1512-1561.
Early Spanish adventure.
Towards the close of the fifteenth
century, Spain achieved her final triumph over the
infidels of Granada, and made her name glorious through
all generations by the discovery of America. The
religious zeal and romantic daring which a long course
of Moorish wars had called forth were now exalted
to redoubled fervor. Every ship from the New World
came freighted with marvels which put the fictions
of chivalry to shame; and to the Spaniard of that
day America was a region of wonder and mystery, of
vague and magnificent promise. Thither adventurers
hastened, thirsting for glory and for gold, and often
mingling the enthusiasm of the crusader and the valor
of the knight-errant with the bigotry of inquisitors
and the rapacity of pirates. They roamed over
land and sea; they climbed unknown mountains, surveyed
unknown oceans, pierced the sultry intricacies of
tropical forests; while from year to year and from
day to day new wonders were unfolded, new islands and
archipelagoes, new regions of gold and pearl, and
barbaric empires of more than Oriental wealth.
The extravagance of hope and the fever of adventure
knew no bounds. Nor is it surprising that amid
such waking marvels the imagination should run wild
in romantic dreams; that between the possible and
the impossible the line of distinction should be but
faintly drawn, and that men should be found ready to
stake life and honor in pursuit of the most insane
fantasies.
Such a man was the veteran cavalier
Juan Ponce de Leon. Greedy of honors and of riches,
he embarked at Porto Rico with three brigantines, bent
on schemes of discovery. But that which gave the
chief stimulus to his enterprise was a story, current
among the Indians of Cuba and Hispaniola, that on
the island of Bimini, said to be one of the Bahamas,
there was a fountain of such virtue, that, bathing
in its waters, old men resumed their youth. It
was said, moreover, that on a neighboring shore might
be found a river gifted with the same beneficent property,
and believed by some to be no other than the Jordan.
Ponce de Leon found the island of Bimini, but
not the fountain. Farther westward, in the latitude
of thirty degrees and eight minutes, he approached
an unknown land, which he named Florida, and, steering
southward, explored its coast as far as the extreme
point of the peninsula, when, after some farther explorations,
he retraced his course to Porto Rico.
Ponce de Leon had not regained his
youth, but his active spirit was unsubdued.
Nine years later he attempted to plant
a colony in Florida; the Indians attacked him fiercely;
he was mortally wounded, and died soon afterwards
in Cuba.
The voyages of Garay and Vasquez de
Ayllon threw new light on the discoveries of Ponce,
and the general outline of the coasts of Florida became
known to the Spaniards. Meanwhile, Cortes had conquered
Mexico, and the fame of that iniquitous but magnificent
exploit rang through all Spain. Many an impatient
cavalier burned to achieve a kindred fortune.
To the excited fancy of the Spaniards the unknown land
of Florida seemed the seat of surpassing wealth, and
Pamphilo de Narvaez essayed to possess himself of
its fancied treasures. Landing on its shores,
and proclaiming destruction to the Indians unless they
acknowledged the sovereignty of the Pope and the Emperor,
he advanced into the forests with three hundred men.
Nothing could exceed their sufferings. Nowhere
could they find the gold they came to seek. The
village of Appalache, where they hoped to gain a rich
booty, offered nothing but a few mean wigwams.
The horses gave out, and the famished soldiers fed
upon their flesh. The men sickened, and the Indians
unceasingly harassed their march. At length, after
two hundred and eighty leagues of wandering,
they found themselves on the northern shore of the
Gulf of Mexico, and desperately put to sea in such
crazy boats as their skill and means could construct.
Cold, disease, famine, thirst, and the fury of the
waves, melted them away. Narvaez himself perished,
and of his wretched followers no more than four escaped,
reaching by land, after years of vicissitude, the Christian
settlements of New Spain.
The interior of the vast country then
comprehended under the name of Florida still remained
unexplored. The Spanish voyager, as his caravel
ploughed the adjacent seas, might give full scope to
his imagination, and dream that beyond the long, low
margin of forest which bounded his horizon lay hid
a rich harvest for some future conqueror; perhaps a
second Mexico with its royal palace and sacred pyramids,
or another Cuzco with its temple of the Sun, encircled
with a frieze of gold. Haunted by such visions,
the ocean chivalry of Spain could not long stand idle.
Hernando de Soto was the companion
of Pizarro in the conquest of Peru. He had come
to America a needy adventurer, with no other fortune
than his sword and target. But his exploits had
given him fame and fortune, and he appeared at court
with the retinue of a nobleman. Still, his active
energies could not endure repose, and his avarice and
ambition goaded him to fresh enterprises. He asked
and obtained permission to conquer Florida. While
this design was in agitation, Cabeca de Vaca, one
of those who had survived the expedition of Narvaez,
appeared in Spain, and for purposes of his own spread
abroad the mischievous falsehood, that Florida was
the richest country yet discovered. De Soto’s
plans were embraced with enthusiasm. Nobles and
gentlemen contended for the privilege of joining his
standard; and, setting sail with an ample armament,
he landed at the bay of Espiritu Santo, now Tampa
Bay, in Florida, with six hundred and twenty chosen
men, a band as gallant and well appointed, as eager
in purpose and audacious in hope, as ever trod the
shores of the New World. The clangor of trumpets,
the neighing of horses, the fluttering of pennons,
the glittering of helmet and lance, startled the ancient
forest with unwonted greeting. Amid this pomp
of chivalry, religion was not forgotten. The
sacred vessels and vestments with bread and wine for
the Eucharist were carefully provided; and De Soto
himself declared that the enterprise was undertaken
for God alone, and seemed to be the object of His
especial care. These devout marauders could not
neglect the spiritual welfare of the Indians whom
they had come to plunder; and besides fetters to bind,
and bloodhounds to hunt them, they brought priests
and monks for the saving of their souls.
The adventurers began their march.
Their story has been often told. For month after
month and year after year, the procession of priests
and cavaliers, crossbowmen, arquebusiers, and
Indian captives laden with the baggage, still wandered
on through wild and boundless wastes, lured hither
and thither by the ignis fatuus of their
hopes. They traversed great portions of Georgia,
Alabama, and Mississippi, everywhere inflicting and
enduring misery, but never approaching their phantom
El Dorado. At length, in the third year of their
journeying, they reached the banks of the Mississippi,
a hundred and thirty-two years before its second discovery
by Marquette. One of their number describes the
great river as almost half a league wide, deep, rapid,
and constantly rolling down trees and drift-wood on
its turbid current.
The Spaniards crossed over at a point
above the mouth of the Arkansas. They advanced
westward, but found no treasures, nothing
indeed but hardships, and an Indian enemy, furious,
writes one of their officers, “as mad dogs.”
They heard of a country towards the north where maize
could not be cultivated because the vast herds of wild
cattle devoured it. They penetrated so far that
they entered the range of the roving prairie tribes;
for, one day, as they pushed their way with difficulty
across great plains covered with tall, rank grass,
they met a band of savages who dwelt in lodges of
skins sewed together, subsisting on game alone, and
wandering perpetually from place to place. Finding
neither gold nor the South Sea, for both of which
they had hoped, they returned to the banks of the
Mississippi.
De Soto, says one of those who accompanied
him, was a “stern man, and of few words.”
Even in the midst of reverses, his will had been law
to his followers, and he had sustained himself through
the depths of disappointment with the energy of a
stubborn pride. But his hour was come. He
fell into deep dejection, followed by an attack of
fever, and soon after died miserably. To preserve
his body from the Indians, his followers sank it at
midnight in the river, and the sullen waters of the
Mississippi buried his ambition and his hopes.
The adventurers were now, with few
exceptions, disgusted with the enterprise, and longed
only to escape from the scene of their miseries.
After a vain attempt to reach Mexico by land, they
again turned back to the Mississippi, and labored,
with all the resources which their desperate necessity
could suggest, to construct vessels in which they
might make their way to some Christian settlement.
Their condition was most forlorn. Few of their
horses remained alive; their baggage had been destroyed
at the burning of the Indian town of Mavila, and many
of the soldiers were without armor and without weapons.
In place of the gallant array which, more than three
years before, had left the harbor of Espiritu Santo,
a company of sickly and starving men were laboring
among the swampy forests of the Mississippi, some
clad in skins, and some in mats woven from a kind
of wild vine.
Seven brigantines were finished and
launched; and, trusting their lives on board these
frail vessels, they descended the Mississippi, running
the gantlet between hostile tribes, who fiercely attacked
them. Reaching the Gulf, though not without the
loss of eleven of their number, they made sail for
the Spanish settlement on the river Panuco, where they
arrived safely, and where the inhabitants met them
with a cordial welcome. Three hundred and eleven
men thus escaped with life, leaving behind them the
bones of their comrades strewn broadcast through the
wilderness.
De Soto’s fate proved an insufficient
warning, for those were still found who begged a fresh
commission for the conquest of Florida; but the Emperor
would not hear them. A more pacific enterprise
was undertaken by Cancello, a Dominican monk,
who with several brother ecclesiastics undertook to
convert the natives to the true faith, but was murdered
in the attempt. Nine years later, a plan was
formed for the colonization of Florida, and Guido
de las Bazares sailed to explore the coasts, and find
a spot suitable for the establishment. After his
return, a squadron, commanded by Angel de Villafane,
and freighted with supplies and men, put to sea from
San Juan d’Ulloa; but the elements were adverse,
and the result was a total failure. Not a Spaniard
had yet gained foothold in Florida.
That name, as the Spaniards of that
day understood it, comprehended the whole country
extending from the Atlantic on the east to the longitude
of New Mexico on the west, and from the Gulf of Mexico
and the River of Palms indefinitely northward towards
the polar sea. This vast territory was claimed
by Spain in right of the discoveries of Columbus, the
grant of the Pope, and the various expeditions mentioned
above. England claimed it in right of the discoveries
of Cabot; while France could advance no better title
than might be derived from the voyage of Verazzano
and vague traditions of earlier visits of Breton adventurers.
With restless jealousy Spain watched
the domain which she could not occupy, and on France
especially she kept an eye of deep distrust. When,
in 1541, Cartier and Roberval essayed to plant
a colony in the part of ancient Spanish Florida now
called Canada, she sent spies and fitted out caravels
to watch that abortive enterprise. Her fears proved
just. Canada, indeed, was long to remain a solitude;
but, despite the Papal bounty gifting Spain with exclusive
ownership of a hemisphere, France and Heresy at length
took root in the sultry forests of modern Florida.