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The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 10 - Asia, Part III by Richard Hakluyt
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of Cambaia, and vnto the mighty emperour of China, was traiterously there
arrested, and all his company, by the Portugals, and afterward sent
prisoner to Goa; where after a long and cruell imprisonmeat, he and his
companions were deliuered vpon sureties, not to depart the towne without
leaue, at the sute of one father Thomas Steuens, an English religious man
which they found there: but shortly after three of them escaped, whereof
one, to wit, M. Ralph Fitch, is since come into England. The fourth, which
was a painter called Iohn Story, became religious in the college of S. Paul
in Goa, as we vnderstood by their letters. [Sidenote: He returneth from
Balsara to Aleppo.] I and my companion William Shales hauing dispatched our
businesse at Balsara, imbarked our selues in company of seuenty barks all
laden with marchandise, hauing euery barke 14. men to draw them, like our
Westerne bargemen on the Thames, and we were forty foure dayes comming vp
against the streame to Babylon, [Sidenote: Their provision of victuals.]
where arriuing and paying our custome, we with all other sorts of marchants
bought vs camels, hired vs men to lade and driue them, furnished our selues
with rice, butter, bisket, hony made of dates, onions and dates: and euery
marchant bought a proportion of liue muttons, and hired certaine shepheards
to driue them with vs: we also bought vs tents to lie in and to put our
goods under: [Sidenote: A Carauan of foure thousand Camels.] and in this
our carauan were foure thousand camels laden with spices, and other rich
marchandises. These camels will liue very well two or three dayes without
water: their feeding is on thistles, wormewood, magdalene, and other strong
weeds which they finde vpon the way. The gouernment and deciding of all
quarels and dueties to be payed, the whole carauan commiteth to one
speciall rich marchant of the company, of whose honesty they conceiue best.
In passing from Babylon to Aleppo, we spent forty dayes, trauelling twenty,
or foure and twenty miles a day, resting ourselues commonly from two of the
clocke in the afternoone, vntill three in the morning, at which time we
begin to take our iourney. Eight dayes iourney from Babylon toward Aleppo,
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