went to the church of Dilao, and there assaulted the
gate and walls (which were there lower), by means
of scaling-ladders, with the same determination.
But they experienced the same resistance and loss,
which compelled them, on the approach of night, to
retire with great loss to the parian and to Dilao.
That whole night the Spaniards spent in guarding their
wall, and in preparing for the morrow. The enemy
passed the night in the parian and at Dilao, making
carts, mantelets, scaling-ladders, artificial fire,
and other contrivances, for approaching and assaulting
the wall, and for burning the gates, and setting fire
to everything. At dawn of the next day, Monday,
the Sangleys came together with these arms and tools,
and having reached the wall with their bravest and
best-armed men, attacked it with great fury and resolution.
The artillery destroyed their machines, and caused
them so great injury and resistance with it and the
arquebuses, that the Sangleys were forced to retire
again to the parian and to Dilao, with heavy loss.
Joan Xuarez Gallinato, accompanied by some soldiers
and a Japanese troop, made a sally from the Dilao gate
upon the Sangleys. They reached the church, when
the Sangleys turned upon them and threw the Japanese
into disorder. The latter were the cause of all
retreating again to seek the protection of the walls,
whither the Sangleys pursued them. At this juncture
Captain Don Luys de Velasco entered Manila. He
came from the Pintados in a stout caracoa, manned
by some good arquebusiers, while others manned some
bancas that sailed in the shelter of the caracoa.
They approached the parian and Dilao by the river,
and harassed the enemy quartered there on that and
the two following days, so that they were compelled
to abandon those positions. These vessels set
fire to the parian, and burned everything, and pursued
the enemy wherever they could penetrate. The Sangleys,
upon beholding their cause waning, and their inability
to attain the end desired, resolved to retire from
the city, after having lost more than four thousand
men; to advise China, so that that country would reenforce
them; and for their support to divide their men into
three divisions in different districts—one
among the Tingues of Passic, the second among those
of Ayonbon, and the third at La Laguna de Bay, San
Pablo, and Batangas. On Wednesday they abandoned
the city completely, and, divided as above stated,
marched inland. Don Luys de Velasco, with some
soldiers and armed Indians who came from all sides
to the relief of Manila, accompanied by some Spaniards
who guided them, and the religious from their missions,
went by way of the river in pursuit of them, and pressed
them, so that they killed and annihilated the bands
bound for the Tingues of Passic and for Ayombon.
The majority and main body of the Sangleys went to
La Laguna de Bay, the mountains of San Pablo, and
Batangas, where they considered themselves more secure.
Burning towns and churches, and everything in their