True Story of Christopher Columbus, Admiral; told for youngest readers by Elbridge Streeter Brooks
page 49 of 91 (53%)
page 49 of 91 (53%)
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And from that act of Columbus came much sorrow and trouble for the land
he found. Even the great war between the northern and southern sections of our own United States, upon one side or the other of which your fathers, or your grandfathers perhaps, fought with gun and sword, was brought about by this act of the great Admiral Columbus hundreds of years before. So the twelve ships sailed back to Spain, and Columbus, with his five remaining ships, his soldiers and his colonists, remained in the new city of Isabella to keep up the hunt for gold or to become farmers in the new world. CHAPTER IX. HOW THE TROUBLES OF THE ADMIRAL BEGAN. Both the farmers and the gold hunters had a hard time of it in the land they had come to so hopefully. The farmers did not like to farm when they thought they could do so much better at gold hunting; the gold hunters found that it was the hardest kind of work to get from the water or pick from the rocks the yellow metal they were so anxious to obtain. Columbus himself was not satisfied with the small amount of gold he got from the streams and mines of Hayti; he was tired of the wrangling and grumbling of his men. So, one day, he hoisted sail on his five ships and started away on a hunt for richer gold mines, or, perhaps, for those wonderful cities of Cathay he was still determined to find. He sailed to the south and discovered the island of Jamaica. Then he coasted along the shores of Cuba. The great island stretched away so |
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