ALVARADO’S LEAP.
If the reader should ever go to the
City of Mexico, as I hope he may, for that
ancient town, which was old and populous when Columbus
was born, is alive with romantic interest, he
will have pointed out to him, on the Rivera de San
Cosme, the historic spot still known as El Salto de
Alvarado. It is now a broad, civilized street,
with horse-cars running, with handsome buildings,
with quaint, contented folk sauntering to and fro,
and with little outwardly to recall the terrors of
that cruellest night in the history of America, the
Noche Triste.
The leap of Alvarado is among the
famous deeds in history, and the leaper was a striking
figure in the pioneering of the New World. In
the first great conquest he bore himself gallantly,
and the story of his exploits then and thereafter
would make a fascinating romance. A tall, handsome
man, with yellow locks and ruddy face, young, impulsive,
and generous, a brilliant soldier and charming comrade,
he was a general favorite with Spaniard and Indian
alike. Though for some reason not fully liked
by Cortez, he was the conqueror’s right-hand
man, and throughout the conquest of Mexico had generally
the post of greatest danger. He was a college
man, and wrote a large, bold hand, none
too common an accomplishment in those days, you will
remember, and signed a beautiful autograph.
He was not a great leader of men like Cortez, his
valor sometimes ran away with his prudence; but as
a field-officer he was as dashing and brilliant as
could be found.
Captain Pedro de Alvarado was a native
of Seville, and came to the New World in his young
manhood, soon winning some recognition in Cuba.
In 1518 he accompanied Grijalva in the voyage which
discovered Mexico, and carried back to Cuba the few
treasures they had collected. In the following
year, when Cortez sailed to the conquest of the new
and wonderful land, Alvarado accompanied him as his
lieutenant. In all the startling feats of that
romantic career he played a conspicuous part.
In the crisis when it became necessary to seize the
treacherous Moctezuma, Alvarado was active and prominent.
He had much to do with Moctezuma during the latter’s
detention as a hostage; and his frankness made him
a great favorite with the captive war-chief.
He was left in command of the little garrison at Mexico
when Cortez marched off on his audacious but successful
expedition against Narvaez, and discharged that responsible
duty well. Before Cortez got back, came the symptoms
of an Indian uprising, the famous war-dance.
Alvarado was alone, and had to meet the crisis on
his own responsibility. But he was equal to the
emergency. He understood the murderous meaning
of this “ghost-dance,” as every Indian-fighter
does, and the way to meet it. In his unsuccessful
attempt to capture the wizards who were stirring up
the populace to massacre the strangers, Alvarado was
severely wounded. But he bore his part in the
desperate resistance to the Indian assaults, in which
nearly every Spaniard was wounded. In the great
fighting to hold their adobe stronghold, and the wild
sorties to force back the flood of savages, the golden-haired
lieutenant was always a prominent figure. When
Cortez, who had now returned with his reinforcements,
saw that Mexico was untenable and that their only
salvation was in retreat from the lake city to the
mainland, the post of honor fell to Alvarado.
There were twelve hundred Spaniards and two thousand
Tlaxcaltecan allies, and this force was divided into
three commands. The vanguard was led by Juan Velasquez,
the second division by Cortez, the third, upon which
it was expected the brunt of pursuit would fall, by
Alvarado.
All was quiet when the Spaniards crept
from their refuge to try to escape along the dyke.
It was a rainy night, and intensely
dark; and with their horses’ hoofs and little
cannon muffled, the Spaniards moved as quietly as possible
along the narrow bank, which stretched like a tongue
from the island city to the mainland.
This dyke was cut by three broad sluices,
and to cross them the soldiers carried a portable
bridge. But despite their care the savages promptly
detected the movement. Scarcely had they issued
from their barracks and got upon the dyke, when the
boom of the monster war-drum, tlapan huehuetl,
from the summit of the pyramid of sacrifice, burst
upon the still night, the knell of their
hopes. It is an awesome sound still, the deep
bellowing of that great three-legged drum, which is
used to-day, and can be heard more than fifteen miles;
and to the Spaniards it was the voice of doom.
Great bonfires shot up from the teocalli, and they
could see the savages swarming to overwhelm them.
Hurrying as fast as their wounds and burdens would permit, the Spaniards
reached the first sluice in safety. They threw their bridge over the gulf,
and began crossing. Then the Indians came swarming in their canoes at
either side of the dyke, and attacked with characteristic ferocity. The
beset soldiers fought as they struggled on. But as the artillery was
crossing the bridge it broke, and down went cannon, horses, and men forever.
Then began the indescribable horrors of The Sad Night. There was no
retreat for the Spaniards, for they were assailed on every side. Those
behind were pushing on, and there was no staying even for that gap of black
water. Over the brink man and horse were crowded in the darkness, and
still those behind came on, until at last the channel was choked with corpses,
and the survivors floundered across the chaos of their dead. Velasquez,
the leader of the vanguard, was slain, and Spaniard and Tlaxcaltecan were
falling like wheat before the sickle. The second sluice, as well as each
side of the dyke, was blocked with canoes full of savage warriors; and there was
another sanguinary melee until this gap too was filled with slain, and over the
bridge of human corpses the fugitives gained the other bank. Alvarado,
fighting with the rearmost to hold in check the savages who followed along the
dyke, was the last to cross; and before he could follow his comrades the current
suddenly broke through the ghastly obstruction, and swept the channel clear.
His faithful horse had been killed under him; he himself was sorely wounded; his
friends were gone, and the merciless foe hemmed him in. We cannot but be
reminded of the Roman hero,
“Of him who held the
bridge so well
In the brave days
of old.”
Alvarados case was fully as desperate as that of Horatius; and he rose as
manlike to the occasion. With one swift glance about, he saw that to
plunge into the flood would be sure death. So, with a supreme effort of
his muscular frame, he thrust down his lance and sprang! It was a distance
of eighteen feet. Considerably longer jumps have been recorded. Our
own Washington once made a running jump of over twenty feet in his athletic
youth. But considering the surroundings, the darkness, his wounds, and his
load of armor, the wonderful leap of Alvarado has perhaps never been surpassed:
“For fast his blood
was flowing,
And he was sore
in pain;
And heavy was his armor,
And spent with
changing blows.”
But the leap was made, and the heroic
leaper staggered up the farther bank and rejoined
his countrymen.
From here the remnant fought, struggling
along the causeway, to the mainland. The Indians
at last drew off from the pursuit, and the exhausted
Spaniards had time to breathe and look about to see
how many had escaped. The survivors were few
in number. Small wonder if, as the legend tells,
their stout-hearted general, used as he was to a stoic
control of his feelings, sat him down under the cypress,
which is still pointed out as the tree of the Noche
Triste, and wept a strong man’s tears as
he looked upon the pitiful remnant of his brave army.
Of the twelve hundred Spaniards eight hundred and
sixty had perished, and of the survivors not one but
was wounded. Two thousand of his allies, the
Tlaxcaltecan Indians, had also been slain. Indeed,
had it not been that the savages tried less to kill
than to capture the Spanish for a more horrible death
by the sacrificial knife, not one would have escaped.
As it was, the survivors saw later three score of
their comrades butchered upon the altar of the great
teocalli.
All the artillery was lost, and so
was all the treasure. Not a grain of powder was
left in condition to be used, and their armor was battered
out of recognition. Had the Indians pursued now,
the exhausted men would have fallen easy victims.
But after that terrific struggle the savages were
resting too, and the Spaniards were permitted to escape.
They struck out for the friendly pueblo of Tlaxcala
by a circuitous route to avoid their enemies, but
were attacked at every intervening pueblo. In
the plains of Otumba was their most desperate hour.
Surrounded and overwhelmed by the savages, they gave
themselves up for lost. But fortunately Cortez
recognized one of the medicine men by his rich dress,
and in a last desperate charge, with Alvarado and a
few other officers, struck down the person upon whom
the superstitious Indians hang so much of the fate
of war. The wizard dead, his awe-struck followers
gave way; and again the Spaniards came out from the
very jaws of death.
In the siege of Mexico, the
bloodiest and most romantic siege in all America, Alvarado
was probably the foremost figure after Cortez.
The great general was the head of that remarkable
campaign, and a head indeed worth having. There
is nothing in history quite like his achievement in
having thirteen brigantines built at Tlaxcala and
transported on the shoulders of men over fifty miles
inland across the mountains to be launched on the
lake of Mexico and aid in the siege. The nearest
to it was the great feat of Balboa in taking two brigantines
across the Isthmus. The exploits of Hannibal the
great Carthaginian at the siege of Tarentum, and of
the Spanish “Great Captain” Gonzalo de
Cordova at the same place, were not at all to be compared
to either.
In the seventy-three days’ fighting
of the siege, Alvarado was the right hand as Cortez
was the head.
The dashing lieutenant had command
of the force which pushed its assault along the same
causeway by which they had retreated on the Noche
Triste. In one of the battles Cortez’s
horse was killed under him, and the conqueror was
being dragged off by the Indians when one of his pages
dashed forward and saved him. In the final assault
and desperate struggle in the city Cortez led half
the Spanish force, and Alvarado the other half; and
the latter it was who conducted that memorable storming
of the great teocalli.
After the conquest of Mexico, in which
he had won such honors, Alvarado was sent by Cortez
to the conquest of Guatemala, with a small force.
He marched down through Oaxaca and Tehuantepec to
Guatemala, meeting a resistance characteristically
Indian. There were three principal tribes in
Guatemala, the Quiche, Zutuhil, and Cacchiquel.
The Quiche opposed him in the open field, and he defeated
them. Then they formally surrendered, made peace,
and invited him to visit them as a friend in their
pueblo of Utatlan. When the Spaniards were safely
in the town and surrounded, the Indians set fire to
the houses and fell fiercely upon their stifling guests.
After a hard engagement Alvarado routed them, and
put the ringleaders to death. The other two tribes
submitted, and in about a year Alvarado and his little
company had achieved the conquest of Guatemala.
His services were rewarded by making him governor and
adelantado of the province; and he founded his city
of Guatemala, which in his day probably became something
like what Mexico then was, a town containing
fifteen thousand to twenty thousand Indians and one
thousand Spaniards.
From this, his capital, Governor Alvarado
was frequently absent. There were many expeditions
to be made up and down the wild New World. His
greatest journey was in 1534, when, building his own
vessels as usual, he sailed to Ecuador and made the
difficult march inland to Quito, only to find himself
in Pizarro’s territory. So he returned to
Guatemala fruitless.
During one of his absences occurred
the frightful earthquake which destroyed the city
of Guatemala, and dealt Alvarado a personal blow from
which he never recovered. Above the city towered
two great volcanoes, the Volcan del
Agua and the Volcan del Fuego.
The volcano of water was extinct, and its crater was
filled with a lake. The volcano of fire was and
is still active. In that memorable
earthquake the lava rim of the Volcan del
Agua was rent asunder by the convulsion, and its
avalanche of waters tumbled headlong upon the doomed
city. Thousands of the people perished under
falling walls and in the resistless flood; and among
the lost was Alvarado’s wife, Dona Beatriz de
la Cueva. Her death broke the brave soldier’s
spirit, for he loved her very dearly.
In the troublous times which befell
Mexico after Cortez had finished his conquest, and
began to be spoiled by prosperity and to make a very
unadmirable exhibition of himself, Alvarado’s
support was sought and won by the great and good viceroy,
Antonio de Mendoza, one of the foremost
executive minds of all time. This was no treachery
on Alvarado’s part toward his former commander;
for Cortez had turned traitor not only to the Crown,
but also to his friends. The cause of Mendoza
was the cause of good government and of loyalty.
It had become necessary to tame the
hostile Nayares Indians, who had caused the Spaniards
great trouble in the province of Jalisco; and in this
campaign Alvarado joined Mendoza. The Indians
retreated to the top of the huge and apparently impregnable
cliff of the Mixton, and they must be dislodged at
any cost. The storming of that rock ranks with
the storming of Acoma as one of the most desperate
and brilliant ever recorded. The viceroy commanded
in person, but the real achievement was by Alvarado
and a fellow officer. In the scaling of the cliff
Alvarado was hit on the head by a rock rolled down
by the savages, and died from the wound, but
not until he saw his followers win that brilliant day.
The man who, next to Alvarado, deserves
the credit of the Mixton was Cristobal de Onate, a
man of distinction for several reasons. He was
a valued officer, a good executive, and one of the
first millionnaires in North America. He
was, too, the father of the colonizer of New Mexico,
Juan de Onate. June 11, 1548, several years after
the battle of the Mixton, the elder Onate discovered
the richest silver mines on the continent, the
mines of Zacatecas, in the barren and desolate plateau
where now stands the Mexican city of that name.
These huge veins of “ruby,” “black,”
arsenate, and virgin silver made the first millionnaires
in North America, as the conquest of Peru made the
first on the southern continent. The mines of
Zacatecas were not so vast as those developed at Potosi,
in Bolivia, which produced between 1541 and 1664 the
inconceivable sum of $641,250,000 in silver; but the
Zacatecas mines were also enormously productive.
Their silver stream was the first realization of the
dreams of vast wealth on the northern continent, and
made a startling commercial change in this part of
the New World. Locally, the discovery reduced
the price of the staples of life about ninety per
cent! Mexico was never a great gold country, but
for more than three centuries has remained one of
the chief silver producers. It is so to-day,
though its output is not nearly so large as that of
the United States.
Cristobal de Onate was, therefore,
a very important man in the working out of destiny.
His “bonanza” made Mexico a new country,
commercially, and his millions were put to a better
use than is always the case nowadays, for they had
the honor of building two of the first towns in our
own United States.