![]() |
CHAPTER IX.
HOW THE TROUBLES OF THE ADMIRAL BEGAN.
The True Story of Christopher Columbus, Called the Great Admiral | ![]() |
9.
CHAPTER IX.
HOW THE TROUBLES OF THE ADMIRAL BEGAN.
BOTH the farmers and the gold hunters had a hard time of it in the land they had come to so hopefully. The farmers did not like to farm when they thought they could do so much better at gold hunting; the gold hunters found that it was the hardest kind of work to get from the water or pick from the rocks the yellow metal they were so anxious to obtain.
Columbus himself was not satisfied with the small amount of gold he got from the streams and mines of Hayti; he was tired of the wrangling and grumbling of his men. So, one day, he hoisted sail on his five ships and started away
He sailed to the south and discovered the island of Jamaica.
Then he coasted along the shores of Cuba. The great island stretched
away so many miles that Columbus was certain it was the mainland of
Asia. There was some excuse for this mistake. The great number of small
islands he had sailed by all seemed to lie just as the books about
Cathay that he had read said they did; the trees and fruits that he
found in these islands seemed to be just the same that travelers said
grew in Cathay.
ALONG THE SHORE OF CUBA.
[Description:
Drawing of the Cuban shore.
]
To be sure the marble temples, the golden-roofed palaces, the gorgeous cities had not yet appeared; but Columbus was so certain that he had found Asia that he made all his men sign a paper in which they declared that the land they had found (which was, as you know, the island of Cuba) was really and truly the coast of Asia.
This did not make it so, of course; but it made the people of Spain, and the king and queen, think it was so. And this was most important. So, to keep the sailors from going back on their word and the statement they had signed,
Then Columbus, fearing another shipwreck or another mutiny, sailed back again to the city of Isabella. His men were discontented, his ships were battered and leaky, his hunt for gold and palaces had again proved a failure. He sailed around Jamaica; he got as far as the eastern end of Hayti, and then, just as he was about to run into the harbor of Isabella, all his strength gave out. The strain and the disappointment were too much for him; he fell very, very sick, and on the twenty-ninth of September, 1494, after just about five months of sailing and wandering and hunting, the Nina ran into Isabella Harbor with Columbus so sick from fever that he could not raise his hand or his head to give an order to his men.
For five long months Columbus lay in his stone house on the plaza or square of Isabella a very sick man. His brother Bartholomew had come across from Spain with three supply ships, bringing provisions for the colony. So Bartholomew took charge of affairs for a while.
And while Columbus lay so sick, some of the leading men in the colony seized the ships in which Bartholomew Columbus had come to his brother's aid, and sailing back to Spain they told the king and queen all sorts of bad stories
At last Columbus began to grow better. And when he knew what his enemies had done he was very much troubled for fear they should get the king and queen to refuse him any further aid. So, just as soon as he was able, on the tenth of March, 1496, he sailed home to Spain.
How different was this from his splendid setting out from Cadiz two years before. Then everything looked bright and promising; now everything seemed dark and disappointing. The second voyage to the Indies had been a failure.
So, tired of his hard work in trying to keep his dissatisfied men in order, in trying to check the Indians who were
The voyage had been a tedious one. Short of food, storm-tossed and full of aches and pains the starving company "crawled ashore," glad to be in their home land once more, and most of them full of complaints and grumblings at their commander, the Admiral.
And Columbus felt as downcast as any. He came ashore dressed, not in the gleaming armor and crimson robes of a conqueror, as on his first return, but in the garb of what was known as a penitent—the long, coarse gown, the knotted girdle and peaked hood of a priest. For, you see, he did not know just what terrible stories had been told by his enemies; he did not know how the king and queen would receive him. He had promised them so much; he had brought them so little. He had sailed away so hopefully; he had come back humbled and hated. The greatest man in the world, he had been in 1492; and in 1496 he was unsuccessful, almost friendless and very unpopular. So you see,
But, as is often the case, Columbus was too full of fear. He was
not really in such disgrace as he thought he was. Though his enemies
had said all sorts of hard things against him, the king—and especially
the queen—could not forget that he was, after all, the man who, had
found the new land for Spain; they knew that even though he had not
brought home the great riches that were to have been gathered in the
Indies, he had still found for Spain a land that would surely, in time,
give to it riches, possessions and power.
COLUMBUS IN THE GARB OF A PRIEST.
[Description:
Drawing of Columbus and several other men wearing long, hooded robes.
]
(At the church in Cadiz after his return from his second voyage.)
So they sent knightly messengers to Columbus telling him

THE QUEEN'S MESSENGERS.
[Description: Drawing of several men dressed in armor riding on horses. ]I am afraid the king and queen of Spain were beginning to feel a little doubtful as to this still undiscovered Cathay. At any rate, they had other matters to think of and they did not seem so very anxious to spend more money on ships and sailors. But they talked very nicely to Columbus; they gave him a new title (this time it was duke or marquis); they made him a present of a great tract of land in Hayti, but it was months and months before they would help him with the ships and money he kept asking for.
At last, however, the queen, Isabella, who had always had
There was not nearly so much excitement among the people about
this voyage. Cathay and its riches had almost become an old story; at
any rate it was a story that was not altogether believed in. Great
crowds did not now follow the Admiral from place to place begging him to
take them with him to the Indies. The hundreds of sick, disappointed and
angry men who had come home poor when they expected to be rich, and sick
when they expected to be strong, had gone through the land, and folks
began to think that Cathay was after all only a dream, and that the
stories of great gold and of untold riches which they had heard were but
"sailors' yarns" which no one could believe.
FERDINAND AND ISABELLA.
[Description:
Drawn portraits of Ferdinand and Isabella.
]
So it was hard to get together a crew large enough to man the six vessels that made up the fleet. At last, however, all was ready, and with a company of two hundred men, besides his sailors, Columbus hoisted anchor in the little port of San Lucar just north of Cadiz, near the mouth of the Guadalquivir river, and sailed away into the West.
This time he was determined to find the continent of Asia. Even though, as you remember, he made his men sign a paper saying that the coast of Cuba was Asia, he really seems to have doubted this himself. He felt that he had only found islands. If so, he said, Cathay must be the other side of those islands; and Cathay is what I must find.
So, with this plan in mind, he sent three of his ships to
the little settlement of Isabella, and with the other three he
sailed more to the southwest. On the first of August the
IN SIGHT OF THE MOUNTAIN PEAKS OF TRINIDAD.
[Description:
Drawing of several ships sailing on the ocean.
]
Look on your map of South America and you will see that Trinidad lies almost in the mouth of the Orinoco, a mighty river in the northern part of South America.
Columbus coasted about this island, and as he did so, looking across to the west, he saw what he supposed to be still another island. It was not. It was the coast of South America. For the first time, but without knowing it, Columbus saw the great continent he had so long been hunting for, though he had been seeking it under another name.
So you see, the story of Columbus shows how his life was full of mistakes. In his first voyage he found an island and thought it was the mainland of the Eastern Hemisphere; in his third voyage he discovered the mainland of the New World and thought it only an island off the coast of the Old World. His life was full of mistakes, but those mistakes have turned out to be, for us, glorious successes.
![]() |
CHAPTER IX.
HOW THE TROUBLES OF THE ADMIRAL BEGAN.
The True Story of Christopher Columbus, Called the Great Admiral | ![]() |