Cabeza de Vaca Meets the Coahuiltecans Reading #1 Eating New and Unusual Foods (From La Relación, Chapter 18)

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Transcription:

Reading #1 Eating New and Unusual Foods (From La Relación, Chapter 18) Sometimes they kill some deer, and sometimes they catch fish. But this is so little and their hunger so great that they eat spiders, ant eggs, worms, lizards, salamanders, snakes and poisonous vipers. They eat dirt and wood and whatever they can get, as well as deer excrement and other things I will not talk about. My observations lead me to believe that they would eat stones if there were any in that land. They keep the bones of the fish, snakes, and other things they eat to grind them into a powder which they eat. Sometimes they kill some deer, and at times they take some fish. But this is so little and their hunger so great that they eat spiders and ant eggs and worms and lizards and salamanders and snakes and vipers that kill the men they bite, and they eat earth and wood and whatever they can get and the dung of deer and other things which I refrain from telling, and I believe truthfully that if in that land there were rocks, they would eat them. They keep the fine bones of the fish that they eat and of the snakes and other things, in order to grind it all later and eat the powder from it. (p. 194)

Reading #2 Fighting the Mosquitoes (From La Relación, Chapter 18) We found throughout that land very many mosquitoes-three kinds of them. They are awful and annoying, and for most of the summer very troublesome. To protect ourselves from them, we would build many fires around the people, using rotten, damp firewood so that it would not burn well but produce a lot of smoke. But this protection caused another affliction, because all night long our eyes watered from the smoke in them. On top of this we had to withstand the great heat from the fires. We would go out to sleep on the coast, but if we could ever get to sleep, the Indians would awaken us with a beating to go and rekindle the fires. We found through the land a great quantity of mosquitoes of three kinds, which are very bad and bothersome and the greater part of the summer gave us much fatigue. And in order to protect ourselves from them we used to make around the people many fires of rotten and damp wood in order that they (the fires) should not burn and should smoke, and this defense gave us additional hardship, because all night we would do nothing but weep, from the smoke that got in our eyes, and on top of this the many fires made it very hot for us. And we used to go out to sleep on the shore and if once in a while we were able to sleep

they (the Indians) used to wake us with sticks so that we should go back to tend the fires. (pp 195-6)

Reading #3 Trying to Stay Warm (From La Relación, Chapter 21) At night I did the following to protect myself against the cold: I would go to the thickets in the woods near the rivers and stop there before sunset. I would dig a hole in the ground and put in it a lot of firewood from the many trees. I also would gather a lot of dried wood that had fallen from the trees, and around the hole I would build four fires crosswise. I was careful to stoke the fires from time to time. I would make some long sheaves from the straw that was available around there, to cover myself in that hole and shelter myself from the night-time cold. One night a spark fell on the straw covering me while I was sleeping and began to burn strongly. Although I jumped out of the hole right away, my hair was singed from the danger in which I had been. For the nights I had this remedy: I went to the thickets of brush which were by the rivers and I stopped in them before sundown. And in the earth I made a pit and into it threw much wood that grows on many trees of which there are a great quantity there, and I gathered together much wood of that which was fallen from the trees and dry. And around the pit I made four fires in the shape of a cross and I took care to replenish the fire from time to time. And I made some bundles of long straw that there is around there, with which I covered myself in that pit, and in this way I sheltered myself from the cold of the nights.

One night the fire fell on the straw with which I was covered and while I was sleeping in that pit it began to burn very rapidly, and for all the haste with which I got our I still received on my hair the mark of the danger I had been in. (pp. 200-201)

Reading #4 Coahuiltecan Housing (From La Relación, Chapter 18) They are so used to running that they can run from morning to night chasing deer without resting or becoming tired. This way they kill many of them, because they pursue them until the deer tire. Sometimes they take them alive. Their lodges are made of mats placed on four arches. They carry them on their backs and move every two or three days to search for food. Their dwellings are of mats placed on four arches: they carry them on their backs and move every two or three days to look for food.they plant nothing that can be of any use. (p.195) They never settle with their houses except where there is water and wood, and sometimes they al load themselves with a supply of these and do to look for the deer, which ordinarily are where there is no water or wood. (p.196)

Reading #5 Singing and Dancing (From La Relación, Chapter 18) The best season for them is when they eat prickly pears, because they are not hungry then and spend all their time dancing. They eat them night and day. During this entire season, they squeeze them, open them and set them out to dry. After they are dried they put them in baskets like figs, and keep them to eat on the way back. They are very happy people; No matter how hungry they are, they do not stop dancing or performing their celebrations and songs (aretos). For them the best time that they have is when they eat the tunas because then they are not hungry and all the time they spend in dancing, and they eat them night and day all the time that they last. (p. 195)

Reading #6 Working and Trading With the Indians (From La Relación, Chapter 22) I traded with these Indians, in bows and arrows and nets and made combs for them. We made mats, which they need very much. Even though they know how to make them, they do not want to be occupied in doing other things because they have to search for food instead. When they work on them, they suffer a great deal from hunger. At other times they would tell me to scrape and soften skins. I was never better off than the days they gave me skins to scrape, because I would scrape them very well and eat the scrapings, which was enough to sustain me for two or three days. It also happened that when these people, or the ones we were with before, gave us a piece of meat, we ate it raw, because if we tried to roast it, the first Indian that came by would take it and eat it. We thought that we should not risk losing the piece of meat. Besides, we were in no condition to take the trouble to eat it roasted, since we could better digest it raw. Such was the life we led there. What little food we had we earned from the trinkets we made with our own hands. I used to trade with these Indians by making them combs, and with bows and with arrows and with nets. We would make mats, which are things that they greatly need and although they know how to make them they do not want to occupy themselves with anything, in order all the while to look for food. When

they do take an interest in these (making mats) they endure very great hunger. At other times they commanded me to scrape hides and soften them. And the greatest prosperity in which I found myself there was the day when they gave me one to scrape, because I would scrape it a great deal and I would eat these scraping and they would last me for two or three days. (p. 205)