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The Life of Columbus; in his own words by Edward Everett Hale
page 50 of 186 (26%)

They killed a serpent in one of the lakes upon this island, which Las
Casas says is the Guana, or what we call the Iguana.

In seeking for good water, the Spaniards found a town, from which the
inhabitants were going to fly. But some of them rallied, and one of them
approached the visitors. Columbus gave him some little bells and glass
beads, with which he was much pleased. The Admiral asked him for water,
and they brought it gladly to the shore in calabashes.

He still wished to see the king of whom the Indians had spoken, but
meant afterward to go to "another very great island, which I believe
must be Cipango, which they call Colba." This is probably a mistake in
the manuscript for Cuba, which is what is meant. It continues, "and
to that other island which they call Bosio" (probably Bohio) "and the
others which are on the way, I will see these in passing. * * * But
still, I am determined to go to the mainland and to the city of Quisay
and to give your Highnesses' letters to the Grand Khan, and seek a reply
and come back with it."

He remained at this island during the twenty-second and twenty-third of
October, waiting first for the king, who did not appear, and then for a
favorable wind. "To sail round these islands," he says, "one needs many
sorts of wind, and it does not blow as men would like." At midnight,
between the twenty-third and twenty-fourth, he weighed anchor in order
to start for Cuba.

"I have heard these people say that it was very large and of great
traffic," he says, "and that there were in it gold and spices, and great
ships and merchants. And they showed me that I should go to it by the
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