The Life of Columbus; in his own words eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about The Life of Columbus; in his own words.

The Life of Columbus; in his own words eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about The Life of Columbus; in his own words.

They went on along the coast, passing by some little villages, from which the inhabitants fled, “as soon as they saw the sails.”  The Admiral decided to send ashore to make investigations, and next morning “certain captains” landed.  At dinnertime some of them returned, bringing with them a boy of fourteen, who said that he was one of the captives of the people of the island.  The others divided, and one party “took a little boy and brought him on board.”  Another party took a number of women, some of them natives of the island, and others captives, who came of their own accord.  One captain, Diego Marquez, with his men, went off from the others and lost his way with his party.  After four days he came out on the coast, and by following that, he succeeded in coming to the fleet.  Their friends supposed them to have been killed and eaten by the Caribs, as, since some of them were pilots and able to set their course by the pole-star, it seemed impossible that they should lose themselves.

During the first day Columbus spent here, many men and women came to the water’s edge, “looking at the fleet and wondering at such a new thing; and when any boat came ashore to talk with them, saying, ‘tayno, tayno,’ which means good.  But they were all ready to run when they seemed in danger, so that of the men only two could be taken by force or free-will.  There were taken more than twenty women of the captives, and of their free-will came other women, born in other islands, who were stolen away and taken by force.  Certain captive boys came to us.  In this harbor we were eight days on account of the loss of the said captain.”

They found great quantities of human bones on shore, and skulls hanging like pots or cups about the houses.  They saw few men.  The women said that this was because ten canoes had gone on a robbing or kidnapping expedition to other islands.  “This people,” says Doctor Chanca, “appeared to us more polite than those who live in the other islands we have seen, though they all have straw houses.”  But he goes on to say that these houses are better made and provided, and that more of both men’s and women’s work appeared in them.  They had not only plenty of spun and unspun cotton, but many cotton mantles, “so well woven that they yield in nothing (or owe nothing) to those of our country.”

When the women, who had been found captives, were asked who the people of the island were, they replied that they were Caribs.  “When they heard that we abhorred such people for their evil use of eating men’s flesh, they rejoiced much.”  But even in the captivity which all shared, they showed fear of their old masters.

“The customs of this people, the Caribs,” says Dr. Chanca, “are beastly;” and it would be difficult not to agree with him, in spite of the “politeness” and comparative civilization he has spoken of.

They occupied three islands, and lived in harmony with each other, but made war in their canoes on all the other islands in the neighborhood.  They used arrows in warfare, but had no iron.  Some of them used arrow-heads of tortoise shell, others sharply toothed fish-bones, which could do a good deal of damage among unarmed men.  “But for people of our nation, they are not arms to be feared much.”

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The Life of Columbus; in his own words from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.