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CHAPTER X.
FROM PARADISE TO PRISON.
The True Story of Christopher Columbus, Called the Great Admiral | ![]() |
10.
CHAPTER X.
FROM PARADISE TO PRISON.
IF you know a boy or a girl whose mind is set on any one thing, you will find that they are always talking about that thing. Is not this so? They have what people call a "hobby" (which is a kind of a horse, you know), and they are apt, as we say, to "ride their hobby to death."
If this is true of certain boys and girls, it is even more true of men and women. They get to be what we call people of one idea, and whatever they see or whatever they do always turns on that one idea.
It was so with Columbus. All his life his one idea had been the finding of Asia—the Indies, or Cathay, as he called it—by sailing to the west. He did sail to the west. He did find land. And, because of this, as we have seen, all his

THE THREE SHIPS OF COLUMBUS LEAVING "PARADISE."
("So at last he turned away from the lovely land that he thought must
be Paradise and steered toward Hayti")
[Description:
Drawing of several ships sailing on the ocean.
]
So, when he looked toward the west, as he sailed around the island of Trinidad and saw the distant shore, he said it was a new part of Asia. He was as certain of this as he had before been certain that Cuba was a part of the Asiatic mainland.
But when he sailed into the mouth of the great Orinoco River he
was puzzled. For the water was no longer salt; it grew fresher and
fresher as he sailed on. And it rushed out so furiously through the two
straits at the northern and southern ends of Trinidad (which because of
the terrible rush of their currents he called the Lion's Mouth and the
Dragon's Mouth) that he was at first unable to explain it all.
IN THE DRAGON'S MOUTH.
[Description:
Drawing of a ship sailing through stormy waters.
]
Then he had a curious idea. Columbus was a great reader of the Bible; some of the Bible scholars of his day said that the Garden of Eden was in a far Eastern land where a mighty river came down through it from the hills of Paradise; as Columbus saw the beautiful
He would gladly have sailed across the broad bay and up the great river to explore this heavenly land; but he was ill with gout, he was nearly blind from his sore eyes, his ships were shaky and leaky, and he felt that he ought to hurry away to the city of Isabella where his brothers, Bartholomew and Diego, were in charge of affairs and were, he knew, anxiously waiting for him to come back.
So at last he turned away from the lovely land that he thought must be Paradise and steered toward Hayti. On the nineteenth of August he arrived off the coast of Hayti. He sent a messenger with news of his arrival, and soon greeted his brother Bartholomew, who, when he heard of the Admiral's arrival, sailed at once to meet him.
Bartholomew Columbus had a sad story to tell his brother Christopher. Things had been going badly in Hayti, and the poor Admiral grew sicker and sicker as he listened to what Bartholomew had to tell.
You have heard it said that there are black sheep in every flock. There were black sheep in this colony of Columbus. There were lazy men and discontented men and jealous men, and they made great trouble, both in the city of Isabella and in the new town which Bartholomew had built in another part of the island and called Santo Domingo.
Such men are sure to make mischief, and these men in Hayti had
made a lot of it. Columbus had staid so long in Spain that these men
began to say that they knew he was certainly in trouble or disgrace
there, that the king and queen were angry with him, and that his offices
of viceroy and admiral were to be taken away from him. If this were so,
they were going to look out for themselves, they said. They would no
longer obey the commands of the Admiral's brothers, Bartholomew and
Diego, whom he had left in charge.
BARTHOLOMEW COLUMBUS, BROTHER OF THE ADMIRAL.
[Description:
Drawing of Bartholomew Columbus.
]
So they rose in rebellion, and made things so uncomfortable for the two brothers that the colony was soon full of strife and quarreling.
The leader of this revolt was one of the chief men in the colony. His name was Roldan. When Columbus and Bartholomew sailed into the harbor of Santo Domingo, on the thirtieth of August, they found that Roldan and his followers had set up a camp for themselves in another part of the island, and given out that they were determined never to have anything more to do with the three Columbus brothers.
This rebellion weakened the colony dreadfully. Things
So the Admiral wrote Roldan a letter in which he offered to forgive and forget all that he had done if he would come back and help make the colony strong and united again. Roldan agreed to do this, if he could have the same position he held before, and if Columbus would see that his followers had all the land they wanted. Columbus agreed to this and also gave the rebels permission to use the poor natives as slaves on their lands. So the trouble seemed to be over for a while, and Columbus sent two of his ships to Spain with letters to the king and queen. But in these letters he accused Roldan of rebellion and tried to explain why it was that things were going so badly in Hayti.
But when these ships arrived in Spain the tidings they brought and the other letters sent by them only made matters worse. People in Spain had heard so many queer things from across the sea that they were beginning to lose faith in Columbus. The men who had lost health and money in the unlucky second voyage of the Admiral were now lazy loafers about the docks, or they hung about the court and told how Columbus had made beggars of them, while they hooted after and insulted the two sons of Columbus
Then came the ships with news of Roldan's rebellion, but with
little or no gold. And people said this was a fine viceroy who couldn't
keep order among his own men because, no doubt, he was too busy hiding
away for his own use the gold and pearls they knew he must have found in
the river of Paradise he said he had discovered.
ON THE DOCK AT CADIZ
[Description:
Drawing of several workers on the Dock at Cadiz.
]
("No gold! This is fine Viceroy," they said.)
Then came five shiploads of Indian slaves, sent to Spain by Columbus, and along with them came the story that Columbus had forgiven Roldan for his rebellion and given him lands and office in Hayti.
King Ferdinand

PADDLES AND POTS FROM THE INDIES.
[Description: Drawing of several pots and miscellaneous utensils. ]More letters came from Columbus asking the king and
queen to let him keep up his slave-trade, and to send out
some one to act as a judge of his quarrel with Roldan.
Then the king and queen decided that something must be
"HE LISTENED TO THE COMPLAINTS OF ALL THE BLACK SHEEP."
[Description:
Drawing of several men standing in a group.
]
Bobadilla sailed at once. But before he got across the sea matters, as we know, had been straightened out by the Admiral; and when Bobadilla reached Hayti he found everything quiet there. Columbus had made friends with Roldan (or made believe that he had), and had got things into good running order again.
This was not what Bobadilla had reckoned upon. He had expected to find things in such a bad way that he would have to take matters into his own hand at once, and become a greater man than the Admiral. If everything was all right he would have his journey for nothing and everybody would laugh at him. So he determined to go ahead, even though there was no necessity for his taking charge of affairs. He had been sent to do certain things, and he did them at once. Without asking Columbus for his advice or his assistance, he took possession of the forts and told every one that he was governor now. He said that he had come to set things straight, and he listened to the complaints of all the black sheep of the colony—and how they did crowd around him and say the worst things they could think of against the Admiral they had once been so anxious to follow.
Bobadilla listened to all their stories. He proceeded to use the power the king and queen had given him to punish and disgrace Columbus—which was not what they meant him to do. He moved into the palace of the Admiral; he ordered the Admiral and his brothers to come to him, and when they came expecting to talk things over, Bobadilla

FEATHERS AND FRUIT FROM THE INDIES.
[Description: Drawing of a collection of fruit and feathers. ]Columbus's saddest day had come. The man who had found a new world for his king and queen, who had worked so hard in their service and who had meant to do right, although he had made many mistakes, was thrust into prison as if he were a thief or a murderer. The Admiral of the Ocean Seas, the Viceroy of the Indies, the grand man whom all Spain had honored and all the world had envied, was held as a prisoner in the land he had found, and all his powers were taken by a stranger. He was sick, he was disappointed, he was defeated in all his plans. And now he was in chains. His third voyage had ended the worst of all. He had sailed away to find Cathay; he had, so he believed, found the Garden of Eden and the river of Paradise. And here, as an end to it all, he was arrested by order of the king and queen he had tried to serve, his power and position were taken from him by an insolent and unpitying messenger from Spain; he was thrown into prison and
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CHAPTER X.
FROM PARADISE TO PRISON.
The True Story of Christopher Columbus, Called the Great Admiral | ![]() |