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Christopher Columbus by Mildred Stapley Byne
page 98 of 164 (59%)
women and children appeared to inhabit the island, and these fled inland
at the strangers' approach. This afforded an excellent opportunity for
the visitors to look into the native huts and see how these wild people
lived. Hammocks of netting, earthenware dishes, and woven cotton cloth
were found; but along with these rudiments of civilization something
else was found that made the Europeans look at each other in horror--
human bones left from a recent feast!

The next day they landed at a different island, for these Caribbeans all
lie close together. Here the deplorable business of kidnapping began
again, and quite legitimately, the Spaniards thought, for were not the
miserable creatures cannibals? A young boy and three women were
captured, and from these Columbus learned that the people of the two
islands he first visited, along with a third he had not yet come to, had
formed a league among themselves to make war on the remainder of the
islands. That was why all the men happened to be absent at the time of
the Spanish landing. They had gone off in their canoes to capture women
as wives, and men and children to be killed and eaten!

The fact that the warriors of this island were absent emboldened a party
of nine Spaniards to penetrate inland in search of gold; secretly, too,
without the Admiral's knowledge or consent. Night came and the nine men
had not returned. The crew were naturally anxious to leave the island
before its man-eating population returned, but the majority were willing
to await their lost companions. Next day Alonzo de Ojeda, who said he
was not afraid of cannibals, led a search party clear across the island,
but without success; not until the third anxious day had passed did the
gold seekers get back to the ship. They had paid dearly for their
adventure, having been utterly lost in a tangled forest, without food,
torn and scratched by brambles, and fearing all the time that the fleet
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