which was the winter of the Indies, there were always
great storms in this gulf, they now experienced fair
weather. On Friday the 18th of May, twenty-three
days after leaving Melinda, during all which time they
had seen no land, they came in sight of India, at
eight leagues distance, the land seeming very high.
Canaca, the pilot, tried the lead and found forty-five
fathoms, upon which he altered his course to the south-east,
having fallen in with the land too far to the north.
Upon the Saturday, he again drew near the land, but
did not certainly know it, as the view was obscured
by rain, which, always falls in India at this season,
being their winter. On Sunday the 20th of May,
the pilot got view of certain high hills which are
directly behind the city of Calicut, and came so near
the land that he was quite sure of the place; on which
he came up with great joy to the general, demanding
his
albrycias, or reward, as this was the place
at which he and his company were so desirous to arrive.
The general was greatly rejoiced at this news, and
immediately satisfied the pilot, after which, he summoned
all the company to prayers, saying the
salve,
and giving hearty thanks to God, who had safely conducted
them to the long wished-for place of his destination.
When prayer was over, there was great festivity and
joy in the ships, which came that same evening to
anchor two leagues from Calicut. Immediately upon
anchoring, some of the natives came off to the ships
in four boats, called
almadias, inquiring whence
our ships came, as they had never before seen any
resembling their construction upon that coast.
These natives were of a brown colour, and entirely
naked, excepting very small aprons. Some of them
immediately came on board the general, and the Guzerat
pilot informed him these were poor fishermen; yet the
general received them courteously, and ordered his
people to purchase the fish which they had brought
for sale. On conversing with them, he understood
that the town whence they came, which was in sight,
was not Calicut, which lay farther off, and to which
they offered to conduct our fleet. Whereupon
the general requested them to do this; and, departing
from this first anchorage, the fleet was conducted
by these fishermen to Calicut.
Calicut is a city on the coast of Malabar, a province
of the second India, which begins at the mount of
Delhi, and ends at Cape Comory, being sixty-one leagues
in length, and fifteen leagues broad[48]. The
whole of this country is very low, and apt to be covered
with water, having many islands in its rivers, which
flow into the Indian Sea. This country of Malabar
is divided from the kingdom of Narsinga by a very high
hill. The Indians report that this land of Malabar
was covered by the sea of old, which then reached
to the foot of the hills, and thence to a hill, where
now the islands of the Maldives are found, which were
then firm land; and that in after times it destroyed
that latter country, and laid bare the country of