trumpets were sounded; the horses were decked out in
rich caparisons, and as glittering and formidable
a show was made as possible. Leaving his brother
James in command of the settlement, Columbus set out
on the 12th of March to the interior of the island.
Through the forest and up the mountainside a road
was cut by pioneers from among the aristocratic adventurers
who had come with the party; which road, the first
made in the New World, was called El Puerto de los
Hidalgos. The formidable, glittering cavalcade
inspired the natives with terror and amazement; they
had never seen horses before, and when one of the soldiers
dismounted it seemed to them as though some terrifying
two-headed, six-limbed beast had come asunder.
What with their fright of the horses and their desire
to possess the trinkets that were carried they were
very friendly and hospitable, and supplied the expedition
with plenty of food. At last, after passing
mountain ranges that made their hearts faint, and rich
valleys that made them hopeful again, the explorers
came to the mountains of Cibao, and passing over the
first range found themselves in a little valley at
the foot of the hills where a river wound round a fertile
plain and there was ample accommodation for an encampment.
There were the usual signs of gold, and Columbus
saw in the brightly coloured stones of the river-bed
evidence of unbounded wealth in precious stones.
At last he had come to the place! He who had
doubted so much, and whose faith had wavered, had
now been led to a place where he could touch and handle
the gold and jewels of his desire; and he therefore
called the place Saint Thomas. He built a fort
here, leaving a garrison of fifty-six men under the
command of Pedro Margarite to collect gold from the
natives, and himself returned to Isabella, which he
reached at the end of March.
Enforced absence from the thing he has organised is
a great test of efficiency in any man. The world
is full of men who can do things themselves; but those
who can organise from the industry of their men a
machine which will steadily perform the work whether
the organiser is absent or present are rare indeed.
Columbus was one of the first class. His own
power and personality generally gave him some kind
of mastery over any circumstances in which he was
immediately concerned; but let him be absent for a
little time, and his organisation went to pieces.
No one was better than he at conducting a one-man
concern; and his conduct of the first voyage, so long
as he had his company under his immediate command,
was a model of efficiency. But when the material
under his command began to grow and to be divided
into groups his life became a succession of ups and
downs. While he was settling and disciplining
one group mutiny and disorder would attack the other;
and when he went to attend to them, the first one
immediately fell into confusion again. He dealt
with the discontent in Isabella, organising the better