登陆注册
38047200000082

第82章 CHAPTER XXV(4)

Havasupais Guide Garces to the Hopi Towns. It was on June 4, 1776--memorable year in American annals--that Garces started under the guidance of some Wallapais for the Hopi towns. They had given him fair details of the country he would have to travel over. Passing by their own home in Diamond Creek (one of the earliest approaches to the Grand Canyon), he decided to visit the Havasupais, whom he calls Yabesuas. Those familiar with Spanish spelling and pronunciation will readily recognize that they are almost one and the same. The Wallapais took the priest down their own trail into Havasu or Cataract Canyon,--a trail which made his head swim, and where his mule had to be left behind, to be brought to him later by another route. He also describes the ladder down which he climbed just before reaching the place where the innumerable springs flow out of the solid rock and form Havasu Creek. It was the same ladder descended eighty years later by Egloffstein, Lieutenant Ives's artist, who was so heavy that he took down ladder and all with him. Here Garces stayed five days, being hospitably treated by the natives, who brought him melons, squash, corn, beans, etc., and who had thriving trees of peaches and apricots.

The Grand Canyon Is Reached. Leaving the kindhearted Havasupais, he returned to the plateau above, and soon saw for the first time the deep gorge of the Colorado River itself,--the Grand Canyon. He describes with surprising accuracy of detail the break in the Kaibabs, where the Marble and Little Colorado Canyons unite and form the Grand Canyon, and then, a little later, he gives a true description of the Little Colorado Canyon.

From his account, he doubtless went down by the old Hopi Salt Trail into the gorge of the Little Colorado, and thus on to Oraibi, which he reached July 2, 1776.

Wishes to Baptize the Indians. About this time those interesting, exciting and most important of all discussions were raging in the Continental Congress on the eastern side of the continent, which, two days later, were to result in the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson had undoubtedly written it at this time, but Garces knew not the name of the great patriot and his compeers. He was bent on a different mission. He wished to declare to the Hopis how they might have *******,--******* from sin and the fear of hell. For, as Elliott Coues (the scholarly translator of Garces's diary, published a few years ago by F. P. Harper of New York)expresses it: "It made him sick at heart to see so many natives going to hell for lack of the three drops of water he would sprinkle over them if only they would let him do it."Garces Reaches Oraibi. His arrival at Oraibi caused great excitement, though a priest had been at work there as early as 1650. There were four priests laboring among the Hopis in 1680, when the great native uprising throughout New Mexico and Arizona occurred, and all of them, with many others (laymen and soldiers as well) were slain at that time. Then, too, the remembrance had not died away of the total destruction of the town of Awatobi (one of the Hopi towns of that day) in the year 1700, because the people of that place were hospitable and tolerant of the "long gowns." The medicine men and leaders of all the adjacent towns gathered together, and led a force which fell upon Awatobi in the dead of the night. Every male in it was slain, and only some of the women and girls were saved and taken to the other towns. The place was fired, and remained a neglected ruin, until the scholarship and labors of recent ethnologists dug up both the town and its tragic history.

Indians Are Hostile. Poor Garces! The hostility of the Oraibis was apparent. They refused to allow him to enter a house, and he was compelled to camp outside, in a corner formed by a jutting wall, while his guide sheltered his mule in a sheep corral. He built his little camp fire, cooked his frugal meal, and slept there during the night, doubtless committing himself and the people who refused to receive him to the protecting mercies of God. The next day the chiefs of the town came to him, clothed in their ceremonial costumes and feathery head-dresses, and bade him leave the place. He held up his crucifix as an index of his mission, and endeavored to tell them that he came solely to do them good. But they would have none of him, and on the following day, the memorable Fourth of July, they expelled him peaceably but forcibly from their town. He returned to the Colorado River again on July 25, and soon to San Xavier, his mission, a failure.

Establishes Missions among the Yumas. Now he threw his whole heart into the two missions which the authorities had decided to place among the Yumas.

Captain Palma, a Yuma chief, who had been very friendly, had urged it repeatedly, and now the desires of both were to be fulfilled. In 1779, Garces went to prepare the way, and the following year the establishment took place. The missions were eight miles apart; one was named La Purisima Concepcion; the other, San Pedro y San Pablo de Bicuner. Garces and Barraneche took charge of the upper mission, and Diaz and Moreno of the lower.

Garces Is Killed. The missions were a failure from the start. The few Spanish soldiers sent to guard the padres were obliged to utilize some of the best lands which were tilled for their own benefit. The appropriations from the treasury were too small to permit of anything but the rudest and ******st of structures, and Palma and his friends soon became disgusted with the whole affair. On July 17 the Indians, many of whom had been hostile from the first, arose and massacred both colonies of white men, as well as a small force of soldiers under former Governor Rivera, of California, who was encamped temporarily on the western side of the river.

At first, Garces' life was spared, but before the day was over he and his co-laborer were beaten to death, and his unselfish mission on earth ended.

In my book "In and Out of the Old Missions of California", I give this interesting and tragic history in fuller detail. This, then, is the man whose name is given to the railway building at Needles, in order that his heroic labors for the Indians of the Colorado River region may not be forgotten.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 他是我所有余生

    他是我所有余生

    从喜欢上沈宸安的那一刻起,唐佳怡就知道,世界上没有两全其美的事情。若是过程和结果只能选其一,她选结果。至此,千难万险,她也不会轻易放弃他。
  • 我有个好友叫QQ

    我有个好友叫QQ

    当天外QQ附身世界命运之子,当天外应用激撞世界意志,他,是否能够逆天改命?欢迎加入陋室铭,群号码:619927451。新书不易,需要大家呵护
  • 寂寞在舞蹈

    寂寞在舞蹈

    年少的日子,我们总是有很多故事。同时,我们也有很多突发奇想。我想用文字记下,记下曾经一闪即逝的细节,回味着那股青涩的青春味道。希望我们一起在小说和散文的世界里,领略喝着下午茶阅读的雅致。
  • 黑客染宝:大神求放过

    黑客染宝:大神求放过

    玩游戏和师父去逛街,没想到遇到大神勾引,更没想到大神竟然要我做他娘子,玛得我忍可没想到他还是我学校里的第一学霸校草,从此我哪都可以遇见大神,大神放过我吧!
  • 明日方舟Collapse

    明日方舟Collapse

    『本文为博士视角哦!讲述博士在从切城被“救”出来后开始掌管罗德岛,参与各项任务的同时探寻自己身世!』我不想战斗,我也不想拿起那把剑,别逼我!......你以为全世界就你一个博士吗,哈哈,无知的少年!......博士,我永远在你背后。我们是,Arknights!......最终任务名为Collaspe!『神秘数字:528575858』
  • exo之允诺

    exo之允诺

    时光说我们变了。陪我看雪的那个人,回来了。原来你一直在我身边。为什么你这么让人喜欢?如果这一世不在一起,下一世我会好好珍惜。-吴世勋
  • 一见钟情:爱你不容易

    一见钟情:爱你不容易

    在无意间,她遇到了一个男孩,喜欢上这个男孩,过了一段时间,男孩和女孩两情相悦,渐渐的,男孩却发现女孩并不是那么好,不够了解女孩,对女孩的爱意也减少了………………这是一个关于校园青春的故事,是一场始于幻世的浮生之梦
  • 魔法学院:三公主的爱情生活

    魔法学院:三公主的爱情生活

    她,冰冷无情;她,活泼开朗;她,腹黑狡诈。他,冰山一座;他,花心无比;他,热情如火。碰撞在一起会有什么样的火花呢?一起来看看吧!(注:女一号以后会变成反派一阵,,,,就是姐妹反目,不喜勿进。)
  • 卡师狂魔

    卡师狂魔

    这世上,有无数种生物可以制作成卡片,只要能杀死他们就能做到。又有无数种生物可以培养卡片,只要能杀死他们就能做到,还有无数种生物可以培养制卡师,前提是能杀死他们。
  • 天封战纪之青城帝君

    天封战纪之青城帝君

    地球普通人,怎么在神仙大能纵横的异世界生存下去?——大学生秦青在线等。穿越修仙异世界,弱肉强食,森林法则,看秦青手握辅助系统,闯出一片天地。