The Famous Voyage Of Sir Francis Drake Into The South Sea, And Therehence About The Whole Globe Of The Earth, Begun In The Year Of Our Lord 1577 Narrative By Francis Pretty
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We Being On Land, The People Came Down To
Us To The Water Side With Show Of Great Courtesy, Bringing To Us
Potatoes, Roots, And Two Very Fat Sheep; Which Our General Received,
And Gave Them Other Things For Them, And Had Promised To Have Water
There.
But the next day repairing again to the shore, and sending two
men a-land with barrels to fill water, the people taking them for
Spaniards (to whom they use to show no favour if they take them) laid
violent hands on them, and, as we think, slew them.
Our General seeing
this, stayed there no longer, but weighed anchor, and set sail towards
the coast of Chili. And drawing towards it, we met near the shore an
Indian in a /canoa/, who thinking us to have been Spaniards, came to
us and told us, that at a place called Santiago, there was a great
Spanish ship laden from the kingdom of Peru; for which good news our
General gave him divers trifles. Whereof he was glad, and went along
with us and brought us to the place, which is called the port of
Valparaiso. When we came thither we found, indeed, the ship riding at
anchor, having in her eight Spaniards and three negroes; who, thinking
us to have been Spaniards, and their friends, welcomed us with a drum,
and made ready a /botija/ of wine of Chili to drink to us. But as soon
as we were entered, one of our company called Thomas Moon began to lay
about him, and struck one of the Spaniards, and said unto him, /Abaxo/
perro!/ that is in English, 'Go down, dog!' One of these Spaniards,
seeing persons of that quality in those seas, crossed and blessed
himself. But, to be short, we stowed them under hatches, all save one
Spaniard, who suddenly and desperately leapt overboard into the sea,
and swam ashore to the town of Santiago, to give them warning of our
arrival.
They of the town, being not above nine households, presently fled away
and abandoned the town. Our General manned his boat and the Spanish
ship's boat, and went to the town; and, being come to it, we rifled
it, and came to a small chapel, which we entered, and found therein a
silver chalice, two cruets, and one altar-cloth, the spoil whereof our
General gave to Master Fletcher, his minister. We found also in this
town a warehouse stored with wine of Chili and many boards of cedar-
wood; all which wine we brought away with us, and certain of the
boards to burn for firewood. And so, being come aboard, we departed
the haven, having first set all the Spaniards on land, saving one John
Griego, a Greek born, whom our General carried with him as pilot to
bring him into the haven of Lima.
When we were at sea our General rifled the ship, and found in her good
store of the wine of Chili, and 25,000 pesos of very pure and fine
gold of Valdivia, amounting in value to 37,000 ducats of Spanish
money, and above.
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