A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 2 - By Robert Kerr


















































































































 -  Having repaired his own ship, he departed from thence with
both ships; and, having procured provisions at a very dear - Page 74
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Having Repaired His Own Ship, He Departed From Thence With Both Ships; And, Having Procured Provisions At A Very Dear Rate, At St Michael De Culiacan, He Went To The Harbour Of Santa Cruz, Where He Received Information That Don Antonio De Mendoca Had Arrived From Spain As Viceroy Of Mexico.

He therefore left Francis de Ulloa with the command of his ships, ordering him to proceed on discoveries; and going to Acapulco, he received a messenger from Don Antonio de Mendoca, the new viceroy, certifying his arrival, and the assumption of his authority.

Mendoca likewise sent him the copy of a letter from Francis Pizarro, stating that Mango, the Inca of Peru, had risen in arms, and assailed the city of Cusco with 100,000 fighting men, having slain his brother, John Pizarro, and above 400 Spaniards, with 200 horses; and that he himself, and the Spanish dominions in Peru, were in imminent danger, unless speedily and effectually assisted.

Cortes, not yet resolved on submitting to the authority of Mendoca, fitted out two ships, under the command of Ferdinando de Grijalva and one Alvarado, on purpose to discover the route to the Moluccas by the way of the equinoctial line, because the islands of Cloves are under that parallel. They went first to St Michael de Tangarara, in Peru, where they landed succours for Pizarro, and thence, all along the line, to the Moluccas, as they were ordered; and they are said to have sailed above 1000 leagues without sight of land on either side the whole way. At length, in lat. 2 deg. N. they discovered an island named _Asea_, which was believed to be one of the islands of Cloves. Five hundred leagues farther, more or less, they came to another, which they named _Isla de los Pescadores_, or island of Fishers. Going still in the same course, they saw another island, called _Hayme_, on the south side of the line, and another named _Apia_, after which they came in sight of _Seri_. Turning one degree to the north, they came to anchor at an island named _Coroa_, whence they came to another under the line named _Memousum_, and thence to _Busu_, still holding on the same course[81].

The people of all these islands are black, with frizzled hair, whom the people of the Moluccas call Papuas. Most of them are witches, and eat human flesh; and are so much given to wickedness, that the devils walk among them as companions. Yet when these wicked spirits find any of the Papuas alone, they kill him with cruel blows, or smother him; for which reason they always go out in companies of two or three together. There is in this country a bird as large as a crane, which has no wings wherewith to fly, but runs on the ground with the swiftness of a deer, and, of the small feathers of this bird, the natives make hair for their idols. They have likewise a particular herb, the leaf of which, after being washed in warm water, if laid on any member, and licked with the tongue, will even draw out the whole blood of a mans body; and, by means of this leaf, the natives let blood of themselves, when afflicted by sickness.

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