Page:The principal navigations, voyages, traffiques and discoveries of the English nation 16.djvu/243

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Peru: the cause why he killed her was, that she might not become a concubine to villaines, nor be called the daughter of a traytor: and these words he vsed vnto her, so soone as he had giuen her her deaths wound: but before he could finish this cruell act, the souldiers came vpon him, and cut him in pieces, also his daughter died of her wound in that place.

Thus haue you heard the miserable ende of this bloodie caitife: in regarde of whose treacherous and mischieuous and mischieuous dealing the king would neuer since suffer this riuer to bee throughly discouered;

Great riches hidden within the riuer of Marannon. so that the riches and treasure of the said riuer remaine vnknowen euen vntill this present day.

The coast of Brasill, why it was so called and by whom it was at the first discouered. Now leauing to discouse any longer of this riuer of Marannon, all the coast betweene the saide riuer and the riuer of Plate, is called The coast of Brasill, taking that name from a kinde of wood in the same countrey called Brasill-wood, whereof there is great store in those partes. This coast of Brasill was first discouered by Pedro Aluarez Cabral, in the second voyage which the king of Portugall caused to be made to the East Indies: and the foresayde Pedro Aluarez tooke possession of this land for the king of Portugall: whereupon the king Don Emanuel hearing newes thereof sent presently shippes to discouer the whole countrey, and found it to be part of America otherwise called The West Indies: for which cause there grewe some controuersie betweene him and the king of Spaine: but being kinsmen and great friends one to another, they agreed in the end, that the king of Portugall should holde all the countrey that he had discouered, the which was (as I haue said) from the riuer of Marannon to the riuer of Plate; albeit the Spaniards affrme, that it stretcheth no further then the Iland of Santa Catelina; whereupon there haue risen many controuersies betweene the Portugales and Spaniardes, which haue cost many men their liues.

There came into the said riuer of Plate in the yeere 1587 two English ships and a Pinnesse of the right Honourable the Earle of Cumberland, which were bound for the staeights of Magellan, and ankored ten leagues within the said riuer before a little Iland, lying hard by another called Seal Iland. On which Iland the Captaine of one of the ships called Christorpher Lister and his whole company landing, found the king of Portugales armes