those on shore might run to the boat for shelter,
and so all might perish, for if the boat were lost
the admiral would be in danger at sea, and he would
therefore do no more than he had been commanded, which
was to take in water, and to see if those on shore
needed any assistance. He resolved therefore to
take in water immediately, that he might carry an
account to the admiral of what had happened, and went
up the river with that view, to where the salt water
did not mix with the fresh, though some advised him
not to go for fear of being attacked by the Indians
in their canoes; but he answered that he feared no
danger since he was sent for that purpose by the admiral.
He accordingly went up the river which is very deep
within the land, and so closely beset on both sides
with thick trees, that there is scarcely any possibility
to go on shore, except at some fishermens paths where
they hide their canoes. When the Indians perceived
that he had got about a league above the colony, they
rushed from the thickets on both sides of the river
in their canoes, and assaulted him boldly on all sides,
making hideous shouts and blowing their horns.
They had great odds against our people, being in great
numbers, and their canoes very swift and manageable,
especially the small ones belonging to the fishermen,
which hold three or four men in each, one of whom
paddles and can easily turn it about as he pleases,
while the others threw their javelins at our boat.
I call them javelins because of their bigness, though
they have no iron heads, but are only pointed with
fish bones. In our boat there were seven or eight
men to row, and three or four more with the captain
to fight; and as the rowers could not defend themselves
from the javelins, they were forced to quit the oars
to handle their targets. But the Indians poured
upon them in such multitudes from all sides, advancing
and retiring in good order as they thought fit, that
they wounded most of the Christians, especially Captain
Tristan who was hurt in many places; and though he
stood unmoved, encouraging his men, his bravery availed
him nothing, for he was beset on all sides and could
not stir or make use of his musket, and at length he
was pierced by a javelin in the eye and fell down dead.
All the rest shared his fate except one man named
John da Noia a native of Cadiz; he by good fortune
fell into the water in the height of the combat, and
gaining the shore by diving made his way through the
thickest of the woods to the colony, where he brought
the melancholy news of the destruction of all his
companions.
This intelligence, joined to what had befallen themselves, so terrified our people, who were likewise afraid that the admiral, being at sea without a boat, might never reach a place from whence he could send them assistance, that they determined to abandon the colony, and would certainly have done so without orders, had not the mouth of the river been rendered impassable by bad weather and a heavy surf in which no boat could