Accordingly, it is not possible to obtain documents
from them except by dint of importunate prayers, and
these necessarily require much going about; this in
the streets of Valladolid in winter is a very arduous
task, especially for religious, who cannot leave their
convent whenever they please. Still, to avoid
this going from place to place is impossible if the
business is to be carried on. After obtaining
an order from the Council of the Indias, which one
cannot generally get at the first request, it is necessary
to obtain a second order from the Council of the Exchequer
with regard to the allowance for the journey, and
both of these must be recorded by the accountants
of both councils. Although this may be necessary
to give further security to the decrees of his Majesty
and to relieve them from any suspicion of forgery,
still, as those which are given to religious persons,
and for so pious a purpose as this, are free from
such suspicion, they may well be privileged in some
respects and need not be obliged to pass through so
many registries. On account of the great number
of matters which are attended to in Valladolid, documents
cannot pass through all the registries without taking
much time. Accordingly, much trouble is necessarily
caused in the hospices [i.e., guest-houses]
of the convents where they lodge, and the commissioner
who takes charge of this business is also obliged to
suffer even more inconvenience—finding that
for business so much to the advantage of our lord
the king, and requiring so great labor and responsibility
on his own part, and in which there is not a trace
of profit to himself, it should be necessary to make
such exertions at the very beginning. I confess,
for my part, that I would have given up at this first
station on the route if I had not supposed that all
the hindrances to this voyage that I could encounter
in the direction of his Majesty would have ended at
this point; but later it will be seen how completely
deceived I was in this notion. However, it is
as well that all those who concern themselves with
this business should be so deceived at the beginning,
for if they were not they would give up this work,
pious as it is.
The smallness of the allowance for conducting the religious to Sevilla. Further, the amount which your Majesty commands to be granted in Valladolid for conveying the religious from their convents to Sevilla, is insufficient by far for the expense thus incurred. I conducted the religious who accompanied me to Sevilla in the greatest poverty, for many of them went on foot, and he who was best equipped rode an ass. Yet I arrived in Sevilla burdened by a debt of more than two hundred ducados, merely from the expenditure which I was obliged to make on their account.