Page:First Voyage Round the World.djvu/95

This page has been validated.
FERNANDO DE MAGALHAES.
17

of Dyguaçam,[1] which belongs to the Moors of Borneo; as has been said above, and after that he went to his country.

While they were at anchor near this village of Diguaçam, there came to them a parao in which there was a negro named Bastiam, who asked for a flag and a passport for the governor of Diguaçam, and they gave him all this and other things as a present. They asked the said Bastiam, who spoke Portuguese sufficiently well, since he had been in Maluco, where he became a Christian, if he would go with them and shew them Borneo; he said he would very willingly, and when the departure arrived he hid himself, and seeing that he did not come, they set sail from this port of Diguaçam on the 21st day of July[2] to seek for Borneo. As they set sail there came to them a parao, which was coming to the port of Diguaçam, and they took it, and in it they took three Moors, who said they were pilots, and that they would take them to Borneo.

Having got these Moors, they steered along this island to the south-west, and fell in with two islands at its extremity, and passed between them; that on the north side is named Bolyna, and that on the south Bamdym.[3] Sailing to the west south-west a matter of fourteen leagues, they fell in with a white bottom, which was a shoal below the water, and the black men they carried with them told them to draw near to the coast of the island, as it was deeper there, and that was more in the direction of Borneo, for from that neighbourhood the island of Borneo could already be sighted. This same day they reached and anchored at some islands, to which they gave the name of islets of St. Paul, which

  1. Paris MS., "Digaçāo;" it is also written Digamcā and Digāçā. Lisbon Ac. note.
  2. Paris MS., "21st day of June." Lisbon Ac. note. Madrid MS., "21st day of June."
  3. Paris MS. "The island to the North is named Bolava, and that to the South Bamdill." Lisbon Ac. note. Madrid MS., "Bolina and Bamdill."