summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/old
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'old')
-rw-r--r--old/guian10.txt3265
-rw-r--r--old/guian10.zipbin0 -> 76231 bytes
2 files changed, 3265 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/old/guian10.txt b/old/guian10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7f2f5e2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/guian10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,3265 @@
+The Project Gutenberg Etext The Discovery of Guiana, by Raleigh
+#3 in our series by Walter Raleigh
+
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
+the copyright laws for your country before posting these files!!
+
+Please take a look at the important information in this header.
+We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
+electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
+
+Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
+further information is included below. We need your donations.
+
+
+The Discovery of Guiana
+
+by Walter Raleigh
+
+August, 2000 [Etext #2272]
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext The Discovery of Guiana, by Raleigh
+*****This file should be named guian10.txt or guian10.zip******
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, guian11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, guian10a.txt
+
+
+Etext prepared by Dagny, dagnyj@hotmail.com
+and John Bickers, jbickers@templar.actrix.gen.nz
+
+Project Gutenberg Etexts are usually created from multiple editions,
+all of which are in the Public Domain in the United States, unless a
+copyright notice is included. Therefore, we usually do NOT keep any
+of these books in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+We are now trying to release all our books one month in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+
+Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an
+up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes
+in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has
+a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a
+look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a
+new copy has at least one byte more or less.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour this year as we release thirty-six text
+files per month, or 432 more Etexts in 1999 for a total of 2000+
+If these reach just 10% of the computerized population, then the
+total should reach over 200 billion Etexts given away this year.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
+Files by December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000 = 1 Trillion]
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only ~5% of the present number of computer users.
+
+At our revised rates of production, we will reach only one-third
+of that goal by the end of 2001, or about 3,333 Etexts unless we
+manage to get some real funding; currently our funding is mostly
+from Michael Hart's salary at Carnegie-Mellon University, and an
+assortment of sporadic gifts; this salary is only good for a few
+more years, so we are looking for something to replace it, as we
+don't want Project Gutenberg to be so dependent on one person.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+
+All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/CMU": and are
+tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. (CMU = Carnegie-
+Mellon University).
+
+For these and other matters, please mail to:
+
+Project Gutenberg
+P. O. Box 2782
+Champaign, IL 61825
+
+When all other email fails. . .try our Executive Director:
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+hart@pobox.com forwards to hart@prairienet.org and archive.org
+if your mail bounces from archive.org, I will still see it, if
+it bounces from prairienet.org, better resend later on. . . .
+
+We would prefer to send you this information by email.
+
+******
+
+To access Project Gutenberg etexts, use any Web browser
+to view http://promo.net/pg. This site lists Etexts by
+author and by title, and includes information about how
+to get involved with Project Gutenberg. You could also
+download our past Newsletters, or subscribe here. This
+is one of our major sites, please email hart@pobox.com,
+for a more complete list of our various sites.
+
+To go directly to the etext collections, use FTP or any
+Web browser to visit a Project Gutenberg mirror (mirror
+sites are available on 7 continents; mirrors are listed
+at http://promo.net/pg).
+
+Mac users, do NOT point and click, typing works better.
+
+Example FTP session:
+
+ftp sunsite.unc.edu
+login: anonymous
+password: your@login
+cd pub/docs/books/gutenberg
+cd etext90 through etext99
+dir [to see files]
+get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
+GET GUTINDEX.?? [to get a year's listing of books, e.g., GUTINDEX.99]
+GET GUTINDEX.ALL [to get a listing of ALL books]
+
+***
+
+**Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor**
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-
+tm etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor
+Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association at
+Carnegie-Mellon University (the "Project"). Among other
+things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
+under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this
+etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors,
+officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost
+and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or
+indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause:
+[1] distribution of this etext, [2] alteration, modification,
+or addition to the etext, or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word pro-
+ cessing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the etext (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Project of 20% of the
+ net profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Association/Carnegie-Mellon
+ University" within the 60 days following each
+ date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare)
+ your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time,
+scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty
+free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution
+you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg
+Association / Carnegie-Mellon University".
+
+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+Etext prepared by Dagny, dagnyj@hotmail.com
+and John Bickers, jbickers@templar.actrix.gen.nz
+
+
+
+
+THE DISCOVERY OF GUIANA
+
+By Sir Walter Raleigh
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+
+ Sir Walter Raleigh may be taken as the great typical figure of the
+ age of Elizabeth. Courtier and statesman, soldier and sailor,
+ scientist and man of letters, he engaged in almost all the main
+ lines of public activity in his time, and was distinguished in
+ them all.
+
+ His father was a Devonshire gentleman of property, connected with
+ many of the distinguished families of the south of England. Walter
+ was born about 1552 and was educated at Oxford. He first saw
+ military service in the Huguenot army in France in 1569, and in
+ 1578 engaged, with his half-brother, Sir Humphrey Gilbert, in the
+ first of his expeditions against the Spaniards. After some service
+ in Ireland, he attracted the attention of the Queen, and rapidly
+ rose to the perilous position of her chief favorite. With her
+ approval, he fitted out two expeditions for the colonization of
+ Virginia, neither of which did his royal mistress permit him to
+ lead in person, and neither of which succeeded in establishing a
+ permanent settlement.
+
+ After about six years of high favor, Raleigh found his position at
+ court endangered by the rivalry of Essex, and in 1592, on
+ returning from convoying a squadron he had fitted out against the
+ Spanish, he was thrown into the Tower by the orders of the Queen,
+ who had discovered an intrigue between him and one of her ladies
+ whom he subsequently married. He was ultimately released, engaged
+ in various naval exploits, and in 1594 sailed for South America on
+ the voyage described in the following narrative.
+
+ On the death of Elizabeth, Raleigh's misfortunes increased. He was
+ accused of treason against James I, condemned, reprieved, and
+ imprisoned for twelve years, during which he wrote his "History of
+ the World," and engaged in scientific researches. In 1616 he was
+ liberated, to make another attempt to find the gold mine in
+ Venezuela; but the expedition was disastrous, and, on his return,
+ Raleigh was executed on the old charge in 1618. In his vices as in
+ his virtues, Raleigh is a thorough representative of the great
+ adventurers who laid the foundations of the British Empire.
+
+
+
+
+
+RALEIGH'S DISCOVERY OF GUIANA
+
+
+
+The Discovery of the large, rich, and beautiful EMPIRE Of GUIANA; with
+a Relation of the great and golden CITY of MANOA, which the Spaniards
+call EL DORADO, and the PROVINCES of EMERIA, AROMAIA, AMAPAIA, and
+other Countries, with their rivers, adjoining. Performed in the year
+1595 by Sir WALTER RALEIGH, KNIGHT, CAPTAIN of her Majesty's GUARD,
+Lord Warden of the STANNARIES, and her Highness' LIEUTENANT-GENERAL of
+the COUNTY of CORNWALL.
+
+
+
+To the Right Honourable my singular good Lord and kinsman CHARLES
+HOWARD, Knight of the Garter, Baron, and Councillor, and of the
+Admirals of England the most renowned; and to the Right Honourable SIR
+ROBERT CECIL, KNIGHT, Councillor in her Highness' Privy Councils.
+
+
+
+For your Honours' many honourable and friendly parts, I have hitherto
+only returned promises; and now, for answer of both your adventures, I
+have sent you a bundle of papers, which I have divided between your
+Lordship and Sir Robert Cecil, in these two respects chiefly; first,
+for that it is reason that wasteful factors, when they have consumed
+such stocks as they had in trust, do yield some colour for the same in
+their account; secondly, for that I am assured that whatsoever shall
+be done, or written, by me, shall need a double protection and
+defence. The trial that I had of both your loves, when I was left of
+all, but of malice and revenge, makes me still presume that you will
+be pleased (knowing what little power I had to perform aught, and the
+great advantage of forewarned enemies) to answer that out of
+knowledge, which others shall but object out of malice. In my more
+happy times as I did especially honour you both, so I found that your
+loves sought me out in the darkest shadow of adversity, and the same
+affection which accompanied my better fortune soared not away from me
+in my many miseries; all which though I cannot requite, yet I shall
+ever acknowledge; and the great debt which I have no power to pay, I
+can do no more for a time but confess to be due. It is true that as my
+errors were great, so they have yielded very grievous effects; and if
+aught might have been deserved in former times, to have counterpoised
+any part of offences, the fruit thereof, as it seemeth, was long
+before fallen from the tree, and the dead stock only remained. I did
+therefore, even in the winter of my life, undertake these travails,
+fitter for bodies less blasted with misfortunes, for men of greater
+ability, and for minds of better encouragement, that thereby, if it
+were possible, I might recover but the moderation of excess, and the
+least taste of the greatest plenty formerly possessed. If I had known
+other way to win, if I had imagined how greater adventures might have
+regained, if I could conceive what farther means I might yet use but
+even to appease so powerful displeasure, I would not doubt but for one
+year more to hold fast my soul in my teeth till it were performed. Of
+that little remain I had, I have wasted in effect all herein. I have
+undergone many constructions; I have been accompanied with many
+sorrows, with labour, hunger, heat, sickness, and peril; it appeareth,
+notwithstanding, that I made no other bravado of going to the sea,
+than was meant, and that I was never hidden in Cornwall, or elsewhere,
+as was supposed. They have grossly belied me that forejudged that I
+would rather become a servant to the Spanish king than return; and the
+rest were much mistaken, who would have persuaded that I was too
+easeful and sensual to undertake a journey of so great travail. But if
+what I have done receive the gracious construction of a painful
+pilgrimage, and purchase the least remission, I shall think all too
+little, and that there were wanting to the rest many miseries. But if
+both the times past, the present, and what may be in the future, do
+all by one grain of gall continue in eternal distaste, I do not then
+know whether I should bewail myself, either for my too much travail
+and expense, or condemn myself for doing less than that which can
+deserve nothing. From myself I have deserved no thanks, for I am
+returned a beggar, and withered; but that I might have bettered my
+poor estate, it shall appear from the following discourse, if I had
+not only respected her Majesty's future honour and riches.
+
+It became not the former fortune, in which I once lived, to go
+journeys of picory (marauding); it had sorted ill with the offices of
+honour, which by her Majesty's grace I hold this day in England, to
+run from cape to cape and from place to place, for the pillage of
+ordinary prizes. Many years since I had knowledge, by relation, of
+that mighty, rich, and beautiful empire of Guiana, and of that great
+and golden city, which the Spaniards call El Dorado, and the naturals
+Manoa, which city was conquered, re-edified, and enlarged by a younger
+son of Guayna-capac, Emperor of Peru, at such time as Francisco
+Pizarro and others conquered the said empire from his two elder
+brethren, Guascar and Atabalipa, both then contending for the same,
+the one being favoured by the orejones of Cuzco, the other by the
+people of Caxamalca. I sent my servant Jacob Whiddon, the year before,
+to get knowledge of the passages, and I had some light from Captain
+Parker, sometime my servant, and now attending on your Lordship, that
+such a place there was to the southward of the great bay of Charuas,
+or Guanipa: but I found that it was 600 miles farther off than they
+supposed, and many impediments to them unknown and unheard. After I
+had displanted Don Antonio de Berreo, who was upon the same
+enterprise, leaving my ships at Trinidad, at the port called Curiapan,
+I wandered 400 miles into the said country by land and river; the
+particulars I will leave to the following discourse.
+
+The country hath more quantity of gold, by manifold, than the best
+parts of the Indies, or Peru. All the most of the kings of the borders
+are already become her Majesty's vassals, and seem to desire nothing
+more than her Majesty's protection and the return of the English
+nation. It hath another ground and assurance of riches and glory than
+the voyages of the West Indies; an easier way to invade the best parts
+thereof than by the common course. The king of Spain is not so
+impoverished by taking three or four port towns in America as we
+suppose; neither are the riches of Peru or Nueva Espana so left by the
+sea side as it can be easily washed away with a great flood, or spring
+tide, or left dry upon the sands on a low ebb. The port towns are few
+and poor in respect of the rest within the land, and are of little
+defence, and are only rich when the fleets are to receive the treasure
+for Spain; and we might think the Spaniards very simple, having so
+many horses and slaves, if they could not upon two days' warning carry
+all the gold they have into the land, and far enough from the reach of
+our footmen, especially the Indies being, as they are for the most
+part, so mountainous, full of woods, rivers, and marishes. In the port
+towns of the province of Venezuela, as Cumana, Coro, and St. Iago
+(whereof Coro and St. Iago were taken by Captain Preston, and Cumana
+and St. Josepho by us) we found not the value of one real of plate in
+either. But the cities of Barquasimeta, Valencia, St. Sebastian,
+Cororo, St. Lucia, Laguna, Maracaiba, and Truxillo, are not so easily
+invaded. Neither doth the burning of those on the coast impoverish the
+king of Spain any one ducat; and if we sack the River of Hacha, St.
+Martha, and Carthagena, which are the ports of Nuevo Reyno and
+Popayan, there are besides within the land, which are indeed rich and
+prosperous, the towns and cities of Merida, Lagrita, St. Christophoro,
+the great cities of Pamplona, Santa Fe de Bogota, Tunxa, and Mozo,
+where the emeralds are found, the towns and cities of Marequita,
+Velez, la Villa de Leiva, Palma, Honda, Angostura, the great city of
+Timana, Tocaima, St. Aguila, Pasto, [St.] Iago, the great city of
+Popayan itself, Los Remedios, and the rest. If we take the ports and
+villages within the bay of Uraba in the kingdom or rivers of Darien
+and Caribana, the cities and towns of St. Juan de Rodas, of Cassaris,
+of Antiochia, Caramanta, Cali, and Anserma have gold enough to pay the
+king's part, and are not easily invaded by way of the ocean. Or if
+Nombre de Dios and Panama be taken, in the province of Castilla del
+Oro, and the villages upon the rivers of Cenu and Chagre; Peru hath,
+besides those, and besides the magnificent cities of Quito and Lima,
+so many islands, ports, cities, and mines as if I should name them
+with the rest it would seem incredible to the reader. Of all which,
+because I have written a particular treatise of the West Indies, I
+will omit the repetition at this time, seeing that in the said
+treatise I have anatomized the rest of the sea towns as well of
+Nicaragua, Yucatan, Nueva Espana, and the islands, as those of the
+inland, and by what means they may be best invaded, as far as any mean
+judgment may comprehend.
+
+But I hope it shall appear that there is a way found to answer every
+man's longing; a better Indies for her Majesty than the king of Spain
+hath any; which if it shall please her Highness to undertake, I shall
+most willingly end the rest of my days in following the same. If it be
+left to the spoil and sackage of common persons, if the love and
+service of so many nations be despised, so great riches and so mighty
+an empire refused; I hope her Majesty will yet take my humble desire
+and my labour therein in gracious part, which, if it had not been in
+respect of her Highness' future honour and riches, could have laid
+hands on and ransomed many of the kings and caciqui of the country,
+and have had a reasonable proportion of gold for their redemption. But
+I have chosen rather to bear the burden of poverty than reproach; and
+rather to endure a second travail, and the chances thereof, than to
+have defaced an enterprise of so great assurance, until I knew whether
+it pleased God to put a disposition in her princely and royal heart
+either to follow or forslow (neglect, decline, lose through sloth) the
+same. I will therefore leave it to His ordinance that hath only power
+in all things; and do humbly pray that your honours will excuse such
+errors as, without the defence of art, overrun in every part the
+following discourse, in which I have neither studied phrase, form, nor
+fashion; that you will be pleased to esteem me as your own, though
+over dearly bought, and I shall ever remain ready to do you all honour
+and service.
+
+
+
+TO THE READER
+
+Because there have been divers opinions conceived of the gold ore
+brought from Guiana, and for that an alderman of London and an officer
+of her Majesty's mint hath given out that the same is of no price, I
+have thought good by the addition of these lines to give answer as
+well to the said malicious slander as to other objections. It is true
+that while we abode at the island of Trinidad I was informed by an
+Indian that not far from the port where we anchored there were found
+certain mineral stones which they esteemed to be gold, and were
+thereunto persuaded the rather for that they had seen both English and
+Frenchmen gather and embark some quantities thereof. Upon this
+likelihood I sent forty men, and gave order that each one should bring
+a stone of that mine, to make trial of the goodness; which being
+performed, I assured them at their return that the same was marcasite,
+and of no riches or value. Notwithstanding, divers, trusting more to
+their own sense than to my opinion, kept of the said marcasite, and
+have tried thereof since my return, in divers places. In Guiana itself
+I never saw marcasite; but all the rocks, mountains, all stones in the
+plains, woods, and by the rivers' sides, are in effect thorough-
+shining, and appear marvellous rich; which, being tried to be no
+marcasite, are the true signs of rich minerals, but are no other than
+El madre del oro, as the Spaniards term them, which is the mother of
+gold, or, as it is said by others, the scum of gold. Of divers sorts
+of these many of my company brought also into England, every one
+taking the fairest for the best, which is not general. For mine own
+part, I did not countermand any man's desire or opinion, and I could
+have afforded them little if I should have denied them the pleasing of
+their own fancies therein; but I was resolved that gold must be found
+either in grains, separate from the stone, as it is in most of the
+rivers in Guiana, or else in a kind of hard stone, which we call the
+white spar, of which I saw divers hills, and in sundry places, but had
+neither time nor men, nor instruments fit for labour. Near unto one of
+the rivers I found of the said white spar or flint a very great ledge
+or bank, which I endeavoured to break by all the means I could,
+because there appeared on the outside some small grains of gold; but
+finding no mean to work the same upon the upper part, seeking the
+sides and circuit of the said rock, I found a clift in the same, from
+whence with daggers, and with the head of an axe, we got out some
+small quantity thereof; of which kind of white stone, wherein gold is
+engendered, we saw divers hills and rocks in every part of Guiana
+wherein we travelled. Of this there have been made many trials; and in
+London it was first assayed by Master Westwood, a refiner dwelling in
+Wood Street, and it held after the rate of twelve or thirteen thousand
+pounds a ton. Another sort was afterward tried by Master Bulmar, and
+Master Dimock, assay-master; and it held after the rate of three and
+twenty thousand pounds a ton. There was some of it again tried by
+Master Palmer, Comptroller of the Mint, and Master Dimock in
+Goldsmith's Hall, and it held after six and twenty thousand and nine
+hundred pounds a ton. There was also at the same time, and by the same
+persons, a trial made of the dust of the said mine; which held eight
+pounds and six ounces weight of gold in the hundred. There was
+likewise at the same time a trial of an image of copper made in
+Guiana, which held a third part of gold, besides divers trials made in
+the country, and by others in London. But because there came ill with
+the good, and belike the said alderman was not presented with the
+best, it hath pleased him therefore to scandal all the rest, and to
+deface the enterprise as much as in him lieth. It hath also been
+concluded by divers that if there had been any such ore in Guiana, and
+the same discovered, that I would have brought home a greater quantity
+thereof. First, I was not bound to satisfy any man of the quantity,
+but only such as adventured, if any store had been returned thereof;
+but it is very true that had all their mountains been of massy gold it
+was impossible for us to have made any longer stay to have wrought the
+same; and whosoever hath seen with what strength of stone the best
+gold ore is environed, he will not think it easy to be had out in
+heaps, and especially by us, who had neither men, instruments, nor
+time, as it is said before, to perform the same.
+
+There were on this discovery no less than an hundred persons, who can
+all witness that when we passed any branch of the river to view the
+land within, and stayed from our boats but six hours, we were driven
+to wade to the eyes at our return; and if we attempted the same the
+day following, it was impossible either to ford it, or to swim it,
+both by reason of the swiftness, and also for that the borders were so
+pestered with fast woods, as neither boat nor man could find place
+either to land or to embark; for in June, July, August, and September
+it is impossible to navigate any of those rivers; for such is the fury
+of the current, and there are so many trees and woods overflown, as if
+any boat but touch upon any tree or stake it is impossible to save any
+one person therein. And ere we departed the land it ran with such
+swiftness as we drave down, most commonly against the wind, little
+less than an hundred miles a day. Besides, our vessels were no other
+than wherries, one little barge, a small cock-boat, and a bad galiota
+which we framed in haste for that purpose at Trinidad; and those
+little boats had nine or ten men apiece, with all their victuals and
+arms. It is further true that we were about four hundred miles from
+our ships, and had been a month from them, which also we left weakly
+manned in an open road, and had promised our return in fifteen days.
+
+Others have devised that the same ore was had from Barbary, and that
+we carried it with us into Guiana. Surely the singularity of that
+device I do not well comprehend. For mine own part, I am not so much
+in love with these long voyages as to devise thereby to cozen myself,
+to lie hard, to fare worse, to be subjected to perils, to diseases, to
+ill savours, to be parched and withered, and withal to sustain the
+care and labour of such an enterprise, except the same had more
+comfort than the fetching of marcasite in Guiana, or buying of gold
+ore in Barbary. But I hope the better sort will judge me by
+themselves, and that the way of deceit is not the way of honour or
+good opinion. I have herein consumed much time, and many crowns; and I
+had no other respect or desire than to serve her Majesty and my
+country thereby. If the Spanish nation had been of like belief to
+these detractors we should little have feared or doubted their
+attempts, wherewith we now are daily threatened. But if we now
+consider of the actions both of Charles the Fifth, who had the
+maidenhead of Peru and the abundant treasures of Atabalipa, together
+with the affairs of the Spanish king now living, what territories he
+hath purchased, what he hath added to the acts of his predecessors,
+how many kingdoms he hath endangered, how many armies, garrisons, and
+navies he hath, and doth maintain, the great losses which he hath
+repaired, as in Eighty-eight above an hundred sail of great ships with
+their artillery, and that no year is less infortunate, but that many
+vessels, treasures, and people are devoured, and yet notwithstanding
+he beginneth again like a storm to threaten shipwrack to us all; we
+shall find that these abilities rise not from the trades of sacks and
+Seville oranges, nor from aught else that either Spain, Portugal, or
+any of his other provinces produce; it is his Indian gold that
+endangereth and disturbeth all the nations of Europe; it purchaseth
+intelligence, creepeth into counsels, and setteth bound loyalty at
+liberty in the greatest monarchies of Europe. If the Spanish king can
+keep us from foreign enterprises, and from the impeachment of his
+trades, either by offer of invasion, or by besieging us in Britain,
+Ireland, or elsewhere, he hath then brought the work of our peril in
+great forwardness.
+
+Those princes that abound in treasure have great advantages over the
+rest, if they once constrain them to a defensive war, where they are
+driven once a year or oftener to cast lots for their own garments; and
+from all such shall all trades and intercourse be taken away, to the
+general loss and impoverishment of the kingdom and commonweal so
+reduced. Besides, when our men are constrained to fight, it hath not
+the like hope as when they are pressed and encouraged by the desire of
+spoil and riches. Farther, it is to be doubted how those that in time
+of victory seem to affect their neighbour nations will remain after
+the first view of misfortunes or ill success; to trust, also, to the
+doubtfulness of a battle is but a fearful and uncertain adventure,
+seeing therein fortune is as likely to prevail as virtue. It shall not
+be necessary to allege all that might be said, and therefore I will
+thus conclude; that whatsoever kingdom shall be enforced to defend
+itself may be compared to a body dangerously diseased, which for a
+season may be preserved with vulgar medicines, but in a short time,
+and by little and little, the same must needs fall to the ground and
+be dissolved. I have therefore laboured all my life, both according to
+my small power and persuasion, to advance all those attempts that
+might either promise return of profit to ourselves, or at least be a
+let and impeachment to the quiet course and plentiful trades of the
+Spanish nation; who, in my weak judgement, by such a war were as
+easily endangered and brought from his powerfulness as any prince in
+Europe, if it be considered from how many kingdoms and nations his
+revenues are gathered, and those so weak in their own beings and so
+far severed from mutual succour. But because such a preparation and
+resolution is not to be hoped for in haste, and that the time which
+our enemies embrace cannot be had again to advantage, I will hope that
+these provinces, and that empire now by me discovered, shall suffice
+to enable her Majesty and the whole kingdom with no less quantities of
+treasure than the king of Spain hath in all the Indies, East and West,
+which he possesseth; which if the same be considered and followed, ere
+the Spaniards enforce the same, and if her Majesty will undertake it,
+I will be contented to lose her Highness' favour and good opinion for
+ever, and my life withal, if the same be not found rather to exceed
+than to equal whatsoever is in this discourse promised and declared. I
+will now refer the reader to the following discourse, with the hope
+that the perilous and chargeable labours and endeavours of such as
+thereby seek the profit and honour of her Majesty, and the English
+nation, shall by men of quality and virtue receive such construction
+and good acceptance as themselves would like to be rewarded withal in
+the like.
+
+
+
+THE DISCOVERY[*] OF GUIANA[+]
+
+[*] Exploration
+
+[+] The name is derived from the Guayano Indians, on the Orinoco.
+
+On Thursday, the sixth of February, in the year 1595, we departed
+England, and the Sunday following had sight of the north cape of
+Spain, the wind for the most part continuing prosperous; we passed in
+sight of the Burlings, and the Rock, and so onwards for the Canaries,
+and fell with Fuerteventura the 17. of the same month, where we spent
+two or three days, and relieved our companies with some fresh meat.
+From thence we coasted by the Grand Canaria, and so to Teneriffe, and
+stayed there for the Lion's Whelp, your Lordship's ship, and for
+Captain Amyas Preston and the rest. But when after seven or eight days
+we found them not, we departed and directed our course for Trinidad,
+with mine own ship, and a small barque of Captain Cross's only; for we
+had before lost sight of a small galego on the coast of Spain, which
+came with us from Plymouth. We arrived at Trinidad the 22. of March,
+casting anchor at Point Curiapan, which the Spaniards call Punta de
+Gallo, which is situate in eight degrees or thereabouts. We abode
+there four or five days, and in all that time we came not to the
+speech of any Indian or Spaniard. On the coast we saw a fire, as we
+sailed from the Point Carao towards Curiapan, but for fear of the
+Spaniards none durst come to speak with us. I myself coasted it in my
+barge close aboard the shore and landed in every cove, the better to
+know the island, while the ships kept the channel. From Curiapan after
+a few days we turned up north-east to recover that place which the
+Spaniards call Puerto de los Espanoles (now Port of Spain), and the
+inhabitants Conquerabia; and as before, revictualling my barge, I left
+the ships and kept by the shore, the better to come to speech with
+some of the inhabitants, and also to understand the rivers, watering-
+places, and ports of the island, which, as it is rudely done, my
+purpose is to send your Lordship after a few days. From Curiapan I
+came to a port and seat of Indians called Parico, where we found a
+fresh water river, but saw no people. From thence I rowed to another
+port, called by the naturals Piche, and by the Spaniards Tierra de
+Brea. In the way between both were divers little brooks of fresh
+water, and one salt river that had store of oysters upon the branches
+of the trees, and were very salt and well tasted. All their oysters
+grow upon those boughs and sprays, and not on the ground; the like is
+commonly seen in other places of the West Indies, and elsewhere. This
+tree is described by Andrew Thevet, in his France Antarctique, and the
+form figured in the book as a plant very strange; and by Pliny in his
+twelfth book of his Natural History. But in this island, as also in
+Guiana, there are very many of them.
+
+At this point, called Tierra de Brea or Piche, there is that abundance
+of stone pitch that all the ships of the world may be therewith laden
+from thence; and we made trial of it in trimming our ships to be most
+excellent good, and melteth not with the sun as the pitch of Norway,
+and therefore for ships trading the south parts very profitable. From
+thence we went to the mountain foot called Annaperima, and so passing
+the river Carone, on which the Spanish city was seated, we met with
+our ships at Puerto de los Espanoles or Conquerabia.
+
+This island of Trinidad hath the form of a sheephook, and is but
+narrow; the north part is very mountainous; the soil is very
+excellent, and will bear sugar, ginger, or any other commodity that
+the Indies yield. It hath store of deer, wild porks, fruit, fish, and
+fowl; it hath also for bread sufficient maize, cassavi, and of those
+roots and fruits which are common everywhere in the West Indies. It
+hath divers beasts which the Indies have not; the Spaniards confessed
+that they found grains of gold in some of the rivers; but they having
+a purpose to enter Guiana, the magazine of all rich metals, cared not
+to spend time in the search thereof any further. This island is called
+by the people thereof Cairi, and in it are divers nations. Those about
+Parico are called Jajo, those at Punta de Carao are of the Arwacas
+(Arawaks) and between Carao and Curiapan they are called Salvajos.
+Between Carao and Punta de Galera are the Nepojos, and those about the
+Spanish city term themselves Carinepagotes (Carib-people). Of the rest
+of the nations, and of other ports and rivers, I leave to speak here,
+being impertinent to my purpose, and mean to describe them as they are
+situate in the particular plot and description of the island, three
+parts whereof I coasted with my barge, that I might the better
+describe it.
+
+Meeting with the ships at Puerto de los Espanoles, we found at the
+landing-place a company of Spaniards who kept a guard at the descent;
+and they offering a sign of peace, I sent Captain Whiddon to speak
+with them, whom afterwards to my great grief I left buried in the said
+island after my return from Guiana, being a man most honest and
+valiant. The Spaniards seemed to be desirous to trade with us, and to
+enter into terms of peace, more for doubt of their own strength than
+for aught else; and in the end, upon pledge, some of them came aboard.
+The same evening there stale also aboard us in a small canoa two
+Indians, the one of them being a cacique or lord of the people, called
+Cantyman, who had the year before been with Captain Whiddon, and was
+of his acquaintance. By this Cantyman we understood what strength the
+Spaniards had, how far it was to their city, and of Don Antonio de
+Berreo, the governor, who was said to be slain in his second attempt
+of Guiana, but was not.
+
+While we remained at Puerto de los Espanoles some Spaniards came
+aboard us to buy linen of the company, and such other things as they
+wanted, and also to view our ships and company, all which I
+entertained kindly and feasted after our manner. By means whereof I
+learned of one and another as much of the estate of Guiana as I could,
+or as they knew; for those poor soldiers having been many years
+without wine, a few draughts made them merry, in which mood they
+vaunted of Guiana and the riches thereof, and all what they knew of
+the ways and passages; myself seeming to purpose nothing less than the
+entrance or discovery thereof, but bred in them an opinion that I was
+bound only for the relief of those English which I had planted in
+Virginia, whereof the bruit was come among them; which I had performed
+in my return, if extremity of weather had not forced me from the said
+coast.
+
+I found occasions of staying in this place for two causes. The one was
+to be revenged of Berreo, who the year before, 1594, had betrayed
+eight of Captain Whiddon's men, and took them while he departed from
+them to seek the Edward Bonaventure, which arrived at Trinidad the day
+before from the East Indies: in whose absence Berreo sent a canoa
+aboard the pinnace only with Indians and dogs inviting the company to
+go with them into the woods to kill a deer. Who like wise men, in the
+absence of their captain followed the Indians, but were no sooner one
+arquebus shot from the shore, but Berreo's soldiers lying in ambush
+had them all, notwithstanding that he had given his word to Captain
+Whiddon that they should take water and wood safely. The other cause
+of my stay was, for that by discourse with the Spaniards I daily
+learned more and more of Guiana, of the rivers and passages, and of
+the enterprise of Berreo, by what means or fault he failed, and how he
+meant to prosecute the same.
+
+While we thus spent the time I was assured by another cacique of the
+north side of the island, that Berreo had sent to Margarita and Cumana
+for soldiers, meaning to have given me a cassado (blow) at parting, if
+it had been possible. For although he had given order through all the
+island that no Indian should come aboard to trade with me upon pain of
+hanging and quartering (having executed two of them for the same,
+which I afterwards found), yet every night there came some with most
+lamentable complaints of his cruelty: how he had divided the island
+and given to every soldier a part; that he made the ancient caciques,
+which were lords of the country, to be their slaves; that he kept them
+in chains, and dropped their naked bodies with burning bacon, and such
+other torments, which I found afterwards to be true. For in the city,
+after I entered the same, there were five of the lords or little
+kings, which they call caciques in the West Indies, in one chain,
+almost dead of famine, and wasted with torments. These are called in
+their own language acarewana, and now of late since English, French,
+and Spanish, are come among them, they call themselves captains,
+because they perceive that the chiefest of every ship is called by
+that name. Those five captains in the chain were called Wannawanare,
+Carroaori, Maquarima, Tarroopanama, and Aterima. So as both to be
+revenged of the former wrong, as also considering that to enter Guiana
+by small boats, to depart 400 or 500 miles from my ships, and to leave
+a garrison in my back interested in the same enterprise, who also
+daily expected supplies out of Spain, I should have savoured very much
+of the ass; and therefore taking a time of most advantage, I set upon
+the Corps du garde in the evening, and having put them to the sword,
+sent Captain Caulfield onwards with sixty soldiers, and myself
+followed with forty more, and so took their new city, which they
+called St. Joseph, by break of day. They abode not any fight after a
+few shot, and all being dismissed, but only Berreo and his companion
+(the Portuguese captain Alvaro Jorge), I brought them with me aboard,
+and at the instance of the Indians I set their new city of St. Joseph
+on fire. The same day arrived Captain George Gifford with your
+lordship's ship, and Captain Keymis, whom I lost on the coast of
+Spain, with the galego, and in them divers gentlemen and others, which
+to our little army was a great comfort and supply.
+
+We then hasted away towards our purposed discovery, and first I called
+all the captains of the island together that were enemies to the
+Spaniards; for there were some which Berreo had brought out of other
+countries, and planted there to eat out and waste those that were
+natural of the place. And by my Indian interpreter, which I carried
+out of England, I made them understand that I was the servant of a
+queen who was the great cacique of the north, and a virgin, and had
+more caciqui under her than there were trees in that island; that she
+was an enemy to the Castellani in respect of their tyranny and
+oppression, and that she delivered all such nations about her, as were
+by them oppressed; and having freed all the coast of the northern
+world from their servitude, had sent me to free them also, and withal
+to defend the country of Guiana from their invasion and conquest. I
+shewed them her Majesty's picture, which they so admired and honoured,
+as it had been easy to have brought them idolatrous thereof. The like
+and a more large discourse I made to the rest of the nations, both in
+my passing to Guiana and to those of the borders, so as in that part
+of the world her Majesty is very famous and admirable; whom they now
+call EZRABETA CASSIPUNA AQUEREWANA, which is as much as 'Elizabeth,
+the Great Princess, or Greatest Commander.' This done, we left Puerto
+de los Espanoles, and returned to Curiapan, and having Berreo my
+prisoner, I gathered from him as much of Guiana as he knew. This
+Berreo is a gentleman well descended, and had long served the Spanish
+king in Milan, Naples, the Low Countries, and elsewhere, very valiant
+and liberal, and a gentleman of great assuredness, and of a great
+heart. I used him according to his estate and worth in all things I
+could, according to the small means I had.
+
+I sent Captain Whiddon the year before to get what knowledge he could
+of Guiana: and the end of my journey at this time was to discover and
+enter the same. But my intelligence was far from truth, for the
+country is situate about 600 English miles further from the sea than I
+was made believe it had been. Which afterwards understanding to be
+true by Berreo, I kept it from the knowledge of my company, who else
+would never have been brought to attempt the same. Of which 600 miles
+I passed 400, leaving my ships so far from me at anchor in the sea,
+which was more of desire to perform that discovery than of reason,
+especially having such poor and weak vessels to transport ourselves
+in. For in the bottom of an old galego which I caused to be fashioned
+like a galley, and in one barge, two wherries, and a ship-boat of the
+Lion's Whelp, we carried 100 persons and their victuals for a month in
+the same, being all driven to lie in the rain and weather in the open
+air, in the burning sun, and upon the hard boards, and to dress our
+meat, and to carry all manner of furniture in them. Wherewith they
+were so pestered and unsavoury, that what with victuals being most
+fish, with the wet clothes of so many men thrust together, and the
+heat of the sun, I will undertake there was never any prison in
+England that could be found more unsavoury and loathsome, especially
+to myself, who had for many years before been dieted and cared for in
+a sort far more differing.
+
+If Captain Preston had not been persuaded that he should have come too
+late to Trinidad to have found us there (for the month was expired
+which I promised to tarry for him there ere he could recover the coast
+of Spain) but that it had pleased God he might have joined with us,
+and that we had entered the country but some ten days sooner ere the
+rivers were overflown, we had adventured either to have gone to the
+great city of Manoa, or at least taken so many of the other cities and
+towns nearer at hand, as would have made a royal return. But it
+pleased not God so much to favour me at this time. If it shall be my
+lot to prosecute the same, I shall willingly spend my life therein.
+And if any else shall be enabled thereunto, and conquer the same, I
+assure him thus much; he shall perform more than ever was done in
+Mexico by Cortes, or in Peru by Pizarro, whereof the one conquered the
+empire of Mutezuma, the other of Guascar and Atabalipa. And whatsoever
+prince shall possess it, that prince shall be lord of more gold, and
+of a more beautiful empire, and of more cities and people, than either
+the king of Spain or the Great Turk.
+
+But because there may arise many doubts, and how this empire of Guiana
+is become so populous, and adorned with so many great cities, towns,
+temples, and treasures, I thought good to make it known, that the
+emperor now reigning is descended from those magnificent princes of
+Peru, of whose large territories, of whose policies, conquests,
+edifices, and riches, Pedro de Cieza, Francisco Lopez, and others have
+written large discourses. For when Francisco Pizarro, Diego Almagro
+and others conquered the said empire of Peru, and had put to death
+Atabalipa, son to Guayna Capac, which Atabalipa had formerly caused
+his eldest brother Guascar to be slain, one of the younger sons of
+Guayna Capac fled out of Peru, and took with him many thousands of
+those soldiers of the empire called orejones ("having large ears," the
+name given by the Spaniards to the Peruvian warriors, who wore ear-
+pendants), and with those and many others which followed him, he
+vanquished all that tract and valley of America which is situate
+between the great river of Amazons and Baraquan, otherwise called
+Orenoque and Maranon (Baraquan is the alternative name to Orenoque,
+Maranon to Amazons).
+
+The empire of Guiana is directly east from Peru towards the sea, and
+lieth under the equinoctial line; and it hath more abundance of gold
+than any part of Peru, and as many or more great cities than ever Peru
+had when it flourished most. It is governed by the same laws, and the
+emperor and people observe the same religion, and the same form and
+policies in government as were used in Peru, not differing in any
+part. And I have been assured by such of the Spaniards as have seen
+Manoa, the imperial city of Guiana, which the Spaniards call El
+Dorado, that for the greatness, for the riches, and for the excellent
+seat, it far exceedeth any of the world, at least of so much of the
+world as is known to the Spanish nation. It is founded upon a lake of
+salt water of 200 leagues long, like unto Mare Caspium. And if we
+compare it to that of Peru, and but read the report of Francisco Lopez
+and others, it will seem more than credible; and because we may judge
+of the one by the other, I thought good to insert part of the 120.
+chapter of Lopez in his General History of the Indies, wherein he
+describeth the court and magnificence of Guayna Capac, ancestor to the
+emperor of Guiana, whose very words are these:--
+
+"Todo el servicio de su casa, mesa, y cocina era de oro y de plata, y
+cuando menos de plata y cobre, por mas recio. Tenia en su recamara
+estatuas huecas de oro, que parescian gigantes, y las figuras al
+propio y tamano de cuantos animales, aves, arboles, y yerbas produce
+la tierra, y de cuantos peces cria la mar y agua de sus reynos. Tenia
+asimesmo sogas, costales, cestas, y troxes de oro y plata; rimeros de
+palos de oro, que pareciesen lena rajada para quemar. En fin no habia
+cosa en su tierra, que no la tuviese de oro contrahecha; y aun dizen,
+que tenian los Ingas un verjel en una isla cerca de la Puna, donde se
+iban a holgar, cuando querian mar, que tenia la hortaliza, las flores,
+y arboles de oro y plata; invencion y grandeza hasta entonces nunca
+vista. Allende de todo esto, tenia infinitisima cantidad de plata y
+oro por labrar en el Cuzco, que se perdio por la muerte de Guascar; ca
+los Indios lo escondieron, viendo que los Espanoles se lo tomaban, y
+enviaban a Espana."
+
+That is, "All the vessels of his house, table, and kitchen, were of
+gold and silver, and the meanest of silver and copper for strength and
+hardness of metal. He had in his wardrobe hollow statues of gold which
+seemed giants, and the figures in proportion and bigness of all the
+beasts, birds, trees, and herbs, that the earth bringeth forth; and of
+all the fishes that the sea or waters of his kingdom breedeth. He had
+also ropes, budgets, chests, and troughs of gold and silver, heaps of
+billets of gold, that seemed wood marked out (split into logs) to
+burn. Finally, there was nothing in his country whereof he had not the
+counterfeit in gold. Yea, and they say, the Ingas had a garden of
+pleasure in an island near Puna, where they went to recreate
+themselves, when they would take the air of the sea, which had all
+kinds of garden-herbs, flowers, and trees of gold and silver; an
+invention and magnificence till then never seen. Besides all this, he
+had an infinite quantity of silver and gold unwrought in Cuzco, which
+was lost by the death of Guascar, for the Indians hid it, seeing that
+the Spaniards took it, and sent it into Spain."
+
+And in the 117. chapter; Francisco Pizarro caused the gold and silver
+of Atabalipa to be weighed after he had taken it, which Lopez setteth
+down in these words following:--"Hallaron cincuenta y dos mil marcos
+de buena plata, y un millon y trecientos y veinte y seis mil y
+quinientos pesos de oro." Which is, "They found 52,000 marks of good
+silver, and 1,326,500 pesos of gold." Now, although these reports may
+seem strange, yet if we consider the many millions which are daily
+brought out of Peru into Spain, we may easily believe the same. For we
+find that by the abundant treasure of that country the Spanish king
+vexes all the princes of Europe, and is become, in a few years, from a
+poor king of Castile, the greatest monarch of this part of the world,
+and likely every day to increase if other princes forslow the good
+occasions offered, and suffer him to add this empire to the rest,
+which by far exceedeth all the rest. If his gold now endanger us, he
+will then be unresistible. Such of the Spaniards as afterwards
+endeavoured the conquest thereof, whereof there have been many, as
+shall be declared hereafter, thought that this Inga, of whom this
+emperor now living is descended, took his way by the river of Amazons,
+by that branch which is called Papamene (The Papamene is a tributary
+not of the Amazon river but of the Meta, one of the principal
+tributaries of the Orinoco). For by that way followed Orellana, by the
+commandment of Gonzalo Pizarro, in the year 1542, whose name the river
+also beareth this day. Which is also by others called Maranon,
+although Andrew Thevet doth affirm that between Maranon and Amazons
+there are 120 leagues; but sure it is that those rivers have one head
+and beginning, and the Maranon, which Thevet describeth, is but a
+branch of Amazons or Orellana, of which I will speak more in another
+place. It was attempted by Ordas; but it is now little less than 70
+years since that Diego Ordas, a Knight of the Order of Santiago,
+attempted the same; and it was in the year 1542 that Orellana
+discovered the river of Amazons; but the first that ever saw Manoa was
+Juan Martinez, master of the munition to Ordas. At a port called
+Morequito (probably San Miguel), in Guiana, there lieth at this day a
+great anchor of Ordas his ship. And this port is some 300 miles within
+the land, upon the great river of Orenoque. I rested at this port four
+days, twenty days after I left the ships at Curiapan.
+
+The relation of this Martinez, who was the first that discovered
+Manoa, his success, and end, is to be seen in the Chancery of St. Juan
+de Puerto Rico, whereof Berreo had a copy, which appeared to be the
+greatest encouragement as well to Berreo as to others that formerly
+attempted the discovery and conquest. Orellana, after he failed of the
+discovery of Guiana by the said river of Amazons, passed into Spain,
+and there obtained a patent of the king for the invasion and conquest,
+but died by sea about the islands; and his fleet being severed by
+tempest, the action for that time proceeded not. Diego Ordas followed
+the enterprise, and departed Spain with 600 soldiers and thirty horse.
+Who, arriving on the coast of Guiana, was slain in a mutiny, with the
+most part of such as favoured him, as also of the rebellious part,
+insomuch as his ships perished and few or none returned; neither was
+it certainly known what became of the said Ordas until Berreo found
+the anchor of his ship in the river of Orenoque; but it was supposed,
+and so it is written by Lopez, that he perished on the seas, and of
+other writers diversely conceived and reported. And hereof it came
+that Martinez entered so far within the land, and arrived at that city
+of Inga the emperor; for it chanced that while Ordas with his army
+rested at the port of Morequito (who was either the first or second
+that attempted Guiana), by some negligence the whole store of powder
+provided for the service was set on fire, and Martinez, having the
+chief charge, was condemned by the General Ordas to be executed
+forthwith. Martinez, being much favoured by the soldiers, had all the
+means possible procured for his life; but it could not be obtained in
+other sort than this, that he should be set into a canoa alone,
+without any victual, only with his arms, and so turned loose into the
+great river. But it pleased God that the canoa was carried down the
+stream, and certain of the Guianians met it the same evening; and,
+having not at any time seen any Christian nor any man of that colour,
+they carried Martinez into the land to be wondered at, and so from
+town to town, until he came to the great city of Manoa, the seat and
+residence of Inga the emperor. The emperor, after he had beheld him,
+knew him to be a Christian, for it was not long before that his
+brethren Guascar and Atabalipa were vanquished by the Spaniards in
+Peru: and caused him to be lodged in his palace, and well entertained.
+He lived seven months in Manoa, but was not suffered to wander into
+the country anywhere. He was also brought thither all the way
+blindfold, led by the Indians, until he came to the entrance of Manoa
+itself, and was fourteen or fifteen days in the passage. He avowed at
+his death that he entered the city at noon, and then they uncovered
+his face; and that he travelled all that day till night through the
+city, and the next day from sun rising to sun setting, ere he came to
+the palace of Inga. After that Martinez had lived seven months in
+Manoa, and began to understand the language of the country, Inga asked
+him whether he desired to return into his own country, or would
+willingly abide with him. But Martinez, not desirous to stay, obtained
+the favour of Inga to depart; with whom he sent divers Guianians to
+conduct him to the river of Orenoque, all loaden with as much gold as
+they could carry, which he gave to Martinez at his departure. But when
+he was arrived near the river's side, the borderers which are called
+Orenoqueponi (poni is a Carib postposition meaning "on") robbed him
+and his Guianians of all the treasure (the borderers being at that
+time at wars, which Inga had not conquered) save only of two great
+bottles of gourds, which were filled with beads of gold curiously
+wrought, which those Orenoqueponi thought had been no other thing than
+his drink or meat, or grain for food, with which Martinez had liberty
+to pass. And so in canoas he fell down from the river of Orenoque to
+Trinidad, and from thence to Margarita, and so to St. Juan del Puerto
+Rico; where, remaining a long time for passage into Spain, he died. In
+the time of his extreme sickness, and when he was without hope of
+life, receiving the sacrament at the hands of his confessor, he
+delivered these things, with the relation of his travels, and also
+called for his calabazas or gourds of the gold beads, which he gave to
+the church and friars, to be prayed for.
+
+This Martinez was he that christened the city of Manoa by the name of
+El Dorado, and, as Berreo informed me, upon this occasion, those
+Guianians, and also the borderers, and all other in that tract which I
+have seen, are marvellous great drunkards; in which vice I think no
+nation can compare with them; and at the times of their solemn feasts,
+when the emperor carouseth with his captains, tributaries, and
+governors, the manner is thus. All those that pledge him are first
+stripped naked and their bodies anointed all over with a kind of white
+balsamum (by them called curca), of which there is great plenty, and
+yet very dear amongst them, and it is of all other the most precious,
+whereof we have had good experience. When they are anointed all over,
+certain servants of the emperor, having prepared gold made into fine
+powder, blow it through hollow canes upon their naked bodies, until
+they be all shining from the foot to the head; and in this sort they
+sit drinking by twenties and hundreds, and continue in drunkenness
+sometimes six or seven days together. The same is also confirmed by a
+letter written into Spain which was intercepted, which Master Robert
+Dudley told me he had seen. Upon this sight, and for the abundance of
+gold which he saw in the city, the images of gold in their temples,
+the plates, armours, and shields of gold which they use in the wars,
+he called it El Dorado.
+
+After the death of Ordas and Martinez, and after Orellana, who was
+employed by Gonzalo Pizarro, one Pedro de Orsua, a knight of Navarre,
+attempted Guiana, taking his way into Peru, and built his brigandines
+upon a river called Oia, which riseth to the southward of Quito, and
+is very great. This river falleth into Amazons, by which Orsua with
+his companies descended, and came out of that province which is called
+Motilones ("friars"--Indians so named from their cropped heads); and
+it seemeth to me that this empire is reserved for her Majesty and the
+English nation, by reason of the hard success which all these and
+other Spaniards found in attempting the same, whereof I will speak
+briefly, though impertinent in some sort to my purpose. This Pedro de
+Orsua had among his troops a Biscayan called Aguirre, a man meanly
+born, who bare no other office than a sergeant or alferez (al-faris,
+Arab.--horseman, mounted officer): but after certain months, when the
+soldiers were grieved with travels and consumed with famine, and that
+no entrance could be found by the branches or body of Amazons, this
+Aguirre raised a mutiny, of which he made himself the head, and so
+prevailed as he put Orsua to the sword and all his followers, taking
+on him the whole charge and commandment, with a purpose not only to
+make himself emperor of Guiana, but also of Peru and of all that side
+of the West Indies. He had of his party 700 soldiers, and of those
+many promised to draw in other captains and companies, to deliver up
+towns and forts in Peru; but neither finding by the said river any
+passage into Guiana, nor any possibility to return towards Peru by the
+same Amazons, by reason that the descent of the river made so great a
+current, he was enforced to disemboque at the mouth of the said
+Amazons, which cannot be less than 1,000 leagues from the place where
+they embarked. From thence he coasted the land till he arrived at
+Margarita to the north of Mompatar, which is at this day called Puerto
+de Tyranno, for that he there slew Don Juan de Villa Andreda, Governor
+of Margarita, who was father to Don Juan Sarmiento, Governor of
+Margarita when Sir John Burgh landed there and attempted the island.
+Aguirre put to the sword all other in the island that refused to be of
+his party, and took with him certain cimarrones (fugitive slaves) and
+other desperate companions. From thence he went to Cumana and there
+slew the governor, and dealt in all as at Margarita. He spoiled all
+the coast of Caracas and the province of Venezuela and of Rio de la
+Hacha; and, as I remember, it was the same year that Sir John Hawkins
+sailed to St. Juan de Ullua in the Jesus of Lubeck; for himself told
+me that he met with such a one upon the coast, that rebelled, and had
+sailed down all the river of Amazons. Aguirre from thence landed about
+Santa Marta and sacked it also, putting to death so many as refused to
+be his followers, purposing to invade Nuevo Reyno de Granada and to
+sack Pamplona, Merida, Lagrita, Tunja, and the rest of the cities of
+Nuevo Reyno, and from thence again to enter Peru; but in a fight in
+the said Nuevo Reyno he was overthrown, and, finding no way to escape,
+he first put to the sword his own children, foretelling them that they
+should not live to be defamed or upbraided by the Spaniards after his
+death, who would have termed them the children of a traitor or tyrant;
+and that, sithence he could not make them princes, he would yet
+deliver them from shame and reproach. These were the ends and
+tragedies of Ordas, Martinez, Orellana, Orsua, and Aguirre. Also soon
+after Ordas followed Jeronimo Ortal de Saragosa, with 130 soldiers;
+who failing his entrance by sea, was cast with the current on the
+coast of Paria, and peopled about S. Miguel de Neveri. It was then
+attempted by Don Pedro de Silva, a Portuguese of the family of Ruy
+Gomez de Silva, and by the favour which Ruy Gomez had with the king he
+was set out. But he also shot wide of the mark; for being departed
+from Spain with his fleet, he entered by Maranon or Amazons, where by
+the nations of the river and by the Amazons, he was utterly
+overthrown, and himself and all his army defeated; only seven escaped,
+and of those but two returned.
+
+After him came Pedro Hernandez de Serpa, and landed at Cumana, in the
+West Indies, taking his journey by land towards Orenoque, which may be
+some 120 leagues; but ere he came to the borders of the said river, he
+was set upon by a nation of the Indians, called Wikiri, and overthrown
+in such sort, that of 300 soldiers, horsemen, many Indians, and
+negroes, there returned but eighteen. Others affirm that he was
+defeated in the very entrance of Guiana, at the first civil town of
+the empire called Macureguarai. Captain Preston, in taking Santiago de
+Leon (which was by him and his companies very resolutely performed,
+being a great town, and far within the land) held a gentleman
+prisoner, who died in his ship, that was one of the company of
+Hernandez de Serpa, and saved among those that escaped; who witnessed
+what opinion is held among the Spaniards thereabouts of the great
+riches of Guiana, and El Dorado, the city of Inga. Another Spaniard
+was brought aboard me by Captain Preston, who told me in the hearing
+of himself and divers other gentlemen, that he met with Berreo's
+campmaster at Caracas, when he came from the borders of Guiana, and
+that he saw with him forty of most pure plates of gold, curiously
+wrought, and swords of Guiana decked and inlaid with gold, feathers
+garnished with gold, and divers rarities, which he carried to the
+Spanish king.
+
+After Hernandez de Serpa, it was undertaken by the Adelantado, Don
+Gonzalez Ximenes de Quesada, who was one of the chiefest in the
+conquest of Nuevo Reyno, whose daughter and heir Don Antonio de Berreo
+married. Gonzalez sought the passage also by the river called
+Papamene, which riseth by Quito, in Peru, and runneth south-east 100
+leagues, and then falleth into Amazons. But he also, failing the
+entrance, returned with the loss of much labour and cost. I took one
+Captain George, a Spaniard, that followed Gonzalez in this enterprise.
+Gonzalez gave his daughter to Berreo, taking his oath and honour to
+follow the enterprise to the last of his substance and life. Who
+since, as he hath sworn to me, hath spent 300,000 ducats in the same,
+and yet never could enter so far into the land as myself with that
+poor troop, or rather a handful of men, being in all about 100
+gentlemen, soldiers, rowers, boat-keepers, boys, and of all sorts;
+neither could any of the forepassed undertakers, nor Berreo himself,
+discover the country, till now lately by conference with an ancient
+king, called Carapana (Caribana, Carib land, was an old European name
+for the Atlantic coast near the mouth of the Orinoco, and hence was
+applied to one of its chiefs. Berrio called this district "Emeria"),
+he got the true light thereof. For Berreo came about 1,500 miles ere
+he understood aught, or could find any passage or entrance into any
+part thereof; yet he had experience of all these fore-named, and
+divers others, and was persuaded of their errors and mistakings.
+Berreo sought it by the river Cassanar, which falleth into a great
+river called Pato: Pato falleth into Meta, and Meta into Baraquan,
+which is also called Orenoque. He took his journey from Nuevo Reyno de
+Granada, where he dwelt, having the inheritance of Gonzalez Ximenes in
+those parts; he was followed with 700 horse, he drove with him 1,000
+head of cattle, he had also many women, Indians, and slaves. How all
+these rivers cross and encounter, how the country lieth and is
+bordered, the passage of Ximenes and Berreo, mine own discovery, and
+the way that I entered, with all the rest of the nations and rivers,
+your lordship shall receive in a large chart or map, which I have not
+yet finished, and which I shall most humbly pray your lordship to
+secrete, and not to suffer it to pass your own hands; for by a draught
+thereof all may be prevented by other nations; for I know it is this
+very year sought by the French, although by the way that they now
+take, I fear it not much. It was also told me ere I departed England,
+that Villiers, the Admiral, was in preparation for the planting of
+Amazons, to which river the French have made divers voyages, and
+returned much gold and other rarities. I spake with a captain of a
+French ship that came from thence, his ship riding in Falmouth the
+same year that my ships came first from Virginia; there was another
+this year in Helford, that also came from thence, and had been
+fourteen months at an anchor in Amazons; which were both very rich.
+
+Although, as I am persuaded, Guiana cannot be entered that way, yet no
+doubt the trade of gold from thence passeth by branches of rivers into
+the river of Amazons, and so it doth on every hand far from the
+country itself; for those Indians of Trinidad have plates of gold from
+Guiana, and those cannibals of Dominica which dwell in the islands by
+which our ships pass yearly to the West Indies, also the Indians of
+Paria, those Indians called Tucaris, Chochi, Apotomios, Cumanagotos,
+and all those other nations inhabiting near about the mountains that
+run from Paria through the province of Venezuela, and in Maracapana,
+and the cannibals of Guanipa, the Indians called Assawai, Coaca, Ajai,
+and the rest (all which shall be described in my description as they
+are situate) have plates of gold of Guiana. And upon the river of
+Amazons, Thevet writeth that the people wear croissants of gold, for
+of that form the Guianians most commonly make them; so as from
+Dominica to Amazons, which is above 250 leagues, all the chief Indians
+in all parts wear of those plates of Guiana. Undoubtedly those that
+trade Amazons return much gold, which (as is aforesaid) cometh by
+trade from Guiana, by some branch of a river that falleth from the
+country into Amazons, and either it is by the river which passeth by
+the nations called Tisnados, or by Caripuna.
+
+I made enquiry amongst the most ancient and best travelled of the
+Orenoqueponi, and I had knowledge of all the rivers between Orenoque
+and Amazons, and was very desirous to understand the truth of those
+warlike women, because of some it is believed, of others not. And
+though I digress from my purpose, yet I will set down that which hath
+been delivered me for truth of those women, and I spake with a
+cacique, or lord of people, that told me he had been in the river, and
+beyond it also. The nations of these women are on the south side of
+the river in the provinces of Topago, and their chiefest strengths and
+retracts are in the islands situate on the south side of the entrance,
+some 60 leagues within the mouth of the said river. The memories of
+the like women are very ancient as well in Africa as in Asia. In
+Africa those that had Medusa for queen; others in Scythia, near the
+rivers of Tanais and Thermodon. We find, also, that Lampedo and
+Marthesia were queens of the Amazons. In many histories they are
+verified to have been, and in divers ages and provinces; but they
+which are not far from Guiana do accompany with men but once in a
+year, and for the time of one month, which I gather by their relation,
+to be in April; and that time all kings of the borders assemble, and
+queens of the Amazons; and after the queens have chosen, the rest cast
+lots for their valentines. This one month they feast, dance, and drink
+of their wines in abundance; and the moon being done they all depart
+to their own provinces. They are said to be very cruel and
+bloodthirsty, especially to such as offer to invade their territories.
+These Amazons have likewise great store of these plates of gold, which
+they recover by exchange chiefly for a kind of green stones, which the
+Spaniards call piedras hijadas, and we use for spleen-stones (stones
+reduced to powder and taken internally to cure maladies of the
+spleen); and for the disease of the stone we also esteem them. Of
+these I saw divers in Guiana; and commonly every king or cacique hath
+one, which their wives for the most part wear, and they esteem them as
+great jewels.
+
+But to return to the enterprise of Berreo, who, as I have said,
+departed from Nuevo Reyno with 700 horse, besides the provisions above
+rehearsed. He descended by the river called Cassanar, which riseth in
+Nuevo Reyno out of the mountains by the city of Tunja, from which
+mountain also springeth Pato; both which fall into the great river of
+Meta, and Meta riseth from a mountain joining to Pamplona, in the same
+Nuevo Reyno de Granada. These, as also Guaiare, which issueth out of
+the mountains by Timana, fall all into Baraquan, and are but of his
+heads; for at their coming together they lose their names, and
+Baraquan farther down is also rebaptized by the name of Orenoque. On
+the other side of the city and hills of Timana riseth Rio Grande,
+which falleth into the sea by Santa Marta. By Cassanar first, and so
+into Meta, Berreo passed, keeping his horsemen on the banks, where the
+country served them for to march; and where otherwise, he was driven
+to embark them in boats which he builded for the purpose, and so came
+with the current down the river of Meta, and so into Baraquan. After
+he entered that great and mighty river, he began daily to lose of his
+companies both men and horse; for it is in many places violently
+swift, and hath forcible eddies, many sands, and divers islands sharp
+pointed with rocks. But after one whole year, journeying for the most
+part by river, and the rest by land, he grew daily to fewer numbers;
+from both by sickness, and by encountering with the people of those
+regions through which he travelled, his companies were much wasted,
+especially by divers encounters with the Amapaians (Amapaia was
+Berrio's name for the Orinoco valley above the Caura river). And in
+all this time he never could learn of any passage into Guiana, nor any
+news or fame thereof, until he came to a further border of the said
+Amapaia, eight days' journey from the river Caroli (the Caroni river,
+the first great affluent of the Orinoco on the south, about 180 miles
+from the sea), which was the furthest river that he entered. Among
+those of Amapaia, Guiana was famous; but few of these people accosted
+Berreo, or would trade with him the first three months of the six
+which he sojourned there. This Amapaia is also marvellous rich in
+gold, as both Berreo confessed and those of Guiana with whom I had
+most conference; and is situate upon Orenoque also. In this country
+Berreo lost sixty of his best soldiers, and most of all his horse that
+remained in his former year's travel. But in the end, after divers
+encounters with those nations, they grew to peace, and they presented
+Berreo with ten images of fine gold among divers other plates and
+croissants, which, as he sware to me, and divers other gentlemen, were
+so curiously wrought, as he had not seen the like either in Italy,
+Spain, or the Low Countries; and he was resolved that when they came
+to the hands of the Spanish king, to whom he had sent them by his
+camp-master, they would appear very admirable, especially being
+wrought by such a nation as had no iron instruments at all, nor any of
+those helps which our goldsmiths have to work withal. The particular
+name of the people in Amapaia which gave him these pieces, are called
+Anebas, and the river of Orenoque at that place is about twelve
+English miles broad, which may be from his outfall into the sea 700 or
+800 miles.
+
+This province of Amapaia is a very low and a marish ground near the
+river; and by reason of the red water which issueth out in small
+branches through the fenny and boggy ground, there breed divers
+poisonful worms and serpents. And the Spaniards not suspecting, nor in
+any sort foreknowing the danger, were infected with a grievous kind of
+flux by drinking thereof, and even the very horses poisoned therewith;
+insomuch as at the end of the six months that they abode there, of all
+their troops there were not left above 120 soldiers, and neither horse
+nor cattle. For Berreo hoped to have found Guiana be 1,000 miles
+nearer than it fell out to be in the end; by means whereof they
+sustained much want, and much hunger, oppressed with grievous
+diseases, and all the miseries that could be imagined. I demanded of
+those in Guiana that had travelled Amapaia, how they lived with that
+tawny or red water when they travelled thither; and they told me that
+after the sun was near the middle of the sky, they used to fill their
+pots and pitchers with that water, but either before that time or
+towards the setting of the sun it was dangerous to drink of, and in
+the night strong poison. I learned also of divers other rivers of that
+nature among them, which were also, while the sun was in the meridian,
+very safe to drink, and in the morning, evening, and night, wonderful
+dangerous and infective. From this province Berreo hasted away as soon
+as the spring and beginning of summer appeared, and sought his
+entrance on the borders of Orenoque on the south side; but there ran a
+ledge of so high and impassable mountains, as he was not able by any
+means to march over them, continuing from the east sea into which
+Orenoque falleth, even to Quito in Peru. Neither had he means to carry
+victual or munition over those craggy, high, and fast hills, being all
+woody, and those so thick and spiny, and so full or prickles, thorns,
+and briars, as it is impossible to creep through them. He had also
+neither friendship among the people, nor any interpreter to persuade
+or treat with them; and more, to his disadvantage, the caciques and
+kings of Amapaia had given knowledge of his purpose to the Guianians,
+and that he sought to sack and conquer the empire, for the hope of
+their so great abundance and quantities of gold. He passed by the
+mouths of many great rivers which fell into Orenoque both from the
+north and south, which I forbear to name, for tediousness, and because
+they are more pleasing in describing than reading.
+
+Berreo affirmed that there fell an hundred rivers into Orenoque from
+the north and south: whereof the least was as big as Rio Grande (the
+Magdalena), that passed between Popayan and Nuevo Reyno de Granada,
+Rio Grande being esteemed one of the renowned rivers in all the West
+Indies, and numbered among the great rivers of the world. But he knew
+not the names of any of these, but Caroli only; neither from what
+nations they descended, neither to what provinces they led, for he had
+no means to discourse with the inhabitants at any time; neither was he
+curious in these things, being utterly unlearned, and not knowing the
+east from the west. But of all these I got some knowledge, and of many
+more, partly by mine own travel, and the rest by conference; of some
+one I learned one, of others the rest, having with me an Indian that
+spake many languages, and that of Guiana (the Carib) naturally. I
+sought out all the aged men, and such as were greatest travellers. And
+by the one and the other I came to understand the situations, the
+rivers, the kingdoms from the east sea to the borders of Peru, and
+from Orenoque southward as far as Amazons or Maranon, and the regions
+of Marinatambal (north coasts of Brazil), and of all the kings of
+provinces, and captains of towns and villages, how they stood in terms
+of peace or war, and which were friends or enemies the one with the
+other; without which there can be neither entrance nor conquest in
+those parts, nor elsewhere. For by the dissension between Guascar and
+Atabalipa, Pizarro conquered Peru, and by the hatred that the
+Tlaxcallians bare to Mutezuma, Cortes was victorious over Mexico;
+without which both the one and the other had failed of their
+enterprise, and of the great honour and riches which they attained
+unto.
+
+Now Berreo began to grow into despair, and looked for no other success
+than his predecessor in this enterprise; until such time as he arrived
+at the province of Emeria towards the east sea and mouth of the river,
+where he found a nation of people very favourable, and the country
+full of all manner of victual. The king of this land is called
+Carapana, a man very wise, subtle, and of great experience, being
+little less than an hundred years old. In his youth he was sent by his
+father into the island of Trinidad, by reason of civil war among
+themselves, and was bred at a village in that island, called Parico.
+At that place in his youth he had seen many Christians, both French
+and Spanish, and went divers times with the Indians of Trinidad to
+Margarita and Cumana, in the West Indies, for both those places have
+ever been relieved with victual from Trinidad: by reason whereof he
+grew of more understanding, and noted the difference of the nations,
+comparing the strength and arms of his country with those of the
+Christians, and ever after temporised so as whosoever else did amiss,
+or was wasted by contention, Carapana kept himself and his country in
+quiet and plenty. He also held peace with the Caribs or cannibals, his
+neighbours, and had free trade with all nations, whosoever else had
+war.
+
+Berreo sojourned and rested his weak troop in the town of Carapana six
+weeks, and from him learned the way and passage to Guiana, and the
+riches and magnificence thereof. But being then utterly unable to
+proceed, he determined to try his fortune another year, when he had
+renewed his provisions, and regathered more force, which he hoped for
+as well out of Spain as from Nuevo Reyno, where he had left his son
+Don Antonio Ximenes to second him upon the first notice given of his
+entrance; and so for the present embarked himself in canoas, and by
+the branches of Orenoque arrived at Trinidad, having from Carapana
+sufficient pilots to conduct him. From Trinidad he coasted Paria, and
+so recovered Margarita; and having made relation to Don Juan
+Sarmiento, the Governor, of his proceeding, and persuaded him of the
+riches of Guiana, he obtained from thence fifty soldiers, promising
+presently to return to Carapana, and so into Guiana. But Berreo meant
+nothing less at that time; for he wanted many provisions necessary for
+such an enterprise, and therefore departed from Margarita, seated
+himself in Trinidad, and from thence sent his camp-master and his
+sergeant-major back to the borders to discover the nearest passage
+into the empire, as also to treat with the borderers, and to draw them
+to his party and love; without which, he knew he could neither pass
+safely, nor in any sort be relieved with victual or aught else.
+Carapana directed his company to a king called Morequito, assuring
+them that no man could deliver so much Guiana as Morequito could, and
+that his dwelling was but five days' journey from Macureguarai, the
+first civil town of Guiana.
+
+Now your lordship shall understand that this Morequito, one of the
+greatest lords or kings of the borders of Guiana, had two or three
+years before been at Cumana and at Margarita, in the West Indies, with
+great store of plates of gold, which he carried to exchange for such
+other things as he wanted in his own country, and was daily feasted,
+and presented by the governors of those places, and held amongst them
+some two months. In which time one Vides, Governor of Cumana, won him
+to be his conductor into Guiana, being allured by those croissants and
+images of gold which he brought with him to trade, as also by the
+ancient fame and magnificence of El Dorado; whereupon Vides sent into
+Spain for a patent to discover and conquer Guiana, not knowing of the
+precedence of Berreo's patent; which, as Berreo affirmeth, was signed
+before that of Vidas. So as when Vides understood of Berreo and that
+he had made entrance into that territory, and foregone his desire and
+hope, it was verily thought that Vides practised with Morequito to
+hinder and disturb Berreo in all he could, and not to suffer him to
+enter through his seignory, nor any of his companies; neither to
+victual, nor guide them in any sort. For Vides, Governor of Cumana,
+and Berreo, were become mortal enemies, as well for that Berreo had
+gotten Trinidad into his patent with Guiana, as also in that he was by
+Berreo prevented in the journey of Guiana itself. Howsoever it was, I
+know not, but Morequito for a time dissembled his disposition,
+suffered ten Spaniards and a friar, which Berreo had sent to discover
+Manoa, to travel through his country, gave them a guide for
+Macureguarai, the first town of civil and apparelled people, from
+whence they had other guides to bring them to Manoa, the great city of
+Inga; and being furnished with those things which they had learned of
+Carapana were of most price in Guiana, went onward, and in eleven days
+arrived at Manoa, as Berreo affirmeth for certain; although I could
+not be assured thereof by the lord which now governeth the province of
+Morequito, for he told me that they got all the gold they had in other
+towns on this side Manoa, there being many very great and rich, and
+(as he said) built like the towns of Christians, with many rooms.
+
+When these ten Spaniards were returned, and ready to put out of the
+border of Aromaia (the district below the Caroni river), the people of
+Morequito set upon them, and slew them all but one that swam the
+river, and took from them to the value of 40,000 pesos of gold; and
+one of them only lived to bring the news to Berreo, that both his nine
+soldiers and holy father were benighted in the said province. I myself
+spake with the captains of Morequito that slew them, and was at the
+place where it was executed. Berreo, enraged herewithal, sent all the
+strength he could make into Aromaia, to be revenged of him, his
+people, and country. But Morequito, suspecting the same, fled over
+Orenoque, and through the territories of the Saima and Wikiri
+recovered Cumana, where he thought himself very safe, with Vides the
+governor. But Berreo sending for him in the king's name, and his
+messengers finding him in the house of one Fajardo, on the sudden, ere
+he was suspected, so as he could not then be conveyed away, Vides
+durst not deny him, as well to avoid the suspicion of the practice, as
+also for that an holy father was slain by him and his people.
+Morequito offered Fajardo the weight of three quintals in gold, to let
+him escape; but the poor Guianian, betrayed on all sides, was
+delivered to the camp-master of Berreo, and was presently executed.
+
+After the death of this Morequito, the soldiers of Berreo spoiled his
+territory and took divers prisoners. Among others they took the uncle
+of Morequito, called Topiawari, who is now king of Aromaia, whose son
+I brought with me into England, and is a man of great understanding
+and policy; he is above an hundred years old, and yet is of a very
+able body. The Spaniards led him in a chain seventeen days, and made
+him their guide from place to place between his country and Emeria,
+the province of Carapana aforesaid, and he was at last redeemed for an
+hundred plates of gold, and divers stones called piedras hijadas, or
+spleen-stones. Now Berreo for executing of Morequito, and other
+cruelties, spoils, and slaughters done in Aromaia, hath lost the love
+of the Orenoqueponi, and of all the borderers, and dare not send any
+of his soldiers any further into the land than to Carapana, which he
+called the port of Guiana; but from thence by the help of Carapana he
+had trade further into the country, and always appointed ten Spaniards
+to reside in Carapana's town (the Spanish settlement of Santo Tome de
+la Guyana, founded by Berrio in 1591 or 1592, but represented by
+Raleigh as an Indian pueblo), by whose favour, and by being conducted
+by his people, those ten searched the country thereabouts, as well for
+mines as for other trades and commodities.
+
+They also have gotten a nephew of Morequito, whom they have christened
+and named Don Juan, of whom they have great hope, endeavouring by all
+means to establish him in the said province. Among many other trades,
+those Spaniards used canoas to pass to the rivers of Barema, Pawroma,
+and Dissequebe (Essequibo), which are on the south side of the mouth
+of Orenoque, and there buy women and children from the cannibals,
+which are of that barbarous nature, as they will for three or four
+hatchets sell the sons and daughters of their own brethren and
+sisters, and for somewhat more even their own daughters. Hereof the
+Spaniards make great profit; for buying a maid of twelve or thirteen
+years for three or four hatchets, they sell them again at Margarita in
+the West Indies for fifty and an hundred pesos, which is so many
+crowns.
+
+The master of my ship, John Douglas, took one of the canoas which came
+laden from thence with people to be sold, and the most of them
+escaped; yet of those he brought, there was one as well favoured and
+as well shaped as ever I saw any in England; and afterwards I saw many
+of them, which but for their tawny colour may be compared to any in
+Europe. They also trade in those rivers for bread of cassavi, of which
+they buy an hundred pound weight for a knife, and sell it at Margarita
+for ten pesos. They also recover great store of cotton, Brazil wood,
+and those beds which they call hamacas or Brazil beds, wherein in hot
+countries all the Spaniards use to lie commonly, and in no other,
+neither did we ourselves while we were there. By means of which
+trades, for ransom of divers of the Guianians, and for exchange of
+hatchets and knives, Berreo recovered some store of gold plates,
+eagles of gold, and images of men and divers birds, and dispatched his
+camp-master for Spain, with all that he had gathered, therewith to
+levy soldiers, and by the show thereof to draw others to the love of
+the enterprise. And having sent divers images as well of men as
+beasts, birds, and fishes, so curiously wrought in gold, he doubted
+not but to persuade the king to yield to him some further help,
+especially for that this land hath never been sacked, the mines never
+wrought, and in the Indies their works were well spent, and the gold
+drawn out with great labour and charge. He also despatched messengers
+to his son in Nuevo Reyno to levy all the forces he could, and to come
+down the river Orenoque to Emeria, the province of Carapana, to meet
+him; he had also sent to Santiago de Leon on the coast of the Caracas,
+to buy horses and mules.
+
+After I had thus learned of his proceedings past and purposed, I told
+him that I had resolved to see Guiana, and that it was the end of my
+journey, and the cause of my coming to Trinidad, as it was indeed, and
+for that purpose I sent Jacob Whiddon the year before to get
+intelligence: with whom Berreo himself had speech at that time, and
+remembered how inquisitive Jacob Whiddon was of his proceedings, and
+of the country of Guiana. Berreo was stricken into a great melancholy
+and sadness, and used all the arguments he could to dissuade me; and
+also assured the gentlemen of my company that it would be labour lost,
+and that they should suffer many miseries if they proceeded. And first
+he delivered that I could not enter any of the rivers with any bark or
+pinnace, or hardly with any ship's boat, it was so low, sandy, and
+full of flats, and that his companies were daily grounded in their
+canoes, which drew but twelve inches water. He further said that none
+of the country would come to speak with us, but would all fly; and if
+we followed them to their dwellings, they would burn their own towns.
+And besides that, the way was long, the winter at hand, and that the
+rivers beginning once to swell, it was impossible to stem the current;
+and that we could not in those small boats by any means carry victuals
+for half the time, and that (which indeed most discouraged my company)
+the kings and lords of all the borders of Guiana had decreed that none
+of them should trade with any Christians for gold, because the same
+would be their own overthrow, and that for the love of gold the
+Christians meant to conquer and dispossess them of all together.
+
+Many and the most of these I found to be true; but yet I resolving to
+make trial of whatsoever happened, directed Captain George Gifford, my
+Vice-Admiral, to take the Lion's Whelp, and Captain Caulfield his
+bark, to turn to the eastward, against the mouth of a river called
+Capuri, whose entrance I had before sent Captain Whiddon and John
+Douglas the master to discover. Who found some nine foot water or
+better upon the flood, and five at low water: to whom I had given
+instructions that they should anchor at the edge of the shoal, and
+upon the best of the flood to thrust over, which shoal John Douglas
+buoyed and beckoned (beaconed) for them before. But they laboured in
+vain; for neither could they turn it up altogether so far to the east,
+neither did the flood continue so long, but the water fell ere they
+could have passed the sands. As we after found by a second experience:
+so as now we must either give over our enterprise, or leaving our
+ships at adventure 400 mile behind us, must run up in our ship's
+boats, one barge, and two wherries. But being doubtful how to carry
+victuals for so long a time in such baubles, or any strength of men,
+especially for that Berreo assured us that his son must be by that
+time come down with many soldiers, I sent away one King, master of the
+Lion's Whelp, with his ship-boat, to try another branch of the river
+in the bottom of the Bay of Guanipa, which was called Amana, to prove
+if there were water to be found for either of the small ships to
+enter. But when he came to the mouth of Amana, he found it as the
+rest, but stayed not to discover it thoroughly, because he was assured
+by an Indian, his guide, that the cannibals of Guanipa would assail
+them with many canoas, and that they shot poisoned arrows; so as if he
+hasted not back, they should all be lost.
+
+In the meantime, fearing the worst, I caused all the carpenters we had
+to cut down a galego boat, which we meant to cast off, and to fit her
+with banks to row on, and in all things to prepare her the best they
+could, so as she might be brought to draw but five foot: for so much
+we had on the bar of Capuri at low water. And doubting of King's
+return, I sent John Douglas again in my long barge, as well to relieve
+him, as also to make a perfect search in the bottom of the bay; for it
+hath been held for infallible, that whatsoever ship or boat shall fall
+therein can never disemboque again, by reason of the violent current
+which setteth into the said bay, as also for that the breeze and
+easterly wind bloweth directly into the same. Of which opinion I have
+heard John Hampton (Captain of the Minion in the third voyage of
+Hawkins), of Plymouth, one of the greatest experience of England, and
+divers other besides that have traded to Trinidad.
+
+I sent with John Douglas an old cacique of Trinidad for a pilot, who
+told us that we could not return again by the bay or gulf, but that he
+knew a by-branch which ran within the land to the eastward, and he
+thought by it we might fall into Capuri, and so return in four days.
+John Douglas searched those rivers, and found four goodly entrances,
+whereof the least was as big as the Thames at Woolwich, but in the bay
+thitherward it was shoal and but six foot water; so as we were now
+without hope of any ship or bark to pass over, and therefore resolved
+to go on with the boats, and the bottom of the galego, in which we
+thrust 60 men. In the Lion's Whelp's boat and wherry we carried
+twenty, Captain Caulfield in his wherry carried ten more, and in my
+barge other ten, which made up a hundred; we had no other means but to
+carry victual for a month in the same, and also to lodge therein as we
+could, and to boil and dress our meat. Captain Gifford had with him
+Master Edward Porter, Captain Eynos, and eight more in his wherry,
+with all their victual, weapons, and provisions. Captain Caulfield had
+with him my cousin Butshead Gorges, and eight more. In the galley, of
+gentlemen and officers myself had Captain Thyn, my cousin John
+Greenvile, my nephew John Gilbert, Captain Whiddon, Captain Keymis,
+Edward Hancock, Captain Clarke, Lieutenant Hughes, Thomas Upton,
+Captain Facy, Jerome Ferrar, Anthony Wells, William Connock, and above
+fifty more. We could not learn of Berreo any other way to enter but in
+branches so far to windward as it was impossible for us to recover;
+for we had as much sea to cross over in our wherries, as between Dover
+and Calice, and in a great bollow, the wind and current being both
+very strong. So as we were driven to go in those small boats directly
+before the wind into the bottom of the Bay of Guanipa, and from thence
+to enter the mouth of some one of those rivers which John Douglas had
+last discovered; and had with us for pilot an Indian of Barema, a
+river to the south of Orenoque, between that and Amazons, whose canoas
+we had formerly taken as he was going from the said Barema, laden with
+cassavi bread to sell at Margarita. This Arwacan promised to bring me
+into the great river of Orenoque; but indeed of that which he entered
+he was utterly ignorant, for he had not seen it in twelve years
+before, at which time he was very young, and of no judgment. And if
+God had not sent us another help, we might have wandered a whole year
+in that labyrinth of rivers, ere we had found any way, either out or
+in, especially after we were past ebbing and flowing, which was in
+four days. For I know all the earth doth not yield the like confluence
+of streams and branches, the one crossing the other so many times, and
+all so fair and large, and so like one to another, as no man can tell
+which to take: and if we went by the sun or compass, hoping thereby to
+go directly one way or other, yet that way we were also carried in a
+circle amongst multitudes of islands, and every island so bordered
+with high trees as no man could see any further than the breadth of
+the river, or length of the breach. But this it chanced, that entering
+into a river (which because it had no name, we called the River of the
+Red Cross, ourselves being the first Christians that ever came
+therein), the 22. of May, as we were rowing up the same, we espied a
+small canoa with three Indians, which by the swiftness of my barge,
+rowing with eight oars, I overtook ere they could cross the river. The
+rest of the people on the banks, shadowed under the thick wood, gazed
+on with a doubtful conceit what might befall those three which we had
+taken. But when they perceived that we offered them no violence,
+neither entered their canoa with any of ours, nor took out of the
+canoa any of theirs, they then began to show themselves on the bank's
+side, and offered to traffic with us for such things as they had. And
+as we drew near, they all stayed; and we came with our barge to the
+mouth of a little creek which came from their town into the great
+river.
+
+As we abode here awhile, our Indian pilot, called Ferdinando, would
+needs go ashore to their village to fetch some fruits and to drink of
+their artificial wines, and also to see the place and know the lord of
+it against another time, and took with him a brother of his which he
+had with him in the journey. When they came to the village of these
+people the lord of the island offered to lay hands on them, purposing
+to have slain them both; yielding for reason that this Indian of ours
+had brought a strange nation into their territory to spoil and destroy
+them. But the pilot being quick and of a disposed body, slipt their
+fingers and ran into the woods, and his brother, being the better
+footman of the two, recovered the creek's mouth, where we stayed in
+our barge, crying out that his brother was slain. With that we set
+hands on one of them that was next us, a very old man, and brought him
+into the barge, assuring him that if we had not our pilot again we
+would presently cut off his head. This old man, being resolved that he
+should pay the loss of the other, cried out to those in the woods to
+save Ferdinando, our pilot; but they followed him notwithstanding, and
+hunted after him upon the foot with their deer-dogs, and with so main
+a cry that all the woods echoed with the shout they made. But at the
+last this poor chased Indian recovered the river side and got upon a
+tree, and, as we were coasting, leaped down and swam to the barge half
+dead with fear. But our good hap was that we kept the other old
+Indian, which we handfasted to redeem our pilot withal; for, being
+natural of those rivers, we assured ourselves that he knew the way
+better than any stranger could. And, indeed, but for this chance, I
+think we had never found the way either to Guiana or back to our
+ships; for Ferdinando after a few days knew nothing at all, nor which
+way to turn; yea, and many times the old man himself was in great
+doubt which river to take. Those people which dwell in these broken
+islands and drowned lands are generally called Tivitivas. There are of
+them two sorts; the one called Ciawani, and the other Waraweete.
+
+The great river of Orenoque or Baraquan hath nine branches which fall
+out on the north side of his own main mouth. On the south side it hath
+seven other fallings into the sea, so it disemboqueth by sixteen arms
+in all, between islands and broken ground; but the islands are very
+great, many of them as big as the Isle of Wight, and bigger, and many
+less. From the first branch on the north to the last of the south it
+is at least 100 leagues, so as the river's mouth is 300 miles wide at
+his entrance into the sea, which I take to be far bigger than that of
+Amazons. All those that inhabit in the mouth of this river upon the
+several north branches are these Tivitivas, of which there are two
+chief lords which have continual wars one with the other. The islands
+which lie on the right hand are called Pallamos, and the land on the
+left, Hororotomaka; and the river by which John Douglas returned
+within the land from Amana to Capuri they call Macuri.
+
+These Tivitivas are a very goodly people and very valiant, and have
+the most manly speech and most deliberate that ever I heard of what
+nation soever. In the summer they have houses on the ground, as in
+other places; in the winter they dwell upon the trees, where they
+build very artificial towns and villages, as it is written in the
+Spanish story of the West Indies that those people do in the low lands
+near the gulf of Uraba. For between May and September the river of
+Orenoque riseth thirty foot upright, and then are those islands
+overflown twenty foot high above the level of the ground, saving some
+few raised grounds in the middle of them; and for this cause they are
+enforced to live in this manner. They never eat of anything that is
+set or sown; and as at home they use neither planting nor other
+manurance, so when they come abroad they refuse to feed of aught but
+of that which nature without labour bringeth forth. They use the tops
+of palmitos for bread, and kill deer, fish, and porks for the rest of
+their sustenance. They have also many sorts of fruits that grow in the
+woods, and great variety of birds and fowls; and if to speak of them
+were not tedious and vulgar, surely we saw in those passages of very
+rare colours and forms not elsewhere to be found, for as much as I
+have either seen or read.
+
+Of these people those that dwell upon the branches of Orenoque, called
+Capuri, and Macureo, are for the most part carpenters of canoas; for
+they make the most and fairest canoas; and sell them into Guiana for
+gold and into Trinidad for tabacco, in the excessive taking whereof
+they exceed all nations. And notwithstanding the moistness of the air
+in which they live, the hardness of their diet, and the great labours
+they suffer to hunt, fish, and fowl for their living, in all my life,
+either in the Indies or in Europe, did I never behold a more goodly or
+better-favoured people or a more manly. They were wont to make war
+upon all nations, and especially on the Cannibals, so as none durst
+without a good strength trade by those rivers; but of late they are at
+peace with their neighbours, all holding the Spaniards for a common
+enemy. When their commanders die they use great lamentation; and when
+they think the flesh of their bodies is putrified and fallen from
+their bones, then they take up the carcase again and hang it in the
+cacique's house that died, and deck his skull with feathers of all
+colours, and hang all his gold plates about the bones of this arms,
+thighs, and legs. Those nations which are called Arwacas, which dwell
+on the south of Orenoque, of which place and nation our Indian pilot
+was, are dispersed in many other places, and do use to beat the bones
+of their lords into powder, and their wives and friends drink it all
+in their several sorts of drinks.
+
+After we departed from the port of these Ciawani we passed up the
+river with the flood and anchored the ebb, and in this sort we went
+onward. The third day that we entered the river, our galley came on
+ground; and stuck so fast as we thought that even there our discovery
+had ended, and that we must have left four-score and ten of our men to
+have inhabited, like rooks upon trees, with those nations. But the
+next morning, after we had cast out all her ballast, with tugging and
+hauling to and fro we got her afloat and went on. At four days' end we
+fell into as goodly a river as ever I beheld, which was called the
+great Amana, which ran more directly without windings and turnings
+than the other. But soon after the flood of the sea left us; and,
+being enforced either by main strength to row against a violent
+current, or to return as wise as we went out, we had then no shift but
+to persuade the companies that it was but two or three days' work, and
+therefore desired them to take pains, every gentleman and others
+taking their turns to row, and to spell one the other at the hour's
+end. Every day we passed by goodly branches of rivers, some falling
+from the west, others from the east, into Amana; but those I leave to
+the description in the chart of discovery, where every one shall be
+named with his rising and descent. When three days more were overgone,
+our companies began to despair, the weather being extreme hot, the
+river bordered with very high trees that kept away the air, and the
+current against us every day stronger than other. But we evermore
+commanded our pilots to promise an end the next day, and used it so
+long as we were driven to assure them from four reaches of the river
+to three, and so to two, and so to the next reach. But so long we
+laboured that many days were spent, and we driven to draw ourselves to
+harder allowance, our bread even at the last, and no drink at all; and
+our men and ourselves so wearied and scorched, and doubtful withal
+whether we should ever perform it or no, the heat increasing as we
+drew towards the line; for we were now in five degrees.
+
+The further we went on, our victual decreasing and the air breeding
+great faintness, we grew weaker and weaker, when we had most need of
+strength and ability. For hourly the river ran more violently than
+other against us, and the barge, wherries, and ship's boat of Captain
+Gifford and Captain Caulfield had spent all their provisions; so as we
+were brought into despair and discomfort, had we not persuaded all the
+company that it was but only one day's work more to attain the land
+where we should be relieved of all we wanted, and if we returned, that
+we were sure to starve by the way, and that the world would also laugh
+us to scorn. On the banks of these rivers were divers sorts of fruits
+good to eat, flowers and trees of such variety as were sufficient to
+make ten volumes of Herbals; we relieved ourselves many times with the
+fruits of the country, and sometimes with fowl and fish. We saw birds
+of all colours, some carnation, some crimson, orange-tawny, purple,
+watchet (pale blue), and of all other sorts, both simple and mixed,
+and it was unto us a great good-passing of the time to behold them,
+besides the relief we found by killing some store of them with our
+fowling-pieces; without which, having little or no bread, and less
+drink, but only the thick and troubled water of the river, we had been
+in a very hard case.
+
+Our old pilot of the Ciawani, whom, as I said before, we took to
+redeem Ferdinando, told us, that if we would enter a branch of a river
+on the right hand with our barge and wherries, and leave the galley at
+anchor the while in the great river, he would bring us to a town of
+the Arwacas, where we should find store of bread, hens, fish, and of
+the country wine; and persuaded us, that departing from the galley at
+noon we might return ere night. I was very glad to hear this speech,
+and presently took my barge, with eight musketeers, Captain Gifford's
+wherry, with himself and four musketeers, and Captain Caulfield with
+his wherry, and as many; and so we entered the mouth of this river;
+and because we were persuaded that it was so near, we took no victual
+with us at all. When we had rowed three hours, we marvelled we saw no
+sign of any dwelling, and asked the pilot where the town was; he told
+us, a little further. After three hours more, the sun being almost
+set, we began to suspect that he led us that way to betray us; for he
+confessed that those Spaniards which fled from Trinidad, and also
+those that remained with Carapana in Emeria, were joined together in
+some village upon that river. But when it grew towards night, and we
+demanded where the place was, he told us but four reaches more. When
+we had rowed four and four, we saw no sign; and our poor watermen,
+even heart-broken and tired, were ready to give up the ghost; for we
+had now come from the galley near forty miles.
+
+At the last we determined to hang the pilot; and if we had well known
+the way back again by night, he had surely gone. But our own
+necessities pleaded sufficiently for his safety; for it was as dark as
+pitch, and the river began so to narrow itself, and the trees to hang
+over from side to side, as we were driven with arming swords to cut a
+passage through those branches that covered the water. We were very
+desirous to find this town hoping of a feast, because we made but a
+short breakfast aboard the galley in the morning, and it was now eight
+o'clock at night, and our stomachs began to gnaw apace; but whether it
+was best to return or go on, we began to doubt, suspecting treason in
+the pilot more and more; but the poor old Indian ever assured us that
+it was but a little further, but this one turning and that turning;
+and at the last about one o'clock after midnight we saw a light, and
+rowing towards it we heard the dogs of the village. When we landed we
+found few people; for the lord of that place was gone with divers
+canoas above 400 miles off, upon a journey towards the head of
+Orenoque, to trade for gold, and to buy women of the Cannibals, who
+afterwards unfortunately passed by us as we rode at an anchor in the
+port of Morequito in the dark of the night, and yet came so near us as
+his canoas grated against our barges; he left one of his company at
+the port of Morequito, by whom we understood that he had brought
+thirty young women, divers plates of gold, and had great store of fine
+pieces of cotton cloth, and cotton beds. In his house we had good
+store of bread, fish, hens, and Indian drink, and so rested that
+night; and in the morning, after we had traded with such of his people
+as came down, we returned towards our galley, and brought with us some
+quantity of bread, fish, and hens.
+
+On both sides of this river we passed the most beautiful country that
+ever mine eyes beheld; and whereas all that we had seen before was
+nothing but woods, prickles, bushes, and thorns, here we beheld plains
+of twenty miles in length, the grass short and green, and in divers
+parts groves of trees by themselves, as if they had been by all the
+art and labour in the world so made of purpose; and still as we rowed,
+the deer came down feeding by the water's side as if they had been
+used to a keeper's call. Upon this river there were great store of
+fowl, and of many sorts; we saw in it divers sorts of strange fishes,
+and of marvellous bigness; but for lagartos (alligators and caymans)
+it exceeded, for there were thousands of those ugly serpents; and the
+people call it, for the abundance of them, the River of Lagartos, in
+their language. I had a negro, a very proper young fellow, who leaping
+out of the galley to swim in the mouth of this river, was in all our
+sights taken and devoured with one of those lagartos. In the meanwhile
+our companies in the galley thought we had been all lost, for we
+promised to return before night; and sent the Lion's Whelp's ship's
+boat with Captain Whiddon to follow us up the river. But the next day,
+after we had rowed up and down some fourscore miles, we returned, and
+went on our way up the great river; and when we were even at the last
+cast for want of victuals, Captain Gifford being before the galley and
+the rest of the boats, seeking out some place to land upon the banks
+to make fire, espied four canoas coming down the river; and with no
+small joy caused his men to try the uttermost of their strengths, and
+after a while two of the four gave over and ran themselves ashore,
+every man betaking himself to the fastness of the woods. The two other
+lesser got away, while he landed to lay hold on these; and so turned
+into some by-creek, we knew not whither. Those canoas that were taken
+were loaded with bread, and were bound for Margarita in the West
+Indies, which those Indians, called Arwacas, proposed to carry thither
+for exchange; but in the lesser there were three Spaniards, who having
+heard of the defeat of their Governor in Trinidad, and that we
+purposed to enter Guiana, came away in those canoas; one of them was a
+cavallero, as the captain of the Arwacas after told us, another a
+soldier and the third a refiner.
+
+In the meantime, nothing on the earth could have been more welcome to
+us, next unto gold, than the great store of very excellent bread which
+we found in these canoas; for now our men cried, "Let us go on, we
+care not how far." After that Captain Gifford had brought the two
+canoas to the galley, I took my barge and went to the bank's side with
+a dozen shot, where the canoas first ran themselves ashore, and landed
+there, sending out Captain Gifford and Captain Thyn on one hand and
+Captain Caulfield on the other, to follow those that were fled into
+the woods. And as I was creeping through the bushes, I saw an Indian
+basket hidden, which was the refiner's basket; for I found in it his
+quicksilver, saltpetre, and divers things for the trial of metals, and
+also the dust of such ore as he had refined; but in those canoas which
+escaped there was a good quantity of ore and gold. I then landed more
+men, and offered five hundred pound to what soldier soever could take
+one of those three Spaniards that we thought were landed. But our
+labours were in vain in that behalf, for they put themselves into one
+of the small canoas, and so, while the greater canoas were in taking,
+they escaped. But seeking after the Spaniards we found the Arwacas
+hidden in the woods, which were pilots for the Spaniards, and rowed
+their canoas. Of which I kept the chiefest for a pilot, and carried
+him with me to Guiana; by whom I understood where and in what
+countries the Spaniards had laboured for gold, though I made not the
+same known to all. For when the springs began to break, and the rivers
+to raise themselves so suddenly as by no means we could abide the
+digging of any mine, especially for that the richest are defended with
+rocks of hard stones, which we call the white spar, and that it
+required both time, men, and instruments fit for such a work, I
+thought it best not to hover thereabouts, lest if the same had been
+perceived by the company, there would have been by this time many
+barks and ships set out, and perchance other nations would also have
+gotten of ours for pilots. So as both ourselves might have been
+prevented, and all our care taken for good usage of the people been
+utterly lost, by those that only respect present profit; and such
+violence or insolence offered as the nations which are borderers would
+have changed the desire of our love and defence into hatred and
+violence. And for any longer stay to have brought a more quantity,
+which I hear hath been often objected, whosoever had seen or proved
+the fury of that river after it began to arise, and had been a month
+and odd days, as we were, from hearing aught from our ships, leaving
+them meanly manned 400 miles off, would perchance have turned somewhat
+sooner than we did, if all the mountains had been gold, or rich
+stones. And to say the truth, all the branches and small rivers which
+fell into Orenoque were raised with such speed, as if we waded them
+over the shoes in the morning outward, we were covered to the
+shoulders homeward the very same day; and to stay to dig our gold with
+our nails, had been opus laboris but not ingenii. Such a quantity as
+would have served our turns we could not have had, but a discovery of
+the mines to our infinite disadvantage we had made, and that could
+have been the best profit of farther search or stay; for those mines
+are not easily broken, nor opened in haste, and I could have returned
+a good quantity of gold ready cast if I had not shot at another mark
+than present profit.
+
+This Arwacan pilot, with the rest, feared that we would have eaten
+them, or otherwise have put them to some cruel death: for the
+Spaniards, to the end that none of the people in the passage towards
+Guiana, or in Guiana itself, might come to speech with us, persuaded
+all the nations that we were men-eaters and cannibals. But when the
+poor men and women had seen us, and that we gave them meat, and to
+every one something or other which was rare and strange to them, they
+began to conceive the deceit and purpose of the Spaniards, who indeed,
+as they confessed took from them both their wives and daughters daily
+. . . But I protest before the Majesty of the living God, that I
+neither know nor believe, that any of our company, one or other, did
+offer insult to any of their women, and yet we saw many hundreds, and
+had many in our power, and of those very young and excellently
+favoured, which came among us without deceit, stark naked. Nothing got
+us more love amongst them than this usage; for I suffered not any man
+to take from any of the nations so much as a pina (pineapple) or a
+potato root without giving them contentment, nor any man so much as to
+offer to touch any of their wives or daughters; which course, so
+contrary to the Spaniards, who tyrannize over them in all things, drew
+them to admire her Majesty, whose commandment I told them it was, and
+also wonderfully to honour our nation. But I confess it was a very
+impatient work to keep the meaner sort from spoil and stealing when we
+came to their houses; which because in all I could not prevent, I
+caused my Indian interpreter at every place when we departed, to know
+of the loss or wrong done, and if aught were stolen or taken by
+violence, either the same was restored, and the party punished in
+their sight, or else was paid for to their uttermost demand. They also
+much wondered at us, after they heard that we had slain the Spaniards
+at Trinidad, for they were before resolved that no nation of
+Christians durst abide their presence; and they wondered more when I
+had made them know of the great overthrow that her Majesty's army and
+fleet had given them of late years in their own countries.
+
+After we had taken in this supply of bread, with divers baskets of
+roots, which were excellent meat, I gave one of the canoas to the
+Arwacas, which belonged to the Spaniards that were escaped; and when I
+had dismissed all but the captain, who by the Spaniards was christened
+Martin, I sent back in the same canoa the old Ciawani, and Ferdinando,
+my first pilot, and gave them both such things as they desired, with
+sufficient victual to carry them back, and by them wrote a letter to
+the ships, which they promised to deliver, and performed it; and then
+I went on, with my new hired pilot, Martin the Arwacan. But the next
+or second day after, we came aground again with our galley, and were
+like to cast her away, with all our victual and provision, and so lay
+on the sand one whole night, and were far more in despair at this time
+to free her than before, because we had no tide of flood to help us,
+and therefore feared that all our hopes would have ended in mishaps.
+But we fastened an anchor upon the land, and with main strength drew
+her off; and so the fifteenth day we discovered afar off the mountains
+of Guiana, to our great joy, and towards the evening had a slent
+(push) of a northerly wind that blew very strong, which brought us in
+sight of the great river Orenoque; out of which this river descended
+wherein we were. We descried afar off three other canoas as far as we
+could discern them, after whom we hastened with our barge and
+wherries, but two of them passed out of sight, and the third entered
+up the great river, on the right hand to the westward, and there
+stayed out of sight, thinking that we meant to take the way eastward
+towards the province of Carapana; for that way the Spaniards keep, not
+daring to go upwards to Guiana, the people in those parts being all
+their enemies, and those in the canoas thought us to have been those
+Spaniards that were fled from Trinidad, and escaped killing. And when
+we came so far down as the opening of that branch into which they
+slipped, being near them with our barge and wherries, we made after
+them, and ere they could land came within call, and by our interpreter
+told them what we were, wherewith they came back willingly aboard us;
+and of such fish and tortugas' (turtles) eggs as they had gathered
+they gave us, and promised in the morning to bring the lord of that
+part with them, and to do us all other services they could. That night
+we came to an anchor at the parting of the three goodly rivers (the
+one was the river of Amana, by which we came from the north, and ran
+athwart towards the south, the other two were of Orenoque, which
+crossed from the west and ran to the sea towards the east) and landed
+upon a fair sand, where we found thousands of tortugas' eggs, which
+are very wholesome meat, and greatly restoring; so as our men were now
+well filled and highly contented both with the fare, and nearness of
+the land of Guiana, which appeared in sight.
+
+In the morning there came down, according to promise, the lord of that
+border, called Toparimaca, with some thirty or forty followers, and
+brought us divers sorts of fruits, and of his wine, bread, fish, and
+flesh, whom we also feasted as we could; at least we drank good
+Spanish wine, whereof we had a small quantity in bottles, which above
+all things they love. I conferred with this Toparimaca of the next way
+to Guiana, who conducted our galley and boats to his own port, and
+carried us from thence some mile and a-half to his town; where some of
+our captains caroused of his wine till they were reasonable pleasant,
+for it is very strong with pepper, and the juice of divers herbs and
+fruits digested and purged. They keep it in great earthen pots of ten
+or twelve gallons, very clean and sweet, and are themselves at their
+meetings and feasts the greatest carousers and drunkards of the world.
+When we came to his town we found two caciques, whereof one was a
+stranger that had been up the river in trade, and his boats, people,
+and wife encamped at the port where we anchored; and the other was of
+that country, a follower of Toparimaca. They lay each of them in a
+cotton hamaca, which we call Brazil beds, and two women attending them
+with six cups, and a little ladle to fill them out of an earthen
+pitcher of wine; and so they drank each of them three of those cups at
+a time one to the other, and in this sort they drink drunk at their
+feasts and meetings.
+
+That cacique that was a stranger had his wife staying at the port
+where we anchored, and in all my life I have seldom seen a better
+favoured woman. She was of good stature, with black eyes, fat of body,
+of an excellent countenance, her hair almost as long as herself, tied
+up again in pretty knots; and it seemed she stood not in that awe of
+her husband as the rest, for she spake and discoursed, and drank among
+the gentlemen and captains, and was very pleasant, knowing her own
+comeliness, and taking great pride therein. I have seen a lady in
+England so like to her, as but for the difference of colour, I would
+have sworn might have been the same.
+
+The seat of this town of Toparimaca was very pleasant, standing on a
+little hill, in an excellent prospect, with goodly gardens a mile
+compass round about it, and two very fair and large ponds of excellent
+fish adjoining. This town is called Arowocai; the people are of the
+nation called Nepoios, and are followers of Carapana. In that place I
+saw very aged people, that we might perceive all their sinews and
+veins without any flesh, and but even as a case covered only with
+skin. The lord of this place gave me an old man for pilot, who was of
+great experience and travel, and knew the river most perfectly both by
+day and night. And it shall be requisite for any man that passeth it
+to have such a pilot; for it is four, five, and six miles over in many
+places, and twenty miles in other places, with wonderful eddies and
+strong currents, many great islands, and divers shoals, and many
+dangerous rocks; and besides upon any increase of wind so great a
+billow, as we were sometimes in great peril of drowning in the galley,
+for the small boats durst not come from the shore but when it was very
+fair.
+
+The next day we hasted thence, and having an easterly wind to help us,
+we spared our arms from rowing; for after we entered Orenoque, the
+river lieth for the most part east and west, even from the sea unto
+Quito, in Peru. This river is navigable with barks little less than
+1000 miles; and from the place where we entered it may be sailed up in
+small pinnaces to many of the best parts of Nuevo Reyno de Granada and
+of Popayan. And from no place may the cities of these parts of the
+Indies be so easily taken and invaded as from hence. All that day we
+sailed up a branch of that river, having on the left hand a great
+island, which they call Assapana, which may contain some five-and-
+twenty miles in length, and six miles in breadth, the great body of
+the river running on the other side of this island. Beyond that middle
+branch there is also another island in the river, called Iwana, which
+is twice as big as the Isle of Wight; and beyond it, and between it
+and the main of Guiana, runneth a third branch of Orenoque, called
+Arraroopana. All three are goodly branches, and all navigable for
+great ships. I judge the river in this place to be at least thirty
+miles broad, reckoning the islands which divide the branches in it,
+for afterwards I sought also both the other branches.
+
+After we reached to the head of the island called Assapana, a little
+to the westward on the right hand there opened a river which came from
+the north, called Europa, and fell into the great river; and beyond it
+on the same side we anchored for that night by another island, six
+miles long and two miles broad, which they call Ocaywita. From hence,
+in the morning, we landed two Guianians, which we found in the town of
+Toparimaca, that came with us; who went to give notice of our coming
+to the lord of that country, called Putyma, a follower of Topiawari,
+chief lord of Aromaia, who succeeded Morequito, whom (as you have
+heard before) Berreo put to death. But his town being far within the
+land, he came not unto us that day; so as we anchored again that night
+near the banks of another land, of bigness much like the other, which
+they call Putapayma, over against which island, on the main land, was
+a very high mountain called Oecope. We coveted to anchor rather by
+these islands in the river than by the main, because of the tortugas'
+eggs, which our people found on them in great abundance; and also
+because the ground served better for us to cast our nets for fish, the
+main banks being for the most part stony and high and the rocks of a
+blue, metalline colour, like unto the best steel ore, which I
+assuredly take it to be. Of the same blue stone are also divers great
+mountains which border this river in many places.
+
+The next morning, towards nine of the clock, we weighed anchor; and
+the breeze increasing, we sailed always west up the river, and, after
+a while, opening the land on the right side, the country appeared to
+be champaign and the banks shewed very perfect red. I therefore sent
+two of the little barges with Captain Gifford, and with him Captain
+Thyn, Captain Caulfield, my cousin Greenvile, my nephew John Gilbert,
+Captain Eynos, Master Edward Porter, and my cousin Butshead Gorges,
+with some few soldiers, to march over the banks of that red land and
+to discover what manner of country it was on the other side; who at
+their return found it all a plain level as far as they went or could
+discern from the highest tree they could get upon. And my old pilot, a
+man of great travel, brother to the cacique Toparimaca, told me that
+those were called the plains of the Sayma, and that the same level
+reached to Cumana and Caracas, in the West Indies, which are a hundred
+and twenty leagues to the north, and that there inhabited four
+principal nations. The first were the Sayma, the next Assawai, the
+third and greatest the Wikiri, by whom Pedro Hernandez de Serpa,
+before mentioned, was overthrown as he passed with 300 horse from
+Cumana towards Orenoque in his enterprise of Guiana. The fourth are
+called Aroras, and are as black as negroes, but have smooth hair; and
+these are very valiant, or rather desperate, people, and have the most
+strong poison on their arrows, and most dangerous, of all nations, of
+which I will speak somewhat, being a digression not unnecessary.
+
+There was nothing whereof I was more curious than to find out the true
+remedies of these poisoned arrows. For besides the mortality of the
+wound they make, the party shot endureth the most insufferable torment
+in the world, and abideth a most ugly and lamentable death, sometimes
+dying stark mad, sometimes their bowels breaking out of their bellies;
+which are presently discoloured as black as pitch, and so unsavory as
+no man can endure to cure or to attend them. And it is more strange to
+know that in all this time there was never Spaniard, either by gift or
+torment, that could attain to the true knowledge of the cure, although
+they have martyred and put to invented torture I know not how many of
+them. But everyone of these Indians know it not, no, not one among
+thousands, but their soothsayers and priests, who do conceal it, and
+only teach it but from the father to the son.
+
+Those medicines which are vulgar, and serve for the ordinary poison,
+are made of the juice of a root called tupara; the same also quencheth
+marvellously the heat of burning fevers, and healeth inward wounds and
+broken veins that bleed within the body. But I was more beholding to
+the Guianians than any other; for Antonio de Berreo told me that he
+could never attain to the knowledge thereof, and yet they taught me
+the best way of healing as well thereof as of all other poisons. Some
+of the Spaniards have been cured in ordinary wounds of the common
+poisoned arrows with the juice of garlic. But this is a general rule
+for all men that shall hereafter travel the Indies where poisoned
+arrows are used, that they must abstain from drink. For if they take
+any liquor into their body, as they shall be marvellously provoked
+thereunto by drought, I say, if they drink before the wound be
+dressed, or soon upon it, there is no way with them but present death.
+
+And so I will return again to our journey, which for this third day we
+finished, and cast anchor again near the continent on the left hand
+between two mountains, the one called Aroami and the other Aio. I made
+no stay here but till midnight; for I feared hourly lest any rain
+should fall, and then it had been impossible to have gone any further
+up, notwithstanding that there is every day a very strong breeze and
+easterly wind. I deferred the search of the country on Guiana side
+till my return down the river.
+
+The next day we sailed by a great island in the middle of the river,
+called Manoripano; and, as we walked awhile on the island, while the
+galley got ahead of us, there came for us from the main a small canoa
+with seven or eight Guianians, to invite us to anchor at their port,
+but I deferred till my return. It was that cacique to whom those
+Nepoios went, which came with us from the town of Toparimaca. And so
+the fifth day we reached as high up as the province of Aromaia, the
+country of Morequito, whom Berreo executed, and anchored to the west
+of an island called Murrecotima, ten miles long and five broad. And
+that night the cacique Aramiary, to whose town we made our long and
+hungry voyage out of the river of Amana, passed by us.
+
+The next day we arrived at the port of Morequito, and anchored there,
+sending away one of our pilots to seek the king of Aromaia, uncle to
+Morequito, slain by Berreo as aforesaid. The next day following,
+before noon, he came to us on foot from his house, which was fourteen
+English miles, himself being a hundred and ten years old, and returned
+on foot the same day; and with him many of the borderers, with many
+women and children, that came to wonder at our nation and to bring us
+down victual, which they did in great plenty, as venison, pork, hens,
+chickens, fowl, fish, with divers sorts of excellent fruits and roots,
+and great abundance of pinas, the princess of fruits that grow under
+the sun, especially those of Guiana. They brought us, also, store of
+bread and of their wine, and a sort of paraquitos no bigger than
+wrens, and of all other sorts both small and great. One of them gave
+me a beast called by the Spaniards armadillo, which they call
+cassacam, which seemeth to be all barred over with small plates
+somewhat like to a rhinoceros, with a white horn growing in his hinder
+parts as big as a great hunting-horn, which they use to wind instead
+of a trumpet. Monardus (Monardes, Historia Medicinal) writeth that a
+little of the powder of that horn put into the ear cureth deafness.
+
+After this old king had rested awhile in a little tent that I caused
+to be set up, I began by my interpreter to discourse with him of the
+death of Morequito his predecessor, and afterward of the Spaniards;
+and ere I went any farther I made him know the cause of my coming
+thither, whose servant I was, and that the Queen's pleasure was I
+should undertake the voyage for their defence, and to deliver them
+from the tyranny of the Spaniards, dilating at large, as I had done
+before to those of Trinidad, her Majesty's greatness, her justice, her
+charity to all oppressed nations, with as many of the rest of her
+beauties and virtues as either I could express or they conceive. All
+which being with great admiration attentively heard and marvellously
+admired, I began to sound the old man as touching Guiana and the state
+thereof, what sort of commonwealth it was, how governed, of what
+strength and policy, how far it extended, and what nations were
+friends or enemies adjoining, and finally of the distance, and way to
+enter the same. He told me that himself and his people, with all those
+down the river towards the sea, as far as Emeria, the province of
+Carapana, were of Guiana, but that they called themselves
+Orenoqueponi, and that all the nations between the river and those
+mountains in sight, called Wacarima, were of the same cast and
+appellation; and that on the other side of those mountains of Wacarima
+there was a large plain (which after I discovered in my return) called
+the valley of Amariocapana. In all that valley the people were also of
+the ancient Guianians.
+
+I asked what nations those were which inhabited on the further side of
+those mountains, beyond the valley of Amariocapana. He answered with a
+great sigh (as a man which had inward feeling of the loss of his
+country and liberty, especially for that his eldest son was slain in a
+battle on that side of the mountains, whom he most entirely loved)
+that he remembered in his father's lifetime, when he was very old and
+himself a young man, that there came down into that large valley of
+Guiana a nation from so far off as the sun slept (for such were his
+own words), with so great a multitude as they could not be numbered
+nor resisted, and that they wore large coats, and hats of crimson
+colour, which colour he expressed by shewing a piece of red wood
+wherewith my tent was supported, and that they were called Orejones
+and Epuremei; that those had slain and rooted out so many of the
+ancient people as there were leaves in the wood upon all the trees,
+and had now made themselves lords of all, even to that mountain foot
+called Curaa, saving only of two nations, the one called Iwarawaqueri
+and the other Cassipagotos; and that in the last battle fought between
+the Epuremei and the Iwarawaqueri his eldest son was chosen to carry
+to the aid of the Iwarawaqueri a great troop of the Orenoqueponi, and
+was there slain with all his people and friends, and that he had now
+remaining but one son; and farther told me that those Epuremei had
+built a great town called Macureguarai at the said mountain foot, at
+the beginning of the great plains of Guiana, which have no end; and
+that their houses have many rooms, one over the other, and that
+therein the great king of the Orejones and Epuremei kept three
+thousand men to defend the borders against them, and withal daily to
+invade and slay them; but that of late years, since the Christians
+offered to invade his territories and those frontiers, they were all
+at peace, and traded one with another, saving only the Iwarawaqueri
+and those other nations upon the head of the river of Caroli called
+Cassipagotos, which we afterwards discovered, each one holding the
+Spaniard for a common enemy.
+
+After he had answered thus far, he desired leave to depart, saying
+that he had far to go, that he was old and weak, and was every day
+called for by death, which was also his own phrase. I desired him to
+rest with us that night, but I could not entreat him; but he told me
+that at my return from the country above he would again come to us,
+and in the meantime provide for us the best he could, of all that his
+country yielded. The same night he returned to Orocotona, his own
+town; so as he went that day eight-and-twenty miles, the weather being
+very hot, the country being situate between four and five degrees of
+the equinoctial. This Topiawari is held for the proudest and wisest of
+all the Orenoqueponi, and so he behaved himself towards me in all his
+answers, at my return, as I marvelled to find a man of that gravity
+and judgment and of so good discourse, that had no help of learning
+nor breed. The next morning we also left the port, and sailed westward
+up to the river, to view the famous river called Caroli, as well
+because it was marvellous of itself, as also for that I understood it
+led to the strongest nations of all the frontiers, that were enemies
+to the Epuremei, which are subjects to Inga, emperor of Guiana and
+Manoa. And that night we anchored at another island called Caiama, of
+some five or six miles in length; and the next day arrived at the
+mouth of Caroli. When we were short of it as low or further down as
+the port of Morequito, we heard the great roar and fall of the river.
+But when we came to enter with our barge and wherries, thinking to
+have gone up some forty miles to the nations of the Cassipagotos, we
+were not able with a barge of eight oars to row one stone's cast in an
+hour; and yet the river is as broad as the Thames at Woolwich, and we
+tried both sides, and the middle, and every part of the river. So as
+we encamped upon the banks adjoining, and sent off our Orenoquepone
+which came with us from Morequito to give knowledge to the nations
+upon the river of our being there, and that we desired to see the
+lords of Canuria, which dwelt within the province upon that river,
+making them know that we were enemies to the Spaniards; for it was on
+this river side that Morequito slew the friar, and those nine
+Spaniards which came from Manoa, the city of Inga, and took from them
+14,000 pesos of gold. So as the next day there came down a lord or
+cacique, called Wanuretona, with many people with him, and brought all
+store of provisions to entertain us, as the rest had done. And as I
+had before made my coming known to Topiawari, so did I acquaint this
+cacique therewith, and how I was sent by her Majesty for the purpose
+aforesaid, and gathered also what I could of him touching the estate
+of Guiana. And I found that those also of Caroli were not only enemies
+to the Spaniards, but most of all to the Epuremei, which abound in
+gold. And by this Wanuretona I had knowledge that on the head of this
+river were three mighty nations, which were seated on a great lake,
+from whence this river descended, and were called Cassipagotos,
+Eparegotos, and Arawagotos (the Purigotos and Arinagotos are still
+settled on the upper tributaries of the Caroni river, no such lake as
+that mentioned is known to exist); and that all those either against
+the Spaniards or the Epuremei would join with us, and that if we
+entered the land over the mountains of Curaa we should satisfy
+ourselves with gold and all other good things. He told us farther of a
+nation called Iwarawaqueri, before spoken of, that held daily war with
+the Epuremei that inhabited Macureguarai, and first civil town of
+Guiana, of the subjects of Inga, the emperor.
+
+Upon this river one Captain George, that I took with Berreo, told me
+that there was a great silver mine, and that it was near the banks of
+the said river. But by this time as well Orenoque, Caroli, as all the
+rest of the rivers were risen four or five feet in height, so as it
+was not possible by the strength of any men, or with any boat
+whatsoever, to row into the river against the stream. I therefore sent
+Captain Thyn, Captain Greenvile, my nephew John Gilbert, my cousin
+Butshead Gorges, Captain Clarke, and some thirty shot more to coast
+the river by land, and to go to a town some twenty miles over the
+valley called Amnatapoi; and they found guides there to go farther
+towards the mountain foot to another great town called Capurepana,
+belonging to a cacique called Haharacoa, that was a nephew to old
+Topiawari, king of Aromaia, our chiefest friend, because this town and
+province of Capurepana adjoined to Macureguarai, which was a frontier
+town of the empire. And the meanwhile myself with Captain Gifford,
+Captain Caulfield, Edward Hancock, and some half-a-dozen shot marched
+overland to view the strange overfalls of the river of Caroli, which
+roared so far off; and also to see the plains adjoining, and the rest
+of the province of Canuri. I sent also Captain Whiddon, William
+Connock, and some eight shot with them, to see if they could find any
+mineral stone alongst the river's side. When we were come to the tops
+of the first hills of the plains adjoining to the river, we beheld
+that wonderful breach of waters which ran down Caroli; and might from
+that mountain see the river how it ran in three parts, above twenty
+miles off, and there appeared some ten or twelve overfalls in sight,
+every one as high over the other as a church tower, which fell with
+that fury, that the rebound of water made it seem as if it had been
+all covered over with a great shower of rain; and in some places we
+took it at the first for a smoke that had risen over some great town.
+For mine own part I was well persuaded from thence to have returned,
+being a very ill footman; but the rest were all so desirous to go near
+the said strange thunder of waters, as they drew me on by little and
+little, till we came into the next valley, where we might better
+discern the same. I never saw a more beautiful country, nor more
+lively prospects; hills so raised here and there over the valleys; the
+river winding into divers branches; the plains adjoining without bush
+or stubble, all fair green grass; the ground of hard sand, easy to
+march on, either for horse or foot; the deer crossing in every path;
+the birds towards the evening singing on every tree with a thousand
+several tunes; cranes and herons of white, crimson, and carnation,
+perching in the river's side; the air fresh with a gentle easterly
+wind; and every stone that we stooped to take up promised either gold
+or silver by his complexion. Your Lordship shall see of many sorts,
+and I hope some of them cannot be bettered under the sun; and yet we
+had no means but with our daggers and fingers to tear them out here
+and there, the rocks being most hard of that mineral spar aforesaid,
+which is like a flint, and is altogether as hard or harder, and
+besides the veins lie a fathom or two deep in the rocks. But we wanted
+all things requisite save only our desires and good will to have
+performed more if it had pleased God. To be short, when both our
+companies returned, each of them brought also several sorts of stones
+that appeared very fair, but were such as they found loose on the
+ground, and were for the most part but coloured, and had not any gold
+fixed in them. Yet such as had no judgment or experience kept all that
+glistered, and would not be persuaded but it was rich because of the
+lustre; and brought of those, and of marcasite withal, from Trinidad,
+and have delivered of those stones to be tried in many places, and
+have thereby bred an opinion that all the rest is of the same. Yet
+some of these stones I shewed afterward to a Spaniard of the Caracas,
+who told me that it was El Madre del Oro, that is, the mother of gold,
+and that the mine was farther in the ground.
+
+But it shall be found a weak policy in me, either to betray myself or
+my country with imaginations; neither am I so far in love with that
+lodging, watching, care, peril, diseases, ill savours, bad fare, and
+many other mischiefs that accompany these voyages, as to woo myself
+again into any of them, were I not assured that the sun covereth not
+so much riches in any part of the earth. Captain Whiddon, and our
+chirurgeon, Nicholas Millechamp, brought me a kind of stones like
+sapphires; what they may prove I know not. I shewed them to some of
+the Orenoqueponi, and they promised to bring me to a mountain that had
+of them very large pieces growing diamond-wise; whether it be crystal
+of the mountain, Bristol diamond, or sapphire, I do not yet know, but
+I hope the best; sure I am that the place is as likely as those from
+whence all the rich stones are brought, and in the same height or very
+near. On the left hand of this river Caroli are seated those nations
+which I called Iwarawaqueri before remembered, which are enemies to
+the Epuremei; and on the head of it, adjoining to the great lake
+Cassipa, are situated those other nations which also resist Inga, and
+the Epuremei, called Cassipagotos, Eparegotos, and Arawagotos. I
+farther understood that this lake of Cassipa is so large, as it is
+above one day's journey for one of their canoas, to cross, which may
+be some forty miles; and that thereinto fall divers rivers, and that
+great store of grains of gold are found in the summer time when the
+lake falleth by the banks, in those branches.
+
+There is also another goodly river beyond Caroli which is called Arui,
+which also runneth through the lake Cassipa, and falleth into Orenoque
+farther west, making all that land between Caroli and Arui an island;
+which is likewise a most beautiful country. Next unto Arui there are
+two rivers Atoica and Caura, and on that branch which is called Caura
+are a nation of people whose heads appear not above their shoulders;
+which though it may be thought a mere fable, yet for mine own part I
+am resolved it is true, because every child in the provinces of
+Aromaia and Canuri affirm the same. They are called Ewaipanoma; they
+are reported to have their eyes in their shoulders, and their mouths
+in the middle of their breasts, and that a long train of hair groweth
+backward between their shoulders. The son of Topiawari, which I
+brought with me into England, told me that they were the most mighty
+men of all the land, and use bows, arrows, and clubs thrice as big as
+any of Guiana, or of the Orenoqueponi; and that one of the
+Iwarawaqueri took a prisoner of them the year before our arrival
+there, and brought him into the borders of Aromaia, his father's
+country. And farther, when I seemed to doubt of it, he told me that it
+was no wonder among them; but that they were as great a nation and as
+common as any other in all the provinces, and had of late years slain
+many hundreds of his father's people, and of other nations their
+neighbours. But it was not my chance to hear of them till I was come
+away; and if I had but spoken one word of it while I was there I might
+have brought one of them with me to put the matter out of doubt. Such
+a nation was written of by Mandeville, whose reports were holden for
+fables many years; and yet since the East Indies were discovered, we
+find his relations true of such things as heretofore were held
+incredible (Mandeville, or the author who assumed this name, placed
+his headless men in the East Indian Archipelago, the fable is borrowed
+from older writers, Herodotus &c). Whether it be true or no, the
+matter is not great, neither can there be any profit in the
+imagination; for mine own part I saw them not, but I am resolved that
+so many people did not all combine or forethink to make the report.
+
+When I came to Cumana in the West Indies afterwards by chance I spake
+with a Spaniard dwelling not far from thence, a man of great travel.
+And after he knew that I had been in Guiana, and so far directly west
+as Caroli, the first question he asked me was, whether I had seen any
+of the Ewaipanoma, which are those without heads. Who being esteemed a
+most honest man of his word, and in all things else, told me that he
+had seen many of them; I may not name him, because it may be for his
+disadvantage, but he is well known to Monsieur Moucheron's son of
+London, and to Peter Moucheron, merchant, of the Flemish ship that was
+there in trade; who also heard, what he avowed to be true, of those
+people.
+
+The fourth river to the west of Caroli is Casnero: which falleth into
+the Orenoque on this side of Amapaia. And that river is greater than
+Danubius, or any of Europe: it riseth on the south of Guiana from the
+mountains which divide Guiana from Amazons, and I think it to be
+navigable many hundred miles. But we had no time, means, nor season of
+the year, to search those rivers, for the causes aforesaid, the winter
+being come upon us; although the winter and summer as touching cold
+and heat differ not, neither do the trees ever sensibly lose their
+leaves, but have always fruit either ripe or green, and most of them
+both blossoms, leaves, ripe fruit, and green, at one time: but their
+winter only consisteth of terrible rains, and overflowing of the
+rivers, with many great storms and gusts, thunder and lightnings, of
+which we had our fill ere we returned.
+
+On the north side, the first river that falleth into the Orenoque is
+Cari. Beyond it, on the same side is the river of Limo. Between these
+two is a great nation of Cannibals, and their chief town beareth the
+name of the river, and is called Acamacari. At this town is a
+continual market of women for three or four hatchets apiece; they are
+bought by the Arwacas, and by them sold into the West Indies. To the
+west of Limo is the river Pao, beyond it Caturi, beyond that Voari,
+and Capuri (the Apure river), which falleth out of the great river of
+Meta, by which Berreo descended from Nuevo Reyno de Granada. To the
+westward of Capuri is the province of Amapaia, where Berreo wintered
+and had so many of his people poisoned with the tawny water of the
+marshes of the Anebas. Above Amapaia, toward Nuevo Reyno, fall in
+Meto, Pato and Cassanar. To the west of those, towards the provinces
+of the Ashaguas and Catetios, are the rivers of Beta, Dawney, and
+Ubarro; and toward the frontier of Peru are the provinces of
+Thomebamba, and Caxamalca. Adjoining to Quito in the north side of
+Peru are the rivers of Guiacar and Goauar; and on the other side of
+the said mountains the river of Papamene which descendeth into Maranon
+or Amazons, passing through the province Motilones, where Don Pedro de
+Orsua, who was slain by the traitor Aguirre before rehearsed, built
+his brigandines, when he sought Guiana by the way of Amazons.
+
+Between Dawney and Beta lieth a famous island in Orenoque (now called
+Baraquan, for above Meta it is not known by the name of Orenoque)
+which is called Athule (cataract of Ature); beyond which ships of
+burden cannot pass by reason of a most forcible overfall, and current
+of water; but in the eddy all smaller vessels may be drawn even to
+Peru itself. But to speak of more of these rivers without the
+description were but tedious, and therefore I will leave the rest to
+the description. This river of Orenoque is navigable for ships little
+less than 1,000 miles, and for lesser vessels near 2,000. By it, as
+aforesaid, Peru, Nuevo Reyno and Popayan may be invaded: it also
+leadeth to the great empire of Inga, and to the provinces of Amapaia
+and Anebas, which abound in gold. His branches of Casnero, Manta,
+Caura descend from the middle land and valley which lieth between the
+easter province of Peru and Guiana; and it falls into the sea between
+Maranon and Trinidad in two degrees and a half. All of which your
+honours shall better perceive in the general description of Guiana,
+Peru, Nuevo Reyno, the kingdom of Popayan, and Rodas, with the
+province of Venezuela, to the bay of Uraba, behind Cartagena,
+westward, and to Amazons southward. While we lay at anchor on the
+coast of Canuri, and had taken knowledge of all the nations upon the
+head and branches of this river, and had found out so many several
+people, which were enemies to the Epuremei and the new conquerors, I
+thought it time lost to linger any longer in that place, especially
+for that the fury of Orenoque began daily to threaten us with dangers
+in our return. For no half day passed but the river began to rage and
+overflow very fearfully, and the rains came down in terrible showers,
+and gusts in great abundance; and withal our men began to cry out for
+want of shift, for no man had place to bestow any other apparel than
+that which he ware on his back, and that was throughly washed on his
+body for the most part ten times in one day; and we had now been well-
+near a month every day passing to the westward farther and farther
+from our ships. We therefore turned towards the east, and spent the
+rest of the time in discovering the river towards the sea, which we
+had not viewed, and which was most material.
+
+The next day following we left the mouth of Caroli, and arrived again
+at the port of Morequito where we were before; for passing down the
+stream we went without labour, and against the wind, little less than
+a hundred miles a day. As soon as I came to anchor, I sent away one
+for old Topiawari, with whom I much desired to have further
+conference, and also to deal with him for some one of his country to
+bring with us into England, as well to learn the language, as to
+confer withal by the way, the time being now spent of any longer stay
+there. Within three hours after my messenger came to him, he arrived
+also, and with him such a rabble of all sorts of people, and every one
+loaden with somewhat, as if it had been a great market or fair in
+England; and our hungry companies clustered thick and threefold among
+their baskets, every one laying hand on what he liked. After he had
+rested awhile in my tent, I shut out all but ourselves and my
+interpreter, and told him that I knew that both the Epuremei and the
+Spaniards were enemies to him, his country and nations: that the one
+had conquered Guiana already, and the other sought to regain the same
+from them both; and therefore I desired him to instruct me what he
+could, both of the passage into the golden parts of Guiana, and to the
+civil towns and apparelled people of Inga. He gave me an answer to
+this effect: first, that he could not perceive that I meant to go
+onward towards the city of Manoa, for neither the time of the year
+served, neither could he perceive any sufficient numbers for such an
+enterprise. And if I did, I was sure with all my company to be buried
+there, for the emperor was of that strength, as that many times so
+many men more were too few. Besides, he gave me this good counsel and
+advised me to hold it in mind (as for himself, he knew he could not
+live till my return), that I should not offer by any means hereafter
+to invade the strong parts of Guiana without the help of all those
+nations which were also their enemies; for that it was impossible
+without those, either to be conducted, to be victualled, or to have
+aught carried with us, our people not being able to endure the march
+in so great heat and travail, unless the borderers gave them help, to
+cart with them both their meat and furniture. For he remembered that
+in the plains of Macureguarai three hundred Spaniards were overthrown,
+who were tired out, and had none of the borderers to their friends;
+but meeting their enemies as they passed the frontier, were environed
+on all sides, and the people setting the long dry grass on fire,
+smothered them, so as they had no breath to fight, nor could discern
+their enemies for the great smoke. He told me further that four days'
+journey from his town was Macureguarai, and that those were the next
+and nearest of the subjects of Inga, and of the Epuremei, and the
+first town of apparelled and rich people; and that all those plates of
+gold which were scattered among the borderers and carried to other
+nations far and near, came from the said Macureguarai and were there
+made, but that those of the land within were far finer, and were
+fashioned after the images of men, beasts, birds, and fishes. I asked
+him whether he thought that those companies that I had there with me
+were sufficient to take that town or no; he told me that he thought
+they were. I then asked him whether he would assist me with guides,
+and some companies of his people to join with us; he answered that he
+would go himself with all the borderers, if the rivers did remain
+fordable, upon this condition, that I would leave with him till my
+return again fifty soldiers, which he undertook to victual. I answered
+that I had not above fifty good men in all there; the rest were
+labourers and rowers, and that I had no provision to leave with them
+of powder, shot, apparel, or aught else, and that without those things
+necessary for their defence, they should be in danger of the Spaniards
+in my absence, who I knew would use the same measures towards mine
+that I offered them at Trinidad. And although upon the motion Captain
+Caulfield, Captain Greenvile, my nephew John Gilbert and divers others
+were desirous to stay, yet I was resolved that they must needs have
+perished. For Berreo expected daily a supply out of Spain, and looked
+also hourly for his son to come down from Nuevo Reyno de Granada, with
+many horse and foot, and had also in Valencia, in the Caracas, two
+hundred horse ready to march; and I could not have spared above forty,
+and had not any store at all of powder, lead, or match to have left
+with them, nor any other provision, either spade, pickaxe, or aught
+else to have fortified withal.
+
+When I had given him reason that I could not at this time leave him
+such a company, he then desired me to forbear him and his country for
+that time; for he assured me that I should be no sooner three days
+from the coast but those Epuremei would invade him, and destroy all
+the remain of his people and friends, if he should any way either
+guide us or assist us against them. He further alleged that the
+Spaniards sought his death; and as they had already murdered his
+nephew Morequito, lord of that province, so they had him seventeen
+days in a chain before he was king of the country, and led him like a
+dog from place to place until he had paid an hundred plates of gold
+and divers chains of spleen-stones for his ransom. And now, since he
+became owner of that province, that they had many times laid wait to
+take him, and that they would be now more vehement when they should
+understand of his conference with the English. /And because/, said he,
+/they would the better displant me, if they cannot lay hands on me,
+they have gotten a nephew of mine called Eparacano, whom they have
+christened Don Juan, and his son Don Pedro, whom they have also
+apparelled and armed, by whom they seek to make a party against me in
+mine own country. He also hath taken to wife one Louiana, of a strong
+family, which are borderers and neighbours; and myself now being old
+and in the hands of death am not able to travel nor to shift as when I
+was of younger years./ He therefore prayed us to defer it till the
+next year, when he would undertake to draw in all the borderers to
+serve us, and then, also, it would be more seasonable to travel; for
+at this time of the year we should not be able to pass any river, the
+waters were and would be so grown ere our return.
+
+He farther told me that I could not desire so much to invade
+Macureguarai and the rest of Guiana but that the borderers would be
+more vehement than I. For he yielded for a chief cause that in the
+wars with the Epuremei they were spoiled of their women, and that
+their wives and daughters were taken from them; so as for their own
+parts they desired nothing of the gold or treasure for their labours,
+but only to recover women from the Epuremei. For he farther complained
+very sadly, as it had been a matter of great consequence, that whereas
+they were wont to have ten or twelve wives, they were now enforced to
+content themselves with three or four, and that the lords of the
+Epuremei had fifty or a hundred. And in truth they war more for women
+than either for gold or dominion. For the lords of countries desire
+many children of their own bodies to increase their races and
+kindreds, for in those consist their greatest trust and strength.
+Divers of his followers afterwards desired me to make haste again,
+that they might sack the Epuremei, and I asked them, of what? They
+answered, Of their women for us, and their gold for you. For the hope
+of those many of women they more desire the war than either for gold
+or for the recovery of their ancient territories. For what between the
+subjects of Inga and the Spaniards, those frontiers are grown thin of
+people; and also great numbers are fled to other nations farther off
+for fear of the Spaniards.
+
+After I received this answer of the old man, we fell into
+consideration whether it had been of better advice to have entered
+Macureguarai, and to have begun a war upon Inga at this time, yea, or
+no, if the time of the year and all things else had sorted. For mine
+own part, as we were not able to march it for the rivers, neither had
+any such strength as was requisite, and durst not abide the coming of
+the winter, or to tarry any longer from our ships, I thought it were
+evil counsel to have attempted it at that time, although the desire
+for gold will answer many objections. But it would have been, in mine
+opinion, an utter overthrow to the enterprise, if the same should be
+hereafter by her Majesty attempted. For then, whereas now they have
+heard we were enemies to the Spaniards and were sent by her Majesty to
+relieve them, they would as good cheap have joined with the Spaniards
+at our return, as to have yielded unto us, when they had proved that
+we came both for one errand, and that both sought but to sack and
+spoil them. But as yet our desire gold, or our purpose of invasion, is
+not known to them of the empire. And it is likely that if her Majesty
+undertake the enterprise they will rather submit themselves to her
+obedience than to the Spaniards, of whose cruelty both themselves and
+the borderers have already tasted. And therefore, till I had known her
+Majesty's pleasure, I would rather have lost the sack of one or two
+towns, although they might have been very profitable, than to have
+defaced or endangered the future hope of so many millions, and the
+great good and rich trade which England may be possessed of thereby. I
+am assured now that they will all die, even to the last man, against
+the Spaniards in hope of our succour and return. Whereas, otherwise,
+if I had either laid hands on the borderers or ransomed the lords, as
+Berreo did, or invaded the subjects of Inga, I know all had been lost
+for hereafter.
+
+After that I had resolved Topiawari, lord of Aromaia, that I could not
+at this time leave with him the companies he desired, and that I was
+contented to forbear the enterprise against the Epuremei till the next
+year, he freely gave me his only son to take with me into England; and
+hoped that though he himself had but a short time to live, yet that by
+our means his son should be established after his death. And I left
+with him one Francis Sparrow, a servant of Captain Gifford, who was
+desirous to tarry, and could describe a country with his pen, and a
+boy of mine called Hugh Goodwin, to learn the language. I after asked
+the manner how the Epuremei wrought those plates of gold, and how they
+could melt it out of the stone. He told me that the most of the gold
+which they made in plates and images was not severed from the stone,
+but that on the lake of Manoa, and in a multitude of other rivers,
+they gathered it in grains of perfect gold and in pieces as big as
+small stones, and they put it to a part of copper, otherwise they
+could not work it; and that they used a great earthen pot with holes
+round about it, and when they had mingled the gold and copper together
+they fastened canes to the holes, and so with the breath of men they
+increased the fire till the metal ran, and then they cast it into
+moulds of stone and clay, and so make those plates and images. I have
+sent your honours of two sorts such as I could by chance recover, more
+to shew the manner of them than for the value. For I did not in any
+sort make my desire of gold known, because I had neither time nor
+power to have a great quantity. I gave among them many more pieces of
+gold than I received, of the new money of twenty shillings with her
+Majesty's picture, to wear, with promise that they would become her
+servants thenceforth.
+
+I have also sent your honours of the ore, whereof I know some is as
+rich as the earth yieldeth any, of which I know there is sufficient,
+if nothing else were to be hoped for. But besides that we were not
+able to tarry and search the hills, so we had neither pioneers, bars,
+sledges, nor wedges of iron to break the ground, without which there
+is no working in mines. But we saw all the hills with stones of the
+colour of gold and silver, and we tried them to be no marcasite, and
+therefore such as the Spaniards call El madre del oro or "the mother
+of gold," which is an undoubted assurance of the general abundance;
+and myself saw the outside of many mines of the spar, which I know to
+be the same that all covet in this world, and of those more than I
+will speak of.
+
+Having learned what I could in Canuri and Aromaia, and received a
+faithful promise of the principallest of those provinces to become
+servants to her Majesty, and to resist the Spaniards if they made any
+attempt in our absence, and that they would draw in the nations about
+the lake of Cassipa and those of Iwarawaqueri, I then parted from old
+Topiawari, and received his son for a pledge between us, and left with
+him two of ours as aforesaid. To Francis Sparrow I gave instructions
+to travel to Macureguarai with such merchandises as I left with them,
+thereby to learn the place, and if it were possible, to go on to the
+great city of Manoa. Which being done, we weighed anchor and coasted
+the river on Guiana side, because we came upon the north side, by the
+lawns of the Saima and Wikiri.
+
+There came with us from Aromaia a cacique called Putijma, that
+commanded the province of Warapana, which Putijma slew the nine
+Spaniards upon Caroli before spoken of; who desired us to rest in the
+port of his country, promising to bring us unto a mountain adjoining
+to his town that had stones of the colour of gold, which he performed.
+And after we had rested there one night I went myself in the morning
+with most of the gentlemen of my company over-land towards the said
+mountain, marching by a river's side called Mana, leaving on the right
+hand a town called Tuteritona, standing in the province of Tarracoa,
+of which Wariaaremagoto is principal. Beyond it lieth another town
+towards the south, in the valley of Amariocapana, which beareth the
+name of the said valley; whose plains stretch themselves some sixty
+miles in length, east and west, as fair ground and as beautiful fields
+as any man hath ever seen, with divers copses scattered here and there
+by the river's side, and all as full of deer as any forest or park in
+England, and in every lake and river the like abundance of fish and
+fowl; of which Irraparragota is lord.
+
+From the river of Mana we crossed another river in the said beautiful
+valley called Oiana, and rested ourselves by a clear lake which lay in
+the middle of the said Oiana; and one of our guides kindling us fire
+with two sticks, we stayed awhile to dry our shirts, which with the
+heat hung very wet and heavy on our shoulders. Afterwards we sought
+the ford to pass over towards the mountain called Iconuri, where
+Putijma foretold us of the mine. In this lake we saw one of the great
+fishes, as big as a wine pipe, which they call manati, being most
+excellent and wholesome meat. But after I perceived that to pass the
+said river would require half-a-day's march more, I was not able
+myself to endure it, and therefore I sent Captain Keymis with six shot
+to go on, and gave him order not to return to the port of Putijma,
+which is called Chiparepare, but to take leisure, and to march down
+the said valley as far as a river called Cumaca, where I promised to
+meet him again, Putijma himself promising also to be his guide. And as
+they marched, they left the towns of Emperapana and Capurepana on the
+right hand, and marched from Putijma's house, down the said valley of
+Amariocapana; and we returning the same day to the river's side, saw
+by the way many rocks like unto gold ore, and on the left hand a round
+mountain which consisted of mineral stone.
+
+From hence we rowed down the stream, coasting the province of Parino.
+As for the branches of rivers which I overpass in this discourse,
+those shall be better expressed in the description, with the mountains
+of Aio, Ara, and the rest, which are situate in the provinces of
+Parino and Carricurrina. When we were come as far down as the land
+called Ariacoa, where Orenoque divideth itself into three great
+branches, each of them being most goodly rivers, I sent away Captain
+Henry Thyn, and Captain Greenvile with the galley, the nearest way,
+and took with me Captain Gifford, Captain Caulfield, Edward Porter,
+and Captain Eynos with mine own barge and the two wherries, and went
+down that branch of Orenoque which is called Cararoopana, which
+leadeth towards Emeria, the province of Carapana, and towards the east
+sea, as well to find out Captain Keymis, whom I had sent overland, as
+also to acquaint myself with Carapana, who is one of the greatest of
+all the lords of the Orenoqueponi. And when I came to the river of
+Cumaca, to which Putijma promised to conduct Captain Keymis, I left
+Captain Eynos and Master Porter in the said river to expect his
+coming, and the rest of us rowed down the stream towards Emeria.
+
+In this branch called Cararoopana were also many goodly islands, some
+of six miles long, some of ten, and some of twenty. When it grew
+towards sunset, we entered a branch of a river that fell into
+Orenoque, called Winicapora; where I was informed of the mountain of
+crystal, to which in truth for the length of the way, and the evil
+season of the year, I was not able to march, nor abide any longer upon
+the journey. We saw it afar off; and it appeared like a white church-
+tower of an exceeding height. There falleth over it a mighty river
+which toucheth no part of the side of the mountain, but rusheth over
+the top of it, and falleth to the ground with so terrible a noise and
+clamour, as if a thousand great bells were knocked one against
+another. I think there is not in the world so strange an overfall, nor
+so wonderful to behold. Berreo told me that there were diamonds and
+other precious stones on it, and that they shined very far off; but
+what it hath I know not, neither durst he or any of his men ascend to
+the top of the said mountain, those people adjoining being his
+enemies, as they were, and the way to it so impassable.
+
+Upon this river of Winicapora we rested a while, and from thence
+marched into the country to a town called after the name of the river,
+whereof the captain was one Timitwara, who also offered to conduct me
+to the top of the said mountain called Wacarima. But when we came in
+first to the house of the said Timitwara, being upon one of their said
+feast days, we found them all as drunk as beggars, and the pots
+walking from one to another without rest. We that were weary and hot
+with marching were glad of the plenty, though a small quantity
+satisfied us, their drink being very strong and heady, and so rested
+ourselves awhile. After we had fed, we drew ourselves back to our
+boats upon the river, and there came to us all the lords of the
+country, with all such kind of victual as the place yielded, and with
+their delicate wine of pinas, and with abundance of hens and other
+provisions, and of those stones which we call spleen-stones. We
+understood by these chieftains of Winicapora that their lord,
+Carapana, was departed from Emeria, which was now in sight, and that
+he was fled to Cairamo, adjoining to the mountains of Guiana, over the
+valley called Amariocapana, being persuaded by those ten Spaniards
+which lay at his house that we would destroy him and his country. But
+after these caciques of Winicapora and Saporatona his followers
+perceived our purpose, and saw that we came as enemies to the
+Spaniards only, and had not so much as harmed any of those nations,
+no, though we found them to be of the Spaniards' own servants, they
+assured us that Carapana would be as ready to serve us as any of the
+lords of the provinces which we had passed; and that he durst do no
+other till this day but entertain the Spaniards, his country lying so
+directly in their way, and next of all other to any entrance that
+should be made in Guiana on that side. And they further assured us,
+that it was not for fear of our coming that he was removed, but to be
+acquitted of the Spaniards or any other that should come hereafter.
+For the province of Cairoma is situate at the mountain foot, which
+divideth the plains of Guiana from the countries of the Orenoqueponi;
+by means whereof if any should come in our absence into his towns, he
+would slip over the mountains into the plains of Guiana among the
+Epuremei, where the Spaniards durst not follow him without great
+force. But in mine opinion, or rather I assure myself, that Carapana
+being a notable wise and subtle fellow, a man of one hundred years of
+age and therefore of great experience, is removed to look on, and if
+he find that we return strong he will be ours; if not, he will excuse
+his departure to the Spaniards, and say it was for fear of our coming.
+
+We therefore thought it bootless to row so far down the stream, or to
+seek any farther of this old fox; and therefore from the river of
+Waricapana, which lieth at the entrance of Emeria, we returned again,
+and left to the eastward those four rivers which fall from the
+mountains of Emeria into Orenoque, which are Waracayari, Coirama,
+Akaniri, and Iparoma. Below those four are also these branches and
+mouths of Orenoque, which fall into the east sea, whereof the first is
+Araturi, the next Amacura, the third Barima, the fourth Wana, the
+fifth Morooca, the sixth Paroma, the last Wijmi. Beyond them there
+fall out of the land between Orenoque and Amazons fourteen rivers,
+which I forbear to name, inhabited by the Arwacas and Cannibals.
+
+It is now time to return towards the north, and we found it a
+wearisome way back from the borders of Emeria, to recover up again to
+the head of the river Carerupana, by which we descended, and where we
+parted from the galley, which I directed to take the next way to the
+port of Toparimaca, by which we entered first.
+
+All the night it was stormy and dark, and full of thunder and great
+showers, so as we were driven to keep close by the banks in our small
+boats, being all heartily afraid both of the billow and terrible
+current of the river. By the next morning we recovered the mouth of
+the river of Cumaca, where we left Captain Eynos and Edward Porter to
+attend the coming of Captain Keymis overland; but when we entered the
+same, they had heard no news of his arrival, which bred in us a great
+doubt what might become of him. I rowed up a league or two farther
+into the river, shooting off pieces all the way, that he might know of
+our being there; and the next morning we heard them answer us also
+with a piece. We took them aboard us, and took our leave of Putijma,
+their guide, who of all others most lamented our departure, and
+offered to send his son with us into England, if we could have stayed
+till he had sent back to his town. But our hearts were cold to behold
+the great rage and increase of Orenoque, and therefore departed, and
+turned toward the west, till we had recovered the parting of the three
+branches aforesaid, that we might put down the stream after the
+galley.
+
+The next day we landed on the island of Assapano, which divideth the
+river from that branch by which we sent down to Emeria, and there
+feasted ourselves with that beast which is called armadillo, presented
+unto us before at Winicapora. And the day following, we recovered the
+galley at anchor at the port of Toparimaca, and the same evening
+departed with very foul weather, and terrible thunder and showers, for
+the winter was come on very far. The best was, we went no less than
+100 miles a day down the river; but by the way we entered it was
+impossible to return, for that the river of Amana, being in the bottom
+of the bay of Guanipa, cannot be sailed back by any means, both the
+breeze and current of the sea were so forcible. And therefore we
+followed a branch of Orenoque called Capuri, which entered into the
+sea eastward of our ships, to the end we might bear with them before
+the wind; and it was not without need, for we had by that way as much
+to cross of the main sea, after we came to the river's mouth, as
+between Gravelin and Dover, in such boats as your honour hath heard.
+
+To speak of what passed homeward were tedious, either to describe or
+name any of the rivers, islands, or villages of the Tivitivas, which
+dwell on trees; we will leave all those to the general map. And to be
+short, when we were arrived at the sea-side, then grew our greatest
+doubt, and the bitterest of all our journey forepassed; for I protest
+before God, that we were in a most desperate estate. For the same
+night which we anchored in the mouth of the river of Capuri, where it
+falleth into the sea, there arose a mighty storm, and the river's
+mouth was at least a league broad, so as we ran before night close
+under the land with our small boats, and brought the galley as near as
+we could. But she had as much ado to live as could be, and there
+wanted little of her sinking, and all those in her; for mine own part,
+I confess I was very doubtful which way to take, either to go over in
+the pestered (crowded) galley, there being but six foot water over the
+sands for two leagues together, and that also in the channel, and she
+drew five; or to adventure in so great a billow, and in so doubtful
+weather, to cross the seas in my barge. The longer we tarried the
+worse it was, and therefore I took Captain Gifford, Captain Caulfield,
+and my cousin Greenvile into my barge; and after it cleared up about
+midnight we put ourselves to God's keeping, and thrust out into the
+sea, leaving the galley at anchor, who durst not adventure but by
+daylight. And so, being all very sober and melancholy, one faintly
+cheering another to shew courage, it pleased God that the next day
+about nine o'clock, we descried the island of Trinidad; and steering
+for the nearest part of it, we kept the shore till we came to
+Curiapan, where we found our ships at anchor, than which there was
+never to us a more joyful sight.
+
+Now that it hath pleased God to send us safe to our ships, it is time
+to leave Guiana to the sun, whom they worship, and steer away towards
+the north. I will, therefore, in a few words finish the discovery
+thereof. Of the several nations which we found upon this discovery I
+will once again make repetition, and how they are affected. At our
+first entrance into Amana, which is one of the outlets of Orenoque, we
+left on the right hand of us in the bottom of the bay, lying directly
+against Trinidad, a nation of inhuman Cannibals, which inhabit the
+rivers of Guanipa and Berbeese. In the same bay there is also a third
+river, which is called Areo, which riseth on Paria side towards
+Cumana, and that river is inhabited with the Wikiri, whose chief town
+upon the said river is Sayma. In this bay there are no more rivers but
+these three before rehearsed and the four branches of Amana, all which
+in the winter thrust so great abundance of water into the sea, as the
+same is taken up fresh two or three leagues from the land. In the
+passages towards Guiana, that is, in all those lands which the eight
+branches of Orenoque fashion into islands, there are but one sort of
+people, called Tivitivas, but of two castes, as they term them, the
+one called Ciawani, the other Waraweeti, and those war one with
+another.
+
+On the hithermost part of Orenoque, as at Toparimaca and Winicapora,
+those are of a nation called Nepoios, and are the followers of
+Carapana, lord of Emeria. Between Winicapora and the port of
+Morequito, which standeth in Aromaia, and all those in the valley of
+Amariocapana are called Orenoqueponi, and did obey Morequito and are
+now followers of Topiawari. Upon the river of Caroli are the Canuri,
+which are governed by a woman who is inheritrix of that province; who
+came far off to see our nation, and asked me divers questions of her
+Majesty, being much delighted with the discourse of her Majesty's
+greatness, and wondering at such reports as we truly made of her
+Highness' many virtues. And upon the head of Caroli and on the lake of
+Cassipa are the three strong nations of the Cassipagotos. Right south
+into the land are the Capurepani and Emparepani, and beyond those,
+adjoining to Macureguarai, the first city of Inga, are the
+Iwarawakeri. All these are professed enemies to the Spaniards, and to
+the rich Epuremei also. To the west of Caroli are divers nations of
+Cannibals and of those Ewaipanoma without heads. Directly west are the
+Amapaias and Anebas, which are also marvellous rich in gold. The rest
+towards Peru we will omit. On the north of Orenoque, between it and
+the West Indies, are the Wikiri, Saymi, and the rest before spoken of,
+all mortal enemies to the Spaniards. On the south side of the main
+mouth of Orenoque are the Arwacas; and beyond them, the Cannibals; and
+to the south of them, the Amazons.
+
+To make mention of the several beasts, birds, fishes, fruits, flowers,
+gums, sweet woods, and of their several religions and customs, would
+for the first require as many volumes as those of Gesnerus, and for
+the next another bundle of Decades. The religion of the Epuremei is
+the same which the Ingas, emperors of Peru, used, which may be read in
+Cieza and other Spanish stories; how they believe the immortality of
+the soul, worship the sun, and bury with them alive their best beloved
+wives and treasure, as they likewise do in Pegu in the East Indies,
+and other places. The Orenoqueponi bury not their wives with them, but
+their jewels, hoping to enjoy them again. The Arwacas dry the bones of
+their lords, and their wives and friends drink them in powder. In the
+graves of the Peruvians the Spaniards found their greatest abundance
+of treasure. The like, also, is to be found among these people in
+every province. They have all many wives, and the lords five-fold to
+the common sort. Their wives never eat with their husbands, nor among
+the men, but serve their husbands at meals and afterwards feed by
+themselves. Those that are past their younger years make all their
+bread and drink, and work their cotton-beds, and do all else of
+service and labour; for the men do nothing but hunt, fish, play, and
+drink, when they are out of the wars.
+
+I will enter no further into discourse of their manners, laws, and
+customs. And because I have not myself seen the cities of Inga I
+cannot avow on my credit what I have heard, although it be very likely
+that the emperor Inga hath built and erected as magnificent palaces in
+Guiana as his ancestors did in Peru; which were for their riches and
+rareness most marvellous, and exceeding all in Europe, and, I think,
+of the world, China excepted, which also the Spaniards, which I had,
+assured me to be true, as also the nations of the borderers, who,
+being but savages to those of the inland, do cause much treasure to be
+buried with them. For I was informed of one of the caciques of the
+valley of Amariocapana which had buried with him a little before our
+arrival a chair of gold most curiously wrought, which was made either
+in Macureguarai adjoining or in Manoa. But if we should have grieved
+them in their religion at the first, before they had been taught
+better, and have digged up their graves, we had lost them all. And
+therefore I held my first resolution, that her Majesty should either
+accept or refuse the enterprise ere anything should be done that might
+in any sort hinder the same. And if Peru had so many heaps of gold,
+whereof those Ingas were princes, and that they delighted so much
+therein, no doubt but this which now liveth and reigneth in Manoa hath
+the same humour, and, I am assured, hath more abundance of gold within
+his territory than all Peru and the West Indies.
+
+For the rest, which myself have seen, I will promise these things that
+follow, which I know to be true. Those that are desirous to discover
+and to see many nations may be satisfied within this river, which
+bringeth forth so many arms and branches leading to several countries
+and provinces, above 2,000 miles east and west and 800 miles south and
+north, and of these the most either rich in gold or in other
+merchandises. The common soldier shall here fight for gold, and pay
+himself, instead of pence, with plates of half-a-foot broad, whereas
+he breaketh his bones in other wars for provant and penury. Those
+commanders and chieftains that shoot at honour and abundance shall
+find there more rich and beautiful cities, more temples adorned with
+golden images, more sepulchres filled with treasure, than either
+Cortes found in Mexico or Pizarro in Peru. And the shining glory of
+this conquest will eclipse all those so far-extended beams of the
+Spanish nation. There is no country which yieldeth more pleasure to
+the inhabitants, either for those common delights of hunting, hawking,
+fishing, fowling, and the rest, than Guiana doth; it hath so many
+plains, clear rivers, and abundance of pheasants, partridges, quails,
+rails, cranes, herons, and all other fowl; deer of all sorts, porks,
+hares, lions, tigers, leopards, and divers other sorts of beasts,
+either for chase or food. It hath a kind of beast called cama or anta
+(tapir), as big as an English beef, and in great plenty. To speak of
+the several sorts of every kind I fear would be troublesome to the
+reader, and therefore I will omit them, and conclude that both for
+health, good air, pleasure, and riches, I am resolved it cannot be
+equalled by any region either in the east or west. Moreover the
+country is so healthful, as of an hundred persons and more, which lay
+without shift most sluttishly, and were every day almost melted with
+heat in rowing and marching, and suddenly wet again with great
+showers, and did eat of all sorts of corrupt fruits, and made meals of
+fresh fish without seasoning, of tortugas, of lagartos or crocodiles,
+and of all sorts good and bad, without either order or measure, and
+besides lodged in the open air every night, we lost not any one, nor
+had one ill-disposed to my knowledge; nor found any calentura or other
+of those pestilent diseases which dwell in all hot regions, and so
+near the equinoctial line.
+
+Where there is store of gold it is in effect needless to remember
+other commodities for trade. But it hath, towards the south part of
+the river, great quantities of brazil-wood, and divers berries that
+dye a most perfect crimson and carnation; and for painting, all
+France, Italy, or the East Indies yield none such. For the more the
+skin is washed, the fairer the colour appeareth, and with which even
+those brown and tawny women spot themselves and colour their cheeks.
+All places yield abundance of cotton, of silk, of balsamum, and of
+those kinds most excellent and never known in Europe, of all sorts of
+gums, of Indian pepper; and what else the countries may afford within
+the land we know not, neither had we time to abide the trial and
+search. The soil besides is so excellent and so full of rivers, as it
+will carry sugar, ginger, and all those other commodities which the
+West Indies have.
+
+The navigation is short, for it may be sailed with an ordinary wind in
+six weeks, and in the like time back again; and by the way neither
+lee-shore, enemies' coast, rocks, nor sands. All which in the voyages
+to the West Indies and all other places we are subject unto; as the
+channel of Bahama, coming from the West Indies, cannot well be passed
+in the winter, and when it is at the best, it is a perilous and a
+fearful place; the rest of the Indies for calms and diseases very
+troublesome, and the sea about the Bermudas a hellish sea for thunder,
+lightning, and storms.
+
+This very year (1595) there were seventeen sail of Spanish ships lost
+in the channel of Bahama, and the great Philip, like to have sunk at
+the Bermudas, was put back to St. Juan de Puerto Rico; and so it
+falleth out in that navigation every year for the most part. Which in
+this voyage are not to be feared; for the time of year to leave
+England is best in July, and the summer in Guiana is in October,
+November, December, January, February, and March, and then the ships
+may depart thence in April, and so return again into England in June.
+So as they shall never be subject to winter weather, either coming,
+going, or staying there: which, for my part, I take to be one of the
+greatest comforts and encouragements that can be thought on, having,
+as I have done, tasted in this voyage by the West Indies so many
+calms, so much heat, such outrageous gusts, such weather, and contrary
+winds.
+
+To conclude, Guiana is a country that hath yet her maidenhead, never
+sacked, turned, nor wrought; the face of the earth hath not been torn,
+nor the virtue and salt of the soil spent by manurance. The graves
+have not been opened for gold, the mines not broken with sledges, nor
+their images pulled down out of their temples. It hath never been
+entered by any army of strength, and never conquered or possessed by
+any Christian prince. It is besides so defensible, that if two forts
+be builded in one of the provinces which I have seen, the flood
+setteth in so near the bank, where the channel also lieth, that no
+ship can pass up but within a pike's length of the artillery, first of
+the one, and afterwards of the other. Which two forts will be a
+sufficient guard both to the empire of Inga, and to an hundred other
+several kingdoms, lying within the said river, even to the city of
+Quito in Peru.
+
+There is therefore great difference between the easiness of the
+conquest of Guiana, and the defence of it being conquered, and the
+West or East Indies. Guiana hath but one entrance by the sea, if it
+hath that, for any vessels of burden. So as whosoever shall first
+possess it, it shall be found unaccessible for any enemy, except he
+come in wherries, barges, or canoas, or else in flat-bottomed boats;
+and if he do offer to enter it in that manner, the woods are so thick
+200 miles together upon the rivers of such entrance, as a mouse cannot
+sit in a boat unhit from the bank. By land it is more impossible to
+approach; for it hath the strongest situation of any region under the
+sun, and it is so environed with impassable mountains on every side,
+as it is impossible to victual any company in the passage. Which hath
+been well proved by the Spanish nation, who since the conquest of Peru
+have never left five years free from attempting this empire, or
+discovering some way into it; and yet of three-and-twenty several
+gentlemen, knights, and noblemen, there was never any that knew which
+way to lead an army by land, or to conduct ships by sea, anything near
+the said country. Orellana, of whom the river of Amazons taketh name,
+was the first, and Don Antonio de Berreo, whom we displanted, the
+last: and I doubt much whether he himself or any of his yet know the
+best way into the said empire. It can therefore hardly be regained, if
+any strength be formerly set down, but in one or two places, and but
+two or three crumsters (Dutch, Kromsteven or Kromster, a vessel with a
+bent prow) or galleys built and furnished upon the river within. The
+West Indies have many ports, watering places, and landings; and nearer
+than 300 miles to Guiana, no man can harbour a ship, except he know
+one only place, which is not learned in haste, and which I will
+undertake there is not any one of my companies that knoweth, whosoever
+hearkened most after it.
+
+Besides, by keeping one good fort, or building one town of strength,
+the whole empire is guarded; and whatsoever companies shall be
+afterwards planted within the land, although in twenty several
+provinces, those shall be able all to reunite themselves upon any
+occasion either by the way of one river, or be able to march by land
+without either wood, bog, or mountain. Whereas in the West Indies
+there are few towns or provinces that can succour or relieve one the
+other by land or sea. By land the countries are either desert,
+mountainous, or strong enemies. By sea, if any man invade to the
+eastward, those to the west cannot in many months turn against the
+breeze and eastern wind. Besides, the Spaniards are therein so
+dispersed as they are nowhere strong, but in Nueva Espana only; the
+sharp mountains, the thorns, and poisoned prickles, the sandy and deep
+ways in the valleys, the smothering heat and air, and want of water in
+other places are their only and best defence; which, because those
+nations that invade them are not victualled or provided to stay,
+neither have any place to friend adjoining, do serve them instead of
+good arms and great multitudes.
+
+The West Indies were first offered her Majesty's grandfather by
+Columbus, a stranger, in whom there might be doubt of deceit; and
+besides it was then thought incredible that there were such and so
+many lands and regions never written of before. This Empire is made
+known to her Majesty by her own vassal, and by him that oweth to her
+more duty than an ordinary subject; so that it shall ill sort with the
+many graces and benefits which I have received to abuse her Highness,
+either with fables or imaginations. The country is already discovered,
+many nations won to her Majesty's love and obedience, and those
+Spaniards which have latest and longest laboured about the conquest,
+beaten out, discouraged, and disgraced, which among these nations were
+thought invincible. Her Majesty may in this enterprise employ all
+those soldiers and gentlemen that are younger brethren, and all
+captains and chieftains that want employment, and the charge will be
+only the first setting out in victualling and arming them; for after
+the first or second year I doubt not but to see in London a
+Contractation-House (the whole trade of Spanish America passed through
+the Casa de Contratacion at Seville) of more receipt for Guiana than
+there is now in Seville for the West Indies.
+
+And I am resolved that if there were but a small army afoot in Guiana,
+marching towards Manoa, the chief city of Inga, he would yield to her
+Majesty by composition so many hundred thousand pounds yearly as
+should both defend all enemies abroad, and defray all expenses at
+home; and that he would besides pay a garrison of three or four
+thousand soldiers very royally to defend him against other nations.
+For he cannot but know how his predecessors, yea, how his own great
+uncles, Guascar and Atabalipa, sons to Guiana-Capac, emperor of Peru,
+were, while they contended for the empire, beaten out by the
+Spaniards, and that both of late years and ever since the said
+conquest, the Spaniards have sought the passages and entry of his
+country; and of their cruelties used to the borderers he cannot be
+ignorant. In which respects no doubt but he will be brought to tribute
+with great gladness; if not, he hath neither shot nor iron weapon in
+all his empire, and therefore may easily be conquered.
+
+And I further remember that Berreo confessed to me and others, which I
+protest before the Majesty of God to be true, that there was found
+among the prophecies in Peru, at such time as the empire was reduced
+to the Spanish obedience, in their chiefest temples, amongst divers
+others which foreshadowed the loss of the said empire, that from
+Inglatierra those Ingas should be again in time to come restored, and
+delivered from the servitude of the said conquerors. And I hope, as we
+with these few hands have displanted the first garrison, and driven
+them out of the said country, so her Majesty will give order for the
+rest, and either defend it, and hold it as tributary, or conquer and
+keep it as empress of the same. For whatsoever prince shall possess
+it, shall be greatest; and if the king of Spain enjoy it, he will
+become unresistible. Her Majesty hereby shall confirm and strengthen
+the opinions of all nations as touching her great and princely
+actions. And where the south border of Guiana reacheth to the dominion
+and empire of the Amazons, those women shall hereby hear the name of a
+virgin, which is not only able to defend her own territories and her
+neighbours, but also to invade and conquer so great empires and so far
+removed.
+
+To speak more at this time I fear would be but troublesome: I trust in
+God, this being true, will suffice, and that he which is King of all
+Kings, and Lord of Lords, will put it into her heart which is Lady of
+Ladies to possess it. If not, I will judge those men worthy to be
+kings thereof, that by her grace and leave will undertake it of
+themselves.
diff --git a/old/guian10.zip b/old/guian10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ab65c7d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/guian10.zip
Binary files differ