Meta, and Meta into Baraquan, which is also called
Orenoque. He took his journey from Nuevo Reyno
de Granada, where he dwelt, having the inheritance
of Gonzalez Ximenes in those parts; he was followed
with 700 horse, he drove with him 1,000 head of cattle,
he had also many women, Indians, and slaves.
How all these rivers cross and encounter, how the
country lieth and is bordered, the passage of Ximenes
and Berreo, mine own discovery, and the way that I
entered, with all the rest of the nations and rivers,
your lordship shall receive in a large chart or map,
which I have not yet finished, and which I shall most
humbly pray your lordship to secrete, and not to suffer
it to pass your own hands; for by a draught thereof
all may be prevented by other nations; for I know
it is this very year sought by the French, although
by the way that they now take, I fear it not much.
It was also told me ere I departed England, that Villiers,
the Admiral, was in preparation for the planting of
Amazons, to which river the French have made divers
voyages, and returned much gold and other rarities.
I spake with a captain of a French ship that came
from thence, his ship riding in Falmouth the same
year that my ships came first from Virginia; there
was another this year in Helford, that also came from
thence, and had been fourteen months at an anchor
in Amazons; which were both very rich.
Although, as I am persuaded, Guiana cannot be entered
that way, yet no doubt the trade of gold from thence
passeth by branches of rivers into the river of Amazons,
and so it doth on every hand far from the country
itself; for those Indians of Trinidad have plates of
gold from Guiana, and those cannibals of Dominica
which dwell in the islands by which our ships pass
yearly to the West Indies, also the Indians of Paria,
those Indians called Tucaris, Chochi, Apotomios, Cumanagotos,
and all those other nations inhabiting near about
the mountains that run from Paria through the province
of Venezuela, and in Maracapana, and the cannibals
of Guanipa, the Indians called Assawai, Coaca, Ajai,
and the rest (all which shall be described in my description
as they are situate) have plates of gold of Guiana.
And upon the river of Amazons, Thevet writeth that
the people wear croissants of gold, for of that form
the Guianians most commonly make them; so as from
Dominica to Amazons, which is above 250 leagues, all
the chief Indians in all parts wear of those plates
of Guiana. Undoubtedly those that trade Amazons
return much gold, which (as is aforesaid) cometh by
trade from Guiana, by some branch of a river that
falleth from the country into Amazons, and either it
is by the river which passeth by the nations called
Tisnados, or by Caripuna.