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3.11: Chapter XXXIV- Of Sending for the Christians (Excerpt)

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    40713
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    Five days having elapsed, Andres Dorantes and 
    Alonzo del Castillo arrived with those who had been 
    sent after them. They brought more than six hundred 
    persons of that community, whom the Christians had 
    driven into the forests, and who had wandered in con- 
    cealment over the land. Those who accompanied us 
    so far, had drawn them out, and given them to the 
    Christians, who thereupon dismissed all the others 
    they had brought with them. Upon their coming to 
    where I was, Alcaraz begged that we would summon 
    the people of the towns on the margin of the river, 
    who straggled about under cover of the woods, and 
    order them to fetch us something to eat. This last 
    was unnecessary, the Indians being ever diligent to 
    bring us all they could. Directly we sent our messen- 
    gers to call them, when there came six hundred souls, 
    bringing us all the maize in their possession. They 
    fetched it in certain pots, closed with clay, which they 
    had concealed in the earth. They brought us what- 
    ever else they had ; but we, wishing only to have the 
    provision, gave the rest to the Christians, that they 
    might divide among themselves. After this we had 
    many high words with, them ; for they wished to make 
    slaves of the Indians we brought...
    [G]oing with us, [the Indians] feared neither Christians nor 
    lances. Our countrymen became jealous at this, and 
    caused their interpreter to tell the Indians that we 
    were of them, and for a long time we had been lost; 
    that they were the lords of the land who must be 
    obeyed and served, while we were persons of mean 
    condition and small force. The Indians cared little or 
    nothing for what was told them; and conversing 
    among themselves said the Christians lied : that we 
    had come whence the sun rises, and they whence it 
    goes down : we healed the sick, they killed the 
    sound ; that we had come naked and barefooted, 
    while they had arrived in clothing and on horses 
    with lances; that we were not covetous of anything, 
    but all that was given to us, we directly turned to give, 
    remaining with nothing; that the others had the
    only purpose to rob whomsoever they found, bestow- 
    ing nothing on any one...
    Even to the last, I could not convince the Indians that 
    we were of the Christians...

    This page titled 3.11: Chapter XXXIV- Of Sending for the Christians (Excerpt) is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Robin DeRosa, Abby Goode et al..

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