登陆注册
20071100000019

第19章 THE DISCOVERY OF GUIANA(14)

The great river of Orenoque or Baraquan hath nine branches which fall out on the north side of his own main mouth. On the south side it hath seven other fallings into the sea, so it disemboqueth by sixteen arms in all, between islands and broken ground; but the islands are very great, many of them as big as the Isle of Wight, and bigger, and many less. From the first branch on the north to the last of the south it is at least 100 leagues, so as the river's mouth is 300 miles wide at his entrance into the sea, which I take to be far bigger than that of Amazons. All those that inhabit in the mouth of this river upon the several north branches are these Tivitivas, of which there are two chief lords which have continual wars one with the other. The islands which lie on the right hand are called Pallamos, and the land on the left, Hororotomaka; and the river by which John Douglas returned within the land from Amana to Capuri they call Macuri.

These Tivitivas are a very goodly people and very valiant, and have the most manly speech and most deliberate that ever I heard of what nation soever. In the summer they have houses on the ground, as in other places; in the winter they dwell upon the trees, where they build very artificial towns and villages, as it is written in the Spanish story of the West Indies that those people do in the low lands near the gulf of Uraba. For between May and September the river of Orenoque riseth thirty foot upright, and then are those islands overflown twenty foot high above the level of the ground, saving some few raised grounds in the middle of them; and for this cause they are enforced to live in this manner. They never eat of anything that is set or sown; and as at home they use neither planting nor other manurance, so when they come abroad they refuse to feed of aught but of that which nature without labour bringeth forth. They use the tops of palmitos for bread, and kill deer, fish, and porks for the rest of their sustenance. They have also many sorts of fruits that grow in the woods, and great variety of birds and fowls; and if to speak of them were not tedious and vulgar, surely we saw in those passages of very rare colours and forms not elsewhere to be found, for as much as I have either seen or read.

Of these people those that dwell upon the branches of Orenoque, called Capuri, and Macureo, are for the most part carpenters of canoas; for they make the most and fairest canoas; and sell them into Guiana for gold and into Trinidad for tabacco, in the excessive taking whereof they exceed all nations. And notwithstanding the moistness of the air in which they live, the hardness of their diet, and the great labours they suffer to hunt, fish, and fowl for their living, in all my life, either in the Indies or in Europe, did I never behold a more goodly or better-favoured people or a more manly. They were wont to make war upon all nations, and especially on the Cannibals, so as none durst without a good strength trade by those rivers; but of late they are at peace with their neighbours, all holding the Spaniards for a common enemy. When their commanders die they use great lamentation; and when they think the flesh of their bodies is putrified and fallen from their bones, then they take up the carcase again and hang it in the cacique's house that died, and deck his skull with feathers of all colours, and hang all his gold plates about the bones of this arms, thighs, and legs. Those nations which are called Arwacas, which dwell on the south of Orenoque, of which place and nation our Indian pilot was, are dispersed in many other places, and do use to beat the bones of their lords into powder, and their wives and friends drink it all in their several sorts of drinks.

After we departed from the port of these Ciawani we passed up the river with the flood and anchored the ebb, and in this sort we went onward. The third day that we entered the river, our galley came on ground; and stuck so fast as we thought that even there our discovery had ended, and that we must have left four-score and ten of our men to have inhabited, like rooks upon trees, with those nations. But the next morning, after we had cast out all her ballast, with tugging and hauling to and fro we got her afloat and went on. At four days' end we fell into as goodly a river as ever I beheld, which was called the great Amana, which ran more directly without windings and turnings than the other. But soon after the flood of the sea left us; and, being enforced either by main strength to row against a violent current, or to return as wise as we went out, we had then no shift but to persuade the companies that it was but two or three days' work, and therefore desired them to take pains, every gentleman and others taking their turns to row, and to spell one the other at the hour's end. Every day we passed by goodly branches of rivers, some falling from the west, others from the east, into Amana; but those I leave to the deion in the chart of discovery, where every one shall be named with his rising and descent. When three days more were overgone, our companies began to despair, the weather being extreme hot, the river bordered with very high trees that kept away the air, and the current against us every day stronger than other. But we evermore commanded our pilots to promise an end the next day, and used it so long as we were driven to assure them from four reaches of the river to three, and so to two, and so to the next reach. But so long we laboured that many days were spent, and we driven to draw ourselves to harder allowance, our bread even at the last, and no drink at all; and our men and ourselves so wearied and scorched, and doubtful withal whether we should ever perform it or no, the heat increasing as we drew towards the line; for we were now in five degrees.

同类推荐
  • 如实论反质难品

    如实论反质难品

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • OUR MUTUAL FRIEND

    OUR MUTUAL FRIEND

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 聱园词剩

    聱园词剩

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 宥坐

    宥坐

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杂病治例

    杂病治例

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 天芒大陆

    天芒大陆

    一位拥有超能力的少年转世到了异界……拥有超能力的他如何在异界生存如何成为让神魔颤抖的强者……一切尽在本书当中。
  • 极证道路

    极证道路

    当今宇宙,八界之中浑浑噩噩,人人唯利是图,不择手段,从而无亲情,友情,爱情——无情!谁说修炼一途非要斩断情缘!冷月和他的众兄弟一起修炼,杀千万恶人!屠仙魔两界!灭法神战神!终归,统八界化四界,得以证道!欢迎各位粉丝各位书友加我QQ:1625125620讨论情节。
  • 武林群侠传

    武林群侠传

    包子连日跋涉,终于来到了洛阳城。却没想到她的英雄老爹居然是一座大雕像。
  • 中国哲学史大纲

    中国哲学史大纲

    是胡适先生于20世纪初在北京大学教授中国哲学史时期写成的著作。被誉为“用现代学术方法系统研究中国古代哲学史的第一部著作。它的出版被视为中国哲学史学科成立的标志,虽然只有上卷,但是它的成就和特色足以为后世哲学史家开出全新的境界。”写法上摒弃了中国哲学史从三皇五帝的传说开始写起的传统,直接从《诗经》、老子、孔子讲起。考证先哲生存年代,辩识古人著作真伪,还原先秦诸子本来面目。既不随意藏否,也不轻薄评议古人,言必有据,不作无谓的意气之争,显出作者平和的大家风范。此外,本书考证先秦各家流派的师承、变迁痕迹及递次演进的脉络,可谓“一本书读懂诸子百家”之作。
  • 契约人生

    契约人生

    一纸契约,揭开他凡人不平凡的一生,契约掠夺大道三千,一个神秘的女人,另一个神秘的世界任他穿越,神挡杀神,魔挡灭魔,如何看一个胆小懦弱的胖子开启逆天之旅
  • 无上生机

    无上生机

    地球一夜之间万物凋零,残存人类不甘屈服于命运,派遣人类精英穿越时空隧道拯救地球,可是,人类精英来到的却是一片陌生的世界—仙武大陆,而仙武大陆在十万年前,被称作仙界!且看人类精英林尘如何一步步拯救三界,成就无上生机!
  • 爱无形

    爱无形

    周日晚上八点,上海某酒店商务套房的玻璃窗前,雪儿正看着眼前的黄埔江失神。周六早上飞到上海,和这里的钱超汇合。钱超,就是雪儿妈妈介绍给她的新任男友。
  • 丧花

    丧花

    我叫于洋灿,从小到大都被学霸和丑女这两个差别略大的词给包围着。隔壁邻居家的杨二婶拿着皮带站在家门口一边骂一边抽着他那傻里傻气的儿子,“你能不能争点气儿!就考这点分数!也不学学隔壁的于姐姐,看看人家分数多高~我要是有她这样一个年年都拿三好学生的女儿就好了!”是啊,我就是那种家长眼里的好学生,男生面前的好哥们,还有,就是女生面前的嫌弃对象。我一直认为我这种长相可以交到很多朋友,可是我错了,初中那会,女生们只和会打扮的女生玩儿,不会在意我这个接地气的人儿。直到我步入了高中,一次偶然让我认识了周弥,我感觉我那绝缘体般的人生终于可以在这里告一段落了,并且重新开始!
  • 太空战

    太空战

    为了和平,一群青少年驾驶着战机去外太空作战,这一去,太空战即将开始
  • 世纪伟人毛泽东珍闻

    世纪伟人毛泽东珍闻

    本书分为逸才毛泽东、神武毛泽东、智者毛泽东三部分,多角度展示了毛泽东一生的丰功伟绩。