with their writings in the original. He had numerous friends among monks and these may have furnished a medium through which he met these writers. *"I commenced to navigate at fourteen years and I have always followed the sea." Ferdinand Columbus, "Historic" The Science of Columbus 455 It is not too much to conclude that Columbus was better educated at forty than he was at twenty-five ; that an absorp- tive mind, association with men of all nations and all ranks, travel and reading gave him learning more and more each year, sound, serviceable, broad, better than a mediaeval uni- versity could have afforded him in a whole course, much less a few months snatched under the age of fourteen. He spent twenty-six years on the sea before he went to the court of Spain with his project of a westward route to India. He claimed to have visited Frisland and Iceland* ; he was bound to have known the islands of the Mediterranean and he had hugged the African coast as far as San Jorge de Mina. The sea was his highway. Familiarity with the wandering face of the waters begot in him understanding and confidence in it. He was unconsciously equipping himself with the trade previous believers in a round world lacked. He became a nav- igator. Toscanelli, Aristotle or Thales might have believed the earth a globe and believed it for reason? grounded in sci- ence but they could not handle a tiller nor hoist a sail. Sometime in his young manhood while he lived in Portugal he married Phillipa Moniz, daughter of Pietro Moniz de Pe- restrello, governor of the island of Porto Santo. According to Ferdinand Columbus the mother-in-law presented to the Italian his father-in-law's collection of charts, maps and logs such as a sea-captain, a small explorer and the governor of an *"I navigated in 1477 in the month of February 100 leagues beyond the island of Thule," he says in a letter quoted by Ferdinand in his Historic to which Ferdinand adds: "and this by moderns is called Frislanda." *"I was at the fortress of St. George of the Mine belonging to the King of Portugal, which lies below the equinoctial line." Ferdinand Columbus. "Historic" 456 The Science of Columbus insular province might gather together in a life-time. It is natural to suppose that Columbus spent his leisure hours por- ing over the many diverse drawings of the same territory as well as the fanciful sketches of land that existed only in the marvelous tales of travelers. Maps of the day were famous for their difference from each other. There were maps of a square world, of an oval world (Genoese map of 1457), of an apple-shaped world (map of Beatus, 776), a world like a Chines plate (map il- lustrating Sallust's Bellum jugurtinum, nth century), even maps of a globed world drawn with continents not to be iden- tified with land-masses on the face of the earth. (Hereford Map of 1280. See Article Maps, Ency. Brit.) Out of this miscellany Columbus obtained an education in cosmography ; out of it he evolved enough facts to shape a world for himself, a round world that was as beneficent to mankind and as capa- ble of exploration as that already known. A globed world was mapped at a time as remote as 150 B. C. upon a theory conceived seven centuries earlier. Colum- bus was the heir to the belief in a sphere. If he was not a pioneer in the theory, he crystallized the vague surmises of the time and had the courage and the talent to establish his belief. While he was in Portugal poring over maps and shaping his views of a round world and a voyage to the East by the West, there is evidence that he opened correspondence with the Florentine savant, Paola Toscanelli. Several letters de- clared to have been written by the scientist of Florence are preserved as proof that one of the greatest thinkers of the time inspired and urged Columbus to attempt the expedition to India by the West. The Science of Columbus 457 Over the alleged correspondence between the two author- ities have waged a fierce controversy for four centuries. Co- lumbus lived in an age of sham. Forgery was cheerfully in- dulged in whenever authentic evidence was insufficient to prove the point. The great Genoese might have corresponded with Toscanelli and he might not. It is not material. The first paragraph of Toscanelli's first letter shows that Colum- bus had suggested his project to the scientist. "I see your great and magnificent desire to go where the spices grow." The Discoverer shaped his course as often at variance with Toscanelli's theories as in line with them. Columbus was no mere creature of any man's. The fight he made for himself at the very beginning and carried on to the close of his life was based upon a determination to be recognized as the one who had originated the idea, and carried through the labor, of proving the world a globe.* In Portugal he received no encouragement. Addressing the Spanish sovereigns, he bitterly charged the Portuguese King with stupidity. *There is a persistent tradition told of Columbus while living' in Portugal, that a pilot and three or four seamen, remnant of a crew of a merchantman which had been driven by a storm into the far West, were received in the house of Columbus on their return and there died soon after of their mortal experiences. The story goes that the pilot left his log and chart with Columbus, who preempted the information and material furnished him by the dead navigator and sailed upon the chart straightaway to the islands which the pilot had found. Three contemporaneous writers tell this story. (Two (Las Casas and Garcilasso de la Vega, the Inca) accept it without seeing the shadow cast upon the Admiral. The third (Oviedo) who knew Colum- bus and was better able to decide, dismisses it bluntly as fiction. Later writers reject it with a deal more feeling and resentment than the value of the story warrants. 458 The Science of Columbus "He put to shame his sight, hearing and all his faculties for in fourteen years I could not make him understand what I said." At another time he assures the princes of Spain that : "I listened neither to France nor England nor Portugal, the letters of whose sovereigns your Highnesses saw by the hand of Doctor Villalo." No such important letters are preserved or even recorded in the voluminous history of the Genoese. The main import of this reference is to prove that the expedition to the East by the West was an idea old in the mind of the Genoese when he presented himself to them in 1485. Arriving in Spain after the Moorish campaign was well in its third year, he was put off until a more propitious hour. By that time his conception of a round world and a way to the East by the West had crowded all other projects from his mind. He was consumed with a desire to prove his conten- tion and none other. If he had acquired a competence, it had long since been used in support of a family while he spent fourteen years pleading with an uncomprehending court in Portugal. He had reached that exalted state of determination where hunger, cold and exposure amount to nothing so long as an aim may be held true. In want dire enough to move to compassion, a fifteenth century monk accustomed to mediaeval misery, he was intro- duced to the queen by her former confessor and consigned by her to the care of that gentle, kindly, generous knight and royal auditor, Don Alonso de Quintanilla. Thereafter he was entertained here and there over Spain* among friars and *In contrast to Quintanilla's generous treatment of the Genoese without hope or expectation of pay, the letter of the Duque de Medina Celi to the Grand Cardinal of Spain, immediately after the return of The Science of Columbus 459 grandees but the only times when the Discoverer felt want were when he was away from the cordial roof of the noble Quintanilla. When he was finally permitted to present his scheme to the monarchs he offered to the religious nature of the Queen a chance to spread the gospel, to the King territory, to the con- quistadores, gold. Upon these inducements he won a tentative hearing before a council at the University of Salamanca. The importance of this council has been reduced by the research of historians. It is generally accepted as an unofficial affair and its decision was merely a difference of opinion between an ad- vanced thinker and a body of monks or students or members of a faculty, informally convened. That there was a reference of the Discoverer's scheme to a royally appointed council about the year 1491, is incontestable. That the state of the war with Granada precluded support to the expedition is known to have been the verdict of that junta. Before the as- sembled mob of student monks and faculty in Salamanca and before the junta composed of the Grand Cardinal of Spain, Fray Diego de Deza, Alonso de Cardenas, the Prior of Prado, Juan de Cabrera and Alessandro Geraldini, the Italian Am- bassador, Columbus laid his theories. Ferdinand Columbus declares that he did not reveal his plans in their entirety lest Columbus from his first voyage is entertaining. The following is an extract : "It may be eight months since he (Columbus) started and now on his return he has come to Lisbon and has found all that he sought for and very fully. As soon as I learned of this and to make known such good news to Her Highness I wrote her about it by Xuares and I sent him to beg that she would show me favour and allow me to send some of my caravels there each year. I beg your Lordship to kindly aid me in the matter and I entreat it of you on my part since it was through me and by my keeping him in my house for two years and directing him to the service of her Highness that he has accomplished so great a thing." 460 The Science of Columbus they should be pre-empted and used without his participation. His caution along a similar line throughout his Journal very nearly bears out this statement. However, his later arguments before the monarchs in the presence of many of the same per- sons were full and all-persuasive. The conventional belief in the shape of the world, its boun- daries and its nature was simple and Scriptural. Whatever the scientist thought, the common people and the clergy be- lieved the earth to be flat ; that it was bounded upon its outer borders by an ocean that faded away into a mysterious gloom at the edge of things. It was believed to be separate and apart from the heavenly bodies. The sun was believed to revolve around it. Fantastic theories were offered to account for the support of the earth-plane. The one believed the most rational provided a series of im- mense columns among whose labyrinthine gloom the sun threaded its way as it passed under the earth to rise again in the east after setting in the west. These columns rested on anything or nothing. At that point invention seemed to grow feeble. The Scriptures defined the geography of the plane. It had four corners and the land comprised six parts of the seven of its surface.* Upon these claims theologians issued pamphlets *II Esdras 4:42. 1. Writing of the junta in his Christopher Columbus, John Boyd Thatcher says : "Alessandro Geraldini leaned over to the Most Rev. erend Cardinal of Spain, Gonzales de Mendoza and whispered that to his mind the geographical knowledge of the fathers of the Church had been somewhat modified and enlarged since in these days the Portu- guese navigators had been on a point in another hemisphere where the North Star no longer appeared in the heavens and where the pilot's eye was fixed on another Star and another Pole." Columbus was never in great danger of the Inquisition through high churchmen, who at thst date had begun to look upon the fathers of the church as very good saints but indifferent scientists. The Science of Columbus 461 against heresies. Commentaries by numerous saints were their ammunition. 1 Science plays little or no part in their arguments. Reason they used freely without knowing that the simple derivations of reason do not always come up from the deeps of facts. They said that men could not inhabit the other side of the earth because they could not cling head downward to the ground. Oceans would pour away on the under side of the world. Christ had come to all men. If men inhabited the Antipodes they would have been slighted. Sea-faring men added to these scriptural arguments, stories of demons, and monsters, and natural barriers in the shape of whirlpools and magnetic islands that would draw out the nails of ships; seas of sedge and breathless areas of calm. Some declared that the sky failed at certain points and nothing overarched the waters at the uttermost limits. Against these venerable fallacies Columbus had to array new and unique and often perilous argument. He could show the layman the familiar spectacle of a ship approaching a quay, visible first at mast-top, then sails, then deck and finally keel as proof of a world that curved. He could offer the fairly well substantiated tale of the two drowned savages that came ashore at Flores ; he could tell of the great canes and of the bar of wood, wrought, but not with iron that were cast up on the Canaries. To the scientist he could offer deeper argu- ment. He knew the whereabouts of the sun for sixteen hours and because he did not know the rate of the planet's revolu- tion nor indeed that it revolved at all he believed that the sun spent the other eight hours over an unknown extent of ocean about one-third its actual size. Several times, he calculated differences in time between an eclipse of the moon occurring in the western hemisphere with that of the eastern time to bear 462 The Science of Columbus out his belief in the size of the earth at her girth. He did not know at the time he was appealing for funds to make his ex- pedition, that the earth was larger. Whether he ever modified his dimensions of the globe will be discussed later on. "The world is small," he wrote the Sovereigns in the "Lettera Rarissima" after his return from the fourth voyage. "That which is dry, that is to say the land, is six parts. The seventh only is covered with water. ... I say that the world is not as large as commonly asserted." Toscanelli almost exactly estimated the size of the globe.* This computation Columbus refused to accept. Copernicus had not yet pronounced his splendid heresy. Newton had not yet lived. Ptolemy's declaration that the earth could not move at great speed without developing tremendous gales from the east had long since effectively done away with the tolerably cor- rect theory of the earth's revolution advanced some six cen- turies earlier. With the idea of a stationary world upon which to earlier. With the idea of a stationary world upon which to base his computations, the dimensions Columbus obtained for the globe were logical. That he should fail entirely of a cor- rect estimate of the proportions of land and water should be ascribed to his fidelity to the Scriptures. At the beginning he overestimated the size of Asia. He believed that the opposite sides of the Eurasiatic continent approached each other with a water area of a greater or lesser extent between them. Whether this attempt to harmonize Scripture and science kept him in ignorance of the true dimen- sions of his globe until the day of his death is a matter of conjecture. *Toscanelli's figures are 24,969 English miles. M. Faye's meas- urement in 1904 amounted to 24,860 English miles. The Science of Columbus 463 With such matter as would appeal to the minds of those who demand concrete evidence, and with such figures as would arrest the attention of those who deal with unsolved mysteries by mathematics, he approached his Sovereigns and their councils and juntas, unofficial and official with intense earnestness. Spain was at war with the Moors throughout all this time. The Royal Treasury experienced a perennial deficit with a stubborn foe contesting every inch of the Spanish advance. New lands had no charms for a royal pair fighting for their own fief. Expensive adventure could not be undertaken when every maravedi was needed for munitions and mercenaries. In Columbus' usual passionate manner he charges that he was merely laughed at for seven years.* But his petition was granted within ninety days after the surrender of Granada. It is evidence pointing to the sanity and charity of the Queen that the monarchs did not hold him in La Capitulation to the fabulous acquisitions he so often pictured in his argu- ments. Columbus was excitable and incoherent in many of his writings, given to exaggeration, but he lived under tre- mendous pressure a great part of his life and his utterances must be judged by the extremity of his wishfulness and earnestness. It is not unfair to the Discoverer to declare that his inter- ests were also centered in the profits of the expedition, but his ultimate aim as a Crusader gives sufficient cause for a desire to have funds to prosecute the rescue of the Holy Sepulchre. *"Seven years did I remain in the Court of Your Majesties when those to whom I spoke of this enterprise declared with one voice that it was chimerical and foolish." Lettera Rarissima. 464 The Science of Columbus The crown having supplied him with a meagre amount for the expedition he sailed from Palos, August 3, 1492, with a fleet of three vessels, not one of which would have been under- written by any modern maritime insurance company. The voyage outward was peculiarly propitious. The ap- pearance of the volcano on Teneriffe at the beginning of the journey and the passage of a remarkable meteor alarmed the crew and restlessness was noted two or three days before the landfall, but aside from these slight disturbances the journey was serene to the point of monotony. That Columbus chose the month of August in which to sail points to an assumption that he did not expect to cross a great expanse of ocean with equinoctial storms only six or seven weeks away. When he sailed from Palos, he took with him Toscanelli's map which provided for a straightaway sail from Lisbon, but he dropped ten degrees southward on a course of his own. Every map that Columbus had seen, every storm tossed mar- iner that had won home from the jaws of the west had filled the mid-Atlantic with islands of more or less marvelous char- acter. He stubbornly refused to search for these imaginary groups upon encountering vegetation adrift in spite of the loud and boisterous appeals of the brothers Pinzon, pilots of the Pinta and the Nina. When he refused to beat about in search of these islands he was acting upon his own knowledge that insular masses are the final utterance of the continent. He was sure that Cipango (Japan), lying east of Asia, was an island. With the exception of keys and perhaps a string of archipelagoes, Cipango would be the first dry land to be encountered before raising the Asi- atic mainland. His sail had been all too short to reach that, then. The Science of Columbus 465 Under the thirteenth of September after leaving Palos he entered in his Journal the following: "On this day at the beginning of night the needles declined a trifle to the northwest and in the morning they declined a trifle." Had nothing more than this fact come of the expedition, it would have been more than worth all of the efforts of the Discoverer to make the voyage. It was ocular proof that the world was round. It was well known that the needle deflected east of north in European waters. Had the explorer been ex- pecting the needle to deflect west of north as soon as the line of no variation was passed, he would have made an hourly examination of the compass when the declination became less apparent. There is no previous evidence in any of his writ- ings or his verbal arguments to show that he expected this variation. The occurrence promptly explained itself to him. It was no surprise; it was merely unlooked-for evidence that proved his contention. After that day he went forward with the unalterable determination rising upon a belief confirmed. In that hour he assumed his place as the greatest scientist of the times. What occurred afterwards was the fortune of an explorer. On the night of October 11, he encountered one of those spectacular tempests peculiar to the region of the Antilles. While the crews were still wrestling with their feeble craft in the wallow of appalling seas, some anxious squaw on Watling's Island showed a light to guide her fisherman brave into port and the Admiral of the Ocean-sea and Vice-Roy of all the Indies was lighted into a New World by it. When he landed on the following morning, he was so sure 466 The Science of Columbus that he had reached one of the outpost insular masses of Asia that he gave the aborigines their permanent misnomer.* He knew that he had discovered another race. He was sufficiently acquainted with enough representatives of man- kind to separate them at once from the white, the Malay and the negro. He who knew all the kinds of man that can accu- mulate at a port was aware that none of these hawk-nosed horse-haired, copper-skinned folk had mingled with the rest of the world upon any man-built quay. So he called them Indians as the only other race that might be. At this stage of the Discoverer's life began a debate with himself that he probably decided before he was done voyaging over the waste of water and breaking through the wilderness of land in the New World. It is mournfully told by historians of a type that Columbus died without knowing that he had not discovered India. A little closer study of events will call that statement into question. With his belief in a round world confirmed, with the islands of the ocean-sea discovered and acquired as stipulated in his contract, he pressed on confident that his road to India was now open. The next day he proposed to set sail and "go and see if I can encounter the island of Cipango." The Indians told him of Cuba and their information plus his world-old tradition of Cipango led him a twelve-weeks' search through the Antilles. By the first of November he be- gan to waver. He was at that time in Cuba. Under that date *Under October 15 of his Journal he makes the first use of the word " — and I afterwards watched the shore at the time of the landing of the other Indian to whom I had given the aforesaid things and from whom T did not t^ke the ball of cotton although he wished to give it to me." Las Casas. The Science of Columbus 467 he declared he is upon mainland "within a hundred leagues of the marvelous cities of Quinsay and Zaiton."* But men he had sent into the interior to inquire, returned two days later with the information that there were no great or rich cities and he set sail then for the southeast where he had been told lay the country rich in gold, gems and spices. J. B. Thatcher in his work on Columbus says: "At first, on his first voyage and on his second voyage, he doubtless ex- pected to find if not the Great Khan himself at least the outer door of his dwelling but after that, we believe the truth dawned on him, a suspicion positively confirmed on his fourth voyage when on the coast of Veragua he was told that across the land to the west lay another body of water, another ocean and that the western coast of the land, the continental land bore the same relation to the eastern coast where he was then as Fuenterrabia in the Atlantic Ocean bore to Tarragona in the Mediterranean Sea." Much that is contradictory in the narrative of Columbus must be laid to his situation, the times and his temperament. His Journal was written expressly for the eyes of the Sov- ereigns. He had offered India and its wealth, religious field and alliance to them in his argument. Its discovery was to stand as his proof that the world was round. It was the most tempting prize of the expedition. To abandon hope of it would seriously depreciate his gains. Is it not possible to believe that he continued to search for *Journal. 468 The Science of Columbus India long after he was sure that he had not reached it ? Time and again throughout the Journal of his first voyage* he of- fers much forced and untenable encouragement to the Sov- ereigns. Often he quotes absolute dissipation of hope by in- serting information given him by natives. Columbus may have been a stubborn man, preferring to believe as he pleased, but his intelligence was vast. It would be a slander on his mental faculties to believe that a navigator of his experience could coast for years along shores, lifeless, wild, jungle-clad, in the expectation of momently raising a civilization as old as Time, among people still in the Stone Age. Whether or not he began at this time to feel doubts about his India he directed his search painstakingly for gold** and *For instance after dealing strictly with childish savages, accept- ing shelter in straw huts and presenting garments to a King who had never seen clothing he says under the date of January 4, 1493, that "he concludes that Cipango was on that island." He refused at first to believe that the Caribs were cannibals and declared that they were subjects of the Great Khan. Before he left the Indies he surrendered the idea. He found evidence to confirm his beliei and rejected all of it before he returned to Castile. In his Folio Letter to Luis de San- tangel he mentions the Grand Khan once, but the vastness of the people's simplicity and the total absence of any civilization in many and emphatic words. *"Gold was collected by undermining the bank of a stream. At first after the bank falls, the water bubbles up and flows away in a turbid condition but soon having recovered its natural clearness the grains of gold which are heavier than the earth in which they are imbedded and settle to the bottom, are clearly displayed to view." Syllacio-Coma Letter, explaining Indian placer mining. The Science of Columbus 469 spices among the islands that he had found. He knew that he must return to Spain and he felt that a mere cluster of islands inhabited by savages was not reward enough for the liberality of the Spanish monarchs. He must produce revenue enough to justify his expedition. The opportunity of a buccaneer never occurred to him. It occurred to others. In his letter to the nurse of Prince Juan he denies a charge made against him of attempting to barter' the Indies. He might easily have larcenized his discovery and failing to return, dropped the curtain on the New World and the round world until some century far in the future. He collected mined and fashioned gold. He knew free gold or gold in the nugget but there is doubt whether he knew gold-bearing quartz. An assayer, sent with the second expe- dition, was able to cast doubts upon the quality of nuggets found by Columbus himself. He did not know spices in the growing state. Under the date October 23, 1492, of his Jour- nal he states : "And as I must go where great trade may be had, I say that it is not reasonable to delay but to pursue my journey and discover much land until I encounter a very prof- itable country although my understanding is that this one is very well provided with spices ; but / do not know them, which causes me the greatest trouble in the world." Again under October 21, he expresses his alarm at his igno- rance. Sunday, December 30, one of the Pinzons reported that he had found rhubarb, which the Admiral believed. But his description of the plant proved that he was in error. Rhubarb was known in Europe only in the powdered form, used as a medicine. He knew aloes and he recognized cinna- mon, but he confesses that he knew these spices only. He carried with him peppercorns and cinnamon bark, which he 470 The Science of Columbus showed to the Indians when in search of spices. It was only on his second voyage when Dr. Chanca, the queen's physician, accompanied him that he was able to identify spices as they were found. With enough samples of gold, spices and Indians to prove that he had raised "a very profitable country" he returned with all speed to Spain. His rise to greatness was instant. Few successful adventurers have been as warmly applauded and as royally rewarded as was this Italian sailor, returning with a new world for his sovereigns. The Grand Khan and the gorgeous cities of Zaiton and Quinsay fell into insignifi- cance before the chance of conquest and adventure in the esti- mation of the conquistadores. His second expedition had im- mediately a waiting list, not of broken men and convicts and ruffians, but gold-laced and belted knights and lords conscious of their social superiority to the Admiral of the Ocean-sea. Columbus at the pinnacle of his greatness, was vested with powers that were to undo him. It is safe enough to clothe a scientist with a title and allow him an income but to rest in him the duties of an executive may place him without his limitations. It was so in the case of Columbus. The second voyage was one of gold-seeking, ruling and construction which inspires avarice, envy and resistance. He was unfortunate in his association with the average fifteenth century man. He had all that self-centered tedium of manner, all that sensitiveness and solemnity that afflict men with an urge ; he was not always a pleasant companion nor always an admirable figure. Temperamental, almost paranostel, he was nothing different from any man ancient or modern conse- crated to a single purpose and knowing himself solely selected therefor. The Science of Columbus 471 On his second visit to the Indies he built the city of Isabella on the island of Espafiola or Haiti. With a mind to the char- acter of the age, he selected the site not for its agricultural adaptability or for maritime trade but for its proximity to the gold field. It was low and marshy and its soil was thin. Whether he failed to understand these faults or merely ignored them is not settled. At any rate as a city builder he was more energetic than wise and the colony suffered. In the de Torres Memorandum he urges Antonio de Torres to make it plain to the Sovereigns the beauty and inviting features of the spot chosen, which would imply that the Admiral wished to impress upon them that he had been deceived by appearances. The construction of his city nearing completion, he gath- ered a troop of Spanish soldiery together and marched into the interior of Espafiola. Finding the native paths too narrow for his army, the purpose of which was to impress the natives, he set his arquebusiers and belted knights, indiscriminately to work clearing roads. This was just, but rash. It marked the beginning of the Admiral's troubles. Upon that inland journey he discovered the Royal Plain of Haiti, whose waters flowed over sands of gold, and penetrated Cibao, building the fortress of St. Thomas on the way. Cibao was and is still a gold field from which fabulous treasure has been taken and in which fabulous treasure remains to this day. When he returned to his new city of Isabella he found the population prostrate with malaria, conditions of all kinds bad, and the public assayer, Fermin Cedo, declaring that the gold he had analyzed was merely melted ornaments and al- loyed at that. Again the Admiral impressed the leisure class and laborers alike, and higher the flame of resentment and dissatisfaction grew. 472 The Science of Columbus A third incident which added to the Admiral's unpopu- larity occurred later while he was coasting down the long, long edge of Cuba on a voyage of exploration. He had cov- ered more than a thousand miles of it and the end was not yet, when he tried to convince himself it was a continent. He sent a notary among the crews of his vessels to get the opinion of the men and the notary exceeding his authority required of the seamen an oath that it was continental land threatening a pen- alty if the affidavit were afterward repudiated. Navarrete gives the written report of the notary which exonerates the Admiral of any part in this high-handed attempt to declare land a continent by oath. A few days later natives affirmed to Columbus that the land was only a long island and the Discoverer returned to Isabella still defaulting in the second term of his contract, mainland. He was not discouraged. Holding fast to the Apochry- phal statement of the proportion of land and water, with a sea- area already great, he was sure he must find the continent soon. In his affectionate regard for the Scriptures he ham- pered his own science. Columbus freed from the claims of Esdras might have done much that explorers accomplished half a century later. Opposition to him developing in Castile with the Sover- eigns more or less impressed, the Admiral hastened back to Spain. He readily convinced the princes of the value of his discoveries and he was despatched a third time for the Indies in the summer of 1498 to discover and explore. His Journal resumes in the words of Las Casas : "And he ordered the course laid to the way of the south- west which is the route leading from these islands (Canaries) The Science of Columbus 473 to the south in the name, he says, of the Holy and Individual Trinity because then he would be on a parallel with the lands of the sierra of Loa (Sierra Leone) and the cape of Sancta Ana in Guinea which is below the Equinoctial Line where, he says, that below* that line of the world are found more gold and things of value ; and after that he would navigate, the Lord pleasing to the west — " He took this southerly course for a distinct purpose not named in this paragraph but discussed in Spain and Portugal with a good deal of interest. There was, as has been seen, per- sistent reports of mainland south of the Antilles where much gold would be found. The bull by Pope Alexander VI issued shortly after Columbus' return in 1493, had laid a line of de- marcation in the New World dividing Portuguese possessions from those of Spain. It was to quiet the opinion of the King of Portugal that continental land south of the Indies belonged *Columbus owes this belief to Jaime Ferrer, jeweller and geog- rapher, very distinguished for his learning in his times, who wrote to the Admiral thus : "And for this reason (the Queen having commanded him to write to Columbus) and I write my opinion in this matter, and I say that within the equinoctial regions there are great and precious things, such as fine stones and gold and spices and drugs ; ?nd I can say these things in regard to this matter, because of my many conversa- tions that I have had in the Levant, in Alcaire and Domas and because I am a lapidary and because in those places it always pleased me to seek to learn from those who came from yonder, from what clime or province they bring the said things ; and the most I could learn from many Hindoos and Arabs and Ethiopians is that the greater part of valuable things comes from a very hot region where the inhabitants are black or tawny and therefore according to my judg- ment when your Lordship finds such people an abundance of said things will not be lacking; although of all this matter your Lordship knows more when sleeping than I do waking. And of everything, by means of the Divine aid, your Lordship will give such a good accounting that by it, God will be served and the Sovereigns, our Lords, will be satisfied." 474 The Science of Columbus to him that the Discoverer moved south in midsummer along a line near the Equator. Though his course was -definitely outlined, he encountered such stretches of intense tropical heat that he altered his di- rection to the north, but before he had sailed far in that di- rection, on the same day, July 14, 1498, he sighted the island of Trinidad and possessed it. The following Wednesday while replenishing his water supply upon the coast westward, he saw a low, blue misty land to the south. He named it "Ysla Sancta," a diminutive and intramural name for the giant land mass of South America, his continent at last ' Five days later a deputized number from his flagship landed and took possession of the soil of the mainland as an island. But his contract was fulfilled, though he was never vouchsafed absolute confirmation other than the conviction of his own great mind. "Y vuestras Altezas ganaron estas terras tantas qui son otro mundo," he says to his Sovereigns in his narrative of the Third Voyage. "And your Highness will gain these lands which are ANOTHER WORLD !" In the same narrative also, "Y estoy creido que esta es tierra firme, grandissima, de que hasta hoy no se ha sabido." "I am of the belief that this is continental land most vast and which has not been known up to this time." In all his wanderings for six years over land and sea he had never encountered a metal weapon, a house of masonry,* *On his fourth voyage he saw in the region of the "Catiba river" for the first time a "solid edifice" made of stone and plaster which the Admiral takes to be a relic of a by-gone age. The Science of Columbus 475 a government higher than the tribe, a piece of money, a writ- ten word or a clothed human being. India in point of civiliza- tion was rumored to be far superior to contemporaneous Eng- land and France; its refinement was said to be felt as far as its name was known. That this great spread of island and mainland, Adam-innocent, ignorant of all but the simplest forms of tribal government should be adjacent to a land abrim with ancient and all-pervading civilization was not possible. Truth asserted itself. Whether or not thereafter he continued to serve his Sovereigns with a hope of an India near-by, 1 the intelligence of Christopher Columbus stood up sturdily and spoke. Meanwhile the enemies of the Admiral had been active in Castile, and Bobadilla, a vicious and arrogant politician was sent by the Sovereigns to investigate the charges of ineffi- ciency brought against the Admiral because of conditions in Espanola. On arrival at the new colony Bobadilla placed Columbus under arrest and returned him to Spain in chains. Historians place the responsibility of this indignity entirely upon Bobadilla. An effort was made by the friends of the Admiral to remove the irons after Columbus had been placed upon shipboard but he refused to allow it. In his dramatic manner he insisted on wearing them as a reproach to his ene- mies and as an evidence of the ingratitude of men and princes. When he obtained a hearing from his Sovereigns he was again restored to his status and despatched on his fourth and last voyage. He sailed May 9, 1502. The purpose of this expedition was to establish Spain's 1. In the narrative of Diego de Porras it is explicitly charged that Columbus took the charts of the region from the sailors who made them. It is evident that he did not wish the Sovereigns to arrive at conclusions of their own about his India. 476 The Science of Columbus right to South America and to settle new lands. The Admiral was given four ships and dependable crews and told to remain away from Espanola. Circumstances, however, brought him to the new colony and Bobadilla would not permit him to land. Twenty-eight ships under Bobadilla were lying in the roadstead ready to de- part for Castile with accumulated treasure. Signs of a storm of characteristic West Indian severity were prevalent and Co- lumbus sent a messenger warning the commander of the fleet of the danger and urged him not to weigh anchor. His advice was not heeded and his prophecy was ridiculed. Columbus sought shelter in a snug harbor and made all things safe. The fleet of twenty-eight treasure-laden ships with Bobadilla set sail. In a few hours the storm developed and every vessel with every soul on board including Bobadilla was lost. Co- lumbus and his ships escaped without harm. So far as the Discoverer was concerned it was an occur- rence not without a fortunate aspect. Had Bobadilla reached Spain he would have reopened the prosecution of the Admiral, and, Isabella's death occurring shortly, the Admiral would have had no friend at court. Upon this voyage, Columbus was to learn that truth which was to unseat the final deception he entertained of his globe and its dimensions. He was once more upon the mainland, this time upon the Isthmus of Panama among Indians at the mouth of the Vera- gua river. He was told that he was within nine days' journey by land to another sea that washed the western slope of the land. Las Casas commenting on the Admiral's Journal says : "Item : The sea surrounds Ciguare which ought to be The Science of Columbus 477 some city or province of the dominion belonging to the Grand Khan and ten days' journey from there was the river Ganges, and as one of the provinces which the Indians indicated as rich in gold was the province of Veragua, the Admiral be- lieved that those countries were situated in relation to Veragua as Tortosa is to Fuenterarabia as if he understood that one was on one sea and the other on another. Thus it appears that the Admiral imagined that there was another sea which we now call the South Sea and in this he was not deceived, al- though he was in all other things." The Admiral's own words are, translated: "They say, moreover, that the sea boils* in the said prov- ince of Ciguare and that from there it is ten days' journey to the river Ganges. It seems that these lands stand in relation- ship to Beragua as Tortosa stands in relationship with Fuen- terrabia or as Pisa with Venice." The reader consulting maps of Spain and northern Italy and of Panama will be struck with the soundness of the Ad- miral's comparisons. This statement of the Indians quoted and illustrated by the Admiral evidently did not reach cartographers of the next score of years, or failed to impress them if it did. Maps until 1520 allowed only for a strait between the South American land body and the Asiatic continent. The probabilities are that they were convinced by the Admiral's own statement near the middle of his "Lettera Rarissima" in which he reiterates his belief that the world is not as large as commonly supposed. It is at this time that he must have made disposition of his problem. He has the proportions given him by Esdras of land and sea ; he has Sovereigns to satisfy that India is now acces- *Foams. 478 The Science of Columbus sible to them; these upon one hand. On the other he has all that he has seen, all that he has reasoned, all that he surmises in his sagacious and discerning mind to reconcile. He must have known positively that he was upon conti- nental land, not Asia, and that a body of water at least a ten days' sail in width lay between him and Cathay. In the light of these indisputable facts supported by the Admiral's own words, it seems advisable to dismiss as false the ancient tradi- tion that Columbus died in ignorance of his discovery and be- lieving that he had reached India. Why he did not take up a march at once across Panama to the opposite side is easily explained. His ships were crazy, his food exhausted and the folk he encountered on the main- land were not the simple savages of the West Indies. There is something pathetic in his sailing away from that mighty rumor that he had heard to take up the roundabout rambling over the sea. Perhaps what was left to him of life was more to his liking than an end on the limitless breast of the Pacific, or an open admission to the Sovereigns that he had found yet between his New World and India thousands of leagues of mighty world-girth. Having taken possession of Ciguare with its mines of gold, he sailed away to explore the north. Storm and accident stranded him on Jamaica. He sent a real hero by the name of Diego Mendez across a hundred miles of wilderness and furi- ous sea to Espafiola for ships. The man made the trip over- land and by canoe and discharged his mission to the letter. The Admiral and his exhausted crews were rescued after months of waiting by a ship that Mendez had bought with Columbus' money and by one sent by Ovando, governor of Espafiola. The Science of Columbus 479 It was while waiting on rescue that he called into use his astronomical knowledge and frightened the recalcitrant na- tives into providing his men with food, by predicting an eclipse of the moon. It is not probable that the Admiral made the calculation himself. The chances are that he carried with him one of Johannes Muller's Calendarium, a book issued in 1474, which calculated eclipses and movements of the heavenly bodies years in advance. In his "Book of Prophecies" Columbus mentions eclipses twice, adding enough personal observations to warrant the belief that he knew and understood astronomy. In his new ships he returned to Espanola where he was kindly received, but his wound had opened afresh,* gout af- flicted him, and his years weighed upon him. He returned to Spain in November of 1504. He had fulfilled the terms of his contract. If he had not opened an ocean route to India it was the fault of the config- uration of the globe not his own. He had delivered a new hemisphere, the richest on the globe to Spain. This done, the ungrateful survivor of the party of the second part, Ferdinand, refused to live up to his terms. Christopher Columbus, one of the greatest scientists of all times, part owner of half the globe, died in poverty and men- tal disquiet, as somehow they always die who achieve mightily for mankind. When he left Palos in August, 1492, he was the foremost *There is no account of a wound in all the history of the Admiral but when the casket containing his ashes was opened twenty-five or thirty years ago a bullet of lead weighing an ounce was found in his dust. The presumption is that he was wounded at some period of his life, when he was obscure and roving, and the bullet was never removed. 480 The Science of Columbus thinker of the day ; when he landed on Watling's Island he was a bewildered, ignorant man on the threshold of immense facts old and new. When he dragged himself from the ship he had bought with his own money, in the harbor of San Lu- car de Barrameda, in Spain, he was again the foremost thinker of the day, for he had learned mightily, more than he chose to tell the world or his friend among the Sovereigns of Spain. He knew his people, his times and his monarchs. When he uncovered continental land unknown to that hour, he recog- nized that he had not opened a way for trade with India, nor revealed the whereabouts of the gorgeous cities of Quinsay and Zaiton to the avaricious age. Instead he had given it treasure greater than the fabulous wealth of many Indias but a virgin wealth that had to be gained by toil and pains. This was hardly welcomed by that people accustomed to profit without labor. He deemed it wise to keep his greatest knowl- edge within himself. He lived before Tycho Brahe, before Copernicus, before Galileo and before Newton. Available scientific facts to guide him were fewer than those in the knowledge of the school-boy to-day. But he had a vision that could penetrate the dark without help. His was a twilight age and in spite of intimida- tion, in spite of injustice and vast difficulty, he lessened the obscurity so that all men might see. Note — Acknowledgment is made to Tohn Boyd Thatcher' ''Christopher Columbus" for translations in this article.