Volume 1
Letters of Cortes : the five letters of relation from Fernando Cortes to the Emperor Charles V / translated and edited, with a biographical introd. and notes compiled from original sources, by Francis Augustus MacNutt.
- Cortés, Hernán, 1485-1547.
- Date:
- 1908
Licence: Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)
Credit: Letters of Cortes : the five letters of relation from Fernando Cortes to the Emperor Charles V / translated and edited, with a biographical introd. and notes compiled from original sources, by Francis Augustus MacNutt. Source: Wellcome Collection.
28/384 (page 6)
![of this occurrence, there were those present who claimed to recognise the Holy Ghost in the white-winged pilot sent to rescue the hapless ship.—“Alius, Sanctum esse Spiritum, qui in illius alitis spe cié, ut meestos et aflictos solaretur, venire erat dignatns. The Governor being absent, his secretary, Medina, who airead y knew Cortes, met him upon his landing, and gave him hospitality in his house, acquainting him with the con- dition of things in the island, and advising him to settle near the town. To this Cortes is said to have replied that he had come to seek gold rather than to till the ground. During the war against Queen Anacoana of Hayti, which followed cióse upon his arrival, the horrors of which have been described first by Las Casas and later by Washington Irving, Cortes gave a very good account of himself, and upon the establishment of peace he received a grant of good land and a repartimiento of Indians at Daiguao where he was likewise appointed notary of the newly founded town of Azua. (Gomara, Crónica. Cap. ni] De Rebus Gestis). During the five or six ensuing years, his life was that of a planter, and was barren of any salient event, though Bernal Diaz says that he was involved in several affairs about women which led to quarrels and duels, in one of which he was wounded in the lip. He was prevented by an opportune illness from ioining the luckless expedition of Alonso de Ojedo and Diego de Nicuesa to Darien. Don Nicolás de Ovando was succeeded in the office of Governor by Don Diego Columbus, who in 1511 fitted out an expedition for the conquest of Cuba, which he placed under the command of Don Diego Velas- quez, and in which Cortes volunteered. His conduct at this time advanced his interests in every respect, for his genial character and lively conversaron soon made him a favourite with his companions m arms, while his bravery and address acquired him the best reputation as a soldier and attracted the attention of his](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b24883505_0001_0028.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)