where he looked to haue their ships laden with pepper:
and being counselled of the said Pinteado, considering
the late time of the yeere, for that time to go no
further, but to make sale of their wares such as they
had for gold, wherby they might haue bene great gainers:
Windam not assenting hereunto, fell into a sudden
rage, reuiling the sayd Pinteado, calling him Iew,
with other opprobrious words, saying, This whoreson
Iew hath promised to bring vs to such places as are
not, or as he cannot bring vs vnto: but if he
do not, I will cut off his eares and naile them to
the maste. Pinteado gaue the foresaid counsell
to go no further for the safegard of the men and their
liues, which they should put in danger if they came
too late, for the Rossia which is their Winter, not
for cold, but for smothering heate, with close and
cloudie aire and storming weather, of such putrifying
qualitie, that it rotted the coates of their backs:
or els for comming to soone for the scorching heat
of the sunne, which caused them to linger in the way.
[Sidenote: The king of Benin his court.] But
of force and not of will brought he the ships before
the riuer of Benin, where riding at an Anker, they
sent their pinnas vp into the riuer 50 or 60 leagues,
from whence certaine of the marchants with captaine
Pinteado, Francisco, a Portugale, Nicholas Lambert
gentleman, and other marchants were conducted to the
court where the king remained, ten leagues from the
riuer side, whither when they came, they were brought
with a great company to the presence of the king, who
being a blacke Moore (although not so blacke as the
rest) sate in a great huge hall, long and wide, the
wals made of earth without windowes, the roofe of thin
boords, open in sundry places, like vnto louers to
let in the aire.
And here to speake of the great reuerence they giue
to their king, it is such, that if we would giue as
much to our Sauior Christ, we should remooue from
our heads many plagues which we daily deserue for our
contempt and impietie.
So it is therefore, that when his noble men are in
his presence, they neuer looke him in the face, but
sit cowring, as we vpon our knees, so they vpon their
buttocks, with their elbowes vpon their knees, and
their hands before their faces, not looking vp vntil
the king command them. And when they are comming
toward the king, as far as they do see him, they do
shew such reuerence, sitting on the ground with their
faces couered as before. Likewise when they depart
from him, they turn not their backs toward him, but
goe creeping backward with like reuerence.
[Sidenote: The communication between the king
of Benin and our men.] And now to speake somewhat
of the communication that was between the king and
our men, you shall first vnderstand that he himselfe
could speake the Portugall tongue, which he had learned
of a child. Therefore after he had commanded
our men to stand vp, and demanded of them the cause
of their comming into that countrey, they answered