The life and voyages of Christopher Colombus. Volume 1

Page 365

LIFE A N D V O Y A G E S

364

OF

[BOOK V I .

The natives, having heard of the arrival of the Spaniards in their vicinity, came flocking from various parts, anxious to obtain European trinkets.

The admiral signified to them that any thing

would be given in exchange for gold ; upon hearing this some of them ran to a neighboring river, and gathering and sifting its sands, returned in a little while with considerable quantities of gold dust.

One old man brought two pieces of virgin ore, weigh­

ing an ounce, and thought himself richly repaid when he received a hawk's bell.

On remarking that the admiral was struck with

the size of these specimens, he affected to treat them with con­ tempt, as insignificant, intimating by signs, that in his country, which lay within half a day's journey, they found pieces of gold as big as an orange.

Other Indians brought grains of gold weigh­

ing ten and twelve drachms, and declared that in the country

this day exactly with the description given above, three centuries since, by Co­ lumbus, Ojeda, and Juan de Luxan. The only change to notice is, that the neat little Indian villages, swarming with an innocent and happy population, have totally disappeared ; there being at present only a few scattered huts of indigent Spaniards to be met with, buried in the gloom of the mountains. The traces of those villages are rarely to be discovered at the present day. The situation of one near Ponton, was well chosen for defence, being built on a high bank between deep and precipitous ravines.

A large square occupied the

centre ; in the rear of each dwelling were thrown the sweepings of the apart­ ments and the ashes from the fires, which form a line of mounds, mixed up with broken Indian utensils.

A s it lays in the direct road from Isabella, Cibao,

and La Vega, and commands the best fording place in the neighborhood for crossing the river Yaqui in dry seasons, it must, no doubt, have been a place of considerable resort at the time of the discovery—most likely a pontoon or large canoe was stationed here for the facility of communication between St. Thomas and Isabella, whence it derived its name.


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.