This document is from the journal of Columbus in his
voyage of 1492. Saturday, 13 October. "At daybreak great
multitudes of men came to the shore, all young and of fine shapes, very
handsome; their hair not curled but straight and coarse like horse-hair,
and all with foreheads and heads much broader than any people I had
hitherto seen; their eyes were large and very beautiful; they were not
black, but the color of the inhabitants of the Canaries, which is a very
natural circumstance, they being in the same latitude with the island of
Ferro in the Canaries. They were straight-limbed without exception, and
not with prominent bellies but handsomely shaped. They came to the ship
in canoes, made of a single trunk of a tree, wrought in a wonderful
manner considering the country; some of them large enough to contain
forty or forty-five men, others of different sizes down to those fitted
to hold but a single person. They rowed with an oar like a baker's peel,
and wonderfully swift. If they happen to upset, they all jump into the
sea, and swim till they have righted their canoe and emptied it with the
calabashes they carry with them. They came loaded with balls of cotton,
parrots, javelins, and other things too numerous to mention; these they
exchanged for whatever we chose to give them. I was very attentive to
them, and strove to learn if they had any gold. Seeing some of them with
little bits of this metal hanging at their noses, I gathered from them
by signs that by going southward or steering round the island in that
direction, there would be found a king who possessed large vessels of
gold, and in great quantities. I endeavored to procure them to lead the
way thither, but found they were unacquainted with the route. I
determined to stay here till the evening of the next day, and then sail
for the southwest; for according to what I could learn from them, there
was land at the south as well as at the southwest and northwest and
those from the northwest came many times and fought with them and
proceeded on to the southwest in search of gold and precious stones.
This is a large and level island, with trees extremely flourishing, and
streams of water; there is a large lake in the middle of the island, but
no mountains: the whole is completely covered with verdure and
delightful to behold. The natives are an inoffensive people, and so
desirous to possess any thing they saw with us, that they kept swimming
off to the ships with whatever they could find, and readily bartered for
any article we saw fit to give them in return, even such as broken
platters and fragments of glass. I saw in this manner sixteen balls of
cotton thread which weighed above twenty-five pounds, given for three
Portuguese ceutis. This traffic I forbade, and suffered no one to take
their cotton from them, unless I should order it to be procured for your
Highnesses, if proper quantities could be met with. It grows in this
island, but from my short stay here I could not satisfy myself fully
concerning it; the gold, also, which they wear in their noses, is found
here, but not to lose time, I am determined to proceed onward and
ascertain whether I can reach Cipango. At night they all went on shore
with their canoes. |