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		  <title type="main" rend="bold">Narrative of the expedition of
			 Coronado</title>
		  <title type="version">An Electronic Edition</title>
		  <author>
			 <name reg="Casta&#x00F1;eda, Pedro de">Pedro de Casta&#x00F1;eda</name>
			 <date>16th century</date></author>
		  <respStmt>
			
			 <resp>Header creation by Ralph Bauer</resp>
			 <resp>Marked up by Ralph Bauer</resp>
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		<publicationStmt><idno>castaneda_account.xml</idno> 
		  <publisher>Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities
			 (MITH)</publisher>
		  <pubPlace>
			 <address>
				<addrLine>
				  <name type="organization">University of
					 Maryland</name></addrLine>
				<addrLine>College Park</addrLine>
			 </address></pubPlace>
		  <date value="2002-04-12">12/04/2002</date>
		  <availability>
			 <p>Copyright 2002. Thist text is freely available provided the text
				is distributed with the header information provided</p>
		  </availability>
		</publicationStmt>
		<sourceDesc>
		  <bibl>Frederick W. Hodge, ed. Spanish explorers in the southern United
			 States, 1528-1543. New York: C. Scribner's Sons, 1907.</bibl>
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			 <date>1560</date>s. </p><p>The text of the present edition was initially
			 prepared from and proofed against 
		  <title rend="italic">Spanish explorers in the southern United States,
			 1528-1543</title>Edited by Frederick W. Hodge (New York: C. Scribner's Sons,
		  1907). All preliminaries have been omitted except those for which the author is
		  responsible. All editorial notes have been omitted except those that indicate
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				<item type="geographic">Spanish_borderlands_in_North_America</item>
				<item type="chronological">1500-1550</item>
				<item type="mode">History</item>
				<item type="form">Account/Relation</item>
				<item type="subject">Discovery and Exploration</item>
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	 <body>
		<div0 type="Preface">
		  <head>Pedro de Casta&#x00F1;eda, The
  narrative of the expedition of Coronado</head>
		  <div1>
			 <p n="1">TO ME it seems very certain, my very
				noble lord, that it is a worthy ambition for great men to desire to know and
				wish to preserve for posterity correct information concerning the things that
				have happened in distant parts, about which little is known. I do not blame
				those inquisitive persons who, perchance with good intentions, have many times
				troubled me not a little with their requests that I clear up for them some
				doubts which they have had about different things that have been commonly
				related concerning the events and occurrences that took place during the
				expedition to 
				<name type="geographic">Cibola</name>, or the 
				<name type="geographic">New Land</name>, which the good viceroy
				&#x2013; may he be with God in His glory&#x2013;Don Antonio de Mendoza, ordered
				and arranged, and on which he sent Francisco Vazquez de Coronado as
				captain-general. </p>
			 <p n="2">In truth, they have reason for wishing to know the truth,
				because most people very often make things of which they have heard, and about
				which they have perchance no knowledge, appear either greater or less than they
				are. They make nothing of those things that amount to something, and those that
				do not they make so remarkable that they appear to be something impossible to
				believe. This may very well have been caused by the fact that, as the country
				was not permanently occupied, there has not been anyone who was willing to
				spend his time in writing about its peculiarities, because all knowledge was
				lost of that which it was not the pleasure of God &#x2013; He alone knows the
				reason &#x2013; that they should enjoy. </p>
			 <p n="3">In truth, he who wishes to employ himself thus in writing
				out the things that happened on the expedition, and the things that were seen
				in those lands, and the ceremonies and customs of the natives, will have matter
				enough to test his judgment, &#x0026; I believe that the result can not fail to be
				an account which, describing only the truth, will be so remarkable that it will
				seem incredible. And besides, I think that the twenty years and more since that
				expedition took place have been the cause of some stories which are related.
				For example, some make it an uninhabitable country, others have it bordering on
				Florida, and still others on Greater India, which does not appear to be a
				slight difference. They are unable to give any basis upon which to found their
				statements. There are those who tell about some very peculiar animals, who are
				contradicted by others who were on the expedition, declaring that there was
				nothing of the sort seen. Others differ as to the limits of the provinces and
				even in regard to the ceremonies and customs, attributing what pertains to one
				people to others. All this has had a large part, my very noble lord, in making
				me wish to give now, although somewhat late, a short general account for all
				those who pride themselves on this noble curiosity, and to save myself the time
				taken up by these solicitations. Things enough will certainly be found here
				which are hard to believe. All or most of these were seen with my own eyes, and
				the rest is from reliable information obtained by inquiry of the natives
				themselves.</p>
			 <p n="4">Understanding as I do that this little work would be nothing
				in itself, lacking authority, unless it were favored and protected by a person
				whose authority would protect it from the boldness of those who, without
				reverence, give their murmuring tongues liberty, and knowing as I do how great
				are the obligations under which I have always been, &#x0026; am, to Your Grace, I
				humbly beg to submit this work to your protection. May it be received as from a
				faithful retainer and servant. It will be divided into three parts, that it may
				be better understood. The first will tell of the discovery and armament or army
				that was made ready, and of the whole journey, with the captains who were
				there; the second, of the villages and provinces which were found, their
				limits, and ceremonies and customs, the animals, fruits, vegetation, and in
				what parts of the country these are; the third, of the return of the army and
				the reasons for abandoning the country, although these were insufficient,
				because this is the best place there is for discoveries &#x2013; the marrow of
				the land in these western parts, as will be seen. And after this has been made
				plain, some remarkable things which were seen will be described at the end, and
				the way by which one might more easily return to discover that better land
				which we did not see, since it would be no small advantage to enter the country
				through the land which the Marquis of the Valley, Don Fernando Cortes, went in
				search of under the Western Star, and which cost him no small sea armament.
				</p>
			 <p n="5">May it please our lord to so favor me that with my slight
				knowledge and small abilities I may be able, by relating the truth, to make my
				little work pleasing to the learned and wise readers, when it has been accepted
				by Your Grace. For my intention is not to gain the fame of a good composer or
				rhetorician, but I desire to give a faithful account and to do this slight
				service to Your Grace, who will, I hope, receive it as from a faithful servant
				and soldier who took part in it. Although not in a polished style, I write that
				which happened &#x2013; that which I heard, experienced, saw, and did. </p>
			 <p n="6">I always notice, and it is a fact, that for the most part
				when we have something valuable in our hands, and deal with it without
				hindrance, we do not value or prize it as highly as if we understood how much
				we would miss it after we had lost it, and the longer we continue to have it
				the less we value it; but after we have lost it and miss the advantages of it,
				we have a great pain in the heart, and we are all the time imagining and trying
				to find ways and means by which to get back again. It seems to me that this has
				happened to all or most of those who went on the expedition which, in the year
				of our Savior Jesus Christ 1540, Francisco Vazquez de Coronado led in search of
				the Seven Cities. </p>
			 <p n="7">Granted that they did not find the riches of which they had
				been told, they found a place in which to search for them and the beginning of
				a good country to settle in, so as to go on farther from there. Since they came
				back from the country which they conquered and abandoned, time has given them a
				chance to understand the direction and locality in which they were, and the
				borders of the good country they had in their hands, and their hearts weep for
				having lost so favorable an opportunity. Just as men see more at the bullfight
				when they are upon the seats than when they are around in the ring, now when
				they know and understand the direction and situation in which they were, and
				see, indeed, that they can not enjoy it nor recover it, now when it is too late
				they enjoy telling about what they saw, and even of what they realize that they
				lost, especially those who are now as poor as when they went there. They have
				never ceased their labors and have spent their time to no advantage. I say this
				because I have known several of those who came back from there who amuse
				themselves now by talking of how it would be to go back and proceed to recover
				that which is lost, while others enjoy trying to find the reason why it was
				discovered at all. And now I will proceed to relate all that happened from the
				beginning. </p>
		  </div1>
		  <div1>
			 <head type="main" rend="bold">Part I</head>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter I.</head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Which treats of the way we first came to know about the
					 Seven Cities, and how Nuno de Guzman made an expedition to discover them.
				</head>
				<p n="9"><hi rend="all-caps">In the</hi>year 1530, Nuno de Guzman,
				  who was President of New Spain, had in his possession an Indian, a native of
				  the valley or valleys of Oxitipar, who was called Tejo by the Spaniards. This
				  Indian said he was the son of a trader who was dead but that when he was a
				  little boy his father had gone into the back country with fine feathers to
				  trade for ornaments, and that when he came back he brought a large amount of
				  gold and silver, of which there is a good deal in that country. He went with
				  him once or twice, and saw some very large villages, which he compared to
				  Mexico and its environs. He had seen seven very large towns which had streets
				  of silver workers. It took forty days to go there from his country, through a
				  wilderness in which nothing grew, except some very small plants about a span
				  high. The way they went was up through the country between the two seas,
				  following the northern direction. Acting on this information, Nuno de Guzman
				  got together nearly 400 Spaniards and 20,000 friendly Indians of New Spain, and
				  as he happened to be in Mexico, he crossed Tarasca, which is in the province of
				  Michoacan, so as to get into the region which the Indian said was to be crossed
				  toward the North sea, in this way getting to the country which they were
				  looking for, which was already named "The Seven Cities." He thought, from the
				  forty days of which the Tejo had spoken, that it would be found to be about 200
				  leagues, and that they would easily be able to cross the country.</p>
				<p n="10">Omitting several things that occurred on this journey, as
				  soon as they had reached the province of Culiacan, where his government ended
				  and where the New Kingdom of Galicia is now, they tried to cross the country,
				  but found the difficulties very great, because the mountain chains which are
				  near that sea are so rough that it was impossible, after great labor, to find a
				  passageway in that region. His whole army had to stay in the district of
				  Culiacan for so long on this account that some rich men who were with him, who
				  had possessions in Mexico, changed their minds, and every day became more
				  anxious to return. Besides this, Nuno de Guzman received word that the Marquis
				  of the Valley, Don Fernando Cortes, had come from Spain with his new title, and
				  with great favors and estates, and as Nuno de Guzman had been a great rival of
				  his at the time he was president, and had done much damage to his property and
				  to that of his friends, he feared that Don Fernando Cortes would want to pay
				  him back in the same way, or worse. So he decided to establish the town of
				  Culiacan there and to go back with the other men, without doing anything more.
				  </p>
				<p n="11">After his return from this expedition, he founded
				  Xalisco, where the city of Compostela is situated, and Tonala, which is called
				  Guadalaxara, and now this is the New Kingdom of Galicia. The guide they had,
				  who was called Tejo, died about this time, and thus the names of these Seven
				  Cities and the search for them remain until now, since they have not been
				  discovered. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter II.</head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 How Francisco Vazquez de Coronado came to be governor,
					 and the second account which Cabeza de Vaca gave. 
				</head>
				<p n="13"><hi rend="all-caps">Eight</hi>years after Nuno de Guzman
				  made this expedition, he was put in prison by a juez de residencia, named the
				  licentiate Diego de la Torre, who came from Spain with sufficient powers to do
				  this. After the death of the judge, who had also managed the government of that
				  country himself, the good Don Antonio de Mendoza, viceroy of New Spain,
				  appointed as governor of that province Francisco Vazquez de Coronado, a
				  gentleman from Salamanca, who had married a lady in the City of Mexico, the
				  daughter of Alonso de Estrada, the treasurer and at one time governor of
				  Mexico, and the son, most people said, of His Catholic Majesty Don Ferdinand,
				  and many stated it as certain. As I was saying, at the time Francisco Vazquez
				  was appointed governor, he was traveling through New Spain as an official
				  inspector, and in this way he gained the friendship of many worthy men who
				  afterward went on his expedition with him. </p>
				<p n="14">It happened that just at this time three Spaniards, named
				  Cabeza de Vaca, Dorantes, and Castillo Maldonado, and a negro, who had been
				  lost on the expedition which Panfilo de Narvaez led into Florida, reached
				  Mexico. They came out through Culiacan, having crossed the country from sea to
				  sea, as anyone who wishes may find out for himself by an account which this
				  same Cabeza de Vaca wrote and dedicated to Prince Don Philip, who is now King
				  of Spain and our sovereign. They gave the good Don Antonio de Mendoza an
				  extended account of some powerful villages, four and five stories high, of
				  which they had heard a great deal in the countries they had crossed, and other
				  things very different from what turned out to be the truth. The noble viceroy
				  communicated this to the new governor, who gave up the visits he had in hand,
				  on account of this, and hurried his departure for his government, taking with
				  him the negro who had come [with Cabeza de Vaca] with three friars of the order
				  of Saint Francis, one of whom was named Friar Marcos de Niza, a regular priest,
				  and another Friar Daniel, a lay brother, and the other, Friar Antonio de Santa
				  Maria. When he reached the province of Culiacan he sent the friars just
				  mentioned and the negro, who was named Stephen [Esteban], off in search of that
				  country, because Friar Marcos offered to go and see it, because he had been in
				  Peru at the time Don Pedro de Alvarado went there overland. </p>
				<p n="15">It seems that, after the friars I have mentioned and the
				  negro had started, the negro did not get on well with the friars, because he
				  took the women that were given him and collected turquoises, and got together a
				  stock of everything. Besides, the Indians in those places through which they
				  went got along with the negro better, because they had seen him before. This
				  was the reason he was sent on ahead to open up the way and pacify the Indians,
				  so that when the others came along they had nothing to do except keep an
				  account of the things for which they were looking. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter III.</head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how they killed the negro Stephen [Esteban] at
					 Cibola, and Friar Marcos returned in flight
				</head>
				<p n="17"><hi rend="all-caps">After</hi>Stephen [Esteban] had left
				  the friars, he thought he could get all the reputation and honor himself, and
				  that if he should discover those settlements with such famous high houses,
				  alone, he would be considered bold and courageous. So he proceeded with the
				  people who had followed him, and attempted to cross the wilderness which lies
				  between the country he had passed through and Cibola. He was so far ahead of
				  the friars that, when these reached Chichilticalli, which is on the edge of the
				  wilderness, he was already at Cibola, which is 80 leagues beyond. It is 220
				  leagues from Culiacan to the edge of the wilderness, and 80 across the desert,
				  which makes 300, or perhaps 10 more or less. As I said, Stephen [Esteban]
				  reached Cibola laden with the large quantity of turquoises they had given him
				  and some beautiful women whom the Indians who followed him and carried his
				  things were taking with them and had given him. These had followed him from all
				  the settlements he had passed, believing that under his protection they could
				  traverse the whole world without any danger. </p>
				<p n="18">But as the people in this country were more intelligent
				  than those who followed Stephen [Esteban], they lodged him in a little hut they
				  had outside their village, and the older men and the governors heard his story
				  and took steps to find out the reason he had come to that country. For three
				  days they made inquiries about him and held a council. The account which the
				  negro gave them of two white men who were following him, sent by a great lord,
				  who knew about the things in the sky, and how these were coming to instruct
				  them in divine matters, made them think that he must be a spy or a guide from
				  some nations who wished to come and conquer them, because it seemed to them
				  unreasonable to say that the people were white in the country from which he
				  came and that he was sent by them, he being black. Besides these other reasons,
				  they thought it was hard of him to ask them for turquoises and women, and so
				  they decided to kill him. They did this, but they did not kill any of those who
				  went with him, although they kept some young fellows and let the others, about
				  60 persons, return freely to their own country. As these, who were badly
				  scared, were returning in flight, they happened to come upon the friars in the
				  desert 60 leagues from Cibola, and told them the sad news, which frightened
				  them so much that they would not even trust these folks who had been with the
				  negro, but opened the packs they were carrying and gave away everything they
				  had except the holy vestments for saying mass. They returned from there by
				  double marches, prepared for anything, without seeing any more of the country
				  except what the Indians told them. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter IV. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how noble Don Antonio de Mendoza made an expedition
					 to discover Cibola.
				</head>
				<p n="20"><hi rend="all-caps">After</hi>Francisco Vazquez de
				  Coronado had sent Friar Marcos de Niza and his party on the search already
				  related, he was engaged in Culiacan about some business that related to his
				  government, when he heard an account of a province called Topira, which was to
				  the north of the country of Culiacan. He started to explore this region with
				  several of the conquerors and some friendly Indians, but he did not get very
				  far, because the mountain chains which they had to cross were very difficult.
				  He returned without finding the least signs of a good country, and when he got
				  back, he found the friars who had just arrived, and who told such great things
				  about what the negro Stephen [Esteban] had discovered and what they had heard
				  from the Indians, and other things they had heard about the South Sea and
				  islands and other riches, that, without stopping for anything, the governor set
				  off at once for the City of Mexico, taking Friar Marcos with him, to tell the
				  viceroy about it. He made the things seem more important by not talking about
				  them to anyone except his particular friends, under promise of the greatest
				  secrecy, until after he had reached Mexico and seen Don Antonio de Mendoza.
				  Then it began to be noised abroad that the Seven Cities for which Nuno de
				  Guzman had searched, had already been discovered, and a beginning was made in
				  collecting an armed force and in bringing together people to go to conquer
				  them. </p>
				<p n="21">The noble viceroy arranged with the friars of the order
				  of Saint Francis so that Friar Marcos was made father provincial, as a result
				  of which the pulpits of that order were filled with such accounts of marvels
				  and wonders that more than 300 Spaniards and about 800 natives of New Spain
				  collected in a few days. There were so many men of such high quality among the
				  Spaniards, that such a noble body was never collected in the Indies, nor so
				  many men of quality in such a small body, there being 300 men. Francisco
				  Vazquez de Coronado, governor of New Galicia, was captain-general, because he
				  had been the author of it all. The good viceroy Don Antonio did this because at
				  this time Francisco Vazquez was his closest and most intimate friend, and
				  because he considered him to be wise, skillful, and intelligent, besides being
				  a gentleman. Had he paid more attention and regard to the position in which he
				  was placed and the charge over which he was placed, and less to the estates he
				  left behind in New Spain, or, at least more to the honor he had and might
				  secure from having such gentlemen under his command, things would not have
				  turned out as they did. When this narrative is ended, it will be seen that he
				  did not know how to keep his position nor the government that he held. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter V. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Concerning the captains who went to Cibola. 
				</head>
				<p n="23"><hi rend="all-caps">When</hi>the viceroy, Don Antonio de
				  Mendoza, saw what a noble company had come together, and the spirit and good
				  will with which they had all presented themselves, knowing the worth of these
				  men, he would have liked very well to make every one of them captain of an
				  army; but as the whole number was small he could not do as he would have liked,
				  and so he issued the commissions &#x0026; captaincies as he saw fit, because it
				  seemed to him that if they were appointed by him, as he was so well obeyed and
				  beloved, nobody would find fault with his arrangements. After everybody had
				  heard who the general was, he made Don Pedro de Tovar, the guardian and lord
				  high steward of the Queen Dona Juana, our lamented mistress &#x2013; may she be
				  in glory &#x2013; and Lope de Samaniego, the governor of the arsenal at Mexico,
				  a gentleman fully equal to the charge, army-master. The captains were Don
				  Tristan de Atellano; Don Pedro de Guevara, the son of Don Juan de Guevara and
				  nephew of the Count of Onate; Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas; Don Rodrigo
				  Maldonado, brother-in-law of the Duke of the Infantado; Diego Lopez, alderman
				  of Seville, and Diego Gutierres, for the cavalry. </p>
				<p n="24">All the other gentlemen were placed under the flag of the
				  general, as being distinguished persons, and some of them became captains
				  later, and their appointments were confirmed by order of the viceroy and by the
				  general, Francisco Vazquez. To name some of them whom I happen to remember,
				  there were Francisco de Barrionuevo, a gentleman from Granada; Juan de
				  Saldivar, Francisco de Ovando, Juan Gallego, and Melchior Diaz &#x2013; a
				  captain who had been mayor of Culiacan, who, although he was not a gentleman,
				  merited the position he held. The other gentlemen, who were prominent, were Don
				  Alonso Manrique de Lara; Don Lope de Urrea, a gentleman from Aragon; Gomez
				  Suarez de Figueroa, Luis Ramirez de Vargas, Juan de Sotomayor, Francisco
				  Gorbalan, the commissioner Riberos, and other gentlemen, men of high quality,
				  whom I do not now recall. The infantry captain was Pablo de Melgosa of Burgos,
				  and of the artillery, Hernando de Alvarado de Montanez. As I say, since then I
				  have forgotten the names of many gentlemen. It would be well if I could name
				  some of them, so that it might be clearly seen what cause I had for saying that
				  they had on this expedition the most brilliant company ever collected in the
				  Indies to go in search of new lands. But they were unfortunate in having a
				  captain who left in New Spain estates and a pretty wife, a noble and excellent
				  lady, which were not the least cause for what was to happen. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VI. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how all the companies collected in Compostela and
					 set off on the journey in good order. 
				</head>
				<p n="26"><hi rend="all-caps">When</hi>the viceroy, Don Antonio de
				  Mendoza, had fixed &#x0026; arranged everything as we have related, and the
				  companies and captaincies had been arranged, he advanced a part of their
				  salaries from the chest of His Majesty to those in the army who were in
				  greatest need. And as it seemed to him that it would be rather hard for the
				  friendly Indians in the country if the army should start from Mexico, he
				  ordered them to assemble at the city of Compostela, the chief city in the New
				  Kingdom of Galicia, 110 leagues from Mexico, so that they could begin their
				  journey there with everything in good order. There is nothing to tell about
				  what happened on this trip, since they all finally assembled at Compostela by
				  shrove-tide, in the year [fifteen hundred and] forty-one. </p>
				<p n="27">After the whole force had left Mexico, he ordered Don
				  Pedro de Alarcon to set sail with two ships that were in the port of La
				  Natividad on the South Sea coast, and go to the port of Xalisco to take the
				  baggage which the soldiers were unable to carry, and thence to sail along the
				  coast near the army, because he had understood from the reports that they would
				  have to go through the country near the seacoast, &#x0026; that we could find the
				  harbors by means of the rivers, and that the ships could always get news of the
				  army, which turned out afterward to be false, and so all this stuff was lost,
				  or, rather, those who owned it lost it, as will be told farther on. After the
				  viceroy had completed all his arrangements, he set off for Compostela,
				  accompanied by many noble and rich men. He kept the New Year of [fifteen
				  hundred and] forty-one at Pasquaro, which is the chief place in the bishopric
				  of Michoacan, and from there he crossed the whole of New Spain, taking much
				  pleasure in enjoying the festivals and great receptions which were given him,
				  till he reached Compostela, which is, as I have said, 110 leagues. There he
				  found the whole company assembled, being well treated &#x0026; entertained by
				  Christobal de Onate, who had the whole charge of that government for the time
				  being. He had had the management of it and was in command of all that region
				  when Francisco Vazquez was made governor. </p>
				<p n="28">All were very glad when he arrived, and he made an
				  examination of the company and found all those whom we have mentioned. He
				  assigned the captains to their companies, and after this was done, on the next
				  day, after they had all heard mass, captains and soldiers together, the viceroy
				  made them a very eloquent short speech, telling them of the fidelity they owed
				  to their general and showing them clearly the benefits which this expedition
				  might afford, from the conversation of those peoples as well as in the profit
				  of those who should conquer the territory, and the advantage to His Majesty
				  &#x0026; the claim which they would thus have on his favor and aid at all times.
				  After he had finished, they all, both captains and soldiers, gave him their
				  oaths upon the Gospels in a Missal that they would follow their general on this
				  expedition and would obey him in everything he commanded them, which they
				  faithfully performed, as will be seen. The next day after this was done, the
				  army started off with its colors flying. The viceroy, Don Antonio, went with
				  them for two days, and there he took leave of them, returning to New Spain with
				  his friends. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how the army reached Chiametla, the killing of the
					 army-master, and the other things that happened up to the arrival at Culiacan.
					 
				</head>
				<p n="30"><hi rend="all-caps">After</hi>the viceroy, Don Antonio,
				  left them, the army continued its march. As each one was obliged to transport
				  his own baggage and all did not know how to fasten the packs, and as the horses
				  started off fat and plump, they had a good deal of difficulty and labor during
				  the first few days, and many left many valuable things, giving them to anyone
				  who wanted them, in order to get rid of carrying them. In the end necessity,
				  which is all powerful, made them skillful, so that one could see many gentlemen
				  become carriers, and anybody who despised this work was not considered a man.
				  </p>
				<p n="31">With such labors, which they then thought severe, the
				  army reached Chiametla, where it was obliged to delay several days to procure
				  food. During this time the army-master, Lope de Samaniego, went off with some
				  soldiers to find food, and at one village a crossbowman having entered it
				  indiscreetly in pursuit of the enemies, they shot him through the eye and it
				  passed through his brain, so that he died on the spot. They also shot five or
				  six of his companions before Diego Lopez, the alderman from Seville, since the
				  commander was dead, collected the men and sent word to the general. He put a
				  guard in the village and over the provisions. There was great confusion in the
				  army when this news became known. He was buried here. Several sorties were
				  made, by which food was obtained and several of the natives taken prisoners.
				  They hanged those who seemed to belong to the district where the army-master
				  was killed. </p>
				<p n="32">It seems that when the general, Francisco Vazquez, left
				  Culiacan with Friar Marcos to tell the viceroy, Don Antonio de Mendoza, the
				  news, as already related, he left orders for Captain Melchior Diaz and Juan de
				  Saldivar to start off with a dozen good men from Culiacan and verify what Friar
				  Marcos had seen and heard. They started and went as far as Chichilticalli,
				  which is where the wilderness begins, 220 leagues from Culiacan, &#x0026; there
				  they turned back, not finding anything important. They reached Chiametla just
				  as the army was ready to leave, and reported to the general. Although they were
				  kept secret, the bad news leaked out, and there were some reports which,
				  although they were exaggerated, did not fail to give an indication of what the
				  facts were. Friar Marcos, noticing that some were feeling disturbed, cleared
				  away these clouds, promising that what they would see should be good, and that
				  he would place the army in a country where their hands would be filled, &#x0026;
				  in this way he quieted them so that they appeared well satisfied. From there
				  the army marched to Culiacan, making some detours into the country to seize
				  provisions. They were two leagues from the town of Culiacan at Easter vespers,
				  when the inhabitants came out to welcome their governor and begged him not to
				  enter the town till the day after Easter. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VIII.</head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how the army entered the town of Culiacan and the
					 reception it received, and other things which happened before the departure.
				
				</head>
				<p n="34"><hi rend="all-caps">When</hi>the day after Easter came,
				  the army started in the morning to go to the town, and, as they approached, the
				  inhabitants of the town came out on to an open plain with foot and horse drawn
				  up in ranks as if for a battle, and having its seven bronze pieces of artillery
				  in position, making a show of defending their town. Some of our soldiers were
				  with them. Our army drew up in the same way and began a skirmish with them, and
				  after the artillery on both sides had been fired they were driven back, just as
				  if the town had been taken by force of arms, which was a pleasant demonstration
				  of welcome, except for the artilleryman who lost a hand by a shot, from having
				  ordered them to fire before he had finished drawing out the ramrod. </p>
				<p n="35">After the town was taken, the army was well lodged and
				  entertained by the townspeople, who, as they were all very well-to-do people,
				  took all the gentlemen and people of quality who were with the army into their
				  own apartments, although they had lodgings prepared for them all just outside
				  the town. Some of the townspeople were not ill repaid for this hospitality,
				  because all had started with fine clothes and accoutrements, &#x0026; as they had
				  to carry provisions on their animals after this, they were obliged to leave
				  their fine stuff, so that many preferred giving it to their hosts instead of
				  risking it on the sea by putting it in the ship that had followed the army
				  along the coast to take the extra baggage, as I have said. After they arrived
				  and were being entertained in the town, the general, by order of the viceroy
				  Don Antonio, left Fernandarias de Saabedra, uncle of Hernandarias de Saabedra,
				  count of Castellar, formerly mayor of Seville, as his lieutenant and captain in
				  this town. The army rested here several days, because the inhabitants had
				  gathered a good stock of provisions that year and each one shared his stock
				  very gladly with his guests from our army. They not only had plenty to eat
				  here, but they also had plenty to take away with them, so that when the
				  departure came they started off with more than six hundred loaded animals,
				  besides the friendly Indians and the servants &#x2013; more than a thousand
				  persons. After a fortnight had passed, the general started ahead with about
				  fifty horsemen and a few foot soldiers and most of the Indian allies, leaving
				  the army, which was to follow him a fortnight later, with Don Tristan de
				  Arellano in command as his lieutenant. </p>
				<p n="36">At this time, before his departure, a pretty sort of
				  thing happened to the general, which I will tell for what it is worth. A young
				  soldier named Trugillo [Truxillo] pretended that he had seen a vision while he
				  was bathing in the river. Feigning that he did not want to, he was brought
				  before the general, whom he gave to understand that the devil had told him that
				  if he would kill the general, he could marry his wife, Dona Beatris, and would
				  receive great wealth and other very fine things. Friar Marcos de Niza preached
				  several sermons on this, laying it all to the fact that the devil was jealous
				  of the good which must result from this journey and so wished to break it up in
				  this way. It did not end here, but the friars who were in the expedition wrote
				  to their monasteries about it, and this was the reason the pulpits of Mexico
				  proclaimed strange rumors about this affair. </p>
				<p n="37">The general ordered Truxillo to stay in that town and not
				  to go on the expedition, which was what he was after when he made up that
				  falsehood, judging from what afterward appeared to be the truth. The general
				  started off with the force already described to continue his journey, and the
				  army followed him, as will be related. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter IX. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how the army started from Culiacan and the arrival
					 of the general at Cibola and of the army at Senora and of other things that
					 happened. 
				</head>
				<p n="39"><hi rend="all-caps">The</hi>general, as has been said,
				  started to continue his journey from the valley of Culiacan somewhat lightly
				  equipped, taking with him the friars, since none of them wished to stay behind
				  with the army. After they had gone three days, a regular friar who could say
				  mass, named Friar Antonio Victoria, broke his leg, and they brought him back
				  from the camp to have it doctored. He stayed with the army after this, which
				  was no slight consolation for all. The general and his force crossed the
				  country without trouble, as they found everything peaceful, because the Indians
				  knew Friar Marcos and some of the others who had been with Melchior Diaz when
				  he went with Juan de Saldivar to investigate. </p>
				<p n="40">After the general had crossed the inhabited region and
				  came to Chichilticalli, where the wilderness begins, and saw nothing favorable,
				  he could not help feeling somewhat downhearted, for, although the reports were
				  very fine about what there was ahead, there was nobody who had seen it except
				  the Indians who went with the negro, and these had already been caught in some
				  lies. Besides all this, he was much affected by seeing that the fame of
				  Chichilticalli was summed up in one tumble-down house without any roof,
				  although it appeared to have been a strong place at some former time when it
				  was inhabited, and it was very plain that it had been built by a civilized and
				  warlike race of strangers who had come from a distance. This building was made
				  of red earth. From here they went on through the wilderness, and in fifteen
				  days came to a river about eight leagues from Cibola, which they called Red
				  River, because its waters were muddy and reddish. In this river they found
				  mullets like those of Spain. The first Indians from that country were seen here
				  &#x2013; two of them, who ran away to give the news. During the night following
				  the next day, about two leagues from the village, some Indians in a safe place
				  yelled so that, although the men were ready for anything, some were so excited
				  that they put their saddles on hind-side before; but these were the new
				  fellows. When the veterans had mounted and ridden round the camp, the Indians
				  fled. None of them could be caught because they knew the country. </p>
				<p n="41">The next day they entered the settled country in good
				  order, and when they saw the first village, which was Cibola, such were the
				  curses that some hurled at Friar Marcos that I pray to God He may protect him
				  from them. </p>
				<p n="42">It is a little, crowded village, looking as if it had
				  been crumpled all up together. There are ranch houses in New Spain which make a
				  better appearance at a distance. It is a village of about 200 warriors, is
				  three and four stories high, with the houses small and having only a few rooms,
				  and without a courtyard. One yard serves for each section. The people of the
				  whole district had collected here, for there are seven villages in the
				  province, and some of the others are even larger and stronger than Cibola.
				  These folk waited for the army, drawn up by divisions in front of the village.
				  When they refused to have peace on the terms the interpreters extended to them,
				  but appeared defiant, the Santiago was given, and they were at once put to
				  flight. The Spaniards then attacked the village, which was taken with not a
				  little difficulty, since they held the narrow and crooked entrance. During the
				  attack they knocked the general down with a large stone, and would have killed
				  him but for Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas and Hernando de Alvarado, who threw
				  themselves above him and drew him away, receiving the blows of the stones,
				  which were not few. But the first fury of the Spaniards could not be resisted,
				  and in less than an hour they entered the village and captured it. They
				  discovered food there, which was the thing they were most in need of. After
				  this the whole province was at peace. </p>
				<p n="43">The army which had stayed with Don Tristan de Arellano
				  started to follow their general, all loaded with provisions, with lances on
				  their shoulders, and all on foot, so as to have the horses loaded. With no
				  slight labor from day to day, they reached a province which Cabeza de Vaca had
				  named Corazones [Hearts], because the people here offered him many hearts of
				  animals. He founded a town here and name it San Hieronimo de los Corazones
				  [Saint Jerome of the Hearts]. After it had been started, it was seen that it
				  could not be kept up here, and so it was afterward transferred to a valley
				  which had been called Senora. The Spaniards call it Senora, and so it will be
				  known by this name. </p>
				<p n="44">From here a force went down the river to the seacoast to
				  find the harbor and to find out about the ships. Don Rodrigo Maldonado, who was
				  captain of those who went in search of the ships, did not find them, but he
				  brought back with him an Indian so large and tall that the best man in the army
				  reached only to his chest. It was said that other Indians were even taller on
				  that coast. After the rains ceased the army went on to where the town of Senora
				  was afterward located, because there were provisions in that region, so that
				  they were able to wait there for orders from the general. </p>
				<p n="45">About the middle of the month of October Captains
				  Melchior Diaz and Juan Gallego came from Cibola, Juan Gallego on his way to New
				  Spain and Melchior Diaz to stay in the new town of Hearts, in command of the
				  men who remained there. He was to go along the coast in search of ships. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter X. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 How the army started from Senora, &#x0026; how it reached
					 Cibola, &#x0026; of what happened to Captain Melchior Diaz and how he discovered
					 the Tison (Firebrand) River.
				</head>
				<p n="47"><hi rend="all-caps">After</hi>Melchior Diaz and Juan
				  Gallego had arrived in the town of Senora, it was announced that the army was
				  to depart for Cibola; that Melchior Diaz was to remain in charge of that town
				  with 80 men; that Juan Gallego was going to New Spain with messages for the
				  viceroy, and that Friar Marcos was going back with him, because he did not
				  think it was safe for him to stay in Cibola, seeing that his report had turned
				  out to be entirely false, because the kingdoms that he had told about had not
				  been found, nor the populous cities, nor the wealth of gold, nor the precious
				  stones which he had reported, nor the fine clothes, nor other things that had
				  been proclaimed from the pulpits. When this had been announced, those who were
				  to remain were selected and the rest loaded their provisions and set off in
				  good order about the middle of September on the way to Cibola, following their
				  general. </p>
				<p n="48">Don Tristan de Arellano stayed in this new town with the
				  weakest men, and from this time on there was nothing but mutinies and strife,
				  because after the army had gone Captain Melchior Diaz took 25 of the most
				  efficient men, leaving in his place one Diego de Alcaraz, a man unfitted to
				  have people under his command. He took guides and went toward the north &#x0026;
				  west in search of the seacoast. After going about 150 leagues, they came to a
				  province of exceedingly tall and strong men &#x2013; like giants. They are naked
				  and live in large straw cabins built under ground like smoke houses, with only
				  the straw roof over ground. They enter these at one end and come out at the
				  other. More than a hundred persons, old and young, sleep in one cabin. When
				  they carry anything, they can take a load of more than three or four
				  hundred-weight on their heads. Once when our men wished to fetch a log for the
				  fire, and six men were unable to carry it, one of these Indians is reported to
				  have come and raised it in his arms, put it on his head alone, and carried it
				  very easily. They eat bread cooked in the ashes, as big as the large two-pound
				  loaves of Castile. On account of the great cold, they carry a firebrand (tison)
				  in the hand when they go from one place to another, with which they warm the
				  other hand and the body as well, &#x0026; in this way they keep shifting it every
				  now and then. On this account the large river which is in the country was
				  called Rio del Tison [Firebrand River]. It is a very great river and is more
				  than two leagues wide at its mouth; here it is half a league across. Here the
				  captain heard that there had been ships at a point three days down toward the
				  sea. When he reached the place where the ships had been, which was more than
				  fifteen leagues up the river from the mouth of the harbor, they found written
				  on a tree: "Alarcon reached this place; there are letters at the foot of this
				  tree." He dug up the letters and learned from them how long Alarcon had waited
				  for news of the army and that he had gone back with the ships to New Spain,
				  because he was unable to proceed farther, since this sea was a bay, which was
				  formed by the Isle of the Marquis, which is called California, and it was
				  explained that California was not an island, but a point of the mainland
				  forming the other side of that gulf. </p>
				<p n="49">After he had seen this, the captain turned back to go up
				  the river, without going down to the sea to find a ford by which to cross to
				  the other side, so as to follow the other bank. After they had gone five or six
				  days, it seemed to them as if they could cross on rafts. For this purpose they
				  called together a large number of the natives, who were waiting for a favorable
				  opportunity to make an attack on our men, and when they saw that the strangers
				  wanted to cross, they helped make the rafts with all zeal &#x0026; diligence, so
				  as to catch them in this way on the water and drown them or else so divide them
				  that they could not help one another. While the rafts were being made, a
				  soldier who had been out around the camp saw a large number of armed men go
				  across to a mountain, where they were waiting till the soldiers should cross
				  the river. He reported this, and an Indian was quietly shut up, in order to
				  find out the truth, and when they tortured him he told all the arrangements
				  that had been made. These were, that when our men were crossing and part of
				  them had got over and part were on the river and part were waiting to cross,
				  those who were on the rafts should drown those they were taking across and the
				  rest of their force should make an attack on both sides of the river. If they
				  had had as much discretion and courage as they had strength and power, the
				  attempt would have succeeded. </p>
				<p n="50">When he knew their plan, the captain had the Indian who
				  had confessed the affair killed secretly, and that night he was thrown into the
				  river with a weight, so that the Indians would not suspect that they found out.
				  The next day they noticed that our men suspected them, and so they made an
				  attack, shooting showers of arrows, but when the horses began to catch up with
				  them and the lances wounded them without mercy and the musketeers likewise made
				  good shots, they had to leave the plain and take to the mountain, until not a
				  man of them was to be seen. The force then came back and crossed all right, the
				  Indian allies and the Spaniards going across on the rafts and the horses
				  swimming alongside the rafts, where we will leave them to continue their
				  journey. </p>
				<p n="51">To relate how the army that was on its way to Cibola got
				  on: Everything went along in good shape, since the general had left everything
				  peaceful, because he wished the people in that region to be contented and
				  without fear and willing to do what they were ordered. In a province called
				  Vacapan there was a large quantity of prickly pears, of which the natives make
				  a great deal of preserves. They gave this preserve away freely, and as the men
				  of the army ate much of it, they all fell sick with a headache and fever, so
				  that the natives might have done much harm to the force if they had wished.
				  This lasted regularly twenty-four hours. After this they continued their march
				  until they reached Chichilticalli. The men in the advance guard saw a flock of
				  sheep one day after leaving this place. I myself saw and followed them. They
				  had extremely large bodies and longwool; their horns were very thick and large,
				  and when they run they throw back their heads and put their horns on the ridge
				  of their back. They are used to the rough country, so that we could not catch
				  them and had to leave them. </p>
				<p n="52">Three days after we entered the wilderness we found a
				  horn on the bank of a river that flows in the bottom of a very steep, deep
				  gully, which the general had noticed and left there for his army to see, for it
				  was six feet long and as thick at the base as a man's thigh. It seemed to be
				  more like the horn of a goat than of any other animal. It was something worth
				  seeing. The army proceeded and was about a day's march from Cibola when a very
				  cold tornado came up in the afternoon, followed by a great fall of snow, which
				  was a bad combination for the carriers. The army went on till it reached some
				  caves in a rocky ridge, late in the evening. The Indian allies who were from
				  New Spain, and for the most part from warm countries, were in great danger.
				  They felt the coldness of that day so much that it was hard work the next day
				  taking care of them, for they suffered much pain and had to be carried on the
				  horses, the soldiers walking. After this labor the army reached Cibola, where
				  their general was waiting for them, with their quarters all ready, and here
				  they were reunited, except some captains and men who had gone off to discover
				  other provinces. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XI. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  How Don Pedro de Tovar discovered Tusayan or Tutahaco
					 and Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas saw the Firebrand River, and the other things
					 that had happened. 
				</head>
				<p n="54"><hi rend="all-caps">While</hi>the things already
				  described were taking place, Cibola being at peace, the General Francisco
				  Vazquez found out from the people of the province about the provinces that lay
				  around it, and got them to tell their friends and neighbors that Christians had
				  come into the country, whose only desire was to be their friends, and to find
				  out about good lands to live in, and for them to come to see the strangers and
				  talk with them. They did this, since they know how to communicate with one
				  another in these regions, and they informed him about a province with seven
				  villages of the same sort as theirs, although somewhat different. They had
				  nothing to do with these people. This province is called Tusayan. It is
				  twenty-five leagues from Cibola. The villages are high and the people are
				  warlike. </p>
				<p n="55">The general had sent Don Pedro de Tovar to these villages
				  with seventeen horsemen and three or four foot-soldiers. Juan de Padilla, a
				  Franciscan friar, who had been a fighting man in his youth, went with them.
				  When they reached the region, they entered the country so quietly that nobody
				  observed them, because there were no settlements or farms between one village
				  and another and the people do not leave the villages except to go to their
				  farms, especially at this time, when they had heard that Cibola had been
				  captured by very fierce people, who travelled on animals which ate people. This
				  information was generally believed by those who had never seen horses, although
				  it was so strange as to cause much wonder. Our men arrived after nightfall and
				  were able to conceal themselves under the edge of the village, where they heard
				  the natives talking in their houses. But in the morning they were discovered
				  and drew up in regular order, while the natives came out to meet them, with
				  bows, and shields, and wooden clubs, drawn up in lines without any confusion.
				  The interpreter was given a chance to speak to them and give them due warning,
				  for they were very intelligent people, but nevertheless they drew lines and
				  insisted that our men should not go across these lines toward the village. </p>
				
				<p n="56">While they were talking, some men acted as if they would
				  cross the lines, and one of the natives lost control of himself and struck a
				  horse a blow on the cheek of the bridle with his club. Friar Juan, fretted by
				  the time that was being wasted in talking with them, said to the captain: "To
				  tell the truth, I do not know why we came here." When the men heard this, they
				  gave the Santiago so suddenly that they ran down many of the Indians and the
				  others fled to the town in confusion. Some indeed did not have a chance to do
				  this, so quickly did the people in the village come out with presents, asking
				  for peace. The captain ordered his force to collect, and, as the natives did
				  not do any more harm, he and those who were with him found a place to establish
				  their headquarters near the village. They had dismounted here when the natives
				  came peacefully, saying that they wanted him to be friends with them and to
				  accept the presents which they gave him. This was some cotton cloth, although
				  not much, because they do not make it in that district. They also gave him some
				  dressed skins and cornmeal, and pine nuts and corn and birds of the country.
				  Afterward they presented some turquoises, but not many. The people of the whole
				  district came together that day and submitted themselves, and they allowed him
				  to enter their villages freely to visit, buy, sell, and barter with them. </p>
				<p n="57">It is governed like Cibola, by an assembly of the oldest
				  men. They have their governors and generals. This was where they obtained the
				  information about a large river, and that several days down the river there
				  were some people with very large bodies. </p>
				<p n="58">As Don Pedro de Tovar was not commissioned to go farther,
				  he returned from there and gave this information to the general, who dispatched
				  Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas with about twelve companions to go to see this
				  river. He was well received when he reached Tusayan and was entertained by the
				  natives who gave him guides for his journey. They started from there laden with
				  provisions, for they had to go through a desert country before reaching the
				  inhabited region, which the Indians said was more than 20 days' journey. After
				  they had gone 20 days they came to the banks of the river. It seemed to be more
				  than three or four leagues in an air line across to the other bank of the
				  stream which flowed between them. </p>
				<p n="59">This country was elevated and full of low twisted pines,
				  very cold, and lying open toward the north, so that, this being the warm
				  season, no one could live there on account of the cold. They spent three days
				  on this bank looking for a passage down to the river, which looked from above
				  as if the water was six feet across, although the Indians said it was half a
				  league wide. It was impossible to descend, for after these three days Captain
				  Melgosa &#x0026; one Juan Galeras and another companion, who were the three
				  lightest and most agile men, made an attempt to go down at the least difficult
				  place, and went down until those who were above were unable to keep sight of
				  them. They returned about four o'clock in the afternoon, not having succeeded
				  in reaching the bottom on account of the great difficulties which they found,
				  because what seemed to be easy from above was not so, but instead very hard and
				  difficult. They said that they had been down about a third of the way and that
				  the river seemed very large from the place which they reached, and that from
				  what they saw they thought the Indians had given the width correctly. Those who
				  stayed above had estimated that some huge rocks on the sides of the cliffs
				  seemed to be about as tall as a man, but those who went down swore that when
				  they reached these rocks they were bigger than the great tower of Seville. They
				  did not go farther up the river, because they could not get water. </p>
				<p n="60">Before this they had had to go a league or two inland
				  every day late in the evening in order to find water, and the guides said they
				  if they should go four days farther it would not be possible to go on, because
				  there was no water within three or four days, for when they travel across this
				  region themselves they take with them women laden with water in gourds, and
				  bury the gourds of water along the way, to use when they return, &#x0026; besides
				  this, they travel in one day over what it takes us two days to accomplish. </p>
				
				<p n="61">This was the Tison (Firebrand) River, much nearer its
				  source than where Melchior Diaz and his company crossed it. These were the same
				  kind of Indians, judging from what was afterward learned. They came back from
				  this point &#x0026; the expedition did not have any other result. On the way they
				  saw some water falling over a rock and learned from the guides that some
				  bunches of crystals which were hanging there were salt. They went and gathered
				  a quantity of this &#x0026; brought it back to Cibola, dividing it among those who
				  were there. They gave the general a written account of what they had seen,
				  because one Pedro de Sotomayor had gone with Don Garcia Lopez as chronicler for
				  the army. The villages of that province remained peaceful, since they were
				  never visited again, nor was any attempt made to find other peoples in that
				  direction. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
			How people came from Cicuye to Cibola to see the
					 Christians, &#x0026; Hernando de Alvarado went to see the cows.
				</head>
				<p n="63"><hi rend="all-caps">While</hi>they were making these
				  discoveries, some Indians came to Cibola from a village which was 70 leagues
				  east of this province, called Cicuye. Among them was a captain who was called
				  Bigotes [Whiskers] by our men, because he wore a long mustache. He was a tall,
				  well-built young fellow, with a fine figure. He told the general that they had
				  come in response to the notice which had been given, to offer themselves as
				  friends, and that if we wanted to go through their country they would consider
				  us as their friends. They brought a present of tanned hides and shields and
				  headpieces, which were very gladly received, and the general gave them some
				  glass dishes and a number of pearls and little bells which they prized highly,
				  because these were things they had never seen. They described cows which, from
				  the picture that one of them had painted on his skin, seemed to be cows,
				  although from the hides this did not seem possible, because the hair was woolly
				  and snarled so that we could not tell what sort of skins they had. The general
				  ordered Hernando de Alvarado to take twenty companions &#x0026; go with them,
				  &#x0026; gave him a commission for eighty days, after which he should return to
				  give an account of what he had found. </p>
				<p n="64">Captain Alvarado started on this journey &#x0026; in five
				  days reached a village which was on a rock called Acuco, having a population of
				  about 200 men. These people were robbers, feared by the whole country round
				  about. The village was very strong, because it was up on a rock out of reach,
				  having steep sides in every direction, and so high that it was a very good
				  musket that could throw a ball as high. There was only one entrance by a
				  stairway built by hand, which began at the top of a slope which is around the
				  foot of the rock. There was a broad stairway for about 200 steps, then a
				  stretch of about 100 narrower steps, and at the top they had to go up about
				  three times as high as a man by means of holes in the rock, in which they put
				  the points of their feet, holding on at the same time by their hands. There was
				  a wall of large and small stones at the top, which they could roll down without
				  showing themselves, so that no army could possibly be strong enough to capture
				  the village. On the top they had room to sow and store a large amount of corn,
				  and cisterns to collect snow and water. These people came down to the plain
				  ready to fight, and would not listen to any arguments. They drew lines on the
				  ground and determined to prevent our men from crossing these, but when they saw
				  that they would have to fight they offered to make peace before any harm had
				  been done. They went through their forms of making peace, which is to touch the
				  horses and take their sweat and rub themselves with it, and to make crosses
				  with the fingers of the hands. But to make the most secure peace they put their
				  hands across each other, and they keep this peace inviolably. They made a
				  present of a large number of [turkey] cocks with very big wattles, much bread,
				  tanned deerskins, pine [pinon] nuts, flour [corn meal], and corn. </p>
				<p n="65">From here they went to a province called Triguex, three
				  days distant. The people all came out peacefully, seeing that Whiskers was with
				  them. These men are feared throughout all those provinces. Alvarado sent
				  messengers back from here to advise the general to come and winter in this
				  country. The general was not a little relieved to hear that the country was
				  growing better. Five days from here he came to Cicuye, a very strong village
				  four stories high. The people came out from the village with signs of joy to
				  welcome Hernando de Alvarado and their captain, and brought them into the town
				  with drums and pipes something like flutes, of which they have a great many.
				  They made many presents of cloth and turquoises, of which there are quantities
				  in that region. The Spaniards enjoyed themselves here for several days and
				  talked with an Indian slave, a native of the country toward Florida, which is
				  the region Don Fernando de Soto discovered. This fellow said that there were
				  large settlements in the farther part of that country. Hernando de Alvarado
				  took him to guide them to the cows; but he told them so many and such great
				  things about the wealth of gold &#x0026; silver in his country that they did not
				  care about looking for cows, but returned after they had seen some few, to
				  report the rich news to the general. They called the Indian "Turk," because he
				  looked like one. </p>
				<p n="66">Meanwhile the general had sent Don Garcia Lopez de
				  Cardenas to Tiguex with men to get lodgings ready for the army, which had
				  arrived from Senora about this time, before taking them there for the winter;
				  and when Hernando de Alvarado reached Tiguex, on his way back from Cicuye, he
				  found Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas there, &#x0026; so there was no need for him to
				  go farther. As it was necessary that the natives should give the Spaniards
				  lodging places, the people in one village had to abandon it and go to others
				  belonging to their friends, and they took with them nothing but themselves and
				  the clothes they had on. Information was obtained here about many towns up
				  toward the north, and I believe that it would have been much better to follow
				  this direction than that of the Turk, who was the cause of all the misfortunes
				  which followed. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XIII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  How the general went toward Tutahaco with a few men
					 &#x0026; how Don Tristan took the army to Tiguex. 
				</head>
				<p n="68"><hi rend="all-caps">Everything</hi>already related had
				  happened when Don Tristan de Arellano reached Cibola from Senora. Soon after he
				  arrived, the general, who had received notice of a province containing eight
				  villages, took thirty of the men who were most fully rested and went to see it,
				  going from there directly to Tiguex with the skilled guides who conducted him.
				  He left orders for Don Tristan de Arellano to proceed to Tiguex by the direct
				  road, after the men had rested twenty days. On this journey, between one day
				  when they left the camping place and midday of the third day, when they saw
				  snow-covered mountains, toward which they went in search of water, neither the
				  Spaniards nor the horses nor the servants drank anything. They were able to
				  stand it because of the severe cold, although with great difficulty. In eight
				  days they reached Tutahaco, where they learned that there were other towns down
				  the river. These people were peaceful. The villages are terraced, like those at
				  Tiguex, and of the same style. </p>
				<p n="69">The general went up the river from here, visiting the
				  whole province, until he reached Tiguex, where he found Hernando de Alvarado
				  and the Turk. He felt no slight joy at such good news, because the Turk said in
				  his country there was a river in the level country which was two leagues wide,
				  in which there were fishes as big as horses, and large numbers of very big
				  canoes, with more than twenty rowers on a side, and that they carried sails,
				  and that their lords sat on the poop under awnings, and on the prow they had a
				  great golden eagle. He said also that the lord of that country took his
				  afternoon nap under a great tree on which were hung a great number of little
				  gold bells, which put him to sleep as they swung in the air. He said also that
				  everyone had his ordinary dishes made of wrought plate, and the jugs and bowls
				  were of gold. He called gold acochis. For the present he was believed, on
				  account of the ease with which he told it and because they showed him metal
				  ornaments and he recognized them and said they were not gold, and he knew gold
				  and silver very well and did not care anything about other metals. </p>
				<p n="70">The general sent Hernando de Alvarado back to Cicuye to
				  demand some gold bracelets which this Turk said they had taken from him at the
				  time they captured him. Alvarado went, and was received as a friend at the
				  village, &#x0026; when he demanded the bracelets they said they knew nothing at
				  all about them, saying the Turk was deceiving him &#x0026; was lying. Captain
				  Alvarado, seeing that there were no other means, got the Captain Whiskers and
				  the governor to come to his tent, and when they had come he put them in chains.
				  The villagers prepared to fight, and let fly their arrows, denouncing Hernando
				  de Alvarado, and saying that he was a man who had no respect for peace &#x0026;
				  friendship. Hernando de Alvarado started back to Tiguex, where the general kept
				  them prisoners more than six months. This began the want of confidence in the
				  word of the Spaniards whenever there was talk of peace from this time on, as
				  will be seen by what happened afterward. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XIV. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how the army went from Cibola to Tiguex &#x0026; what
					 happened to them on the way, on account of the snow. 
				</head>
				<p n="72"><hi rend="all-caps">We have</hi>already said that when
				  the general started from Cibola, he left orders for Don Tristan de Arellano to
				  start twenty days later. He did so as soon as he saw the men were well rested
				  and provided with food and eager to start off to find their general. He set off
				  with his force toward Tiguex and the first day they made their camp in the
				  best, largest, and finest village of that (Cibola) province. This is the only
				  village that has houses with seven stories. In this village certain houses are
				  used as fortresses; they are higher than the others and set up above them like
				  towers, and there are embrasures and hoopholes in them for defending the roofs
				  of the different stories, because, like the other villages, they do not have
				  streets, and the flat roofs are all of a height and are used in common. The
				  roofs have to be reached first, and these upper houses are the means of
				  defending them. It began to snow on us there, and the force took refuge under
				  the wings of the village, which extend out like balconies, with wooden pillars
				  beneath, because they generally use ladders to go up to those balconies, since
				  they do not have any doors below.</p>
				<p n="73">The army continued its march from here after it stopped
				  snowing, and as the season had already advanced into December, during the ten
				  days that the army was delayed, it did not fail to snow during the evenings and
				  nearly every night, so that they had to clear away a large amount of snow when
				  they came to where they wanted to make a route camp. The road could not be
				  seen, but the guides managed to find it, as they knew the country. There are
				  junipers and pines all over the country, which they used in making large
				  brushwood fires, the smoke and heat of which melted the snow from two to four
				  yards all around the fire. It was a dry snow, so that although it fell on the
				  baggage and covered it for half a man's height it did not hurt it. It fell all
				  night long, covering the baggage and the soldiers and their beds, piling up in
				  the air, so that if anyone had suddenly come upon the army nothing would have
				  been seen but mountains of snow. The horses stood half buried in it. It kept
				  those who were underneath warm instead of cold. The army passed by the great
				  rock of Acuco, and the natives, who were peaceful, entertained our men well,
				  giving them provisions and birds, although there are not many people here, as I
				  have said. Many of the gentlemen went up to the top to see it, and they had
				  great difficulty in going up the steps in the rock, because they were not used
				  to them, for the natives go up and down so easily that they carry loads &#x0026;
				  the women carry water, and they do not seem even to touch their hands, although
				  our men had to pass their weapons up from one to another. </p>
				<p n="74">From here they went on to Tiguex, where they were well
				  received and taken care of, and the great good news of the Turk gave no little
				  joy and helped lighten their hard labors, although when the army arrived we
				  found the whole country or province in revolt, for reasons which were not
				  slight in themselves, as will be shown, and our men had also burnt a village
				  the day before the army arrived, and returned to the camp. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XV.</head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				Of how the people of Tiguex revolted, and how they were
					 punished, without being to blame for it. 
				</head>
				<p n="76"><hi rend="all-caps">It has</hi>been related how the
				  general reached Tiguex, where he found Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas &#x0026;
				  Hernando de Alvarado, &#x0026; how he sent the latter back to Cicuye, where he
				  took the Captain Whiskers and the governor of the village, who was an old man,
				  prisoners. The people of Tiguex did not feel well about this seizure. </p>
				<p n="77">In addition to this, the general wished to obtain some
				  clothing to divide among his soldiers, and for this purpose he summoned one of
				  the chief Indians of Tiguex, with whom he had already had much intercourse and
				  with whom he was on good terms, who was called Juan Aleman by our men, after a
				  Juan Aleman who lived in Mexico, whom he was said to resemble. The general told
				  him that he must furnish about three hundred or more pieces of cloth, which he
				  needed to give his people. He said that he was not able to do this, but that it
				  pertained to the governors; and that besides this, they would have to consult
				  together and divide it among the villages, and that it was necessary to make
				  the demand of each town separately. The general did this, and ordered certain
				  of the gentlemen who were with him to go and make the demand; and as there were
				  twelve villages, some of them went on one side of the river and some on the
				  other. As they were in very great need, they did not give the natives a chance
				  to consult about it, but when they came to a village they demanded what they
				  had to give, so that they could proceed at once. Thus these people could do
				  nothing except take off their own cloaks and give them to make up the number
				  demanded of them. And some of the soldiers who were in these parties, when the
				  collectors gave them some blankets or cloaks which were not such as they
				  wanted, if they saw any Indian with a better one on, they exchanged with him
				  without more ado, not stopping to find out the rank of the man they were
				  stripping, which caused not a little hard feeling. </p>
				<p n="78">Besides what I have just said, one whom I will not name,
				  out of regard for him, left the village where the camp was and went to another
				  village about a league distant, and seeing a pretty woman there he called her
				  husband down to hold his horse by the bridle while he went up; and as the
				  village was entered by the upper story, the Indian supposed he was going to
				  some other part of it. While he was there the Indian heard some slight noise,
				  and then the Spaniard came down, took his horse, and went away. The Indian went
				  up and learned that he had violated, or tried to violate, his wife, and so he
				  came with the important men of the town to complain that a man had violated his
				  wife, and he told how it had happened. When the general made all the soldiers
				  and the persons who were with him come together, the Indian did not recognize
				  the man, either because he had changed his clothes or for whatever other reason
				  there may have been, but he said he could tell the horse, because he had held
				  his bridle, and so he was taken to the stables, and found the horse, and said
				  that the master of the horse must be the man. He denied doing it, seeing that
				  he had not been recognized, and it may be that the Indian was mistaken in the
				  horse; anyway, he went off without getting any satisfaction. The next day one
				  of the Indians, who was guarding the horses of the army, came running in,
				  saying that a companion of his had been killed, and that the Indians of the
				  country were driving off the horses toward their villages. The Spaniards tried
				  to collect the horses again, but many were lost, besides seven of the general's
				  mules. </p>
				<p n="79">The next day Don Garcia de Cardenas went to see the
				  villages and talk with the natives. He found the villages closed by palisades
				  and a great noise inside, the horses being chased as in a bull fight and shot
				  with arrows. They were all ready for fighting. Nothing could be done, because
				  they would not come down on to the plain and the villages are so strong that
				  the Spaniards could not dislodge them. The general then ordered Don Garcia
				  Lopez de Cardenas to go and surround one village with all the rest of the
				  force. This village was the one where the greatest injury had been done and
				  where the affair with the Indian woman occurred. Several captains who had gone
				  on in advance with the general, Juan de Saldivar and Barrionuevo and Diego
				  Lopez and Melgosa, took the Indians so much by surprise that they gained the
				  upper story, with great danger, for they wounded many of our men from within
				  the houses. Our men were on top of the houses in great danger for a day and a
				  night and part of the next day, and they made some good shots with their
				  crossbows and muskets. The horsemen on the plain with many of the Indian allies
				  from New Spain smoked them out from the cellars into which they had broken, so
				  that they begged for peace. </p>
				<p n="80">Pablo de Melgosa and Diego Lopez, the alderman from
				  Seville, were left on the roof and answered the Indians with the same signs
				  they were making for peace, which was to make a cross. They then put down their
				  arms and received pardon. They were taken to the tent of Don Garcia, who,
				  according to what he said, did not know about the peace and thought that they
				  had given themselves up of their own accord because they had been conquered. As
				  he had been ordered by the general not to take them alive, but to make an
				  example of them so that the other natives would fear the Spaniards, he ordered
				  200 stakes to be prepared at once to burn them alive. Nobody told him about the
				  peace that had been granted them, for the soldiers knew as little as he, and
				  those who should have told him about it remained silent, not thinking that it
				  was any of their business. Then when the enemies saw that the Spaniards were
				  binding them and beginning to roast them, about a hundred men who were in the
				  tent began to struggle and defend themselves with what there was there and with
				  the stakes they could seize. Our men who were on foot attacked the tent on all
				  sides, so that there was great confusion around it, and then the horsemen
				  chased those who escaped. As the country was level, not a man of them remained
				  alive, unless it was some who remained hidden in the village and escaped that
				  night to spread throughout the country the news that the strangers did not
				  respect the peace they had made, which afterward proved a great misfortune.
				  After this was over, it began to snow, and they abandoned the village and
				  returned to the camp just as the army came from Cibola. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XVI. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how they besieged Tiguex &#x0026; took it, and of what
					 happened during the siege. 
				</head>
				<p n="82"><hi rend="all-caps">As</hi>I have already related, it
				  began to snow in that country just after they captured the village, and it
				  snowed so much that for the next two months it was impossible to do anything
				  except to go along the roads to advise them to make peace and tell them that
				  they would be pardoned and might consider themselves safe, to which they
				  replied that they did not trust those who did not know how to keep good faith
				  after they had once given it, and that the Spaniards should remember that they
				  were keeping Whiskers prisoner and that they did not keep their word when they
				  burned those who surrendered in the village. Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas was
				  one of those who went to give this notice. He started out with about 30
				  companions and went to the village of Tiguex to talk with Juan Aleman. Although
				  they were hostile, they talked with him and said that if he wished to talk with
				  them he must dismount and they would come out and talk with him about a peace,
				  and that if he would send away the horsemen and make his men keep away, Juan
				  Aleman and another captain would come out of the village and meet him.
				  Everything was done as they required, and then when they approached they said
				  that they had no arms and that he must take his off. Don Garcia Lopez did this
				  in order to give them confidence, on account of his great desire to get them to
				  make peace. When he met them, Juan Aleman approached and embraced him
				  vigorously, while the other two who had come with him drew two mallets which
				  they had hidden behind their backs and gave him two such blows over his helmet
				  that they almost knocked him senseless. Two of the soldiers on horseback had
				  been unwilling to go very far off, even when he ordered them, and so they were
				  near by and rode up so quickly that they rescued him from their hands, although
				  they were unable to catch the enemies because the meeting was so near the
				  village that of the great shower of arrows which were shot at them one arrow
				  hit a horse and went through his nose. The horsemen all rode up together and
				  hurriedly carried off their captain, without being able to harm the enemy,
				  while many of our men were dangerously wounded. </p>
				<p n="83">They then withdrew, leaving a number of men to continue
				  the attack. Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas went on with a part of the force to
				  another village about half a league distant, because almost all the people in
				  this region had collected into these two villages. As they paid no attention to
				  the demands made on them except by shooting arrows from the upper stories with
				  loud yells, and would not hear of peace, he returned to his companions whom he
				  had left to keep up the attack at Tiguex . A large number of those in the
				  village came out and our men rode off slowly, pretending to flee, so that they
				  drew the enemy on to the plain, and then turned on them and caught several of
				  their leaders. The rest collected on the roofs of the village and the captain
				  returned to his camp. </p>
				<p n="84">After this affair the general ordered the army to go and
				  surround the village. He set out with his men in good order, one day, with
				  several scaling ladders. When he reached the village, he encamped his force
				  near by, and then began the siege; but as the enemy had had several days to
				  provide themselves with stores, they threw down such quantities of rocks upon
				  our men that many of them were laid out, and they wounded nearly a hundred with
				  arrows, several of whom afterward died on account of the bad treatment by an
				  unskillful surgeon who was with the army. The siege lasted fifty days, during
				  which time several assaults were made. The lack of water was what troubled the
				  Indians most. They dug a very deep well inside the village, but were not able
				  to get water, and while they were making it, it fell in and killed 30 persons.
				  Two hundred of the besieged died in the fights. One day when there was a hard
				  fight, they killed Francisco de Obando, a captain who had been army-master all
				  the time that Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas was away making the discoveries
				  already described, and also Francisco Pobares, a fine gentleman. Our men were
				  unable to prevent them from carrying Francisco de Obando inside the village,
				  which was regretted not a little, because he was a distinguished person,
				  besides being honored on his own account, affable and much beloved, which was
				  noticeable. </p>
				<p n="85">One day, before the capture was completed, they asked to
				  speak to us, and said that, since they knew we would not harm the women and
				  children, they wished to surrender their women and sons, because they were
				  using up their water. It was impossible to persuade them to make peace, as they
				  said that the Spaniards would not keep an agreement made with them. So they
				  gave up about a hundred persons, women and boys, who did not want to leave
				  them. Don Lope de Urrea rode up in front of the town without his helmet and
				  received the boys and girls in his arms, and when all of these had been
				  surrendered, Don Lope begged them to make peace, giving them the strongest
				  promises for their safety. They told him to go away, as they did not wish to
				  trust themselves to people who had no regard for friendship or their own words
				  which they had pledged. As he seemed unwilling to go away, one of them put an
				  arrow in his bow ready to shoot, and threatened to shoot him with it unless he
				  went off, and they warned him to put on his helmet, but he was unwilling to do
				  so, saying that they would not hurt him as long as he stayed there. When the
				  Indian saw that he did not want to go away, he shot and planted his arrow
				  between the fore feet of the horse, and then put another arrow in his bow and
				  repeated that if he did not go away he would really shoot him. Don Lope put on
				  his helmet and slowly rode back to where the horsemen were, without receiving
				  any harm from them. When they saw that he was really in safety, they began to
				  shoot arrows in showers, with loud yells and cries. The general did not want to
				  make an assault that day, in order to see if they could be brought in some way
				  to make peace, which they would not consider. </p>
				<p n="86">Fifteen days later they decided to leave the village one
				  night, and did so, taking the women in their midst. They started about the
				  fourth watch, in the very early morning, on the side where the cavalry was. The
				  alarm was given by those in the camp of Don Rodrigo Maldonado. The enemy
				  attacked them and killed one Spaniard and a horse and wounded others, but they
				  were driven back with great slaughter until they came to the river, where the
				  water flowed swiftly and very cold. They threw themselves into this, and as the
				  men had come quickly from the whole camp to assist the cavalry, there were few
				  who escaped being killed or wounded. Some men from the camp went across the
				  river next day and found many of them who had been overcome by the great cold.
				  They brought these back, cured them, and made servants of them. This ended that
				  siege, and the town was captured, although there were a few who remained in one
				  part of the town and were captured a few days later. Two captains, Don Diego de
				  Guevara and Juan de Saldivar, had captured the other large village after a
				  siege. Having started out very early one morning to make an ambuscade in which
				  to catch some warriors who used to come out every morning to try to frighten
				  our camp, the spies, who had been placed where they could see when they were
				  coming, saw the people come out and proceed toward the country. The soldiers
				  left the ambuscade and went to the village and saw the people fleeing. They
				  pursued and killed large numbers of them. At the same time those in the camp
				  were ordered to go over the town, and they plundered it, making prisoners of
				  all the people who were found in it, amounting to about a hundred women and
				  children. This siege ended the last of March, in the year 1542. Other things
				  had happened in the meantime, which would have been noticed, but that it would
				  have cut the thread. I have omitted them, but will relate them now, so that it
				  will be possible to understand what follows. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XVII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how messengers reached the army from the valley of
					 Senora and how Captain Melchior Diaz died on the expedition to the Firebrand
					 River. 
				</head>
				<p n="88"><hi rend="all-caps">We have</hi>already related how
				  Captain Melchior Diaz crossed the Firebrand river on rafts, in order to
				  continue his discoveries farther in that direction. About the time the siege
				  ended, messengers reached the army from the city of San Hieronimo with letters
				  from Diego de Alarcon, who had remained there in the place of Melchior Diaz.
				  These contained the news that Melchior Diaz had died while he was conducting
				  his search, and that the force had returned without finding any of the things
				  they were after. It all happened in this fashion: </p>
				<p n="89">After they had crossed the river they continued their
				  search for the coast, which here turned back toward the south, or between south
				  &#x0026; east, because that arm of the sea enters the land due north and this
				  river, which brings its waters down from the north, flowing toward the south,
				  enters the head of the gulf. Continuing in the direction they had been going,
				  they came to some sand banks of hot ashes which it was impossible to cross
				  without being drowned as in the sea. The ground they were standing on trembled
				  like a sheet of paper, so that it seemed as if there were lakes underneath
				  them. It seemed wonderful and like something infernal, for the ashes to bubble
				  up here in several places. After they had gone away from this place, on account
				  of the danger they seemed to be in and of the lack of water, one day a
				  greyhound belonging to one of the soldiers chased some sheep which they were
				  taking along for food. When the captain noticed this, he threw his lance at the
				  dog while his horse was running, so that it stuck up in the ground, and not
				  being able to stop his horse he went over the lance so that it nailed him
				  through the thighs and the iron came out behind, rupturing his bladder. After
				  this the soldiers turned back with their captain, having to fight everyday with
				  the Indians, who had remained hostile. He lived about twenty days, during which
				  they proceeded with great difficulty on account of the necessity of carrying
				  him. They returned in good order without losing a man, until he died, &#x0026;
				  after that they were relieved of the greatest difficulty. When they reached
				  Senora, Alcaraz dispatched the messengers already referred to, so that the
				  general might know of this and also that some of the soldiers were ill disposed
				  and had caused several mutinies, and that he had sentenced two of them to the
				  gallows, but they had afterward escaped from the prison. </p>
				<p n="90">When the general learned this, he sent Don Pedro de Tovar
				  to that city to sift out some of the men. He was accompanied by messengers whom
				  the general sent to Don Antonio de Mendoza the viceroy, with an account of what
				  had occurred and with the good news given by the Turk. When Don Pedro de Tovar
				  arrived there, he found that the natives of that province had killed a soldier
				  with a poisoned arrow, which had made only a very little wound in one hand.
				  Several soldiers went to the place where this happened to see about it, and
				  they were not very well received. Don Pedro de Tovar sent Diego de Alcaraz with
				  a force to seize the chiefs &#x0026; lords of a village in what they call the
				  valley of Knaves (de los Vellacos), which is in the hills. After getting there
				  and taking these men prisoners, Diego de Alcaraz decided to let them go in
				  exchange for some thread &#x0026; cloth &#x0026; other things which the soldiers
				  needed. Finding themselves free, they renewed the war and attacked them, and as
				  they were strong and had poison, they killed several Spaniards and wounded
				  others so that they died on the way back. They retired toward the town, &#x0026;
				  if they had not had Indian allies from the country of the Hearts, it would have
				  gone worse with them. They got back to the town, leaving 17 soldiers dead from
				  the poison. They would die in agony from only a small wound, the bodies
				  breaking out with an insupportable pestilential stink. When Don Pedro de Tovar
				  saw the harm done, and as it seemed to them that they could not safely stay in
				  that city, he moved 40 leagues toward Cibola into the valley of Suya, where we
				  will leave them, in order to relate what happened to the general and his army
				  after the siege of Tiguex. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XVIII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how the general managed to leave the country in
					 peace so as to go in search of Quivira, where the Turk said there was the most
					 wealth. 
				</head>
				<p n="92"><hi rend="all-caps">During</hi>the siege of Tiguex the
				  general decided to go to Cicuye and take the governor with him, in order to
				  give him his liberty and to promise them that he would give Whiskers his
				  liberty and leave him in the village, as soon as he should start for Quivira.
				  He was received peacefully when he reached Cicuye, and entered the village with
				  several soldiers. They received their governor with much joy and gratitude.
				  After looking over the village and speaking with the natives he returned to his
				  army, leaving Cicuye at peace, in the hope of getting back their Captain
				  Whiskers. </p>
				<p n="93">After the siege was ended, as we have already related, he
				  sent a captain to Chia, a fine village with many people, which had sent to
				  offer its submission. It was four leagues distant to the west of the river.
				  They found it peaceful and gave it four bronze cannon, which were in poor
				  condition, to take care of. Six gentlemen also went to Quirix, a province with
				  seven villages. At the first village, which had about a hundred inhabitants,
				  the natives fled, not daring to wait for our men; but they headed them off by a
				  short cut, riding at full speed, and then they returned to their houses in the
				  village in perfect safety, and then told the other villagers about it and
				  reassured them. In this way the entire region was reassured, little by little,
				  by the time the ice in the river was broken up and it became possible to ford
				  the river and so continue the journey. The twelve villages of Tiguex, however,
				  were not repopulated at all during the time the army was there, in spite of
				  every promise of security that could possibly be given to them. </p>
				<p n="94">And when the river, which for almost four months had been
				  frozen over so that they crossed the ice on horseback, had thawed out, orders
				  were given for the start to Quivira, where the Turk said there was some gold
				  and silver, although not so much as in Arche and the Guaes. There were already
				  some in the army who suspected the Turk, because a Spaniard named Servantes,
				  who had charge of him during the siege, solemnly swore that he had seen the
				  Turk talking with the devil in a pitcher of water, and also that while he had
				  him under lock so that no one could speak to him, the Turk had asked him what
				  Christians had been killed by the people at Tiguex . He told him "nobody," and
				  then the Turk answered: </p>
				<p n="95">"You lie; five Christians are dead, including a captain."
				  And as Cervantes knew that he told the truth, he confessed it so as to find out
				  who had told him about it, and the Turk said he knew it all by himself and that
				  he did not need to have anyone tell him in order to know it. And it was on
				  account of this that he watched him and saw him speaking to the devil in the
				  pitcher, as I have said. </p>
				<p n="96">While all this was going on, preparations were being made
				  to start from Tiguex . At this time people came from Cibola to see the general,
				  and he charged them to take good care of the Spaniards who were coming from
				  Senora with Don Pedro de Tovar. He gave them letters to give to Don Pedro,
				  informing him what he ought to do and how he should go to find the army, and
				  that he would find letters under the crosses which the army would put up along
				  the way. The army left Tiguex on the 5th of May and returned to Cicuye, which,
				  as I have said, is twenty-five marches, which means leagues, from there, taking
				  Whiskers with them. Arrived there, he gave them their captain, who already went
				  about freely with a guard. The village was very glad to see him, and the people
				  were peaceful and offered food. The governor and Whiskers gave the general a
				  young fellow named Xabe, a native of Quivira, who could give them information
				  about the country. This fellow said that there was gold and silver, but not so
				  much of it as the Turk had said. The Turk, however, continued to declare that
				  it was as he had said. He went as a guide, and thus the army started off from
				  here. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XIX. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how they started in search of Quivira and of what
					 happened on the way. 
				</head>
				<p n="98"><hi rend="all-caps">The</hi>army started from Cicuye,
				  leaving the village at peace and, as it seemed, contented, &#x0026; under
				  obligations to maintain the friendship because their governor and captain had
				  been restored to them. Proceeding toward the plains, which are all on the other
				  side of the mountains, after four days' journey they came to a river with a
				  large, deep current, which flowed down from toward Cicuye, and they named this
				  the Cicuye river. They had to stop here to make a bridge so as to cross it. It
				  was finished in four days, by much diligence and rapid work, and as soon as it
				  was done the whole army and the animals crossed. After ten days more they came
				  to some settlements of people who lived like Arabs and who are called Querechos
				  in that region. They had seen the cows for two days. These folks live in tents
				  made of the tanned skins of the cows. They travel around near the cows, killing
				  them for food. They did nothing unusual when they saw our army, except to come
				  out of their tents to look at us, after which they came to talk with the
				  advance guard, and asked who we were. The general talked with them, but as they
				  had already talked with the Turk, who was with the advance guard, they agreed
				  with what he had said. That they were very intelligent is evident from the fact
				  that although they conversed by means of signs they made themselves understood
				  so well that there was no need of an interpreter. They said there was a very
				  large river over toward where the sun came from, and that one could go along
				  this river through an inhabited region for ninety days without a break from
				  settlement to settlement. They said that the first of these settlements was
				  called Haxa, and that the river was more than a league wide and that there were
				  many canoes on it. These folk started off from here next day with a lot of dogs
				  which dragged their possessions. </p>
				<p n="99">For two days, during which the army marched in the same
				  direction as that in which they had come from the settlements &#x2013; that is,
				  between north and east, but more toward the north &#x2013; they saw other
				  roaming Querechos and such great numbers of cows that it already seemed
				  something incredible. These people gave a great deal of information about
				  settlements, all toward the east from where we were. Here Don Garcia broke his
				  arm and a Spaniard got lost who went off hunting so far that he was unable to
				  return to the camp, because the country is very level. The Turk said it was one
				  or two days to Haya (Haxa). The general sent Captain Diego Lopez with ten
				  companions lightly equipped &#x0026; a guide to go at full speed toward the
				  sunrise for two days and discover Haxa, and then return to meet the army, which
				  set out in the same direction next day. They came across so many animals that
				  those who were on the advance guard killed a large number of bulls. As these
				  fled they trampled one another in their haste until they came to a ravine. So
				  many of the animals fell into this that they filled it up, and the rest went on
				  across the top of them. The men who were chasing them on horseback fell in
				  among the animals without noticing where they were going. Three of the horses
				  that fell in among the cows, all saddled and bridled, were lost sight of
				  completely. </p>
				<p n="100">As it seemed to the general that Diego Lopez ought to be
				  on his way back, he sent six of his companions to follow up the banks of the
				  little river, and as many more down the banks, to look for traces of the horses
				  at the trails to and from the river. It was impossible to find tracks in this
				  country, because the grass straightened up again as soon as it was trodden
				  down. They were found by some Indians from the army who had gone to look for
				  fruit. These got track of them a good league off, and soon came up with them.
				  They followed the river down to the camp, and told the general that in the
				  twenty leagues they had been over they had seen nothing but cows and the sky.
				  There was another native of Quivira with the army, a tattooed Indian named
				  Ysopete. This Indian had always declared that the Turk was lying, and on
				  account of this the army paid no attention to him, and even now, although he
				  said that the Querechos had consulted with him, Ysopete was not believed. </p>
				<p n="101">The general sent Don Rodrigo Maldonado, with his
				  company, forward from here. He traveled four days and reached a large ravine
				  like those of Colima, in the bottom of which he found a large settlement of
				  people. Cabeza de Vaca and Dorantes had passed through this place, so that they
				  presented Don Rodrigo with a pile of tanned skins and other things, and a tent
				  as big as a house, which he directed them to keep until the army came up. He
				  sent some of his companions to guide the army to that place, so that they
				  should not get lost, although he had been making piles of stones and cow dung
				  for the army to follow. This was the way in which the army was guided by the
				  advance guard. </p>
				<p n="102">When the general came up with the army and saw the great
				  quantity of skins, he thought he would divide them among the men, &#x0026; placed
				  guards so that they could look at them. But when the men arrived and saw that
				  the general was sending some of his companions with orders for the guards to
				  give them some of the skins, &#x0026; that these were to select the best, they
				  were angry because they were not going to be divided evenly, &#x0026; made a rush,
				  &#x0026; in less than a quarter of an hour nothing was left but the empty ground.
				  </p>
				<p n="103">The natives who happened to see this also took a hand in
				  it. The women and some others were left crying, because they thought that the
				  strangers were not going to take anything, but would bless them as Cabeza de
				  Vaca and Dorantes had done when they passed through here. They found an Indian
				  girl here who was as white as a Castilian lady, except that she had her chin
				  tattooed like a Moorish woman. In general they all tattoo themselves in this
				  way here, and they decorate their eyes. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XX. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how great stones fell in the camp; &#x0026; how they
					 discovered a ravine, where the army divided into two parts. 
				</head>
				<p n="105"><hi rend="all-caps">While</hi>the army was resting in
				  this ravine, as we have related, a tempest came up one afternoon with a very
				  high wind &#x0026; hail, &#x0026; in a very short space of time a great quantity of
				  hailstones, as big as bowls, or bigger, fell as thick as raindrops, so that in
				  places they covered the ground two or three spans or more deep. And one hit the
				  horse &#x2013; or should I say, there was not a horse that did not break away,
				  except two or three which the negroes protected by holding large sea nets over
				  them, with the helmets and shields which all the rest wore; and some of them
				  dashed up on to the sides of the ravine so that they got them down with great
				  difficulty. If this had struck them while they were upon the plain, the army
				  would have been in great danger of being left without its horses, as there were
				  many which they were not able to cover. The hail broke many tents, and battered
				  many helmets, and wounded many of the horses, and broke all the crockery of the
				  army, and the gourds, which was no small loss, because they do not have any
				  crockery in this region. They do not make gourds, nor sow corn, nor eat bread,
				  but instead raw meat &#x2013; or only half cooked &#x2013; and fruit. </p>
				<p n="106">From here the general sent out to explore the country,
				  and they found another settlement four days from there. The country was well
				  inhabited, and they had plenty of kidney beans and prunes like those of
				  Castile, and tall vineyards. These village settlements extended for three days.
				  This was called Cona. Some Teyas, as these people are called, went with the
				  army from here and traveled as far as the end of the other settlements with
				  their packs of dogs &#x0026; women &#x0026; children, and then they gave them guides
				  to proceed to a large ravine where the army was. They did not let these guides
				  speak with the Turk and did not receive the same statements from these as they
				  had from the others. These said that Quivira was toward the north, and that we
				  would not find any good road thither. After this they began to believe Ysopete.
				  The ravine which the army had now reached was a league wide from one side to
				  the other, with a little bit of a river at the bottom, and there were many
				  groves of mulberry trees near it, and rosebushes with the same sort of fruit
				  that they have in France. They made verjuice from the unripe grapes at this
				  ravine, although there were ripe ones. There were walnuts and the same kind of
				  fowls as in New Spain, and large quantities of prunes like those of Castile.
				  During this journey a Teya was seen to shoot a bull right through both
				  shoulders with an arrow, which would be a good shot for a musket. These people
				  are very intelligent; the women are well made and modest. They cover their
				  whole body. They wear shoes and buskins made of tanned skin. The women wear
				  cloaks over their small under petticoats, with sleeves gathered up at the
				  shoulders, all of skin, and some wore something like little sanbenitos with a
				  fringe, which reached half-way down the thigh over the petticoat. </p>
				<p n="107">The army rested several days in this ravine and explored
				  the country. Up to this point they had made thirty-seven days' marches,
				  traveling six or seven leagues a day. It had been the duty of one man to
				  measure and count his steps. They found that it was 250 leagues to the
				  settlements. When the general Francisco Vazquez realized this, and saw that
				  they had been deceived by the Turk heretofore, &#x0026; as the provisions were
				  giving out and there was no country around here where they could procure more,
				  he called the captains and ensigns together to decide on what they thought
				  ought to be done. They all agreed that the general should go in search of
				  Quivira with thirty horsemen and half a dozen foot-soldiers, and that Don
				  Tristan de Arellano should go back to Tiguex with all the army. When the men in
				  the army learned of this decision, they begged their general not to leave them
				  to conduct the further search, but declared that they all wanted to die with
				  him and did not want to go back. This did not do any good, although the general
				  agreed to send messengers to them within eight days saying whether it was best
				  for them to follow him or not, and with this he set off with the guides he had
				  and with Ysopete. The Turk was taken along in chains. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XXI. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how the army returned to Tiguex and the general
					 reached Quivira.
				</head>
				<p n="109"><hi rend="all-caps">The</hi>general started from the
				  ravine with the guides that the Teyas had given him. He appointed the alderman
				  Diego Lopez his army-master, and took with him the men who seemed to him to be
				  most efficient, and the best horses. The army still had some hope that the
				  general would send for them, and sent two horsemen, lightly equipped and riding
				  post, to repeat their petition. The general arrived &#x2013; I mean, the guides
				  ran away during the first few days and Diego Lopez had to return to the army
				  for guides, bringing orders for the army to return to Tiguex to find food and
				  wait there for the general. The Teyas, as before, willingly furnished him with
				  new guides. The army waited for its messengers and spent a fortnight here,
				  preparing jerked beef to take with them. It was estimated that during this
				  fortnight they killed 500 bulls. The number of these that were there without
				  any cows was something incredible. Many fellows were lost at this time who went
				  out hunting and did not get back to the army for two or three days, wandering
				  about the country as if they were crazy, in one direction or another, not
				  knowing how to get back where they started from, although this ravine extended
				  in either direction so that they could find it. Every night they took account
				  of who was missing, fired guns and blew trumpets and beat drums and built great
				  fires, but yet some of them went off so far and wandered about so much that all
				  this did not give them any help, although it helped others. The only way was to
				  go back where they had killed an animal and start from there in one direction
				  and another until they struck the ravine or fell in with somebody who could put
				  them on the right road. It is worth noting that the country there is so level
				  that at midday, after one had wandered about in one direction and another in
				  pursuit of game, the only thing to do is to stay near the game quietly until
				  sunset, so as to see where it goes down, and even then they have to be men who
				  are practiced to do it. Those who are not, had to trust themselves to others.
				  </p>
				<p n="110">The general followed his guides until he reached
				  Quivira, which took 49 days' marching, on account of the great detour they had
				  made toward Florida. He was received peacefully on account of the guides whom
				  he had. They asked the Turk why he had lied and had guided them so far out of
				  their way. He said that his country was in that direction and that, besides
				  this, the people at Cicuye had asked him to lead them off on to the plains and
				  lose them, so that the horses would die when their provisions gave out, and
				  they would be so weak if they ever returned that they would be killed without
				  any trouble, and thus they could take revenge for what had been done to them.
				  This was the reason why he had led them astray, supposing that they did not
				  know how to hunt or to live without corn, while as for the gold, he did not
				  know where there was any of it. He said this like one who had given up hope and
				  who found that he was being persecuted, since they had begun to believe
				  Ysopete, who had guided them better than he had, &#x0026; fearing lest those who
				  were there might give some advice by which some harm would come to him. They
				  garroted him, which pleased Ysopete very much, because he had always said that
				  Ysopete was a rascal and that he did not know what he was talking about &#x0026;
				  had always hindered his talking with anybody. Neither gold nor silver nor any
				  trace of either was found among these people. Their lord wore a copper plate on
				  his neck and prized it highly. </p>
				<p n="111">The messengers whom the army had sent to the general
				  returned, as I said, and then, as they brought no news except what the alderman
				  had delivered, the army left the ravine and returned to the Teyas, where they
				  took guides who led them back by a more direct road. They readily furnished
				  these, because these people are always roaming over this country in pursuit of
				  the animals and so know it thoroughly. They keep their road in this way: In the
				  morning they notice where the sun rises and observe the direction they are
				  going to take, and then shoot an arrow in this direction. Before reaching this
				  they shoot another over it, and in this way they go all day toward the water
				  where they are to end the day. In this way they covered in 25 days what had
				  taken them 37 days going, besides stopping to hunt cows on the way. They found
				  many salt lakes on this road, and there was a great quantity of salt. There
				  were thick pieces of it on top of the water bigger than tables, as thick as
				  four or five fingers. Two or three spans down under water there was salt which
				  tasted better than that in the floating pieces, because this was rather bitter.
				  It was crystalline. All over these plains there were large numbers of animals
				  like squirrels and a great number of their holes. On its return the army
				  reached the Cicuye river more than 30 leagues below there &#x2013; I mean below
				  the bridge they had made when they crossed it, and they followed it up to that
				  place. In general, its banks are covered with a sort of rose bushes, the fruit
				  of which tastes like muscatel grapes. They grow on little twigs about as high
				  up as a man. It has the parsley leaf. There were unripe grapes and currants [?]
				  and wild marjoram. The guides said this river joined that of Tiguex more than
				  20 days from here, and that its course turned toward the east. It is believed
				  that it flows into the mighty river of the Holy Spirit (Espiritu Santo), which
				  the men with Don Hernando de Soto discovered in Florida. A tattooed Indian
				  woman ran away from Juan de Saldivar and hid in the ravines about this time,
				  because she recognized the country of Tiguex where she had been a slave. She
				  fell into the hands of some Spaniards who had entered the country from Florida
				  to explore it in this direction. After I got back to New Spain I heard them say
				  that the Indian told them that she had run away from other men like them nine
				  days, and that she gave the names of some captains; from which we ought to
				  believe that we were not far from that region they discovered, although they
				  said they were more than 200 leagues inland. I believe the land at that point
				  is more than 600 leagues across from sea to sea. As I said, the army followed
				  the river up as far as Cicuye, which it found ready for war and unwilling to
				  make any advances toward peace or to give any food to the army. From there we
				  went on to Tiguex where several villages had been reinhabited, but the people
				  were afraid and left them again. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter XXII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of how the general returned from Quivira and of other
					 expeditions toward the north. 
				</head>
				<p n="113"><hi rend="all-caps">After</hi>Don Tristan de Arellano
				  reached Tiguex, about the middle of July, in the year 1542, he had provisions
				  collected for the coming winter. Captain Francisco de Barrionuevo was sent up
				  the river toward the north with several men. He saw two provinces, one of which
				  was called Hemes and had seven villages, and the other Yuqueyunque. The
				  inhabitants of Hemes came out peaceably and furnished provisions. At
				  Yuqueyunque the whole nation left two very fine villages which they had on
				  either side of the river entirely vacant, and went into the mountains, where
				  they had four very strong villages in a rough country, where it was impossible
				  for horses to go. In the two villages there was a great deal of food &#x0026; some
				  very beautiful glazed earthenware with many figures &#x0026; different shapes.
				  Here they also found many bowls full of a carefully selected shining metal with
				  which they glazed the earthenware. This shows that mines of silver would be
				  found in that country if they should hunt for them. </p>
				<p n="114">There was a large and powerful river, I mean village,
				  which was called Braba, 20 leagues farther up the river, which our men called
				  Valladolid. The river flowed through the middle of it. The natives crossed it
				  by wooden bridges, made of very long, large, squared pines. At this village
				  they saw the largest &#x0026; finest hot rooms or estufas that there were in the
				  entire country, for they had a dozen pillars, each one of which was twice as
				  large around as one could reach and twice as tall as a man. Hernando de
				  Alvarado visited this village when he discovered Cicuye. The country is very
				  high and very cold. The river is deep and very swift, without any ford. Captain
				  Barrionuevo returned from here, leaving the province at peace. </p>
				<p n="115">Another captain went down the river in search of the
				  settlements which the people at Tutahaco had said were several days distant
				  from there. This captain went down 80 leagues and found four large villages
				  which he left at peace. He proceeded until he found that the river sank into
				  the earth, like the Guadiana in Estremadura. He did not go on to where the
				  Indians said that it came out much larger, because his commission did not
				  extend for more than 80 leagues march. After this captain got back, as the time
				  had arrived which the captain had set for his return from Quivira, and as he
				  had not come back, Don Tristan selected 40 companions and, leaving the army to
				  Francisco de Barrionuevo, he started with them in search of the general. When
				  he reached Cicuye the people came out of the village to fight, which detained
				  him there four days, while he punished them, which he did by firing some
				  volleys into the village. These killed several men, so that they did not come
				  out against the army, since two of their principal men had been killed on the
				  first day. Just then word was brought that the general was coming, and so Don
				  Tristan had to stay there on this account also, to keep the road open.
				  Everybody welcomed the general on his arrival, with great joy. The Indian Xabe,
				  who was the young fellow who had been given to the general at Cicuye when he
				  started off in search of Quivira, was with Don Tristan de Arellano &#x0026; when
				  he learned that the general was coming he asked as if he was greatly pleased,
				  and said, "Now, when the general comes, you will see that there is gold and
				  silver in Quivira, although not so much as the Turk said." When the general
				  arrived, and Xabe saw that they had not found anything, he was sad and silent,
				  and kept declaring that there was some. He made many believe that it was so,
				  because the general had not dared to enter into the country on account of its
				  being thickly settled and his force not very strong, and that he had returned
				  to lead his army there after the rains, because it had begun to rain there
				  already, as it was early in August when he left. It took him forty days to
				  return, traveling lightly equipped. The Turk had said when they left Tiguex
				  that they ought not load the horses with too much provisions, which would tire
				  them so that they could not afterward carry the gold and silver, from which it
				  is very evident that he was deceiving them. </p>
				<p n="116">The general reached Cicuye with his force and at once
				  set off for Tiguex, leaving the village more quiet, for they had met him
				  peaceably and had talked with him. When he reached Tiguex, he made his plans to
				  pass the winter there, so as to return with the whole army, because it was said
				  that he brought information regarding large settlements and very large rivers,
				  and that the country was very much like that of Spain in the fruits and
				  vegetation and seasons. They were not ready to believe that there was no gold
				  there, but instead had suspicions that there was some farther back in the
				  country, because, although this was denied, they knew what the thing was and
				  had a name for it among themselves &#x2013; acochis. With this we end this first
				  part, and now we will give an account of the provinces. </p>
			 </div2>
		  </div1>
		  <div1>
			 <head type="main" rend="bold">Part II </head>
			 <head type="sub" rend="bold">
				Which treats of the High Villages and Provinces and of
				  their habits and customs, as collected by Pedro de Castaneda, native of the
				  City of Najara.
			 </head>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">LAUS DEO</head>
				<p n="118">IT does not seem to me that the reader will be
				  satisfied with having seen and understood what I have already related about the
				  expedition, although that has made it easy to see the difference between the
				  report which told about vast treasures, and the places where nothing like this
				  was either found or known. It is to be noted that in place of settlements great
				  deserts were found, and instead of populous cities villages of 200 inhabitants
				  and only 800 or 1,000 people in the largest. I do not know whether this will
				  furnish grounds for pondering and considering the uncertainty of this life. To
				  please these, I wish to give a detailed account of all the inhabited region
				  seen &#x0026; discovered by this expedition, and some of their ceremonies and
				  habits, in accordance with what we came to know about them, and the limits
				  within which each province falls, so that hereafter it may be possible to
				  understand in what direction Florida lies and in what direction Greater India;
				  and this land of New Spain is part of the mainland with Peru, and with Greater
				  India or China as well, there not being any strait between to separate them. On
				  the other hand, the country is so wide that there is room for these vast
				  deserts which lie between the two seas, for the coast of the North Sea beyond
				  Florida stretches toward the Bacallaos and then turns toward Norway, while that
				  of the South Sea turns toward the west, making another bend down toward the
				  south almost like a bow and stretches away toward India, leaving room for the
				  lands that border on the mountains on both sides to stretch out in such a way
				  as to have between them these great plains which are full of cattle and many
				  other animals of different sorts, since they are not inhabited, as I will
				  relate farther on. There is every sort of game and fowl there, but no snakes,
				  for they are free from these. I will leave the account of the return of the
				  army to New Spain until I have shown what slight occasion there was for this.
				  We will begin our account with the city of Culiacan, &#x0026; point out the
				  differences between the one country and the other, on account of which one
				  ought to be settled by Spaniards and the other not. It should be the reverse,
				  however, with Christians, since there are intelligent men in one, and in the
				  other wild animals and worse than beasts.</p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter I. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of the province of Culiacan and of its habits and
					 customs. 
				</head>
				<p n="120"><hi rend="all-caps">Culican</hi>is the last place in
				  the New Kingdom of Galicia, and was the first settlement made by Nuno de Guzman
				  when he conquered this kingdom. It is 210 leagues west of Mexico. In this
				  province there are three chief languages, besides other related dialects. The
				  first is that of the Tahues, who are the best &#x0026; most intelligent race. They
				  are now the most settled and have received the most light from the faith. They
				  worship idols &#x0026; make presents to the devil of their goods and riches,
				  consisting of cloth &#x0026; turquoises. They do not eat human flesh nor sacrifice
				  it. They are accustomed to keep very large snakes, which they venerate. Among
				  them there are men dressed like women who marry other men and serve as their
				  wives. At a great festival they consecrate the women who wish to live
				  unmarried, with much singing and dancing, at which all the chiefs of the
				  locality gather and dance naked, and after all have danced with her they put
				  her in a hut that has been decorated for this event and the chiefs adorn her
				  with clothes and bracelets of fine turquoises, and then the chiefs go in one by
				  one to lie with her, and all the others who wish, follow them. From this time
				  on these women cannot refuse anyone who pays them a certain amount agreed on
				  for this. Even if they take husbands, this does not exempt them from obliging
				  anyone who pays them. The greatest festivals are on market days. The custom is
				  for the husbands to buy the women whom they marry, of their fathers and
				  relatives, at a high price, and then to take them to a chief, who is considered
				  to be a priest, to deflower them and see if she is a virgin; and if she is not,
				  they have to return the whole price, and he can keep her for his wife or not,
				  or let her be consecrated, as he chooses. At these times they all get drunk.
				  </p>
				<p n="121">The second language is that of the Pacaxes, the people
				  who live in the country between the plains and the mountains. These people are
				  more barbarous. Some of them who live near the mountains eat human flesh. They
				  are great sodomites, &#x0026; have many wives, even when these are sisters. They
				  worship painted and sculptured stones, and are much given to witchcraft and
				  sorcery. </p>
				<p n="122">The third language is that of the Acaxes, who are in
				  possession of a large part of the hilly country and all of the mountains. They
				  go hunting for men just as they hunt animals. They all eat human flesh, and he
				  who has the most human bones and skulls hung up around his house is most feared
				  and respected. They live in settlements and in very rough country, avoiding the
				  plains. In passing from one settlement to another, there is always a ravine in
				  the way which they can not cross, although they can talk together across it. At
				  the slightest call 500 men collect, and on any pretext kill and eat one
				  another. Thus it has been very hard to subdue these people, on account of the
				  roughness of the country, which is very great. </p>
				<p n="123">Many rich silver mines have been found in this country.
				  They do not run deep, but soon give out. The gulf of the sea begins on the
				  coast of this province, entering the land 250 leagues toward the north and
				  ending at the mouth of the Firebrand (Tizon) River. This country forms its
				  eastern limit, and California the western. From what I have been told by men
				  who had navigated it, it is 30 leagues across from point to point, because they
				  lose sight of this country when they see the other. They say the gulf is over
				  150 leagues broad (or deep), from shore to shore. The coast makes a turn toward
				  the south at the Firebrand River, bending down to California, which turns
				  toward the west, forming that peninsula which was formerly held to be an
				  island, because it was a low sandy country. It is inhabited by brutish,
				  bestial, naked people who eat their own offal. The men and women couple like
				  animals, the female openly getting down on all fours. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter II. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of the province of Petlatlan and all the inhabited
					 country as far as Chichilticalli. 
				</head>
				<p n="125"><hi rend="all-caps">Petlatlan</hi>is a settlement of
				  houses covered with a sort of mats made of petates. These are collected into
				  villages, extending along a river from the mountains to the sea. The people are
				  of the same race and habits as the Culuacanian Tahues. There is much sodomy
				  among them. In the mountain district there is a large population &#x0026; more
				  settlements. These people have a somewhat different language from the Tahues,
				  although they understand each other. It is called Petlatlan because the houses
				  are made of petates or palm-leaf mats. Houses of this sort are found for more
				  than 240 leagues in this region, to the beginning of the Cibola wilderness. The
				  nature of the country changes here very greatly, because from this point on
				  there are no trees except the pine, nor are there any fruits except a few
				  tunas, mesquites, and pitahayas. </p>
				<p n="126">Petlatlan is 20 leagues from Culiacan, and it is 130
				  leagues from here to the valley of Senora. There are many rivers between the
				  two, with settlements of the same sort of people-for example, Sinaloa, Boyomo,
				  Teocomo, Yaquimi, and other smaller ones. There is also the Corazones or
				  Hearts, which is in our possession, down the valley of Senora. </p>
				<p n="127">Senora is a river and valley thickly settled by
				  able-bodied people. The women wear petticoats of tanned deerskin, and little
				  sanbenitos reaching half way down the body. The chiefs of the villages go up on
				  some little heights they have made for this purpose, like public criers, and
				  there make proclamations for the space of an hour, regulating those things they
				  have to attend to. They have some little huts for shrines, all over the outside
				  of which they stick many arrows, like a hedgehog. They do this when they are
				  eager for war. All about this province toward the mountains there is a large
				  population in separate little provinces containing ten or twelve villages.
				  Seven or eight of them, of which I know the names, are Comupatrico, Mochilagua,
				  Arispa, and the Little Valley. There are others which we did not see. </p>
				<p n="128">It is 40 leagues from Senora to the valley of Suya. The
				  town of Saint Jerome (San Hieronimo) was established in this valley, where
				  there was a rebellion later, and part of the people who had settled there were
				  killed, as will be seen in the third part. There are many villages in the
				  neighborhood of this valley. The people are the same as those in Senora and
				  have the same dress and language, habits, and customs, like all the rest as far
				  as the desert of Chichilticalli. The women paint their chins and eyes like the
				  Moorish women of Barbary. They are great sodomites. They drink wine made of the
				  pitahaya, which is the fruit of a great thistle which opens like the
				  pomegranate. The wine makes them stupid. They make a great quantity of
				  preserves from the tuna; they preserve it in a large amount of its sap without
				  other honey. They make bread of the mesquite, like cheese, which keeps good for
				  a whole year. There are native melons in this country so large that a person
				  can carry only one of them. They cut these into slices and dry them in the sun.
				  They are good to eat, and taste like figs, &#x0026; are better than dried meat;
				  they are very good and sweet, keeping for a whole year when prepared in this
				  way. </p>
				<p n="129">In this country there were also tame eagles, which the
				  chiefs esteemed to be something fine. No fowls of any sort were seen in any of
				  these villages except in this valley of Suya, where fowls like those of Castile
				  were found. Nobody could find out how they came to be so far inland, the people
				  being all at war with one another. Between Suya and Chichilticalli there are
				  many sheep &#x0026; mountain goats with very large bodies and horns. Some
				  Spaniards declare that they have seen flocks of more than a hundred together,
				  which ran so fast that they disappeared very quickly. </p>
				<p n="130">At Chichilticalli the country changes its character
				  again and the spiky vegetation ceases. The reason is that the gulf reaches as
				  far up as this place, and the mountain chain changes its direction at the same
				  time that the coast does. Here they had to cross and pass through the mountains
				  in order to get into the level country. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter III. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of Chichilticalli &#x0026; the desert, of Cibola, its
					 customs and habits, and of other things.
				</head>
				<p n="132">Chichilticalli is so called because the friars found a
				  house at this place which was formerly inhabited by people who separated from
				  Cibola. It was made of colored or reddish earth. The house was large and
				  appeared to have been a fortress. It must have been destroyed by the people of
				  the district, who are the most barbarous people that have yet been seen. They
				  live in separate cabins and not in settlements. They live by hunting. The rest
				  of the country is all wilderness, covered with pine forests. There are great
				  quantities of the pine nuts. The pines are two or three times as high as a man
				  before they send out branches. There is a sort of oak with sweet acorns, of
				  which they make cakes like sugar plums with dried coriander seeds. It is very
				  sweet, like sugar. Watercress grows in many springs, and there are rosebushes,
				  and penny-royal, and wild marjoram. There are barbels and picones, like those
				  of Spain, in the river of this wilderness. Gray lions and leopards were seen.
				  The country rises continually from the beginning of the wilderness until Cibola
				  is reached, which is 85 leagues, going north. From Culiacan to the edge of the
				  wilderness the route had kept the north on the left hand.</p>
				<p n="133">Cibola is seven villages. The largest is called Macaque.
				  The houses are ordinarily three or four stories high, but in Macaque there are
				  houses with four and seven stories. These people are very intelligent. They
				  cover their privy parts and all the immodest parts with cloths made like a sort
				  of table napkin, with fringed edges &#x0026; a tassel at each corner, which they
				  tie over the hips. They wear long robes of feathers and of the skins of hares
				  and cotton blankets. The women wear blankets, which they tie or knot over the
				  left shoulder leaving the right arm out. These serve to cover the body. They
				  wear a neat well-shaped outer garment of skin. They gather their hair over the
				  two ears, making a frame which looks like an old-fashioned headdress. This
				  country is in a valley between mountains in the form of isolated cliffs. They
				  cultivate the corn, which does not grow very high, in patches. There are three
				  or four large fat ears having each eight hundred grains on every stalk growing
				  upward from the ground, something not seen before in these parts. There are
				  large numbers of bears in this province, and lions, wild-cats, deer, and otter.
				  There are very fine turquoises, although not so many as was reported. They
				  collect the pine nuts each year, and store them up in advance. A man does not
				  have more than one wife. There are estufas or hot rooms in the villages, which
				  are the courtyards or places where they gather for consultation. They do not
				  have chiefs as in New Spain, but are ruled by a council of the oldest men. They
				  have priests who preach to them, whom they call "papas." These are the elders.
				  They go up on the highest roof of the village and preach to the village from
				  there, like public criers, in the morning while the sun is rising, the whole
				  village being silent &#x0026; sitting in the galleries to listen. They tell them
				  how they are to live, and I believe that they give certain commandments for
				  them to keep, for there is no drunkenness among them nor sodomy nor sacrifices,
				  neither do they eat human flesh nor steal, but they are usually at work. The
				  estufas belong to the whole village. It is a sacrilege for the women to go into
				  the estufas to sleep. They make the cross as a sign of peace. They burn their
				  dead, and throw the implements used in their work into the fire with the
				  bodies. </p>
				<p n="134">It is 20 leagues to Tusayan, going northwest. This is a
				  province with seven villages, of the same sort, dress, habits, and ceremonies
				  as at Cibola. There may be as many as 3,000 or 4,000 men in the fourteen
				  villages of these two provinces. It is 40 leagues or more to Tiguex, the road
				  trending toward the north. The rock of Acuco, which we described in the first
				  part, is between these. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter IV. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how they live at Tiguex, &#x0026; of the province of
					 Tiguex and its neighborhood.
				</head>
				<p n="136"><hi rend="all-caps">Tiguex</hi>is a province with
				  twelve villages on the banks of a large, swift river; some villages on one side
				  and some on the other. It is a spacious valley two leagues wide, &#x0026; a very
				  high, rough, snow-covered mountain chain lies east of it. There are seven
				  villages in the ridges at the foot of this-four on the plain and three situated
				  on the skirts of the mountain. </p>
				<p n="137">There are seven villages seven leagues to the north
				  [i.e. of Tiguex ] at Quirix, and the seven villages of the province of Hemes
				  are 40 leagues northeast. It is four leagues north or east to Acha. Tutahaco, a
				  province with eight villages, is toward the southeast. In general, these
				  villages all have the same habits &#x0026; customs, although some have some things
				  in particular which the others have not. They are governed by the opinions of
				  the elders. They all work together to build the villages, the women being
				  engaged in making the mixture and the walls, while the men bring the wood and
				  put it in place. They have no lime, but they make a mixture of ashes, coals,
				  and dirt which is almost as good as mortar, for when the house is to have four
				  stories, they do not make the walls more than half a yard thick. They gather a
				  great pile of twigs of thyme and sedge grass and set it afire, and when it is
				  half coals and ashes they throw a quantity of dirt and water on it and mix it
				  all together. They make round balls of this, which they use instead of stones
				  after they are dry, fixing them with the same mixture, which comes to be like a
				  stiff clay. Before they are married the young men serve the whole village in
				  general, and fetch the wood that is needed for use, putting it in a pile in the
				  courtyard of the villages, from which the women take it to carry to their
				  houses. </p>
				<p n="138">The young men live in the estufas, which are in the
				  yards of the village. They are underground, square or round, with pine pillars.
				  Some were seen with twelve pillars and with four in the center as large as two
				  men could stretch around. They usually had three or four pillars. The floor was
				  made of large, smooth stones, like the baths which they have in Europe. They
				  have a hearth made like the binnacle or compass box of a ship, in which they
				  burn a handful of thyme at a time to keep up the heat, and they can stay in
				  there just as in a bath. The top was on a level with the ground. Some that were
				  seen were large enough for a game of ball. When any man wishes to marry, it has
				  to be arranged by those who govern. The man has to spin and weave a blanket
				  &#x0026; place it before the woman, who covers herself with it and becomes his
				  wife. The houses belong to the women, the estufas to the men. If a man
				  repudiates his woman, he has to go to the estufa. It is forbidden for women to
				  sleep in the estufas, or to enter these for any purpose except to give their
				  husbands or sons something to eat. The men spin &#x0026; weave. The women bring up
				  the children and prepare the food. The country is so fertile that they do not
				  have to break up the ground the year round, but only have to sow the seed,
				  which is presently covered by the fall of snow, and the ears come up under the
				  snow. In one year they gather enough for seven. A very large number of cranes
				  &#x0026; wild geese and crows &#x0026; starlings live on what is sown, and for all
				  this, when they come to sow for another year, the fields are covered with corn
				  which they have not been able to finish gathering. There are a great many
				  native fowl in these provinces, and cocks with great hanging chins. When dead,
				  these keep for sixty days, and longer in winter, without losing their feathers
				  or opening, and without any bad smell, and the same is true of dead men. The
				  villages are free from nuisances, because they go outside to excrete, and they
				  pass their water into clay vessels, which they empty at a distance from the
				  village. </p>
				<p n="139">They keep the separate houses where they prepare the
				  food for eating and where they grind the meal, very clean. This is a separate
				  room or closet, where they have a trough with three stones fixed in stiff clay.
				  Three women go in here, each one having a stone, with which one of them breaks
				  the corn, the next grinds it, and the third grinds it again. They take off
				  their shoes, do up their hair, shake their clothes, &#x0026; cover their heads
				  before they enter the door. A man sits at the door playing on a fife while they
				  grind, moving the stones to the music and singing together. They grind a large
				  quantity at one time, because they make all their bread of meal soaked in warm
				  water, like wafers. They gather a great quantity of brushwood and dry it to use
				  for cooking all through the year. There are no fruits good to eat in the
				  country, except the pine nuts. They have their preachers. Sodomy is not found
				  among them. They do not eat human flesh nor make sacrifices of it. The people
				  are not cruel, for they had Francisco de Ovando in Tiguex about forty days,
				  after he was dead, and when the village was captured, he was found among their
				  dead, whole and without any other wound except the one which killed him, white
				  as snow, without any bad smell. I found out several things about them from one
				  of our Indians, who had been a captive among them for a whole year. I asked him
				  especially for the reason why the young women in that province went entirely
				  naked, however cold it might be, and he told me that the virgins had to go
				  around this way until they took a husband, and that they covered themselves
				  after they had known man. The men here wear little shirts of tanned deerskin
				  &#x0026; their long robes over this. In all these provinces they have earthenware
				  glazed with antimony and jars of extraordinary labor and workmanship, which
				  were worth seeing. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter V. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of Cicuye and the villages in its neighborhood, and of
					 how some people came to conquer this country.
				</head>
				<p n="141"><hi rend="all-caps">We</hi>have already said that the
				  people of Tiguex and of all the provinces on the banks of that river were all
				  alike, having the same ways of living and the same customs. It will not be
				  necessary to say anything particular about them. I wish merely to give an
				  account of Cicuye &#x0026; some depopulated villages which the army saw on the
				  direct road which it followed thither, and of others that were across the snowy
				  mountains near Tiguex, which also lay in that region above the river. </p>
				<p n="142">Cicuye is a village of nearly 500 warriors, who are
				  feated throughout that country. It is square, situated on a rock, with a large
				  court or yard in the middle, containing the estufas. The houses are all alike,
				  four stories high. One can go over the top of the whole village without there
				  being a street to hinder. There are corridors going all around it at the first
				  two stories, by which one can go around the whole village. These are like
				  outside balconies, and they are able to protect themselves under these. The
				  houses do not have doors below, but they use ladders, which can be lifted up
				  like a drawbridge, and so go up to the corridors which are on the inside of the
				  village. As the doors of the houses open on the corridor of that story, the
				  corridor serves as a street. The houses that open on the plain are right back
				  of those that open on the court, and in time of war they go through those
				  behind them. The village is inclosed by a low wall of stone. There is a spring
				  of water inside, which they are able to divert. The people of this village
				  boast that no one has been able to conquer them &#x0026; that they conquer
				  whatever villages they wish. The people &#x0026; their customs are like those of
				  the other villages. Their virgins also go nude until they take husbands,
				  because they say that if they do anything wrong then it will be seen, &#x0026; so
				  they do not do it. They do not need to be ashamed because they go around as
				  they were born. </p>
				<p n="143">There is a village, small and strong, between Cicuye and
				  the province of Quirix, which the Spaniards named Ximena, and another village
				  almost deserted, only one part of which is inhabited. This was a large village,
				  and judging from its condition and newness it appeared to have been destroyed.
				  They called this the village of the granaries or silos, because large
				  underground cellars were found here stored with corn. There was another large
				  village farther on, entirely destroyed and pulled down, in the yards of which
				  there were many stone balls, as big as twelve-quart bowls, which seemed to have
				  been thrown by engines or catapults, which had destroyed the village. All that
				  I was able to find out about them was that, sixteen years before, some people
				  called Teyas, had come to this country in great numbers and had destroyed these
				  villages. They had besieged Cicuye but had not been able to capture it, because
				  it was strong, and when they left the region, they had made peace with the
				  whole country. It seems as if they must have been a powerful people, and that
				  they must have had engines to knock down the villages. The only thing they
				  could tell about the direction these people came from was by pointing toward
				  the north. They usually call these people Teyas or brave men, just as the
				  Mexicans say chichimecas or braves, for the Teyas whom the army saw were brave.
				  These knew the people in the settlements, and were friendly with them, and they
				  (the Teyas of the plains) went there to spend the winter under the wings of the
				  settlements. The inhabitants do not dare to let them come inside, because they
				  can not trust them. Although they are received as friends, and trade with them,
				  they do not stay in the villages over night, but outside under the wings. The
				  villages are guarded by sentinels with trumpets, who call to one another just
				  as in the fortresses of Spain. There are seven other villages along this route,
				  toward the snowy mountains, one of which has been half destroyed by the people
				  already referred to. These were under the rule of Cicuye. Cicuye is in a little
				  valley between mountain chains and mountains covered with large pine forests.
				  There is a little stream which contains very good trout and otters, and there
				  are very large bears and good falcons hereabouts. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VI. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Which gives the number of villages which were seen in
					 the country of the terraced houses, &#x0026; their population.
				</head>
				<p n="145"><hi rend="all-caps">Before</hi>I proceed to speak of
				  the plains, with the cows and settlements and tribes there, it seems to me that
				  it will be well for the reader to know how large the settlements were, where
				  the houses with stories, gathered into villages, were seen, and how great an
				  extent of country they occupied. As I say, Cibola is the first: 
				  <q rend="blockquote" direct="unspecified">Cibola, seven villages.
					 Tusayan, seven villages. The rock of Acuco, one. Tiguex, twelve villages. These
					 villages were below the river. Quirix, seven villages. In the snowy mountains,
					 seven villages. Ximena, three villages. Cicuye, one village. Hemes, seven
					 villages. Aguas Calientes, or Boiling Springs, three villages. Yuqueyunque, in
					 the mountains, six villages. Valladolid, called Braba, one village.</q>Chia,
				  one village. In all, there are sixty-six villages. Tiguex appears to be in the
				  center of the villages. Valladolid is the farthest up the river toward the
				  northeast. The four villages down the river are toward the southeast, because
				  the river turns toward the east. It is 130 leagues-10 more or less-from the
				  farthest point that was seen down the river to the farthest point up the river,
				  and all the settlements are within this region. Including those at a distance,
				  there are sixty-six villages in all, as I have said, and in all of them there
				  may be some 20,000 men, which may be taken to be a fair estimate of the
				  population of the villages. There are no houses or other buildings between one
				  village and another, but where we went it is entirely uninhabited. These
				  people, since they are few, and their manners, government, and habits are so
				  different from all the nations that have been seen and discovered in these
				  western regions, must come from that part of Greater India, the coast of which
				  lies to the west of this country, for they could have come down the river,
				  settling in what seemed to them the best place. As they multiplied, they kept
				  on making settlements until they lost the river when it buried itself
				  underground, its course being in the direction of Florida. It comes down from
				  the northeast, where they could certainly have found signs of villages. He
				  preferred, however, to follow the reports of the Turk, but it would have been
				  better to cross the mountains where this river rises. I believe they would have
				  found traces of riches and would have reached the lands from which these people
				  started, which from its location is on the edge of Greater India, although the
				  region is neither known nor understood, because from the trend of the coast it
				  appears that the land between Norway and China is very far up. The country from
				  sea to sea is very wide, judging from the location of both coasts, as well as
				  from what Captain Villalobos discovered when he went in search of China by the
				  sea to the west, and from what has been discovered on the North Sea concerning
				  the trend of the coast of Florida toward the Bacallaos, up toward Norway. </p>
				<p n="146">To return then to the proposition with which I began, I
				  say that the settlements and people already named were all that were seen in a
				  region 70 leagues wide and 130 long, in the settled country along the river
				  Tiguex . In New Spain there are not one but many establishments, containing a
				  larger number of people. Silver metals were found in many of their villages,
				  which they use for glazing and painting their earthenware. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Which treats of the plains that were crossed, of the
					 cows, and of the people who inhabit them.
				</head>
				<p n="148"><hi rend="all-caps">We have</hi>spoken of the
				  settlements of high houses which are situated in what seems to be the most
				  level and open part of the mountains, since it is 150 leagues across before
				  entering the level country between the two mountain chains which I said were
				  near the North Sea and the South Sea, which might better be called the Western
				  Sea along this coast. This mountain series is the one which is near the South
				  Sea. In order to show that the settlements are in the middle of the mountains,
				  I will state that it is 80 leagues from Chichilticalli, where we began to cross
				  this country, to Cibola; from Cibola, which is the first village, to Cicuye,
				  which is the last on the way across, is 70 leagues; it is 30 leagues from
				  Cicuye to where the plains begin. It may be we went across in an indirect or
				  roundabout way, which would make it seem as if there was more country than if
				  it had been crossed in a direct line, and it may be more difficult and rougher.
				  This can not be known certainly, because the mountains change their direction
				  above the bay at the mouth of the Firebrand (Tizon) River. </p>
				<p n="149">Now we will speak of the plains. The country is spacious
				  and level, and is more than 400 leagues wide in the part between the two
				  mountain ranges-one, that which Francisco Vazquez de Coronado crossed, and the
				  other that which the force under Don Fernando de Soto crossed, near the North
				  Sea, entering the country from Florida. No settlements were seen anywhere on
				  these plains. </p>
				<p n="150">In traversing 250 leagues, the other mountain range was
				  not seen, nor a hill nor a hillock which was three times as high as a man.
				  Several lakes were found at intervals; they were round as plates, a stone's
				  throw or more across, some fresh and some salt. The grass grows tall near these
				  lakes; away from them it is very short, a span or less. The country is like a
				  bowl, so that when a man sits down, the horizon surrounds him all around at the
				  distance of a musket shot. There are no groves of trees except at the rivers,
				  which flow at the bottom of some ravines where the trees grow so thick that
				  they were not noticed until one was right on the edge of them. They are of dead
				  earth. There are paths down into these, made by the cows when they go to the
				  water, which is essential throughout these plains. </p>
				<p n="151">As I have related in the first part, people follow the
				  cows, hunting them and tanning the skins to take to the settlements in the
				  winter to sell, since they go there to pass the winter, each company going to
				  those which are nearest, some to the settlements at Cicuye, others toward
				  Quivira, and others to the settlements which are situated in the direction of
				  Florida. These people are called Querechos and Teyas. They described some large
				  settlements, and judging from what was seen of these people and from the
				  accounts they gave of other places, there are a good many more of these people
				  than there are of those at the settlements. They have better figures, are
				  better warriors, and are more feared. They travel like the Arabs, with their
				  tents and troops of dogs loaded with poles and having Moorish pack saddles with
				  girths. When the load gets disarranged, the dogs howl, calling some one to fix
				  them right. These people eat raw flesh and drink blood. They do not eat human
				  flesh. They are a kind people and not cruel. They are faithful friends. They
				  are able to make themselves very well understood by means of signs. They dry
				  the flesh in the sun, cutting it thin like a leaf, and when dry they grind it
				  like meal to keep it and make a sort of sea soup of it to eat. A handful thrown
				  into a pot swells up so as to increase very much. They season it with fat,
				  which they always try to secure when they kill a cow. They empty a large gut
				  and fill it with blood, and carry this around the neck to drink when they are
				  thirsty. When they open the belly of a cow, they squeeze out the chewed grass
				  and drink the juice that remains behind, because they say that this contains
				  the essence of the stomach. They cut the hide open at the back and pull it off
				  at the joints, using a flint as large as a finger, tied in a little stick, with
				  as much ease as if working with a good iron tool. They give it an edge with
				  their own teeth. The quickness with which they do this is something worth
				  seeing and noting. </p>
				<p n="152">There are very great numbers of wolves on these plains,
				  which go around with the cows. They have white skins. The deer are pied with
				  white. Their skin is loose, so that when they are killed it can be pulled off
				  with the hand while warm, coming off like pigskin. The rabbits, which are very
				  numerous, are so foolish that those on horseback killed them with their lances.
				  This is when they are mounted among the cows. They fly from a person on foot.
				  </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VIII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of Quivira, of where it is and some information about
					 it. 
				</head>
				<p n="154"><hi rend="all-caps">Quivira</hi>is to the west of those
				  ravines, in the midst of the country, somewhat nearer the mountains toward the
				  sea, for the country is level as far as Quivira, and there they began to see
				  some mountain chains. The country is well settled. Judging from what was seen
				  on the borders of it, this country is very similar to that of Spain in the
				  varieties of vegetation and fruits. There are plums like those of Castile,
				  grapes, nuts, mulberries, oats, pennyroyal, wild marjoram, and large quantities
				  of flax, but this does not do them any good, because they do not know how to
				  use it. The people are of almost the same sort and appearance as the Teyas.
				  They have villages like those in New Spain. The houses are round, without a
				  wall, and they have one story like a loft, under the roof, where they sleep and
				  keep their belongings. The roofs are of straw. There are other thickly settled
				  provinces around it containing large numbers of men. A friar named Juan de
				  Padilla remained in this province, together with a Spanish-Portuguese and a
				  negro and a half-blood and some Indians from the province of Capothan, in New
				  Spain. They killed the friar because he wanted to go to the province of the
				  Guas, who were their enemies. The Spaniard escaped by taking flight on a mare,
				  and afterward reached New Spain, coming out by way of Panuco. The Indians from
				  New Spain who accompanied the friar were allowed by the murderers to bury him,
				  and then they followed the Spaniard and overtook him. This Spaniard was a
				  Portuguese, named Campo. </p>
				<p n="155">The great river of the Holy Spirit (Espiritu Santo),
				  which Don Fernando de Soto discovered in the country of Florida, flows through
				  this country. It passes through a province called Arache, according to the
				  reliable accounts which were obtained here. The sources were not visited,
				  because, according to what they said, it comes from a very distant country in
				  the mountains of the South Sea, from the part that sheds its waters onto the
				  plains. It flows across all the level country and breaks through the mountains
				  of the North Sea, and comes out where the people with Don Fernando de Soto
				  navigated it. This is more than 300 leagues from where it enters the sea. On
				  account of this, and also because it has large tributaries, it is so mighty
				  when it enters the sea that they lost sight of the land before the water ceased
				  to be fresh. </p>
				<p n="156">This country of Quivira was the last that was seen, of
				  which I am able to give any description or information. Now it is proper for me
				  to return and speak of the army, which I left in Tiguex, resting for the
				  winter, so that it would be able to proceed or return in search of these
				  settlements of Quivira, which was not accomplished after all, because it was
				  God's pleasure that these discoveries should remain for other peoples and that
				  we who had been there should content ourselves with saying that we were the
				  first who discovered it and obtained any information concerning it, just as
				  Hercules knew the site where Julius Caesar was to found Seville or Hispales.
				  May the all-powerful Lord grant that His will be done in everything. it is
				  certain that if this had not been His will Francisco Vazquez would not have
				  returned to New Spain without cause or reason, as he did, and that it would not
				  have been left for those with Don Fernando de Soto to settle such a good
				  country, as they have done, and besides settling it to increase its extent,
				  after obtaining, as they did, information from our army. </p>
			 </div2>
		  </div1>
		  <div1>
			 <head type="main" rend="bold">Part III></head><head type="sub" rend="bold">Which describes what happened to Francisco
  Vasquez de Coronado during the winter, &#x0026; how he gave up the expedition and
  returned to New Spain. LAUS DEO</head>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter I.</head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				Of how Don Pedro de Tovar came from Senora with some
					 men, &#x0026; Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas started back to New Spain. 
				</head>
				<p n="158"><hi rend="all-caps">At the</hi>end of the first part of
				  this book, we told how Francisco Vazquez de Coronado, when he got back from
				  Quivira, gave orders to winter at Tiguex, in order to return, when the winter
				  was over, with his whole army to discover all the settlements in those regions.
				  Don Pedro de Tovar, who had gone, as we related, to conduct a force from the
				  city of Saint Jerome (San Hieronimo), arrived in the meantime with the men whom
				  he had brought. He had not selected the rebels and seditious men there, but the
				  most experienced ones and the best soldiers-men whom he could trust-wisely
				  considering that he ought to have good men in order to go in search of his
				  general in the country of the Indian called Turk. </p>
				<p n="159">Although they found the army at Tiguex when they arrived
				  there, this did not please them much, because they had come with great
				  expectations, believing that they would find their general in the rich country
				  of the Indian called Turk. They consoled themselves with the hope of going back
				  there, and lived in anticipation of the pleasure of undertaking this return
				  expedition, which the army would soon make to Quivira. Don Pedro de Tovar
				  brought letters from New Spain, both from the viceroy, Don Antonio de Mendoza,
				  and from individuals. Among these was one from Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas,
				  which informed him of the death of his brother, the heir, and summoned him to
				  Spain to receive the inheritance. On this account he was given permission, and
				  left Tiguex with several other persons who received permission to go and settle
				  their affairs. There were many others who would have liked to go, but did not,
				  in order not to appear faint-hearted. During this time the general endeavored
				  to pacify several villages in the neighborhood which were not well disposed,
				  and to make peace with the people at Tiguex . He tried also to procure some of
				  the cloth of the country, because the soldiers were almost naked and poorly
				  clothed, full of lice, which they were unable to get rid of or avoid. </p>
				<p n="160">The general, Francisco Vazquez de Coronado, had been
				  beloved and obeyed by his captains and soldiers as heartily as any of those who
				  have ever started out in the Indies. Necessity knows no law, and the captains
				  who collected the cloth divided it badly, taking the best for themselves and
				  their friends and soldiers, and leaving the rest for the soldiers, and so there
				  began to be some angry murmuring on account of this. Others also complained
				  because they noticed that some favored ones were spared in the work and in the
				  watches and received better portions of what was divided, both of cloth and
				  food. On this account it is thought that they began to say that there was
				  nothing in the country of Quivira which was worth returning for, which was no
				  slight cause of what afterward happened, as will be seen. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter II. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of the general's fall, and how the return to New Spain
					 was ordered.
				</head>
				<p n="162"><hi rend="all-caps">After</hi>the winter was over, the
				  return to Quivira was announced, and the men began to prepare the things
				  needed. Since nothing in this life is at the disposition of men, but all is
				  under the ordination of Almighty God, it was His will that we should not
				  accomplish this, and so it happened that one feast day the general went out on
				  horseback to amuse himself, as usual, riding with the Captain Don Rodrigo
				  Maldonado. He was on a powerful horse, and his servants had put on a new girth,
				  which must have been rotten at the time, for it broke during the race and he
				  fell over on the side where Don Rodrigo was, and as his horse passed over him
				  it hit his head with its hoof, which laid him at the point of death, and his
				  recovery was slow and doubtful. During this time, while he was in his bed, Don
				  Garcia Lopez de Cardenas, who had started to go to New Spain, came back in
				  flight from Suya, because he had found that town deserted and the people and
				  horses and cattle all dead. When he reached Tiguex and learned the sad news
				  that the general was near his end, as already related, they did not dare to
				  tell him until he had recovered, and when he finally got up and learned of it,
				  it affected him so much that he had to go back to bed again. He may have done
				  this in order to bring about what he afterward accomplished, as was believed
				  later. </p>
				<p n="163">It was while he was in this condition that he
				  recollected what a scientific friend of his in Salamanca had told him, that he
				  would become a powerful lord in distant lands, and that he would have a fall
				  from which he would never be able to recover. This expectation of death made
				  him desire to return and die where he had a wife and children. As the physician
				  and surgeon who was doctoring him, and also acted as a tablebearer, suppressed
				  the murmurings that were going about among the soldiers, he treated secretly
				  and underhandedly with several gentlemen who agreed with him. They set the
				  soldiers to talking about going back to New Spain, in little knots and
				  gatherings, and induced them to hold consultations about it, and had them send
				  papers to the general, signed by all the soldiers, through their ensigns,
				  asking for this. They all entered into it readily, and not much time needed to
				  be spent, since many desired it already. When they asked him, the general acted
				  as if he did not want to do it, but all the gentlemen and captains supported
				  them, giving him their signed opinions, and as some were in this, they could
				  give it at once, and they even persuaded others to do the same. </p>
				<p n="164">Thus they made it seem as if they ought to return to New
				  Spain, because they had not found any riches, nor had they discovered any
				  settled country out of which estates could be formed for all the army. When he
				  had obtained their signatures, the return to New Spain was at once announced,
				  and since nothing can ever be concealed, the double dealing began to be
				  understood, and many of the gentlemen found that they had been deceived and had
				  made a mistake. They tried in every way to get their signatures back again from
				  the general, who guarded them so carefully that he did not go out of one room,
				  making his sickness seem very much worse, and putting guards about his person
				  and room, and at night about the floor on which he slept. In spite of all this,
				  they stole his chest, and it is said that they did not find their signatures in
				  it, because he kept them in his mattress; on the other hand, it is said that
				  they did recover them. They asked the general to give them 60 picked men, with
				  whom they would remain and hold the country until the viceroy could send them
				  support, or recall them, or else that the general would leave them the army and
				  pick out 60 men to go back with him. But the soldiers did not want to remain
				  either way, some because they had turned their prow toward New Spain, and
				  others because they saw clearly the trouble that would arise over who should
				  have the command. The gentlemen, I do not know whether because they had sworn
				  fidelity or because they feared that the soldiers would not support them, did
				  what had been decided on, although with an ill-will, and from this time on they
				  did not obey the general as readily as formerly, and they did not show any
				  affection for him. He made much of the soldiers and humored them, with the
				  result that he did what he desired and secured the return of the whole army.
				  </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter III. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of the rebellion at Suya and the reasons the settlers
					 gave for it. 
				</head>
				<p n="166"><hi rend="all-caps">We have</hi>already stated in the
				  last chapter that Don Garcia Lopez de Cardenas came back from Suya in flight,
				  having found that country risen in rebellion. He told how and why that town was
				  deserted, which occurred as I will relate. The entirely worthless fellows were
				  all who had been left in that town, the mutinous and seditious men, besides a
				  few who were honored with the charge of public affairs and who were left to
				  govern the others. Thus the bad dispositions of the worthless secured the
				  power, and they held daily meetings and councils and declared that they had
				  been betrayed and were not going to be rescued, since the others had been
				  directed to go through another part of the country, where there was a more
				  convenient route to New Spain, which was not so because they were still almost
				  on the direct road. This talk led some of them to revolt, and they chose one
				  Pedro de Avila as their captain. </p>
				<p n="167">They went back to Culiacan, leaving the captain, Diego
				  de Alcaraz, sick in the town of San Hieronimo, with only a small force. He did
				  not have anyone whom he could send after them to compel them to return. They
				  killed a number of people at several villages along the way. Finally they
				  reached Culiacan, where Hernandarias de Saabedra, who was waiting for Juan
				  Gallego to come back from New Spain with a force, detained them by means of
				  promises, so that Gallego could take them back. Some who feared what might
				  happen to them ran away one night to New Spain. Diego de Alcaraz, who had
				  remained at Suya with a small force, sick, was not able to hold his position,
				  although he would have liked to, on account of the poisonous herb which the
				  natives use. When these noticed how weak the Spaniards were, they did not
				  continue to trade with them as they formerly had done. Veins of gold had
				  already been discovered before this, but they were unable to work these,
				  because the country was at war. The disturbance was so great that they did not
				  cease to keep watch and to be more than usually careful. </p>
				<p n="168">The town was situated on a little river. One night all
				  of a sudden they saw fires which they were not accustomed to, and on this
				  account they doubled the watches, but not having noticed anything during the
				  whole night, they grew careless along toward morning, and the enemy entered the
				  village so silently that they were not seen until they began to kill and
				  plunder. A number of men reached the plain as well as they could, but while
				  they were getting out the captain was mortally wounded. Several Spaniards came
				  back on some horses after they had recovered themselves and attacked the enemy,
				  rescuing some, though only a few. The enemy went off with the booty, leaving
				  three Spaniards killed, besides many of the servants and more than twenty
				  horses. </p>
				<p n="169">The Spaniards who survived started off the same day on
				  foot, not having any horses. They went toward Culiacan, keeping away from the
				  roads, and did not find any food until they reached Corazones, where the
				  Indians, like the good friends they have always been, provided them with food.
				  From here they continued to Culiacan, undergoing great hardships. Hernandarias
				  de Saabedra, the mayor, received them and entertained them as well as he could
				  until Juan Gallego arrived with the reinforcements which he was conducting, on
				  his way to find the army. He was not a little troubled at finding that post
				  deserted, when he expected that the army would be in the rich country which had
				  been described by the Indian called Turk, because he looked like one. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter IV. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how Friar Juan de Padilla &#x0026; Friar Luis remained
					 in the country &#x0026; the army prepared to return to Mexico. 
				</head>
				<p n="171"><hi rend="all-caps">When</hi>the general, Francisco
				  Vazquez, saw that everything was now quiet, and that his schemes had gone as he
				  wished, he ordered that everything should be ready to start on the return to
				  New Spain by the beginning of the month of April, in the year 1543. </p>
				<p n="172">Seeing this, Friar Juan de Padilla, a regular brother of
				  the lesser order, and another, Friar Luis, a lay brother, told the general that
				  they wanted to remain in that country-Friar Juan de Padilla in Quivira, because
				  his teachings seemed to promise fruit there, and Friar Luis at Cicuye. On this
				  account, as it was Lent at the time, the father made this the subject of this
				  sermon to the companies one Sunday, establishing his proposition on the
				  authority of the Holy Scriptures. He declared his zeal for the conversion of
				  these peoples and his desire to draw them to the faith, and stated that he had
				  received permission to do it, although this was not necessary. The general sent
				  a company to escort them as far as Cicuye, where Friar Luis stopped, while
				  Friar Juan went on back to Quivira with the guides who had conducted the
				  general, taking with him the Portuguese, as we related, and the half-blood, and
				  the Indians from New Spain. He was martyred a short time after he arrived
				  there, as we related in the second part, chapter 8. Thus we may be sure that he
				  died a martyr, because his zeal was holy and earnest. Friar Luis remained at
				  Cicuye. Nothing more than has been heard about him since, but before the army
				  left Tiguex some men who went to take him a number of sheep that were left for
				  him to keep, met him as he was on his way to visit some other villages, which
				  were 15 or 20 leagues from Cicuye, accompanied by some followers. he felt very
				  hopeful that he was liked at the village and that his teachings would bear
				  fruit, although he complained that the old men were falling away from him. I,
				  for my part, believe that as he was a man of good and holy life, Our Lord will
				  protect him and give him grace to convert many of those peoples, and end his
				  days in guiding them in the faith. We do not need to believe otherwise, for the
				  people in those parts are pious and not at all cruel. They are friends, or
				  rather, enemies of cruelty, and they remain faithful and loyal friends. After
				  the friars had gone, the general, fearing that they might be injured if people
				  were carried away from that country to New Spain, ordered the soldiers to let
				  any of the natives who were held as servants go free to their villages whenever
				  they might wish. In my opinion, though I am not sure, it would have been better
				  if they had been kept and taught among Christians. The general was very happy
				  and contented when the time arrived and everything needed for the journey was
				  ready, and the army started from Tiguex on its way back to Cibola. One thing of
				  no small note happened during this part of the trip. The horses were in good
				  condition for their work when they started, fat and sleek, but more than thirty
				  died during the ten days which it took to reach Cibola, and there was not a day
				  in which two or three or more did not die. A large number of them also died
				  afterward before reaching Culiacan, a thing that did not happen during all the
				  rest of the journey. </p>
				<p n="173">After the army reached Cibola, it rested before starting
				  across the wilderness, because this was the last of the settlements in that
				  country. The whole country was left well disposed and at peace, and several of
				  our Indian allies remained there. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter V. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how the army left the settlements and marched to
					 Culiacan, and of what happened on the way. 
				</head>
				<p n="175"><hi rend="all-caps">Leaving</hi>astern, as we might
				  say, the settlements that had been discovered in the new land, of which, as I
				  have said, the seven villages of Cibola were the first to be seen and the last
				  that were left, the army started off, marching across the wilderness. The
				  natives kept following the rear of the army for two or three days, to pick up
				  any baggage or servants, for although they were still at peace and had always
				  been loyal friends, when they saw that we were going to leave the country
				  entirely, they were glad to get some of our people in their power, although I
				  do not think that they wanted to injure them, from what I was told by some who
				  were not willing to go back with them when they teased and asked them to.
				  Altogether, they carried off several people besides those who had remained of
				  their own accord, among whom good interpreters could be found today. </p>
				<p n="176">The wilderness was crossed without opposition, and on
				  the second day before reaching Chichilticalli Juan Gallego met the army, as he
				  was coming from New Spain with re-enforcements of men and necessary supplies
				  for the army, expecting that he would find the army in the country of the
				  Indian called Turk. When Juan Gallego saw that the army was returning, the
				  first thing he said was not, "I am glad you are coming back," and he did not
				  like it any better after he had talked with the general. After he had reached
				  the army, or rather the quarters, there was quite a little movement among the
				  gentlemen toward going back with the new force which had made no slight
				  exertions in coming thus far, having encounters every day with the Indians of
				  these regions who had risen in revolt, as will be related. There was talk of
				  making a settlement somewhere in that region until the viceroy could receive an
				  account of what had occurred. These soldiers who had come from the new lands
				  would not agree to anything except the return to New Spain, so that nothing
				  came of the proposals made at the consultations, and although there was some
				  opposition, they were finally quieted. Several of the mutineers who had
				  deserted the town of Corazones came with Juan Gallego, who had given them his
				  word as surety for their safety, and even if the general had wanted to punish
				  them, his power was slight, for he had been disobeyed already and was not much
				  respected. He began to be afraid again after this, and made himself sick, and
				  kept a guard. </p>
				<p n="177">In several places yells were heard and Indians seen, and
				  some of the horses were wounded and killed, before Batuco was reached, where
				  the friendly Indians from Corazones came to meet the army and see the general.
				  They were always friendly and had treated all the Spaniards who passed through
				  their country well, furnishing them with what food they needed, and men, if
				  they needed these. Our men had always treated them well and repaid them for
				  these things. During this journey the juice of the quince was proved to be a
				  good protection against the poison of the natives, because at one place,
				  several days before reaching Senora, the hostile Indians wounded a Spaniard
				  called Mesa, and he did not die, although the wound of the fresh poison is
				  fatal, and there was a delay of over two hours before curing him with the
				  juice. The poison, however, had left its mark upon him. The skin rotted and
				  fell off until it left the bones and sinews bare, with a horrible smell. The
				  wound was in the wrist, and the poison had reached as far as the shoulder when
				  he was cured. The skin on all this fell off. </p>
				<p n="178">The army proceeded without taking any rest, because the
				  provisions had begun to fail by this time. These districts were in rebellion,
				  and so there were not any victuals where the soldiers could get them until they
				  reached Petlatlan, although they made several forays into the cross country in
				  search of provisions. Petlatlan is in the province of Culiacan, and on this
				  account was at peace, although they had several surprises after this. The army
				  rested here several days to get provisions. After leaving here they were able
				  to travel more quickly than before, through the 30 leagues of the valley of
				  Culiacan, where they were welcomed back again as people who came with their
				  governor, who had suffered ill treatment. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VI. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Of how the general started from Culiacan to give the
					 viceroy an account of the army with which he had been entrusted. 
				</head>
				<p n="180"><hi rend="all-caps">It seemed</hi>, indeed, as if the
				  arrival in the valley of Culiacan had ended the labors of this journey, partly
				  because the general was governor there and partly because it was inhabited by
				  Christians. On this account some began to disregard their superiors and the
				  authority which their captains had over them, and some captains even forgot the
				  obedience due to their general. Each one played his own game, so that while the
				  general was marching toward the town, which was still 10 leagues away, many of
				  the men, or most of them, left him in order to rest in the valley, and some
				  even proposed not to follow him. The general understood that he was not strong
				  enough to compel them, although his position as governor gave him fresh
				  authority. He determined to accomplish it by a better method, which was to
				  order all the captains to provide food and meat from the stores of several
				  villages that were under his control as governor. He pretended to be sick,
				  keeping his bed, so that those who had any business with him could speak to him
				  or he with them more freely, without hindrance or observation, and he kept
				  sending for his particular friends in order to ask them to be sure to speak to
				  the soldiers and encourage them to accompany him back to New Spain, and to tell
				  them that he would request the viceroy, Don Antonio de Mendoza, to show them
				  especial favor, and that he would do so himself for those who might wish to
				  remain in his government. After this had been done, he started with his army at
				  a very bad time, when the rains were beginning, for it was about Saint John's
				  day, at which season it rains continuously. In the uninhabited country which
				  they passed through as far as Compostela there are numerous, very dangerous
				  rivers, full of large and fierce alligators. While the army was halting at one
				  of these rivers, a soldier who was crossing from one side to the other was
				  seized, in sight of everybody, and carried off by an alligator without it being
				  possible to help him. The general proceeded, leaving the men who did not want
				  to follow him all along the way, and reached Mexico with fewer than 100 men. He
				  made his report to the viceroy, Don Antonio de Mendoza, who did not receive him
				  very graciously, although he gave him his discharge. His reputation was gone
				  from this time on. He kept the government of New Galicia, which had been
				  entrusted to him, for only a short time, when the viceroy took it himself,
				  until the arrival of the court, or audiencia, which still governs it. And this
				  was the end of those discoveries and of the expedition which was made to these
				  new lands. </p>
				<p n="181">It now remains for us to describe the way in which to
				  enter the country by a more direct route, although there is never a short cut
				  without hard work. It is always best to find out what those know who have
				  prepared the way, who know what will be needed. This can be found elsewhere,
				  and I will not tell where Quivira lies, what direction the army took, and the
				  direction in which Greater India lies, which was what they pretended to be in
				  search of, when the army started thither. Today, since Villalobos has
				  discovered that this part of the coast of the South Sea trends toward the west,
				  it is clearly seen and acknowledged that, since we were in the north, we ought
				  to have turned to the west instead of toward the east, as we did. With this, we
				  will leave this subject and will proceed to finish this treatise, since there
				  are several noteworthy things of which I must give an account, which I have
				  left to be treated more extensively in the two following chapters. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Of the adventures of Captain Juan Gallego while he was
					 bringing re-enforcements through the revolted country. 
				</head>
				<p n="183"><hi rend="all-caps">One</hi>might well have complained
				  when in the last chapter I passed in silence over the exploits of Captain Juan
				  Gallego with his 20 companions. I will relate them in the present chapter, so
				  that in times to come those who read about it or tell of it may have a reliable
				  authority on whom to rely. I am not writing fables, like some of the things
				  which we read about nowadays in the books of chivalry. If it were not that
				  those stories contained enchantments, there are some things which our Spaniards
				  have done in our own day in these parts, in their conquests and encounters with
				  the Indians, which, for deeds worthy of admiration, surpass not only the books
				  already mentioned, but also those which have been written about the twelve
				  peers of France, because, if the deadly strength which the authors of those
				  times attributed to their heroes and the brilliant and resplendent arms with
				  which they adorned them, are fully considered, and compared with the small
				  stature of the men of our time and the few and poor weapons which they have in
				  these parts, the remarkable things which our people have undertaken and
				  accomplished with such weapons are more to be wondered at today than those of
				  which the ancients write, and just because, too, they fought with barbarous
				  naked people, as ours have with Indians, among whom there are always men who
				  are brave and valiant and very sure bowmen, for we have seen them pierce the
				  wings while flying, and hit hares while running after them. I have said all
				  this in order to show that some things which we consider fables may be true,
				  because we see greater things every day in our own times, just as in future
				  times people will greatly wonder at the deeds of Don Fernando Cortez, who dared
				  to go into the midst of New Spain with 300 men against the vast number of
				  people in Mexico, and who with 500 Spaniards succeeded in subduing it, and made
				  himself lord over it in two years. </p>
				<p n="184">The deeds of Don Pedro de Alvarado in the conquest of
				  Guatemala, and those of Montejo in Tabasco, the conquests of the mainland and
				  of Peru, were all such as to make me remain silent concerning what I now wish
				  to relate; but since I have promised to give an account of what happened on
				  this journey, I want the things I am now going to relate to be known as well as
				  those others of which I have spoken. </p>
				<p n="185">The Captain Juan Gallego, then, reached to town of
				  Culiacan with a very small force. There he collected as many as he could of
				  those who had escaped from the town of Hearts, or, more correctly, from Suya,
				  which made in all 22 men, and with these he marched through all of the settled
				  country, across which he traveled 200 leagues with the country in a state of
				  war and the people in rebellion, although they had formerly been friendly
				  toward the Spaniards, having encounters with the enemy almost every day. He
				  always marched with the advance guard, leaving two-thirds of his force behind
				  with the baggage. With six or seven Spaniards, and without any of the Indian
				  allies whom he had with him, he forced his way into their villages, killing and
				  destroying and setting them on fire, coming upon the enemy so suddenly and with
				  such quickness and boldness that they did not have a chance to collect or even
				  to do anything at all, until they became so afraid of him that there was not a
				  town which dared wait for him, but they fled before him as from a powerful
				  army; so much so, that for ten days, while he was passing through the
				  settlements, they did not have an hour's rest. </p>
				<p n="186">He did all this with his seven companions, so that when
				  the rest of the force came up with the baggage there was nothing for them to do
				  except to pillage, since the others had already killed and captured all the
				  people they could lay their hands on and the rest had fled. They did not pause
				  anywhere, so that although the villages ahead of him received some warning,
				  they were upon them so quickly that they did not have a chance to collect.
				  Especially in the region where the town of Hearts had been, he killed and hung
				  a large number of people to punish them for their rebellion. He did not lose a
				  companion during all this, nor was anyone wounded, except one soldier, who was
				  wounded in the eyelid by an Indian who was almost dead, whom he was stripping.
				  The weapon broke the skin and, as it was poisoned, he would have had to die if
				  he had not been saved by the quince juice; he lost his eye as it was. </p>
				<p n="187">These deeds of theirs were such that I know those people
				  will remember them as long as they live, and especially four or five friendly
				  Indians who went with them from Corazones, who thought that they were so
				  wonderful that they held them to be something divine rather than human. If he
				  had not fallen in with our army as he did, they would have reached the country
				  of the Indian called Turk, which they expected to march to, &#x0026; they would
				  have arrived there without any danger on account of their good order and the
				  skill with which he was leading them, &#x0026; their knowledge and ample practice
				  in war. Several of these men are still in this town of Culiacan, where I am now
				  writing this account and narrative, where they, as well as I and the others who
				  have remained in this province, have never lacked for labor in keeping this
				  country quiet, in capturing rebels, and increasing in poverty and need, and
				  more than ever at the present hour, because the country is poorer and more in
				  debt than ever before. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter VIII. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				 Which describes some remarkable things that were seen
					 on the plains, with a description of the bulls. 
				</head>
				<p n="189"><hi rend="all-caps">My</hi>silence was not without
				  mystery and dissimulation when, in chapter 7 of the second part of this book, I
				  spoke of the plains and of the things of which I will give a detailed account
				  in this chapter, where all these things may be found together; for these things
				  were remarkable and something not seen in other parts. I dare to write of them
				  because I am writing at a time when many men are still living who saw them and
				  who will vouch for my account. Who could believe that 1,000 horses and 500 cows
				  and more than 5,000 rams and ewes and more than 1,500 friendly Indians and
				  servants, in traveling over those plains, would leave no more trace where they
				  had passed than if nothing had been there &#x2013; nothing &#x2013; so that it
				  was necessary to make piles of bones and cow dung now and then, so that the
				  rear guard could follow the army. The grass never failed to become erect after
				  it had been trodden down, and, although it was short, it was as fresh and
				  straight as before. </p>
				<p n="190">Another thing was a heap of cow bones, a crossbow shot
				  long, or a very little less, almost twice a man's height in places, and some 18
				  feet or more wide, which was found on the edge of a salt lake in the southern
				  part, and this in a region where there are no people who could have made it.
				  The only explanation of this which could be suggested was that the waves which
				  the north winds must make in the lake had piled up the bones of the cattle
				  which had died in the lake, when the old and weak ones who went into the water
				  were unable to get out. The noticeable thing is the number of cattle that would
				  be necessary to make such a pile of bones. </p>
				<p n="191">Now that I wish to describe the appearance of the bulls,
				  it is to be noticed first that there was not one of the horses that did not
				  take flight when he saw them first, for they have a narrow, short face, the
				  brow two palms across from eye to eye, the eyes sticking out at the side, so
				  that, when they are running, they can see who is following them. They have very
				  long beards, like goats, and when they are running they throw their heads back
				  with the beard dragging on the ground. There is a sort of girdle round the
				  middle of the body. The hair is very woolly, like a sheep's, very fine, and in
				  front of the girdle the hair is very long and rough like a lion's. They have a
				  great hump, larger than a camel's. The horns are short &#x0026; thick, so that
				  they are not seen much above the hair. In May they change the hair in the
				  middle of the body for a down, which makes perfect lions of them. They rub
				  against the small trees in the little ravines to shed their hair, and they
				  continue this until only the down is left, as a snake changes his skin. They
				  have a short tail, with a bunch of hair at the end. When they run, they carry
				  it erect like a scorpion. It is worth noticing that the little calves are red
				  and just like ours, but they change their color and appearance with time and
				  age. Another strange thing was that all the bulls that were killed had their
				  left ears slit, although these were whole when young. The reason for this was a
				  puzzle that could not be guessed. The wool ought to make good cloth on account
				  of its fineness, although the color is not good, because it is the color of
				  burel. </p>
				<p n="192">Another thing worth noticing is that the bulls traveled
				  without cows in such large numbers that nobody could have counted them, and so
				  far away from the cows that it was more than 40 leagues from where we began to
				  see the bulls to the place where we began to see the cows. The country they
				  traveled over was so level and smooth that if one looked at them the sky could
				  be seen between their legs, so that if some of them were at a distance they
				  looked like smooth-trunked pines whose tops joined, and if there was only one
				  bull it looked as if there were four pines. When one was near them, it was
				  impossible to see the ground on the other side of them. The reason for all this
				  was that the country seemed as round as if a man should imagine himself in a
				  three-pint measure, and could see the sky at the edge of it, about a crossbow
				  shot from him, and even if a man only lay down on his back he lost sight of the
				  ground. </p>
				<p n="193">I have not written about other things which were seen
				  nor made any mention of them, because they were not of so much importance,
				  although it does not seem right for me to remain silent concerning the fact
				  that they venerate the sign of the cross in the region where the settlements
				  have high houses. For at a spring which was in the plain near Acuco they had a
				  cross two palms high and as thick as a finger, made of wood with a square twig
				  for its crosspiece, and many little sticks decorated with feathers around it,
				  and numerous withered flowers, which were the offerings. In a graveyard outside
				  the village of Tutahaco there appeared to have been a recent burial. Near the
				  head there was another cross made of two little sticks tied with cotton thread,
				  &#x0026; dry withered flowers. It certainly seems to me that in some way they must
				  have received some light from the cross of Our Redeemer, Christ, &#x0026; it may
				  have come by way of India, from whence they proceeded. </p>
			 </div2>
			 <div2>
				<head type="main" rend="bold">Chapter IX. </head>
				<head type="sub" rend="bold">
				  Which treats of the direction which the army took, and
					 of how another more direct way might be found, if anyone was to return to that
					 country. 
				</head>
				<p n="195"><hi rend="all-caps">I very</hi>much wish that I
				  possessed some knowledge of cosmography or geography, so as to render
				  intelligible what I wish to say, and so that I could reckon up or measure the
				  advantage those people who might go in search of that country would have if
				  they went directly through the center of the country, instead of following the
				  road the army took. However, with the help of the favor of the Lord, I will
				  state it as well as I can, making it as plain as possible. It is, I think,
				  already understood that the Portuguese, Campo, was the soldier who escaped when
				  Friar Juan de Padilla was killed at Quivira, and that he finally reached New
				  Spain from Panuco, having traveled across the plains country until he came to
				  cross the North Sea mountain chain, keeping the country that Don Hernando de
				  Soto discovered all the time on his left hand, since he did not see Francisco
				  Vazquez de Coronado the river of the Holy Spirit (Espiritu Santo) at all. After
				  he had crossed the North Sea mountains, he found that he was in Panuco, so that
				  if he had not tried to go to the North Sea, he would have come out in the
				  neighborhood of the border land, or the country of the Sacatecas, of which we
				  now have some knowledge. </p>
				<p n="196">This way would be somewhat better and more direct for
				  anyone going back there in search of Quivira, since some of those who came with
				  the Portuguese are still in New Spain to serve as guides. Nevertheless, I think
				  it would be best to go through the country of the Guachichules, keeping near
				  the South Sea mountains all the time, for there are more settlements and a food
				  supply, for it would be suicide to launch out on to the plains country, because
				  it is so vast and is barren of anything to eat, although, it is true, there
				  would not be much need of this after coming to the cows. </p>
				<p n="197">This is only when one goes in search of Quivira, and of
				  the villages which were described by the Indian called Turk, for the army of
				  Francisco Vazquez de Coronado went the very farthest way round to get there,
				  since they started from Mexico and went 110 leagues to the west, and then 100
				  leagues to the northeast, and 250 to the north, and all this brought them as
				  far as the ravines where the cows were, and after traveling 850 leagues they
				  were not more than 400 leagues distant from Mexico by a direct route. If one
				  desires to go to the country of Tiguex, so as to turn from there toward the
				  west in search of the country of India, he ought to follow the road taken by
				  the army, for there is no other, even if one wished to go by a different way,
				  because the arm of the sea which reaches into this coast toward the north does
				  not leave room for any. But what might be done is to have a fleet and cross
				  this gulf and disembark in the neighborhood of the Island of Negroes and enter
				  the country from there, crossing the mountain chains in search of the country
				  from which the people at Tiguex came, or other peoples of the same sort. As for
				  entering from the country of Florida and from the North Sea, it has already
				  been observed that the many expeditions which have been undertaken from that
				  side have been unfortunate and not very successful, because that part of the
				  country is full of bogs and poisonous fruits, barren, and the very worst
				  country that is warmed by the sun. But they might disembark after passing the
				  river of the Holy Spirit, as Don Hernando de Soto did. Nevertheless, despite
				  the fact that I underwent much labor, I still think that the way I went to that
				  country is the best. There ought to be river courses, because the necessary
				  supplies can be carried on these more easily in large quantities. Horses are
				  the most necessary things in the new countries, and they frighten the enemy
				  most. . . . Artillery is also much feared by those who do not know how to use
				  it. A piece of heavy artillery would be very good for settlements like those
				  which Francisco Vazquez de Coronado discovered, in order to knock them down,
				  because he had nothing but some small machines for slinging and nobody skillful
				  enough to make a catapult or some other machine which would frighten them,
				  which is very necessary. </p>
				<p n="198">I say, then, that with what we now know about the trend
				  of the coast of the South Sea, which has been followed by the ships which
				  explored the western part, and what is known of the North Sea toward Norway,
				  the coast of which extends up from Florida, those who now go to discover the
				  country which Francisco Vazquez entered, and reach the country of Cibola or of
				  Tiguex, will know the direction in which they ought to go in order to discover
				  the true direction of the country which the Marquis of the Valley, Don Hernando
				  Cortes, tried to find, following the direction of the gulf of the Firebrand
				  (Tizon) River. This will suffice for the conclusion of our narrative.
				  Everything else rests on the powerful Lord of all things, God Omnipotent, who
				  knows how and when these lands will be discovered and for whom He has guarded
				  this good fortune. </p>
				<p n="199">LAUS DEO Finished copying, Saturday the 26th of October,
				  1596, in Seville.</p>
			 </div2>
		  </div1>
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