In The Evening Of The
25th, They Were Off The Coast Of Guam, One Of The Ladrones Or Mariane
Islands,
The inhabitants coming two leagues out to sea to meet them,
with all sorts of refreshments, which they exchanged for
Old iron, and
next morning 150 canoes came off with fruits and garden stuffs. On the
27th a good watering-place was found, where fifty soldiers were landed
to protect the seamen. In the beginning of February, the natives brought
them considerable quantities of rice, giving 70 or 80 pounds weight in
exchange for an old hatchet. On the 5th, by a general muster, 1260 men
were found to remain in the fleet, including 32 Spanish and Negro
prisoners, so that they had lost 409 since leaving Holland.
[Footnote 141: The relation of the voyage is too vague even to
conjecture what island is here meant, but from the direction of the
course towards Guam or Guaham it may possibly have been that now called
Dawson's island, about 600 leagues nearly east from Guam. - E.]
The island of Guam, Guaham, or Guaci, one of the group named by the
Spaniards Islas de las Velas, Ladrones, or Mariane Islands, is in
lat 13 deg. 40' N.[142] The soil is tolerably fertile producing vast
quantities of cocoas, and the natives grow rice in several places. The
Dutch procured here about 2000 fowls, but the natives would not part
with their cattle for any price. The people of this island are larger
than other Indians' strong and well-proportioned, and are mostly painted
red, the men going entirely naked, and the women having a leaf to cover
their nakedness.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 324 of 825
Words from 87819 to 88095
of 224764