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The Life of Columbus by Sir Arthur Helps
page 181 of 188 (96%)

Soon, however, the differences between the rival parties were brought to
an issue. The Adelantado received information that Porras was planning a
descent on the ships, with the object of seizing the stores and capturing
the admiral. Resolving to anticipate this attack, he placed himself at the
head of fifty[25] devoted partisans of Columbus, and sallied out to engage
the mutineers. A furious struggle ensued; but the Adelantado performed
prodigies of valour, and his followers were better supplied with fire-arms
than the rebels; so that the latter sustained a complete defeat, and their
leader Porras was carried off as a prisoner to the ships.

[Footnote 25: It would appear from this number that either there had
been some defection from the ranks of the mutineers or that more than
half the Spaniards had remained faithful to the admiral.]


THE MUTINEERS CONQUERED.

The natives, who had been spectators of the affray, were much perplexed.
Wiser people than these poor savages have looked with sorrowful wonder on
the appeal to brute force to decide the quarrels of nations; and the
Indians, when they saw strife and death among the beings whom they had
formerly considered as heaven-descended and immortal, felt that their
estimate of these attributes ought to be lowered. But when curiosity
impelled them to examine the corpses of the Spaniards who had been killed
in the encounter, after minutely inspecting several bodies, they came to
that of Ledesma--whose name may be remembered as that of the gigantic
pilot of Seville who swam through the surf at Bethlehem to the
Adelantado's relief--who had now fallen, covered with wounds, fighting on
behalf of the mutineers. As the savages proceeded to thrust their fingers
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