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Columbus - The Mutiny
 by: A. Lamartine
 Rank: 4
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When Columbus left the Canaries to pass with his three small ships into the unknown seas, the eruptions of Teneriffe illuminated the heavens and were reflected in the sea.  This cast terror into the minds of his seamen.  They thought that it was the flaming sword of the angel who expelled the first man from Eden, and who now was trying to drive back in anger those presumptuous ones who were seeking entrance to the forbidden and unknown seas and lands.  But the admiral passed from ship to ship explaining to his men, in a simple way, the action of volcanoes, so that the sailors were no longer afraid.
 
But as the peak of Teneriffe sank below the horizon, a great sadness fell upon the men.  It was their last beacon, the farthest sea-mark of the Old World.  They were seized with a nameless terror and loneliness.
 
Then the admiral called them around him in his own ship, and told them many stories of the things they might hope to find in the wonderful new world to which they were going,--of the lands, the islands, the seas, the kingdoms, the riches, the vegetation, the sunshine, the mines of gold, the sands covered with pearls, the mountains shining with precious stones, the plains loaded with spices.  These stories, tinged with the brilliant colors of their leader's rich imagination, filled the discouraged sailors with hope and good spirits.
 
But as they passed over the trackless ocean, and saw day by day the great billows rolling between them and the mysterious horizon, the sailors were again filled with dread.  They lacked the courage to sail onward into the unknown distance.  The compass began to vacillate, and no longer pointed toward the north; this confused both Columbus and his pilots.  The men fell into a panic, but the resolute and patient admiral encouraged them once more.  So buoyed up by his faith and hope, they continued to sail onwards over the pathless waters.
 
The next day a heron and a tropical bird flew about the masts of the ships, and these seemed to the wondering sailors as two witnesses come to confirm the reasoning of Columbus.
 
The weather was mild and serene, the sky clear, the waves transparent, the dolphins played across the bows, the airs were warm, and the perfumes, which the waves brought from afar, seemed to exhale from their foam.  The brilliancy of the stars and the deep beauty of the night breathed a feeling of calm security that comforted and sustained the sailors.
 
The sea also began to bring its messages.  Unknown vegetations floated upon its surface.  Some were rock-plants, that had been swept off the cliffs by the waves; some were fresh-water plants; and others, recently torn from their roots, were still full of sap.  One of them carried a live crab,--a little sailor afloat on a tuft of grass.  These plants and living things could not have passed many days in the water without fading and dying.  And all encouraged the sailors to believe that they were nearing land.
 
At eve and morning the distant waning clouds, like those that gather round the mountain-tops, took the form of cliffs and hills skirting the horizon.  The cry of ``land'' was on the tip of every tongue.  But Columbus by his reckoning knew that they must still be far from any land, but fearing to discourage his men he kept his thoughts to himself, for he found no trustworthy friend among his companions whose heart was firm enough to bear his secret.
 
During the long passage Columbus conversed with his own thoughts, and with the stars, and with God whom he felt was his protector.  He occupied his days in making notes of what he observed.  The nights he passed on deck with his pilots, studying the stars and watching the seas.  He withdrew into himself, and his thoughtful gravity impressed his companions sometimes with respect and sometimes with mistrust and awe.
 
Each morning the bows of the vessels plunged through the fantastic horizon which the evening mist had made the sailors mistake for a shore.  They kept rolling on through the boundless and bottomless abyss.  Gradually terror and discontent once more took possession of the crews.  They began to imagine that the steadfast east wind that drove them westward prevailed eternally in this region, and that when the time came to sail homeward, the same wind would prevent their return.  For surely their provisions and water could not hold out long enough for them to beat their way eastward over those wide waters!
 
Then the sailors began to murmur against the admiral and his seeming fruitless obstinacy, and they blamed themselves for obeying him, when it might mean the sacrifice of the lives of one hundred and twenty sailors.
 
But each time the murmurs threatened to break out into mutiny, Providence seemed to send more encouraging signs of land.  And these for the time being changed the complaints to hopes.  At evening little birds of the most delicate species, that build their nests in the shrubs of the garden and orchard, hovered warbling about the masts.  Their delicate wings and joyous notes bore no signs of weariness or fright, as of birds swept far away to sea by a storm.  These signs again aroused hope.
 
The green weeds on the surface of the ocean looked like waving corn before the ears are ripe.  The vegetation beneath the water delighted the eyes of the sailors tired of the endless expanse of blue.  But the seaweed soon became so thick that they were afraid of entangling their rudders and keels, and of remaining prisoners forever in the forests of the ocean, as ships of the northern seas are shut in by ice.  Thus each joy soon turned to fear,--so terrible to man is the unknown.
 
The wind ceased, the calms of the tropics alarmed the sailors.  An immense whale was seen sleeping on the waters.  They fancied there were monsters in the deep which would devour their ships.  The roll of the waves drove them upon currents which they could not stem for want of wind.  They imagined they were approaching the cataracts of the ocean, and that they were being hurried toward the abysses into which the deluge had poured its world of waters.
 
Fierce and angry faces crowded round the mast. The murmurs rose louder and louder.  They talked of compelling the pilots to put about and of throwing the admiral into the sea.  Columbus, to whom their looks and threats revealed these plans, defied them by his bold bearing or disconcerted them by his coolness.
 
Again nature came to his assistance, by giving him fresh breezes from the east, and a calm sea under his bows.  Before the close of the day came the first cry of ``Land ho!'' from the lofty poop.  All the crews, repeating this cry of safety, life, and triumph, fell on their knees on the decks,and struck up the hymn, ``Glory be to God in heaven and upon earth.''  When it was over, all climbed as high as they could up the masts, yards, and rigging to see with their own eyes the new land that had been sighted.
 
But the sunrise destroyed this new hope all too quickly.  The imaginary land disappeared with the morning mist, and once more the ships seemed to be sailing over a never-ending wilderness of waters.
 
Despair took possession of the crews.  Again the cry of ``Land ho!'' was heard.  But the sailors found as before that their hopes were but a passing cloud.  Nothing wearies the heart so much as false hopes and bitter disappointments.
 
Loud reproaches against the admiral were heard from every quarter.  Bread and water were beginning to fail.  Despair changed to fury.  The men decided to turn the heads of the vessels toward Europe, and to beat back against the winds that had favored the admiral, whom they intended to chain to the mast of his own vessel and to give up to the vengeance of Spain should they ever reach the port of their own country.
 
These complaints now became clamorous.  The admiral restrained them by the calmness of his countenance.  He called upon Heaven to decide between himself and the sailors.  He flinched not.  He offered his life as a pledge, if they would but trust and wait for three days more.  He swore that, if, in the course of the third day, land was not visible on the horizon, he would yield to their wishes and steer for Europe.
 
The mutinous men reluctantly consented and allowed him three days of grace.  .   .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .
 
At sunrise on the second day rushes recently torn up were seen floating near the vessels.  A plank hewn by an axe, a carved stick, a bough of hawthorn in blossom, and lastly a bird's nest built on a branch which the wind had broken, and full of eggs on which the parent-bird was sitting, were seen swimming past on the waters.  The sailors brought on board these living witnesses of their approach to land.  They were like a message from the shore, confirming the promises of Columbus.
 
The overjoyed and repentant mutineers fell on their knees before the admiral whom they had insulted but the day before, and craved pardon for their mistrust.
 
As the day and night advanced many other sights and sounds showed that land was very near.  Toward day delicious and unknown perfumes borne on a soft land breeze reached the vessels, and there was heard the roar of the waves upon the reefs.
 The dawn, as it spread over the sky, gradually raised the shores of an island from the waves.  Its distant extremities were lost in the morning mist.  As the sun rose it shone on the land ascending from a low yellow beach to the summit of hills whose dark-green covering contrasted strongly with the clear blue of the heavens.  The foam of the waves broke on the yellow sand, and forests of tall and unknown trees stretched away, one above another, over successive terraces of the island.  Green valleys, and bright clefts in the hollows afforded a half glimpse into these mysterious wilds.  And thus the land of golden promises, the land of future greatness, first appeared to Christopher Columbus, the Admiral of the Ocean, and thus he gave a New World to the nations to come.