Christopher Columbus and the New World of His Discovery — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 555 pages of information about Christopher Columbus and the New World of His Discovery — Complete.

Christopher Columbus and the New World of His Discovery — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 555 pages of information about Christopher Columbus and the New World of His Discovery — Complete.
so many picnic parties, being more careful to carry vessels in which to bring back the gold they were to find than proper provisions and equipment to support them in the labour of finding it.  The roads, says Las Casas, swarmed like ant-hills with these adventurers rushing forth to the mines, which were about twenty-five miles distant from San Domingo; they were in the highest spirits, and they made it a kind of race as to who should get there first.  They thought they had nothing to do but to pick up shining lumps of gold; and when they found that they had to dig and delve in the hard earth, and to dig systematically and continuously, with a great deal of digging for very little gold, their spirits fell.  They were not used to dig; and it happened that most of them began in an unprofitable spot, where they digged for eight days without finding any gold.  Their provisions were soon exhausted; and in a week they were back again in San Domingo, tired, famished, and bitterly disappointed.  They had no genius for steady labour; most of them were virtually without means; and although they lived in San Domingo, on what they had as long as possible, they were soon starving there, and selling the clothes off their backs to procure food.  Some of them took situations with the other settlers, more fell victims to the climate of the island and their own imprudences and distresses; and a thousand of them had died within two years.

Ovando had revived the enthusiasm for mining by two enactments.  He reduced the share of discovered gold payable to the Crown, and he developed Columbus’s system of forced labour to such an extent that the mines were entirely worked by it.  To each Spaniard, whether mining or farming, so many natives were allotted.  It was not called slavery; the natives were supposed to be paid a minute sum, and their employers were also expected to teach them the Christian religion.  That was the plan.  The way in which it worked was that, a body of native men being allotted to a Spanish settler for a period, say, of six or eight months—­for the enactment was precise in putting a period to the term of slavery—­the natives would be marched off, probably many days’ journey from their homes and families, and set to work under a Spanish foreman.  The work, as we have already seen, was infinitely harder than that to which they were accustomed; and most serious of all, it was done under conditions that took all the heart out of the labour.  A man will toil in his own garden or in tilling his own land with interest and happiness, not counting the hours which he spends there; knowing in fact that his work is worth doing, because he is doing it for a good reason.  But put the same man to work in a gang merely for the aggrandisement of some other over-man; and the heart and cheerfulness will soon die out of him.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Christopher Columbus and the New World of His Discovery — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.