it. If we rightly conclude of our end, and this
poet of the youthfulness of that age of his, that
other world will only enter into the light when this
of ours shall make its exit; the universe will fall
into paralysis; one member will be useless, the other
in vigour. I am very much afraid that we have
greatly precipitated its declension and ruin by our
contagion; and that we have sold it opinions and our
arts at a very dear rate. It was an infant world,
and yet we have not whipped and subjected it to our
discipline by the advantage of our natural worth and
force, neither have we won it by our justice and goodness,
nor subdued it by our magnanimity. Most of their
answers, and the negotiations we have had with them,
witness that they were nothing behind us in pertinency
and clearness of natural understanding. The astonishing
magnificence of the cities of Cusco and Mexico, and,
amongst many other things, the garden of the king,
where all the trees, fruits, and plants, according
to the order and stature they have in a garden, were
excellently formed in gold; as, in his cabinet, were
all the animals bred upon his territory and in its
seas; and the beauty of their manufactures, in jewels,
feathers, cotton, and painting, gave ample proof that
they were as little inferior to us in industry.
But as to what concerns devotion, observance of the
laws, goodness, liberality, loyalty, and plain dealing,
it was of use to us that we had not so much as they;
for they have lost, sold, and betrayed themselves
by this advantage over us.
As to boldness and courage, stability, constancy against
pain, hunger, and death, I should not fear to oppose
the examples I find amongst them to the most famous
examples of elder times that we find in our records
on this side of the world. Far as to those who
subdued them, take but away the tricks and artifices
they practised to gull them, and the just astonishment
it was to those nations to see so sudden and unexpected
an arrival of men with beards, differing in language,
religion, shape, and countenance, from so remote a
part of the world, and where they had never heard
there was any habitation, mounted upon great unknown
monsters, against those who had not only never seen
a horse, but had never seen any other beast trained
up to carry a man or any other loading; shelled in
a hard and shining skin, with a cutting and glittering
weapon in his hand, against them, who, out of wonder
at the brightness of a looking glass or a knife, would
exchange great treasures of gold and pearl; and who
had neither knowledge, nor matter with which, at leisure,
they could penetrate our steel: to which may
be added the lightning and thunder of our cannon and
harquebuses, enough to frighten Caesar himself, if
surprised, with so little experience, against people
naked, except where the invention of a little quilted
cotton was in use, without other arms, at the most,
than bows, stones, staves, and bucklers of wood; people
surprised under colour of friendship and good faith,