| 1. | In the year 1531 another great
tyrant went with certain people to the kingdoms of
Peru,[104]
which he invaded by virtue of the same title, intentions, and
principles as all the former ones, because he was one of the
most experienced, and since a long time had taken part in all
the cruelties and massacres that had been committed on the
continent since the year 1510; he was devoid of faith and
honour, and he did more cruelty and slaughter, destroying
towns, killing and exterminating the people of them and
causing such great mischief in these countries that, I am
certain, it would be impossible for any one to recount and
describe them till we shall see and know them clearly in the
day of judgment. I could not, nor should I know how to
describe the deformity, [pg 395] the character, and the
circumstances of some incidents that I would relate, and
which greatly aggravate their hideousness. |
|---|
| 2.2. | From his unhappy landing, he killed
and destroyed some peoples and robbed them of a large
quantity of gold. In an island near the same province called
Pugna which is very populous and pleasing, they were received
by the lord and people like angels from heaven and, after
having eaten all their provisions in six months, the Indians
again uncovered the store of corn they had laid up for
themselves and their families in time of drought and
barrenness, tearfully offering it for their consumption. The
payment that was finally awarded the natives, was to put
them to the sword, for they killed great numbers with lances,
and those whom they captured alive, they made slaves; in
consequence of this and the other great notorious cruelties
done there, they left this island almost deserted. |
| 3.3. | From there the Spaniards went to the
province of Tumbala, which is on the continent, where they
killed and destroyed everything they could. And because all
the people fled from their fearful and horrible operations,
they declared they had revolted and were in rebellion against
the king. |
| 4.4. | This tyrant employed the following
artifice. He demanded still more from all who either offered
or whom he asked to present him with gold, silver, and their
other possessions, until he saw that they either had no more,
or brought no more: he then declared that he received them as
vassals of the king of Spain and embraced them; he caused two
trumpets to be sounded, giving them to understand that for
the future he would take nothing more from them, nor do them
any harm; he esteemed it permissible to rob them or to take
all they gave, out of fear inspired by the [pg 396] abominable reports
they heard of him, before he received them under the shelter
and protection of the king, as though after they were
received under the royal protection he would no more
oppress, rob, desolate, and destroy them. |
| 5.5. | A few days later came the universal
king and emperor of those kingdoms, who was called Atabaliba
with many naked people armed with ridiculous weapons and
ignorant of how swords cut, and lances wound, and horses run;
nor did they know the Spaniards, who would assault the very
devils if they had gold, to rob them of it. He arrived at the
place where they were, and said: “Where are these Spaniards? let them come
forward, for I shall not stir from here till satisfaction is
rendered me for my vassals whom they have killed, for the
town they have desolated, and for the riches they have stolen
from me.” |
| 6.6. | The Spaniards attacked him—killing
infinite numbers of his people; they took him prisoner from
the litter in which he was carried and after they had
captured him, they negotiated with him for his ransom: he
promised to give four million crowns, and paid them fifteen,
after which they promised to set him free. |
| 7.7. | They ended by keeping no faith nor
truth, for they have never been kept by the Spaniards in
their dealings with the Indians: they calumniated him, saying
that by his orders the people were assembling, and he replied
that not a leaf moved in all the country save by his will and
that if the people were assembling, they might believe that
he was the cause of it: as he was their prisoner, they might
therefore kill him. |
| 8.8. | In spite of all this they condemned
him to be burned alive, although later, some of them begged
the captain, to have him strangled and to burn him
afterwards. When he learned this he said: “Why do you wish [pg 397] to burn me? What have I done to
you? Have you not promised to free me, after my ransom was
paid? Have I not given you more than what I promised you?
Send me, as thus you wish it, to your King of Spain.”
He said many other things showing condemnation and
detestation of the great injustice of the Spaniards: and at
last they burnt him. |
| 9.9. | Let the justice of these deeds be
considered: the reason of this war: the imprisonment, death
sentence, and execution of this monarch; and how
conscientiously these tyrants hold the great treasures they
steal in those kingdoms from such a great king and from
numberless other lords and private people. |
| 10.10. | Of the countless notoriously wicked
and cruel acts committed in the extirpation of these people
by those who call themselves Christians, I will relate some
few that a friar of St. Francis witnessed in the beginning;
and he signed depositions with his name, sending some of the
copies to those regions and others to the kingdoms of
Castile: and I have one of the copies in my possession with
his own signature, in which he makes the following
statements. |
| 11.11. | “I, Fray
Marcus de Nizza of the Order of St. Francis, commissary of
the friars of the same Order in the provinces of Peru, who
were among the first monks who entered the said provinces
with the first Christians, speak to render truthful testimony
of some of the things that I saw with my own eyes in that
country; chiefly concerning the treatment of the Indians and
the acquisition of property taken from the
natives.” |
| 12.12. | “First of
all I am eye-witness, and from actual experience know, that
these Indians of Peru are the most affable people that have
been seen among the Indians, and were very well inclined and
friendly towards the Christians.” |
| 13.13. | “And I saw
that they gave gold abundantly to the Spaniards, and silver
and precious stones and all that was asked of them, and that
they rendered them every good service; and the Indians never
went forth in war fashion, but always peaceably, as long as
no cruelty and ill-treatment provoked them; on the contrary,
they received the Spaniards with all benevolence and honour
in their towns, giving them provisions and as many male and
female slaves for their service, as they asked.” |
| 14.14. | “I am also
witness, and I testify, that without the Indians giving them
any cause or occasion, the Spaniards, as soon as they
entered their country, and after the chief lord Atabaliba had
paid them more than two millions of gold and had left all the
country in their power, without resistance, immediately burnt
the said Atabaliba, who was ruler of all the country: and
after him, they burnt alive his captain-general Cochilimaca
who had come peaceably to the governor, accompanied by other
high personages.” |
| 15.15. | “Within a
few days after these executions they likewise burned Chamba
another very high lord of the province of Quito, without him
giving them any cause.” |
| 16.16. | “Thus too
they burnt unjustly Chapera lord of the
Canaries.” |
| 17.17. | “Likewise
they burnt the feet of Luis who was one of the great lords in
Quito, and tortured him in many other ways, to force him to
reveal the hiding place of Atabaliba's gold, of which
treasure it was known that he knew nothing
whatever.” |
| 18.18. | “They
likewise burnt in Quito, Cozzopanga, who was governor of all
the provinces of Quito and who had responded to the
intimations of Sebastian de Benalcazza, the governor's
captain, by coming peaceably; but because he did not give
them as much gold as they asked, they burnt him, with many
other lords and principal persons. [pg 399] As far as I could understand, it
was the intention of the Spaniards that no lord should
survive in all the country.” |
| 19.19. | “The
Spaniards assembled a large number of Indians, and shut up as
many as could enter, in three large houses which they then
set on fire and burnt them all, although they had never done
the slightest thing against any Spaniard, nor given the least
cause.” |
| 20.20. | “It once
happened, that when a priest called Ocana, pulled a child out
of the fire in which it was burning, another Spaniard
snatched it out of his hands and threw it back in the middle
of the flames, where it became ashes together with the
others; while the aforesaid Spaniard, who had thus thrown
the Indian into the fire was returning to his dwelling the
same day, he suddenly fell dead in the road; and it was my
opinion, that they should not give him [Christian]
burial.” |
| 21.21. | “Moreover I
affirm, that I myself saw the Spaniards cut off the hands,
noses, and ears of the Indian men and women, for no purpose
whatever but just because the fancy struck them; and in so
many places and regions did this occur that it would be a
long story to tell.” |
| 22.22. | “I also saw
the Spaniards setting dogs onto the Indians, to tear them to
pieces; and thus I saw many of them torn to
pieces.” |
| 23.23. | “I likewise
saw so many houses and towns burned that I could not tell the
number, so great was their multitude.” |
| 24.24. | “It is
likewise true that they took nursing children by the arms and
hurled them in the air as high as they could; and their other
injustice and aimless cruelties terrified me, besides
innumerable other things that I saw, and which it would take
long to tell.” |
| 25.25. | “I saw
moreover that they called the Indian lords and chiefs, to
come peaceably, promising them safety, but as soon as they
arrived they burnt them. [pg 400] And in my presence they burnt two,
one from Andon and the other in Tumbala, nor was I able for
all I preached to them, to prevent them burning
them.” |
| 26.26. | “I call God
and my own conscience to witness that, as far as I can
understand, the Indians only revolted on account of this ill
treatment which sufficiently justified their action as may be
clearly seen by everybody.” |
| 27.27. | “The
Spaniards have never dealt honestly with them nor kept their
word but, contrary to all reason and justice, they have
tyrannically ruined them and all their country, doing such
things against them, that they [the Indians] have resolved
sooner to die, than suffer such deeds.” |
| 28.28. | “I say
moreover, that the Indians are right in affirming that there
is more gold hidden, than has been discovered, for they have
refused to disclose it because of the injustice and cruelty
shown them by the Spaniards; nor will they disclose it as
long as such treatment continues, but rather will they die
like the others.” |
| 29.29. | “God our
Lord has been much offended by these deeds, and His Majesty
very badly served and defrauded, for they have made him lose
countries that could very well provide food for the whole of
Castile, and in my opinion, it will be very difficult and
expensive to recover them.” |
| 30.30. | All these are the formal words of
the said monk; and bear the signature also of the Bishop of
Mexico, testifying that everything was affirmed by the said
Father, Fray Marcus. |
| 31.31. | What this Father says he has seen,
should be considered here: because this happened throughout
fifty or a hundred leagues of country and during nine or ten
years, at the beginning, when there were very few Spaniards:
afterwards the sound of gold drew thither four or five
thousand Spaniards, who spread through many large
[pg 401]
kingdoms and provinces, covering more than five hundred or
seven hundred leagues, all of which they have destroyed by
practising the same deeds and others still more ferocious and
cruel. |
| 32.32. | Truly, from that time to the present
day, a thousand times more people have been destroyed and
dispersed than he was told of; being devoid of mercy and the
fear of God and the King, the Spaniards have destroyed a
very large part of the human race. |
| 33.33. | Within the space of ten years they
have killed, up to the present day, more than four millions
of persons; and they are still killing. |
| 34.34. | A short time since they pursued and
killed a great queen, wife of Elingue, he who was left king
of those kingdoms which the Christians had tyrannically
seized and provoked to rise in the present rebellion. They
captured the queen, his wife who, it is said, was pregnant
and, contrary to all justice, they killed her, only to grieve
her husband. |
| 35.35. | If the cruelties and different
murders committed by the Christians, and their daily deeds in
those kingdoms of Peru were to be told, they would doubtless
be so horrible and so numerous that what we have recounted
of the other countries would fade, and seem little, compared
with their number and their gravity. |
| 1. | In the year 1539 many tyrants joined
together and started from Venezuela, Santa Marta, and
Cartagena for Peru: and others came back from the same Peru
to explore those countries. Three hundred leagues inland
behind Santa Marta and Cartagena, they found some very
delightful and marvellous provinces, full of numberless
people, as mild and kind as the others, and very [pg 402] rich in gold, and
in those precious stones called emeralds. |
|---|
| 2.2. | To these provinces they gave the
name of the new kingdom of Granada; because those tyrants who
first came to these countries were natives of the kingdom of
Granada in Spain. |
| 3.3. | As many iniquitous and cruel men
among those who gathered from all parts, were notorious
butchers and shedders of human blood who were very inured to,
and experienced in the great sins that we have said were
committed in many parts of the Indies, it follows that their
fiendish operations, and the circumstances and qualities that
blackened and aggravated them, were such that they have
surpassed very many, or indeed all, that the others and they
themselves have committed elsewhere in the Indies. |
| 4.4. | Of the multitude they have committed
in these three years, and continue without ceasing to commit,
I will briefly relate a few. As a man who was robbing and
murdering in the said kingdom would not allow a governor to
also rob and kill, the latter brought a suit against him,
calling many witnesses to prove the slaughter, injustice, and
massacres he had done, and is doing; this evidence was read,
and is to be found in the Council of the Indies. |
| 5.5. | The witnesses in the said law-suit
affirm that all the kingdom was quiet, and subject to the
Spaniards; the Indians continually laboured to furnish them
provisions, and to accumulate property for them; they
brought them all the gold and precious emeralds they
possessed or could obtain: the lords and inhabitants of the
towns had been divided among the Spaniards, who lay claim to
them as the means for obtaining their final object, which is
gold. Having thus reduced everybody to the usual tyranny and
slavery, the principal tyrant captain commanding them,
captured the sovereign of [pg 403] all that country, without any cause
or reason, and kept him for six or seven months, demanding
gold and emeralds of him. |
| 6.6. | The said king, who was called
Bogota, being overcome by fear said that he would give a
house of the gold they demanded, hoping to free himself from
the hands of his tormenters: he sent some Indians to bring
him the treasure, and several times they brought a large
quantity of gold and stones: because he did not give the
house of gold, the Spaniards declared that he should be
killed, because he did not fulfil his promise. |
| 7.7. | The tyrant said that he should be
tried by process of law, so they prosecuted him, accusing the
said king of the country. The tyrant gave sentence,
condemning him to tortures, if he did not give the house of
gold. |
| 8.8. | They tortured him with the cord:
they threw burning fat on his belly; they put his feet in
irons fastened to a stake, tied his neck to another, while
two men held his hands; and in this position they put fire to
his feet. |
| 9.9. | Every now and then, the tyrant
entered and told him, that they would kill him by inches with
tortures if he did not give the gold. And thus they did, and
killed this lord with tortures. While they were tormenting
him, God gave a sign of destestation of that cruelty, by
causing all that town, where it was committed to be
burnt. |
| 10.10. | The other Spaniards imitated their
good captain and, since they only know how to rend these
people, they did the same; torturing the lord of the town or
towns, that had been confided to them, with divers and fierce
tortures while those lords and their people felt themselves
safe, and were giving them all the gold and emeralds they
could: the Spaniards tortured them only [pg 404] to extort more gold
and jewels. And in this way they burnt and cut to pieces all
the lords of that country. |
| 11.11. | Terror-stricken by the excessive
cruelty practised upon the Indians by one of those
particular tyrants a great lord called Daytama fled, with
many of his people from such inhumanity, and retreated to the
mountains. This, if it did but avail, they conceive to be the
remedy and refuge, and this is what the Spaniards call revolt
and rebellion. |
| 12.12. | The principal tyrant captain hearing
this, sent a force to that cruel man, whose ferocity and
wickedness towards the peaceful and submissive Indians had
driven them to the mountains; the latter went in pursuit of
the natives, and because it sufficed not to hide in the
bowels of the earth, they found a large number of people whom
they killed, cutting to pieces more than five hundred men,
women, and children, and sparing no one. |
| 13.13. | The witnesses also say that before
his death, the same Prince Daytama had been to see that cruel
man and had taken him four or five thousand crowns, but
notwithstanding this, he committed the said slaughter. |
| 14.14. | Another time a great number of
people having come to serve the Spaniards, and feeling
themselves safe, serving with their humility and simplicity,
the captain entered the town one night where the Indians were
and commanded that all those Indians should be put to the
sword while some of them were sleeping, and some supping and
resting from the labours of the day. |
| 15.15. | He perpetrated this massacre because
it seemed good to him to make himself feared by all the
people of the country. |
| 16.16. | Another time the captain put all the
Spaniards on oath, to lead at once as many lords and chiefs
and common people as each had in his household service, to
the square, where he had all their heads cut off, thus
[pg 405] killing
four or five hundred people. And the witnesses say that he
thought in this way to pacify the country. |
| 17.17. | The witnesses depose that one
particular tyrant did great cruelty, killing, and cutting off
the hands and noses of many men and women, and destroying
many people. |
| 18.18. | Another time the captain sent the
afore-named cruel man, with certain Spaniards to the province
of Bogota, to make inquiry as to who had succeeded to that
dominion since they had tortured the universal lord to death:
he marched through many leagues of country, capturing as
many Indians as he could. |
| 19.19. | And because the people did not show
him the lord who had succeeded, he cut off the hands of some
and gave others to ferocious dogs, which tore them to pieces
both men, and women; and in this way he killed, and destroyed
many Indian men and women. |
| 20.20. | One day, near sunrise, he went to
attack some lords, or captains and many Indians who felt
tranquil and secure, because he had assured them and given
them his word that they should receive no hurt or harm;
confiding in this assurance they had come down from the
mountains, where they were hidden, to dwell in this town on
the plain; thus he captured a great many of these
unsuspecting and confiding people, women and men, and making
them put their hands flat on the ground he himself cut them
off with a scimitar, saying that he punished them because
they would not tell where the new lord, who had succeeded to
that kingdom, was hidden. |
| 21.21. | Another time, because the Indians
did not give a coffer full of gold that this cruel captain
demanded, he sent people to make war on them, in which they
killed numberless persons, and cut off the hands and noses of
so many women and men that they could not be counted: they
gave others to fierce dogs that tore them to pieces and ate
them. |
| 22.22. | Another time, the Indians of a
province of that kingdom, seeing that the Spaniards had burnt
three or four principal lords, retreated in fear to a strong
rock to defend themselves from enemies so devoid of
humanity; and according to the witnesses, there may have
been four or five thousand Indians on the rock. |
| 23.23. | The above-named captain sent a great
and notorious tryant, who surpassed many of those who have
charge of destroying those countries, with a certain number
of Spaniards, to punish those Indians who had fled from such
a great pestilence and butchery: and he declared they were in
revolt, seeking to make it appear that they had done
something wrong, for which the Spaniards must punish them and
take vengeance: they themselves, however, merit any most
cruel torture whatsoever, without mercy, because they are so
deprived of mercy and compassion towards those innocent
creatures. |
| 24.24. | The Spaniards went to the rock and
forced their way up, the Indians being naked and without
arms; then the Spaniards called the Indians with professions
of peace, assuring them that no harm should be done them, if
they did not fight; the Indians at once ceased, whereupon
that most cruel man commanded the Spaniards, to seize all
the strong positions of the rock, and when taken, to surround
the Indians. These tigers and lions surrounded the tame
lambs, and disembowelled and put to the sword so many, that
they stopped to rest, so many had they cut to pieces. |
| 25.25. | When they had rested a little, the
captain ordered that they should kill and throw down from
the rock, which was very high, all the survivors; and so they
did. And the witnesses say, that they beheld such a mass of
Indians thrown from the rock, that there might have been
seven hundred men together, who were crushed to pieces where
they fell. |
| 26.26. | To complete their great cruelty,
they sought out all the Indians who had hidden in the
thicket, and he commanded all to be put to the sword; and
thus they killed them, and threw them down from the
rock. |
| 27.27. | Nor would he rest satisfied with the
cruel things that have been related, but wished to
distinguish himself still more and increase the horribleness
of his sins, by commanding that all the Indians, men and
women, save those he kept for his own service, who had been
captured alive (because in these massacres each usually
chooses a few men, women and children for his own use) should
be put in a straw house to which he set fire: some forty or
fifty were thus burnt alive, while others were thrown to
fierce dogs that tore them to pieces and ate them. |
| 28.28. | Another time, this same tyrant
captured many Indians in a certain town called Cota which he
visited; he had fifteen or twenty lords and principal persons
torn by dogs; and he cut off the hands of many men and women,
tied them to cords and hung about seventy pairs of hands
along a beam, so that the other Indians should see what had
been done to these people; and he cut off the noses of many
women and children. |
| 29.29. | Nobody could explain the actions,
and cruelty of this man, God's enemy, because they are
innumerable, nor have such deeds as he did in those countries
and in the province of Guatemala, ever been witnessed or
heard of since then: during many years he went about those
countries doing these deeds, burning and destroying the
inhabitants and their property. |
| 30.30. | The witnesses in the trial further
say, that the cruelties and massacres perpetrated in the said
new kingdom of Granada by the captain himself and, with his
consent, by all those tyrants and destroyers of the human
race who were with him, were such that they [pg 408] have wasted and
exterminated all the country. And that unless His Majesty
arrests the massacring done among the Indians to extort gold
which, as they had already given all they had, they no longer
possess, the destruction will shortly be complete, and no
Indians of any sort will be left to sustain the country,
which will be left depopulated and desolate. |
| 31.31. | It should be considered how great
and furious has been the cruelty and pestilential tyranny of
unhappy tyrants, in the space of two or three years, since
the discovery of this kingdom which, as all who have been
there, and the witnesses at the trial say, was as thickly
populated as any in the world; they have desolated it with
massacres, so devoid of mercy, of the fear of God and the
King, that they say, not a single person will be left alive
unless His Majesty shortly prevents these infernal
operations. And so I believe it to be, for with my own eyes I
have seen many, and large countries in those parts, which
they have destroyed and completely depopulated within a brief
period. |
| 32.32. | There are other large provinces,
bordering the said new kingdom of Granada, called Popayan and
Cali: also three, or four others that extend for more than
five hundred leagues; the Spaniards have rendered them
desolate, and destroyed them like the others, unjustly
robbing and torturing to death the numberless inhabitants of
that most delightful country. |
| 33.33. | People coming now from there declare
that it excites compassion to see so many large towns burnt
and destroyed; towns where formerly there were a thousand or
two thousand families, are reduced to hardly fifty, while
others are entirely burned and abandoned. |
| 34.34. | In other places, from one to three
hundred leagues of country are found completely deserted;
large towns having been burnt and destroyed. |
| 35.35. | Great and cruel tyrants penetrated
into New Granada from the direction of the province of Quito
in the kingdom of Peru, and into Popayan and Cali from the
direction of Cartagena and Uraba, while from Cartagena,
other ill-starred tyrants marched through to Quito;
afterwards others, came from the direction of Rio de San
Juan, which is on the South coast. All of these men united
together and they have devastated and depopulated more than
six hundred leagues of country, sending innumerable souls to
hell. They are doing the same at the present day to the
miserable survivors, although they are innocent. |
| 36.36. | And to prove the axiom I laid down
in the beginning, namely that the tyranny, violence, and
injustice of the Spaniards towards these gentle lambs,
accompanied by cruelty, inhumanity, and wickedness, most
worthy of all fire and torture, which continue in the said
provinces, go on increasing, I cite the following. |
| 37.37. | After the massacres and slaughter of
the war, the people are condemned, as was said, to the
horrible slavery described above. To one of the devils, two
hundred Indians were given, to another, three. The devil
commandant ordered a hundred Indians to be called before him
and when they promptly came like so many lambs, he had the
heads of thirty or forty cut off; and said to the others:
“I will do the same to you, if you do
not serve me well, and if you leave without my
permission.” |
| 38.38. | Now in God's name consider, you, who
read this, what sort of deeds are these, and whether they do
not surpass every imaginable cruelty and injustice, and
whether it squares well with such Christians as these to call
them devils; and whether it could be worse to give the
Indians into the charge of the devils of hell than to the
Christians of the Indies. [pg 410] |
| 39.39. | I will also tell of another such
operation; I do not know which is the more cruel, the more
infernal, and nearer the ferocity of wild beasts, this one or
that one just told. |
| 40.40. | It has already been said, that the
Spaniards of the Indies have tamed and trained the strongest
and most ferocious dogs to kill and tear the Indians to
pieces. |
| 41.41. | Listen and see, all you who are true
Christians and also you who are not, whether such deeds have
ever been heard of in the world; to feed the said dogs they
take many Indians in chains with them on their journeys, as
though they were herds of swine; and they kill them, making
public butchery of human flesh; and one says to the other;
“lend me a quarter of one of these
villeins to give to my dogs to eat, until I kill.” It
is as though they were lending a quarter of pork or of
mutton. |
| 42.42. | There are others, who go hunting
with their dogs in the morning and when one is asked on his
return for dinner how it has fared with him, he replies;
“it has fared well with me, because I
have left perhaps fifteen or twenty villeins killed by my
dogs.” |
| 43.43. | All these and other diabolical
things are being proved now in law-suits started by some
tyrants against others. What can be filthier, fiercer, and
more inhuman? |
| 44.44. | I will finish with this, till news
comes of other deeds of more eminent wickedness, if any such
there can be: or until, on our return there, we again behold
them, as we continually have with our own eyes since
forty-two years. |
| 45.45. | I protest before God on my
conscience that, as I believe and hold certain, such are the
perdition, harm, destruction, depopulation, slaughter,
deaths, and great and horrible cruelties, and most foul ways
of violence, injustice, robbery, and massacre, done among
those people and in all those countries of the Indies, that
with [pg 411]
all I have described, and those upon which I have enlarged,
I have not told nor enlarged upon, in quality and quantity, a
ten thousandth part of what has been done and is being done
to-day. |
| 46.46. | And that all Christians may have
greater compassion on those innocent nations, and that they
may more sincerely lament their loss and doom, and blame and
abominate the detestible avarice, ambition, and cruelty of
the Spaniards, let them all hold this truth for certain, in
addition to what I have affirmed above; namely, that from the
time the Indies were discovered down to the present, nowhere
did the Indians harm any Christians, before they had
sustained harm, robbery, and treachery from them. Nay, they
always esteemed them immortal, and come from Heaven; and as
such they received them, until their deeds manifested their
character and intentions. |
| 47.47. | It is well to add something else,
that from the beginning till the present day the Spaniards
have given no more thought to providing for the preaching of
the faith of Jesus Christ to these people than if they were
dogs or other animals: nay, they have persistently afflicted
and persecuted the monks, to prevent them from preaching,
because it seemed to them an impediment to the acquisition
of the gold and wealth they promised themselves in their
greedy desires. |
| 48.48. | And to-day there is not in all the
Indies more knowledge of God among these people, as to
whether He is of wood, or in heaven or on earth, than there
was a hundred years ago, except in new Spain, where monks
have gone and which is but a very little corner of the
Indies. And so all have perished and are perishing, without
faith and without Sacraments. |
The present work was printed in the most noble, and faithful town of Seville, at the house of Sebastian Truxillo book-printer. To our Lady of Grace.