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CHAPTER X
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
Summary
How we went on our way and entered a large and broad river to which we then gave the name of the Boca de Términos.
Keeping on our course we reached what seemed to be the mouth of a very rapid river, very broad and open, but it was not a river as we at first thought it to be, but it was a very good harbour.
Because there was land on both sides of us and the water was so wide that it looked like a strait, the pilot Alamínos said that here the Island ended and the mainland began, and that was the reason why we called it the Boca de Términos, and so it is named on the charts.
The Captain Juan de Grijalva went ashore with all the other Captains already mentioned and many soldiers. We spent three days taking soundings at the mouth of the strait and exploring up and down the bay until we came to the end of it, and found out that there was no island, but that we were in a bay which formed a very good harbour. On shore we found some houses built of masonry, used as oratories of their Idols, and many Idols of pottery, wood and stone, which were the images of their gods, and some of them were figures of women and others figures of serpents and there were many deer's antlers.
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- The True History of the Conquest of New Spain , pp. 44 - 45Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1908