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CHAPTER XXXVI

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

How the Captain who was stationed in Pangij began to harass our ships with artillery; and how the great Afonso Dalboquerque acted with our men thereat; and how he would not accept the present which the Hidalcão sent to him.

When the Hidalcão became aware that the great Afonso Dalboquerque would not reply to the proposition concerning an agreement of a peaceable nature between them, he hastened more than ever to send the captain and men whom he had told off for Pangij. And when this captain arrived at the fortress he ordered his men without loss of time to attack our ships with his artillery, and inflicted great damage upon us in this manner. There was one day when they struck us with fifty large cannon-balls, besides other smaller shot. Our men were so disconcerted and dejected at this new difficulty in which they were involved, that they began to imagine that the Moors would be able to take the ships by means of their rafts, and this fear seized them in such a complete manner that Afonso Dalboquerque dared not try to rouse them out of it by reprehension, lest he should drive them to despair. But, on the contrary, when they approached him for the purpose of giving him advice as to what was best to be done in order to extricate himself from the peril in which he was situated, he replied that he was quite of the same opinion as themselves with regard to everything they said, and that he would put it.

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The Commentaries of the Great Afonso Dalboquerque, Second Viceroy of India
Translated from the Portuguese Edition of 1774
, pp. 171 - 173
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1877

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