Page:A Mainsail Haul - Masefield - 1913.djvu/124

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
112
A MAINSAIL HAUL

them; for, although it was of no great size, and "of no great Trade, and therefore not rich in Money," it had been praised in print, some thirty years before, by "the English Mexican" Mr. Thomas Gage. We read that it was "very curiously built" on "a sandy Soil, which soon drinks up all the Rain that falls." It had a famous rope-walk, and a number of sugar-works, besides cattle farms and tallow boileries. The houses were of white stone roofed with a vivid red pantile, "for the chief delight of the inhabitants consisteth in their houses, and in the pleasure of the Country adjoyning, and in the abundance of all things for the life of man, more than in any extraordinary riches, which there are not so much enjoyed as in other parts of America. They are contented with fine gardens, with variety of singing birds and parrets, with plenty of fish and flesh, which is cheap, and with gay houses, and so lead a delicious lasie and idle life. … And especially from the pleasure of this City is all that Province of Nicaragua, called by the Spaniards Mahomet's Paradise, the Paradise of America."

At about 3 o'clock that afternoon, Captain