preach for me. At this time I fell ill, exhausted
by my labors, which, although not excessive, were
too much for me, as having little strength. It
was upon this occasion that the fathers of that holy
order gave proof of their great charity and the great
affection and fraternal feeling which they profess
toward Ours; for all of them on that day, leaving
their own church (which also is named Santissimo Nombre
de Jesus, out of respect for the holy Child, which
is deposited therein), came with their singers to
our church, where they celebrated on the day before
most solemn vespers, and on the day of the feast officiated
and sang solemn high mass and preached a sermon—all
of which I could not attend, on account of being,
as I have said, ill. To grant me a further favor
and charity, they chose to be my guests and partake
of our poverty. It pleased God, in His mercy,
to give me health, so that I might acquit myself in
part of this obligation and the many others which
we owe to them. Thirteen days later, which was
the day on which they celebrate their feast of the
most holy name of Jesus, I visited them and preached
for them, and ate with them. Some days afterward,
there arrived from Manila two discalced religious of
the holy Order of St. Francis, who had come to embark
in a vessel which was fitting out in that port for
Nueva Espana. They disembarked near our house,
which stands at the edge of the water; and, in acknowledgment
of the debt that we also owe to that holy order and
its blessed fathers—who, in so great self-abnegation
and aversion to worldly things, in all seek only the
things of Jesus Christ—I begged them to
accept the use of our house. During their stay
with me they displayed toward me the most signal charity;
and I, on my part, was equally consoled and edified,
until last Pentecost of the year fifteen hundred and
ninety-six. At this festival they assisted me,
before their departure, in the solemn baptism of two
prominent Chinese, and of I know not how many others;
we baptized them, with their Bissayan wives, celebrating
their marriages and conferring the nuptial veils,
with great solemnity and rejoicing, the whole city
assembling to witness the ceremonies. The two
chief men were Don Lorenco Ungac and Don Salvador
Tuigam. The Chinese are not accustomed to cut
their hair, which they comb and make ready every morning,
and wear it fastened on the head in pleasing and graceful
fashion; but when we baptize them we are in the habit
of cutting it off, so that in this way we may have
more certainty of their faith and perseverance.
These two, before baptism, had entreated and supplicated
me not to cut off their hair; and in this they were
not without reason, for, as one of the suppliants
himself explained to me, to wear their hair was honorable
among them, and a custom of their nation, as with
us the wearing of mustaches or beard. But as I
did not dare to act in opposition to what the prelates
and other judicious ministers and religious are accustomed