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CHAPTER XI.
HOW THE ADMIRAL CAME AND WENT AGAIN.
The True Story of Christopher Columbus, Called the Great Admiral | ![]() |
11.
CHAPTER XI.
HOW THE ADMIRAL CAME AND WENT AGAIN.
I SUPPOSE you think Bobadilla was a very cruel man. He was. But in his time people were apt to be cruel to one another whenever they had the power in their own hands. The days in which Columbus lived were not like these in which we are living. You can never be too thankful for that, boys and girls. Bobadilla had been told to go over the water and set the Columbus matters straight. He had been brought up to believe that to set matters straight you must be harsh and cruel; and so he did as he was used to seeing other people in power do. Even Queen Isabella did not hesitate to do some dreadful things to certain people she did not like when she got them in her power. Cruelty was common in those days. It was what we call the "spirit of the age." So you must not blame Bobadilla too much, although we will all agree that it was very hard on Columbus.
So Columbus, as I have told you, sailed back to Spain.

COLUMBUS IN CHAINS.
[Description: Drawing of Columbus with chains around his arms and legs. ]
THE MAN WHO WANTED "TO SET MATTERS STRAIGHT."
[Description: Drawing of Bobadilla. ]It always makes us sad to see any one in great trouble. To hear of a great man who has fallen low or of a rich man who has become poor, always makes us say: Is not that too bad? Columbus had many enemies in Spain. The nobles of the court, the men who had lost money in voyages to the Indies, the people whose fathers and sons and brothers had sailed away never to return, could not say anything bad enough about "this upstart Italian," as they called Columbus.
But to the most of the people Columbus was still the
So when on a certain October day, in the year 1500, it was spread abroad that a ship had just come into the harbor of Cadiz, bringing home the great Admiral, Christopher Columbus, a prisoner and in chains, folks began to talk at once. Why, who has done this? they cried. Is this the way to treat the man who found Cathay for Spain, the man whom the king and the queen delighted to honor, the man who made a procession for us with all sorts of birds and animals and pagan Indians? It cannot be. Why, we all remember how he sailed into Palos Harbor eight years ago and was received like a prince with banners and proclamations and salutes. And now to bring him home in chains! It is a shame; it is cruel; it is wicked. And when people began to talk in this way, the very ones who had said the worst things against him began to change their tone.
As soon as the ship got into Cadiz, Columbus sent off a letter to a friend of his at the court in the beautiful city of Granada. This letter was, of course, shown to the queen. And it told all about what Columbus had suffered, and was, so full of sorrow and humbleness and yet of pride in what he had been able to do, even though he had been disgraced, that
She took the letter to King Ferdinand, and at once both the king and the queen hastened to send a messenger to Columbus telling him how angry and sorry they were that Bobadilla should have dared to treat their good friend the Admiral so. They ordered his immediate release from imprisonment; they sent him a present of five thousand dollars and asked him to come to court at once.
On the seventeenth of December, 1500, Columbus came to the court at Granada in the beautiful palace of the Alhambra. He rode on a mule. At that time, in Spain, people were not allowed to ride on mules, because if they did the Spanish horses would not be bought and sold, as mules were so much cheaper and were easier to ride. But Columbus was sick and it hurt him to ride horseback, while he could be fairly comfortable on an easy-going mule. So the king and queen gave him special permission to come on mule-back.
When Columbus appeared before the queen, looking so sick and troubled, Isabella was greatly affected. She thought of all he had done and all he had gone through and all he had suffered, and as he came to the steps of the throne the queen burst into tears. That made Columbus cry too, for he thought a great deal of the queen, and he fell at her feet and told her how much he honored her, and how much he was ready to do for her, if he could but have the chance.
Then the king and queen told him how sorry they were that any one
should have so misunderstood their desires and have treated their brave
and loyal Admiral so shamefully. They promised to make everything all
right for him again, and to show him that they were his good friends now
as they always had been since the day he first sailed away to find the
Indies for them and for Spain.
The ALHAMBRA.
[Description:
Drawing of the outside of the Alhambra.
]
Of course this made Columbus feel much better. He had left Hayti in fear and trembling. He had come home expecting something dreadful was going to happen; he would not have been surprised at a long imprisonment; he would not even have been surprised if he had been put to

THE COURT OF THE LIONS IN THE ALHAMBRA.
[Description: Drawing of the Court of the Lions. ]Now Columbus, as you must have found out by this time, was as quick to feel glad as he was to feel sad. And when he found that the king and queen were his friends once more, he became full of hope again and began to say where he would go and what he would do when he went back again as Viceroy of the Indies and Admiral of the Ocean Seas. He begged the queen to let him go back again at once, with ships and sailors and the power to do as he pleased in the islands he had found and in the lands he hoped to find.
They promised him everything, for promising is easy. But Columbus had once more to learn the truth of the old Bible warning that he had called to mind years before on the Bridge of Pinos: Put not your trust in princes.
The king and queen talked very nicely and promised much, but to one thing King Ferdinand had made up his mind—Columbus should never go back again to the Indies as viceroy or governor. And King Ferdinand was as stubborn as Columbus was persistent.
Not very much gold had yet been brought back from the Indies, but the king and queen knew from the reports of those who had been over the seas and kept their eyes open that, in time, a great deal of gold and treasure would come from there. So they felt that if they kept their promises to Columbus he would take away too large a slice of their profits, and if they let him have everything to say there it would not be possible to let other people, who were ready to share the profits with them, go off discovering on their own hook.
So they talked and delayed and sent out other expeditions and kept Columbus in Spain, unsatisfied. Another governor was sent over to take the place of Bobadilla, for they soon learned that that ungentlemanly knight was not even so good or so strict a governor as Columbus had been.
Almost two years passed in this way and still Columbus staid in Spain. At last the king and queen said he might
Columbus did not relish being told where to go and where not to go like this; but he promised. And on the ninth of May, 1502, with four small caravels and one hundred and fifty men, Christopher Columbus sailed from Cadiz on his fourth and last voyage to the western world.
He was now fifty-six years old. That is not an age at which we would call any one an old man. But Columbus had grown old long before his time. Care, excitement, exposure, peril, trouble and worry had made him white-haired and wrinkled. He was sick, he was nearly blind, he was weak, he was feeble—but his determination was just as firm, his hope just as high, his desire just as strong as ever. He was bound, this time, to find Cathay.
And he had one other wish. He had enemies in Hayti; they had laughed and hooted at him when he had been dragged off to prison and sent in chains on board the ship. He did wish to get even with them. He could not forgive them. He wanted to sail into the harbor of Isabella and Santo Domingo with his four ships and to say: See, all of you! Here I am again, as proud and powerful as ever. The king and queen have sent me over here once more with ships and sailors at my command. I am still the Admiral of the Ocean Seas and all you tried to do against me has amounted to nothing,
This is not the right sort of a spirit to have, either for
At any rate, it was not to be gratified with Columbus. When his
ships arrived off the coast of Hayti, although his orders from the king
and queen were not to stop at the island going over, the temptation to
show himself was too strong. He could not resist it. So he sent word to
the new governor, whose name was Ovando, that he had arrived with his
fleet for the discovery of new lands in the Indies, and that he wished
to come into Santo Domingo Harbor as one of his ships needed repairs; he
would take the opportunity, he said, of mending his vessel and visiting
the governor at the same time.
"I AM STILL THE ADMIRAL!"
[Description:
Drawing of Columbus standing on the deck of his ship.
]
Now it so happened that Governor Ovando was just
about sending to Spain a large fleet. And in these ships were
to go some of the men who had treated Columbus so badly.
Bobadilla, the ex-governor, was one of them; so was the
rebel Roldan who had done so much mischief; and there
were others among the passengers and prisoners whom
THE OLD CASTLE AND WATER BATTERIES AT SANTO DOMINGO.
[Description:
Drawing of the castle and water batteries at Santo Domingo.
]
We cannot altogether make out whether Governor Ovando was a
friend to Columbus or not. At any rate, he felt that it would be unwise
and unsafe for Columbus to come into the harbor or show himself in the
town when so many of his bitter enemies were there. So he sent back word
to Columbus that he was sorry, but that really he could not let him come
in.
GETTING READY THE GOLD FLEET.
[Description:
Drawing of several ships.
]
How bad that must have made the old Admiral feel! To be refused admission to the place he had found and built up for Spain! It was unkind, he said; he must and would go in.
Just then Columbus, who was a skillful sailor and knew all the signs of the sky, and all about the weather, happened to notice the singular appearance of the sky, and saw that there was every sign that a big storm was coming on. So he sent word to Governor Ovando again, telling him of this,

CORNER OF THE CITY WALL AND SENTRY BOX, SANTO DOMINGO.
[Description: Drawing of the stone city wall and sentry box of Santo Domingo. ]Now, among the twenty-six vessels of the gold fleet was one in which was stored some of the gold that belonged to Columbus as his share, according to his arrangement with

THE WRECK OF BOBADILLA'S SHIP.
[Description: Drawing of a ship tossed about by a storm. ]But the people in Santo Domingo put no faith in the Admiral's "probabilities." There will be no storm, the captains
But almost before they had reached the eastern end of the island of Hayti, the storm that Columbus had prophesied burst upon them.
It was a terrible tempest. Twenty of the ships went to the
bottom. The great gold fleet was destroyed. The enemies of
Columbus—Bobadilla, Roldan and the rest were drowned. Only a few of the
ships managed to get back into Santo Domingo Harbor, broken and
shattered. And the only ship of all the great fleet that got safely
through the storm and reached Spain all right was the one that carried
on board the gold that belonged to Columbus. Was not that singular?
"BROKEN AND SHATTERED"
[Description:
Drawing of a wrecked ship.
]
Then all the friends of Columbus cried: How wonderful! Truly the Lord is on the side of the great Admiral!
But his enemies said: This Genoese is a wizard. He was mad because the governor would not let him come into the harbor, and he raised this storm in revenge. It is a dangerous thing to interfere with the Admiral's wishes.
For you see in those days people believed in witches and

A FRAGMENT OF THE ALHAMBRA.
[Description: Drawing of a fragment of the Alhambra. ]![]() |
CHAPTER XI.
HOW THE ADMIRAL CAME AND WENT AGAIN.
The True Story of Christopher Columbus, Called the Great Admiral | ![]() |