the governors; and perhaps it would be advisable to
do away with their banners and distribute the men
among the old companies. That has not been done
at any time, both to place the aforesaid persons under
some obligations, and because they bring the pay for
one year already paid to them. I petition your
Majesty to order this matter to be examined and considered,
and to command me what I am to do in regard to it and
to order the said viceroy, in accordance with the
above, to refrain from annoying with that pretension
the respectable and deserving inhabitants who sail
[on the ships] with appointments to such offices.
For there are men here who have merits and are old
residents of the country, to whom these employments
might well be given; and others who, although they
are not of so much prominence in this country, have
been and are engaged in the service of your Majesty.
Consequently, both for that reason and because of
their qualifications, no one ought to be preferred
to them—although there are, besides the
aforesaid persons (who are numerous), a much greater
number of others who demand everything, without right,
reason, or justification, and assert that they deserve
it. They must believe this, by the way in which
they get angry about it; for it comes to such a pass
that they do not treat one another well, as we have
just experienced. For I appointed Captain and
Sargento-mayor Esteban de Alcazar admiral of these
ships that I am despatching—a man of many
years of service (some in Flandes), and more than
fifteen years of residence in this country, whither
he came as captain of an infantry company. He
has also served in Terrenate, and reenforced those
forts with the supplies that he took in his charge,
in consideration of which your Majesty confirmed him
in an encomienda, without debarring him therefrom
because he was a brother-in-law of the fiscal.
That relationship, however, no longer exists, because
there is another fiscal, a man young in years and of
little judgment, without services, merits, or any
other qualifications to support his claims, not even
for the office of government notary, which an uncle
of his resigned. This man has tried to oppose
my choice; he has had the audacity to demand the place,
trying to disqualify the appointee with a suit brought
by my predecessor, from which the royal Audiencia freed
and acquitted him. Although I am certain that
he [Esteban de Alcazar] is one of the most deserving
of those who might be employed in this, I have chosen
to send a sworn testimony in the form of a report
(in duplicate), so that your Majesty, if such be your
pleasure, may order it to be examined. Although
any one might resent having to furnish an exoneration
when there is no cause for the accusation, there is
much more to resent here in the accusations which some
are wont to write without any justification, and without
the matter being known; for, by reason of the long
time that must elapse before one comes to have notice
of it and the truth of the matter is made known, he
has already suffered much in darkness from an evil
and unauthentic relation, and this is the truth.