| Some
Eventful Diary Entries From 1492...
October 11-12
So that they may feel great friendship for us, and because
I knew that they were a people who would be better delivered
and converted to our Holy Faith by love than by force,
I gave to some of them red caps and glass bells which
they put round their necks, and many other things of little
value, in which they took much pleasure, and they remained
so friendly to us that it was wonderful. Afterwards
they came swimming to the ship‚s boats where we
were. And they brought us parrots and cotton-thread in
skeins, and javelins and many other things. And they bartered
them with us for other things, which we gave them, such
as little glass beads and little bells. In short, they
took everything, and gave of what they had with good will.
But it seemed to me that they were a people very destitute
of everything.
They all went as naked as their mothers bore them, and
the women as well, although I only saw one who was really
young. And all the men I saw were young, for I saw none
more than thirty years of age; very well made, with very
handsome persons, and very good faces; their hair thick
like the hairs of horses' tails, and cut short. They bring
their hair above their eyebrows, except a little behind,
which they wear long, and never cut. Some of them paint
themselves blackish (and they are of the color of the
inhabitants of the Canaries, neither black nor white),
and some paint themselves white, and some red, and some
with whatever they can get. And some of them paint their
faces, and some all their bodies, and some only the eyes,
and some only the nose.
They do not bear arms nor do they know them, for I showed
them swords and they took them by the edge, and they cut
themselves through ignorance. They have no iron at all;
their javelins are rods without iron, and some of them
have a fish‚s tooth at the end, and some of them
other things. They are all of good stature, and good graceful
appearance, well made. I saw some who had scars of wounds
in their bodies, and I made signs to them [to ask] what
that was, and they showed me how people came there from
other islands which lay around, and tried to take them
captive and they defended themselves. And I believed,
and I [still] believe, that they came there from the mainland
to take them for captives. They would be good servants,
and of good disposition, for I see that they repeat very
quickly everything which is said to them. And I believe
that they could easily be made Christians, for it seems
to me that they have no belief. I, if it please our Lord,
will take six of them to your Highnesses at the time of
my departure, so that they may learn to talk. No wild
creature of any sort have I seen, except parrots, in this
island.
Saturday, October 13
As soon as the day broke, many of these men came to the
beach, all young, as I have said, and all of good stature,
a very handsome race. Their hair is not woolly, but straight
and coarse, like horse hair, and all with much wider foreheads
and heads than any other people I have seen up to this
time. And their eyes are very fine and not small, and
they are not black at all, but of the color of the Canary
Islanders. And nothing else could be expected, since it
is on one line of latitude with the Island of Ferro, in
the Canaries.
They came to the ship with almadias, which are made of
the trunk of a tree, like a long boat, and all of one
piece ˜and made in a very wonderful manner in the
fashion of the country˜ and large enough for some
of them to hold forty or forty-five men. And others are
smaller, down to such as hold one man alone. They row
with a shovel like a baker‚s, and it goes wonderfully
well. And if it overturns, immediately they all go to
swimming and they right it, and bale it with calabashes
which they carry.
They brought skeins of spun cotton, and parrots, and javelins,
and other little things which it would be wearisome to
write down, and they gave everything for whatever was
given to them.
And I strove attentively to learn whether there were gold.
And I saw that some of them had a little piece of gold
hung in a hole which they have in their noses. And by
signs I was able to understand that going to the south,
or going round the island to the southward, there was
a king there who had great vessels of
it, and had very much of it. I tried to persuade them
to go there; and afterward I saw that they did not understand
about
going.
I determined to wait till the next afternoon, and then
to start for the southwest, for many of them told me that
there was land to the south and southwest and northwest,
and that those from the
northwest came often to fight with them, and so to go
on to the southwest to seek gold and precious stones.
Christopher Columbus, 1493
Paraphrased by Washington Irving
Retranslated by Edward Everett Hale
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