Part 31 (1/2)
[Sidenote: Cibao gold mines.]
Not one of the reports from these minor explorations was satisfactory, and December 7, the entire fleet weighed anchor to proceed farther east.
Stress of weather caused them to put into a harbor, which on examination seemed favorable for their building project. The roadstead was wide. A rocky point offered a site for a citadel. There were two rivers winding close by in an attractive country, and capable of running mills. Nature, as they saw it, was variegated and alluring. Flowers and fruits were in abundance. ”Garden seeds came up in five days after they were sown,”
says Coma of their trial of the soil, ”and the gardens were speedily clothed in green, producing plentifully onions and pumpkins, radishes and beets.” ”Vegetables,” wrote Dr. Chanca, ”attain a more luxuriant growth here in eight days than they would in Spain in twenty.” It was also learned that the gold mines of the Cibao mountains were inland from the spot, at no great distance.
The disembarkation began. Days of busy exertion followed. Horses, livestock, provisions, munitions, and the varied merchandise were the centre of a lively scene about their encampment. This they established near a sheet of water. Artificers, herdsmen, cavaliers, priests, laborers, and placemen made up the motley groups which were seen on all sides.
[Sidenote: Sickness in the colony.]
In later years, the Spaniards regulated all the formalities and prescribed with precision the proceedings in the laying out of towns in the New World, but Columbus had no such directions. The planting of a settlement was a novel and untried method. It was a natural thought to commemorate in the new Christian city the great patroness of his undertaking, and the settlement bore from the first the name of Isabella. His engineers laid out square and street. A site for the church was marked, another for a public storehouse, another for the house of the Admiral,--all of stone. The ruins of these three buildings are the most conspicuous relics in the present solitary waste. The great ma.s.s of tenements, which were stretched along the streets back from the public square, where the main edifice stood, were as hastily run up as possible, to cover in the colony. It was time enough for solider structures later to take their places. Parties were occupied in clearing fields and setting out orchards. There were landing piers to be made at the sh.o.r.e. So everybody tasked bodily strength in rival endeavors. The natural results followed in so incongruous a crowd. Those not accustomed to labor broke down from its hards.h.i.+ps. The seekers for pleasure, not finding it in the common toil, rushed into excesses, and imperiled all.
The little lake, so attractive to the inexperienced, was soon, with its night vapors, the source of disease. Few knew how to protect themselves from the insidious malaria. Discomfort induced discouragement, and the mental firmness so necessary in facing strange and exacting circ.u.mstances gave way.
[Sidenote: Columbus sick.]
Forebodings added greater energy to the disease. It was not long before the colony was a camp of hospitals, about one half the people being incapacitated for labor. In the midst of all this downheartedness Columbus himself succ.u.mbed, and for some weeks was unable to direct the trying state of affairs, except as he could do so in the intervals of his la.s.situde.
But as the weeks went on a better condition was apparent. Work took a more steady aspect. The s.h.i.+ps had discharged their burdens. They lay ready for the return voyage.
[Sidenote: Sends Ojeda to seek the Cibao mines.]
Columbus had depended on the exertions of the little colony at La Navidad to ama.s.s a store of gold and other precious commodities with which to laden the returning vessels. He knew the disappointment which would arise if they should carry little else than the dismal tale of disaster. Nothing lay upon his mind more weightily than this mortification and misfortune. There was nothing to be done but to seek the mines of Cibao, for the chance of sending more encouraging reports.
Gold had indeed been brought in to the settlement, but only scantily; and its quant.i.ty was not suited to make real the gorgeous dreams of the East with which Spain was too familiar.
So an expedition to Cibao was organized, and Ojeda was placed in command. The force a.s.signed to him was but fifteen men in all, but each was well armed and courageous. They expected perils, for they had to invade the territory of Caonabo, the destroyer of La Navidad.
[Sidenote: 1494. January. First ma.s.s.]
The march began early in January, 1494; perhaps just after they had celebrated their first solemn ma.s.s in a temporary chapel on January 6.
For two days their progress was slow and toilsome, through forests without a sign of human life, for the savage denizens had moved back from the vicinity of the Spaniards. The men encamped, the second night, on the top of a mountain, and when the dawn broke they looked down on its further side over a broad valley, with its scattered villages. They boldly descended, and met nothing but hospitality from the villagers.
Their course now lay towards and up the opposite slope of the valley.
They pushed on without an obstacle.
[Sidenote: Gold found.]
[Sidenote: Gorvalan's expedition.]
The rude inhabitants of the mountains were as friendly as those of the valley. They did not see nor did they hear anything of the great Caonabo. Every stream they pa.s.sed glittered with particles of gold in its sand. The natives had an expert way of separating the metal, and the Spaniards flattered them for their skill. Occasionally a nugget was found. Ojeda picked up a lump which weighed nine ounces, and Peter Martyr looked upon it wonderingly when it reached Spain. If all this was found on the surface, what must be the wealth in the bowels of these astounding mountains? The obvious answer was what Ojeda hastened back to make to Columbus. A similar story was got from a young cavalier, Gorvalan, who had been dispatched in another direction with another force. There was in all this the foundation of miracles for the glib tongue and lively imagination. One of these exuberant stories reached Coma, and Scillacio makes him say that ”the most splendid thing of all (which I should be ashamed to commit to writing, if I had not received it from a trustworthy source) is that, a rock adjacent to a mountain being struck with a club, a large quant.i.ty of gold burst out, and particles of gold of indescribable brightness glittered all around the spot. Ojeda was loaded down by means of this outburst.” It was stories like these which prepared the way for the future reaction in Spain.
[Sidenote: Columbus writes to the sovereigns.]
There was material now to give spirit to the dispatch to his sovereigns, and Columbus sat down to write it. It has come down to us, and is printed in Navarrete's collection, just as it was perused by the King and Queen, who entered in the margins their comments and orders.
Columbus refers at the beginning to letters already written to their Highnesses, and mentions others addressed to Father Buele and to the treasurer, but they are not known. Then, speaking of the expeditions of Ojeda and Gorvalan, he begs the sovereigns to satisfy themselves of the hopeful prospects for gold by questioning Gorvalan, who was to return with the s.h.i.+ps. He advises their Highnesses to return thanks to G.o.d for all this. Those personages write in the margin, ”Their Highnesses return thanks to G.o.d!” He then explains his embarra.s.sment from the sickness of his men,--the ”greater part of all,” as he adds,--and says that the Indians are very familiar, rambling about the settlement both day and night, necessitating a constant watch. As he makes excuses and gives his reasons for not doing this or that, the compliant monarchs as constantly write against the paragraphs, ”He has done well.” Columbus says he is building stone bulwarks for defense, and when this is done he shall provide for acc.u.mulating gold. ”Exactly as should be done,” chime in the monarchs. He then asks for fresh provisions to be sent to him, and tells how much they have done in planting. ”Fonseca has been ordered to send further seeds,” is the comment. He complains that the wine casks had been badly coopered at Seville, and that the wine had all run out, so that wine was their prime necessity. He urges that calves, heifers, a.s.ses, working mares, be sent to them; and that above all, to prevent discouragement, the supplies should arrive at Isabella by May, and that particularly medicines should come, as their stock was exhausted. He then refers to the cannibals whom he would send back, and asks that they may be made acquainted with the true faith and taught the Spanish tongue. ”His suggestions are good,” is the marginal royal comment.
[Sidenote: Columbus proposes a trade in slaves.]