I do but name obedience. I came to Lisbon toward
the end of March, eight dayes before the departure
of the shippes, so late that if they had not bene
stayed about some weighty matters, they had bene long
gone before our comming: insomuch that there were
others ordained to goe in our places, that the kings
prouision and ours also might not be in vaine.
Neuerthelesse our sudden comming tooke place, and the
fourth of Aprill fiue ships departed for Goa, wherein
besides shipmen and souldiers, there were a great
number of children which in the seas beare out better
than men, and no maruell, when that many women also
passe very well. The setting foorth from the
port I need not to tell how solemne it is with trumpets,
and shooting of ordinance, you may easily imagine it,
considering that they go in the maner of warre.
The tenth of the foresayd moneth we came to the sight
of Porto Santo neere vnto Madera, where an English
shippe set vpon ours (which was then also alone) with
a few shots, which did no harme, but after that our
ship had layed out her greatest ordinance, they straight
departed as they came. The English shippe was
very faire and great, which I was sorry to see so
ill occupied, for she went rouing about, so that we
saw her againe at the Canarian Iles, vnto the which
we came the thirteenth of the sayd moneth, and good
leisure we had to woonder at the high mountaine of
the Iland Tenerif, for we wandred betweene that and
great Canaria foure dayes by reason of contrary windes:
and briefly, such euill weather we had vntill the
foureteenth of May, that they despaired, to compasse
the Cape of Good hope that yeere. Neuertheless,
taking our voyage betweene Guinea and the Ilands of
Capo Verde, without seeing of any land at all, we
arriued at length vnto the coast of Guinie, which
the Portugals so call, chiefly that part of the burning
Zone, which is from the sixt degree vnto the Equinoctiall,
in which parts they suffered so many inconueniences
of heats, and lacke of windes, that they thinke themselues
happy when they haue passed it: for sometimes
the ship standeth there almost by the space of many
dayes, sometimes she goeth, but in such order that
it were almost as good to stand still. And the
greatest part of this coast not cleare, but thicke
and cloudy, full of thunder and lightening, and raine
so vnholesome, that if the water stand a little while,
all is full of wormes, and falling on the meat which
is hanged vp, it maketh it straight full of wormes.
Along all that coast we often times saw a thing swimming
vpon the water like a cocks combe (which they call
a ship of Guinea) but the colour much fairer; which
combe standeth vpon a thing almost like the swimmer
of a fish in colour and bignesse, and beareth vnderneath
in the water, strings which saue it from turning ouer.
This thing is so poisonous, that a man cannot touch
it without great perill. In this coast, that
is to say, from the sixt degree vnto the Equinoctiall,
we spent no lesse than thirty dayes, partly with contrary


