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In the port of Guiaquil, we descried a ship,
wich we took loaden with fruits, conserves,
sugars, meale and others victuals, and a
certain quantity of jewels and precious stones,
13 chests of Ryals of plate; 80 pound
weight in gold; 26 tunne of uncoyned silver;
two very faire guilt drinking-bowls, and the
like trifles. We then departed the haven,
having first set all the Spaniards on land,
saving one Juan de Velasco, a Dominican
friar who, after some persuasion, told us of
an Island the Spaniards call Rica de Oro.
Being a cosmographer of some faire skille,
he vowed to draw for us a map of this Island.
Velasco described a great church wherein the
builders had conceived all manner of hidden
passages and underground (shaf?)ts to confound
the enemies of the Spaniards, should they
discover the Island. Their city is indeede
riche in gold, for the Viceroy of Peru sends
the gold and silver of the Natives not to the
bay of Panama, and Eastward through the
Atlantick ocean to Spain; but Westward,
across the West Ocean to this secret harbor.