190 THE WEST SHORE. July. HKAl'TY'S LAMENT. BY KU H v.. uoxTKlt, (Forest Grove. I staal upon the dampened und Wi.n li marks old Ocean's sway, Anil witli totny akin to praise I watch the king of day, Km v'n . from fas zenith home, ' An 1 hasting toward thu West, With coiifl'lonco inpnnt he sinks Upon old Owip'l Weiwt. Ami liht he rtndath as they meet In broken ban u'oii tu my feet. The ti l') hold liack the restless wave, Tbi r.Vt ajijtenrto view, FnlgbUd with life of varied forms A IllimtfOll. a . n.tii'u crew, i hurmit-crab look with cunning leer Tlioii l.. ! in lit iijrrowtj cell, , And tlio utar-fldi oltogl with tenacioui bold To the ruck it luvca so well. Tim Mi WlldV plumes with grace and eaw? M i't lowly btad to the paining bree4). In each bfiOJf pool by the hull, cased roc k Th pojjp it leauti(ul fringe has spread. Bur). Nature ban given all dulicuto tints To this truant of the ocean bed. I feel, a.t 1 guu in gtai surprise Upm the scene spread out to in'', That bounty hits made her dwelling plana Amid the -J.-!, of the sea. When, imsuen by mini, unconfined by wall-, ydte ralgtu lUprtmi 'mid Ocean's balls. Tin- thought has scarculy taken shapo When there appears truui out the spray A bttuUflfl form of noble mien , ' Of spliit nud not of claj. One hand lio holds uvor the sea, llie I 1.1 toward the lantl, Saying, 11 1 am the Creator' eldest born Anil it ii at his command I j;iitit for yon the ocean's shell Aji'l the II jwnrs of the laud as well. 1 Yi;s, I pfjnt with care each leaf, each flower, M iking Dm world a beauteous stage From year lo year, whore man may act, At will, (he tool or sage. M iy bo a ble-iMiig to his race, liiving tvfim on Heaven's verge; Or, to bis fulluH -man may be, 'Tb'i surest, dmlllut scourgu;' Mty ! I or slight Mch Ifon giftn To draw hu wamlering thoughts to llcavrn. "I thought o uiake tlji home fur man In baauty hko the world above, TO bind his heart with silken OOfdl To thl OHO whose heart is love. Hut mi into my Kdeu cams tjuenrhing the soul's celestial light, An I now, wheniW 1 turn my U0, I sou iUdntlly, withering blight, I try, but ah t I try in rain, I cannot hide ton's feartul stain." HISTORICAL ADVENTURES ON THE PACIFIC COAST. l.v UK 9, Ki l". VICTOR. TUB RPAN1S1I D1SCOVBRBRI, The hiitorj orthc Northwest Coait, very little understood, und extending ovei .i period of more than three hun dred years, is one 10 advent uroui und romantic Hint even the most inveter.ite novel-render could not Pall to find in it the mine olementa of dramatic situation! ami wonderful events that give to fic tion its charm, We are not ncais. t mud to think of Oregon as Spanish territory; and yet ouch it wm accord ing to the law of discovery three hun dred and lirty yean ago, though it had only been seen from the deck of a Spanish sailing craft The history of Spain, during the let tei pari of the fifteenth and the first half of the sixteenth centuries, surpasses In brilliancy of achievement that of any other nation or period since the be Kiuninn if the Christian era. The in tellectual darkness that had Wooded OVO! I'm one lor a thousand mm .. way to a ftosh and glorious dawn In the fourteenth cvuturr, whieh was to!- lowed by a vigorous revival of com merce, it, ami learning, creattag the world anew out of the ruins of peat dvlli Rations. Charles Vnof Spain, Wis the moat fortunate of tt,c mouarehs of (Mtristendom, whom the new Impulse of eventi benefitted, Portugal had both taking the lead as maritime power, when a single Individual ap. peered w ho transferred the ssroiatlencs to Spain, who, theneelorw aid for long n'oryrlarit In iff? bv t. HsmuH All -MM -1 I period of time, possessed the most pow erful navy and the most adventurous people of that adventurous period. The main impulse which led to the greatness of Spain, was one that pic vailed among all the maritime powers of Europe the desire to discover discoveries in an eastern! though the crafty Spaniards had not forgotten to avail themselves of the omission. When, in 1513, Yasco Nunez de Balboa, Governor of the colony of Da Hen, led by guides who assured him that from the summit of a certain high sea-route to India, and to facilitate a mountain he could sec two oceans at commerce which hitherto had been one time, beheld the blue expanse of carried on overland by a class of mer-1 the Pacific, (which he mistook for the chants whom we should denominate desired Indian Ocean) the history of peddlers. j this Pacific Coast began to be shadowed Pope Nicholas Y as early as liU. out. Makintr an excursion, which in 1 had issued a hill for the encouragement of Portuguese commerce, giving them exclusive right of navigation of all vvaters, and the conquest of all lands that day must have more than equalled the more modern one of Lieut. Strain, the noble Spaniard descended to the shore of this unknow 11 sea, ami w&ding discovered by them in their search tori into it waist-deep, took possession of it entrance to the Indian sea. The J and of all lands washed by It, for the geographers of the liftccnth century Government of Spain. It was this act, 1 hail very artless ideas of the sie and ; shape of the earth. They knew, how ever, that oceans hounded the conti- I ncnts, anil they had a prophetic sense J that some communication existed be tween those great seas of whose real 1 extent they were yet very ignorant. The fact of Portugal having three hundred and sixty-four years ago, which made Oregon a Spanish posses ion, anil gave Spain the sovereignty uf the Pacific! lint the dominion of an, ocean which could not he entered front the Atlantic was, not only unprofitable! hut tantallz- the ;.r to it,.. 1.. ,u,r..,. c.t:.a.a , exclusive right to all discoveries of that no communication existed between I w,ter or landi WOl the reason that to- the two oceans, by sea or strait, in the lumbui appealed first to the Portuguese neighborhood oi the isthmus, the monarcn lor an outllt to explore th unknown oceans to the west ofE 1 Spaniards continued their examinations rope; of the coast southwards, until in ?30, i ""d it was a serious error on the par: Fernando Magellan, a Portugese navl- of that gov ernment that his proposition gator in the 6crvice of Spain, discovered I was not accepted. Had it not been and passed through the straits at the mat an intelligent woman shared the southern end of the South American throne of Spain, Columbus might have cpntinent, that bears his name; thus had to look farther for aid to his enter- opening, indeed, a route to the East prise; hut Isabella of Castile had power Indies but one that from its length. to persuade Ferdinand of Arragon, and and from the perils of the Straits of the discovery ol America was accom- Magellan, could never afford the facili Plfhsdi tics for commerce enioved bv the Por- proven, it became tugese. The ambition of Spain had re ceived a check, hut not for long. Her This done and necessary that Spain should possess the same rights to water and land that had been granted to Portugal; and then occurred the partition fif the ocean This w as effected by a treaty, at Tonic sillas,in 1494, The Portuguese were en titled to possession and dominion of all the seas and territories, not already belonging to a Christian prince or peo ple, which they should discover, cast of a meridian line passing three hundred and seventy leagues west of Cape Vcrd Islands. The Spaniards were given equal authority over all seas and lands, not already Christianized, west vessels crossed the Pacilic, and, very naturally, came in conflict with Portu gal in the Indian Ocean, where, no line being set, they were sure to meet. As Portugal had claimed Braall, so Spain claimed the Molucca Islands, which Portugal was fain to purchase at a sum over three millions of dollars. Nor were Spain's American posses sions so unprofitable as at first they seemed. Prom 1518 to 1535, she ran a high course of conquest and glory. Peru and Mexico had emptied their treasures into her lap. Cortcz, in less I the line of partition. The possibility than three years, had discovered. V l their meeting was not considered by qulihed and robbed the wealthy Mexi- the high contracting parties; nor did either entertain a doubt of the right possessed by the Pope to give away the largest portion of the earth's sur face. Under this arrangement, both Spain and Portugal continued to or.we.-tit.. 1 their search for a passage to the Indies; and live years after the treaty of Totde- ; llllas, the Portuguese rounded the Cape ol Good Hope, and reached India, thus achieving a distinction and power for w hich they had long striven w ith com. inendable enterprise. Meanwhile, only .1 new and wilderness country had re. warded the adventures of the Spaniards, can empire. Colonies were established on the coast of South, and then of North America. Ships traded from these to the Phlllipine Islands without the necessity for the long home-voyage through the perilous straits. Adven ture, and the thirst for gold and glorv, were run mad. The subjects of his most Catholic and Christian Majesty practiced the most revolting cruelty and injustice toward the inhabitants of subjugated America. Though a terri ble -tain on their history, the murder of a whole population of peaceful na tives sat lightly enough on their con sciences, They might, to cncourai-e encj ; devotion, have a mass said for the good .1.1 ..r l ..1.. 1 .... . . ....-e m. legaiu 10 mi- new world , "I ti"an -uu but on P,, l,.t;. ( lor the Portuguese, extending their Jis- they had no compassion. The story of ..M ile- 10 the farthest limit the con- Spanish conquests in the early part of dmon- ol their treaty allowed, touched the sixteenth century must ever read up..,, the cOMt of Uracil, and thus actu- like the most exciting fiction, so far .... . i' . 1 1 m M 01 1 le 1 o 11 i.'ii . 111- 11 vnt .. ... 1.. . i- that bad been discovered by the Spaniards, On the other hand Spain, covetous of tlie treasures of the Baal Indies, was indefatigable in endeavors to find some strait leading from the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico into the Indian Ocean, which was beUered to lie just beyond the group of islands named bj them the West indies the realy of partition ha 11 its daring, its romance, its cruelty, "id its wonderful dramatic effects, as well as in its world-creating results. When Mexico had been despoiled by Cortcz ami his followers and imitators, he proceeded, under instructions Irom Charles V, to commence a careful search of the coasts of .North America for the much-desired shorter passage to the ...1111: nci-iC.ICil to , llli i.'S. w , .1, I....I I . set a limit ,0 discoveries in a WMtorn up-which was not given up ,o hun .b.econ which nugh. Interfere ithjl Ire,) year, later. While vessels were building for this service on the PaciJ. Coast, the search was going on the Atlantic side of the continent win, no encouraging results, except to prove the vast extent of the New World. . was not until i6jS that the sttrvevof the western coast was begun, uiider Corlez as grandee .of Castile, Captain. General of New Spain (Mexico), and Marquis of the Valley of Oaxaca, and the port of Tehuantepec, with the right to enjoy forever, and his children after him. the government of all thn tries he should discover and conquer 11 his own expense. Kings have always known how to drive hard bargalns.S none better than Charles V. In ad. dltlon to these honors and privileges Cortez was to have one-twelfth of all' the gold, silver, pearls, and other riches derivable therefrom; and he was to treat the natives with kindness, and convert them to the Chrlstian'falthl The Mexican ports occupied by tlie Spaniards in 1532, were Tehuantepec, Acapulco.and Culiacan at the entrance to the Gulf of California. During this year Cortcz sent out two ships, built m his own port of Tehuantepec, under the command of a kinsman named Mendoza. A serious mutiny amon his men obliged him to send home one of the vessels and the greater number of his men, when he had proceeded no farther north than the 270 of latitude. The vessel was stranded near Cape Corrlentes, when the crew were mur dered by the natives, and the vessel seized by the commander of the port of Culiacan, who was an enemy to Cortez. The other ship, with Mendoza in com mand, proceeded on her voyage, but was never heard of more. The following year Cortez des patched two other vessels in search of Mendoza, hut these were equally unfor tunate. One ship's crew mutinied, murdering their commander, and being murdered in turn by the natives. A few survivors escaped with the vessel to Culiacan, where it was confiscated, as a previous one had been. The other vessel only discovered the Jievilliigi gcJo Islands, mi returned in 1534 to Tehuantepec. So far, Cortez found the expenses of discovery to outrun the profits; but still determined to perse vere, he himself explored the Gulf of California in 1535, leaving a colony on the peninsula, whieh, after one year's experience of its desert nature, aban doned it, and returned home. Vet one more effort Cortez made to ascertain what laid to the north of the Gulf of Callfoi nia, which had been named by him the "Sea of Cortez;" hut his Lieutenant, Ullsa, who had charge of the fleet of three vessels, ac complished nothing more than a quite thorough survey of the Gulf and Pe ninsula of California, and the discovery of the Isle of Cellars. This expedition came to an end in 1540; and in this year also, Cortcz returned to Spain hop ing to secure the aid of the Government in his enterprises; hut failing, died there, seven years later. One of those romantic episodes so frequent in the history of the Spanish discoveries, happened about this time. In 1539 there had appeared at Culiacan four persons, survivors of the expedition of Penfilo Navarez against the Florida Peninsula in 1527. For ten years they had wandered living as wanderers may, in forest, marsh and desert, until finally they had nuule their way from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. Their advent in Culiacan created much wonder, even among so adventurous a class as the Spanish immigrants to Mexico; and eagerly were their narra tives listened to. When questioned by the Viceroy, they could give no account of civilized peoples, or countries rich ia gold and silver that they had seen; but