on it, they set sail on the twenty-second of February,
one thousand six hundred and six. They had their
terrors on the voyage; the ship caught fire, and the
fire was already quite near the powder-barrels that
were reserved in the “Santa Barbara.”
[61] Warning was given of this (which is one of the
greatest of dangers), in sufficient time to enable
them to extinguish the fire. Had it reached the
powder, the worst ruin would have surely followed.
I think that there is no peril of the sea so horrible.
Another danger happened on a calm, clear night, when
the cry of “Land, land!” came from the
bow. That danger startled the pilots, who had
no shoals down on their charts there. They were
aware of them by the breakers in the water, and the
vessel was so engulfed in them that it could neither
bear away, nor put in, without the same risk.
As the breaking of the waters was getting nearer the
ship, they considered all their efforts vain, and
without any urging, allowed themselves to be carried
in the same path. They tried to make soundings,
but the plunging of the boat and the violent dragging
of the sounding-line on the reefs did not permit them
to make an accurate calculation of the depth.
In such a contest, the hopes of all were already weak,
besides which they were entering amid the breakers.
The ship sailed a long distance without meeting accident,
and later they found themselves in the deep sea, free
from so dangerous a fright. That shoal was marked
down accurately on the charts, and was noted on other
voyages. It was a rocky islet surrounded with
many covered reefs. They considered it a marvelous
occurrence that they should pass over them without
meeting with accident on them. Father Fray Andres
de San Nicolas fell sick near the islands of the Ladrones,
and, recognizing that his attack was serious, he sought
consolation in the holy sacraments. During his
last hours he fervently exhorted all to persevere
in the undertaking that had been begun, promising
them a happy result. He yielded up his spirit
to God amid tender colloquies. Those of the ship
wished to keep his body in a well-sealed wooden casket,
in order to give it decent burial on shore; but in
order to avoid innovations, the venerable superior,
Fray Juan, did not consent to this. Accordingly,
having been placed in a casket, he was cast into the
sea, accompanied with the usual obsequies.
38. They continued from that moment their voyage prosperously, after an almost general epidemic of fever, safe and sound. By special orders they anchored in the port of Zebu. That most venerable prelate, Don Pedro de Agurto, received the new missionaries with a procession. They were lodged in the convent of the Augustinian fathers, who received them as brethren. Much did that illustrious man desire the propagation of the gospel. He begged and insisted that they stay in his bishopric, and offered them a foundation to their liking, if they would only remain for the conversion of the infidelity that was obstinately