TRANSGRESSIONOFTHELAW
In 1510
a
ship
setoutfromtheislandof
Hispaniola
(now
Haitiandthe
Dominican
Republic)
for
Venezuela,
where
it
wastorescuea
besieged
Spanishcolony.
Severalmilesoutof
port,
a
stowaway
climbedoutofa
provision
chest:VascoNufiezde
Balboa,
anoble
Spaniard
whohadcome
totheNewWorldinsearchof
gold
buthadfalleninto
debtand
had
es-
taped
hiscreditors
byhiding
inthechest.
Balboahadbeenobsessedwith
gold
eversinceColumbushadre-
turnedto
Spain
fromhis
voyages
withtalesofafabulousbutas
yet
undis-
covered
kingdom
called El Dorado. Balboa was one of the first
adventurerstocomeinsearchofColurnbus’slandof
gold,
andhehadde-
cidedfromthe
beginning
thathe
would
be
the
onetofind
it,
through
sheer
audacity
and
single—mindedness.
Nowthathewasfreeofhiscredi-
tors,
nothing
would
stop
him.
Unfortunately
the
ship’s
owner,
a
wealthyjurist
namedFranciscoFer-
nandezde
Enciso,
wasfuriouswhentoldofthe
stowaway,
andheordered
thatBalboabeleftonthefirstisland
they
came
across.
Before
they
found
any
island,however,
Encisoreceivednewsthatthe
colony
hewastores-
cuehadbeenabandoned.ThiswasBalboa’schance.Hetoldthesailorsof
his
previousvoyages
to
Panarna,
andoftherumorshehadheardof
gold
inthearea.TheexcitedsailorsconvincedEncisoto
spare
Balboa’s
life,
and
to
establisha
colony
inPanama.
Weekslater
they
named
their
new
settlement“Darien.”
Darien’sfirst
governor
was
Enciso,
butBalboawasnotamantolet
others steal the initiative. He
campaignedagainst
Enciso
among
the
sailors,
who
eventually
madeitclearthat
theypreferred
himas
governor.
Enciso
fledto
Spain,fearing
forhis
life.Months
later,
whena
representa-
tiveofthe
Spanish
crownarrivedtoestablishhimselfasthe
new,
official
governor
of
Darien,
hewasturned
away.
Onhisreturn
voyage
to
Spain,
thisman
drowned;
the
drowning
was
accidental,
butunder
Spanish
law,
Balboahadmurderedthe
governor
and
usurped
his
position.
Balb0a’sbravado
had
got
him
out
of
scrapes
before,
butnowhis
hopes
ofwealthand
glory
seemeddoomed.To
lay
claimtoEl
Dorado,
shouldhediscover
it,
hewouldneedthe
approval
ofthe
Spanishking-—
which,
asan
outlaw,
hewouldneverreceive.Therewas
only
onesolution.
PanamanianIndianshadtoldBalboaofavastoceanontheothersideof
theCentralAmerican
isthmus,
andhadsaiddiat
bytraveling
south
upon
thiswestern
coast,
hewouldreachafabulouslandof
gold,
called
by
a
namethattohisearssoundedlike“Biru.”Balboadecidedhewouldcross
thetreacherous
jungles
ofPanamaandbecomethefirst
European
tobathe
hisfeetinthisnewocean.FromtherehewouldmarchonElDorado.Ifhe
didthison
Spain’s
behalf,
hewouldobtain
the
eternal
gratitude
of
the
king,
andwouldsecurehisown
reprieve—-only
hehadtoactbefore
Span-
ishauthoritiescametoarresthim.
In
1513,then,
Balboaset
out,
with 190 soldiers.
Halfway
acrossthe
isthmus
(some
ninety
miles
wideatthat
point),only sixty
soldiers
re-
Theroarc
veryfew
men—aml
they
are[/10
exec/7tionA'—wl'to
are
abletothink
amlfeel
beyond
the
present
moment
CARLvow
C1./xusewnz.
1780- 1831
Till’.'I\X 0 I“I€(?(l5
Two
frogs
dweltinthe
sums!
pool.
The
pool
being
drier!
up
under
the
summer’:heat,
rhey
leftii,
andsetout
together
toseek
(motherhome.As
they
went
alongIlwy
rlmncerlto
pays
(1
deep
well,amplysupplied
with
water,
on
Scemg
whichone
of
the
frogs
saidtoIlucarlwrz“Let
usdescendandnmke
ourabodeinthis
well,
it
willfurnisli
uswith
shelterand
food.
"
The
other
replied
Wtl/I
greater
caurinrlr
“But
suppose
thewater
shrmldfail
us.howcan
we
get
our
aguinfmm
so
grew
11
tlepllt?"
Do
nothing
without 11
regard
tothe
conse-
£[M€IlC€5'.
EABLES.
AESOP.
SIXTHCENTURY
Hr‘.
LAW 29 237