Thethird pateofthethingesthat 
hat trees Aus manp thinges As come fromtbeſe partes: Ther “gar 
88 ther it from certeyne Trees, whiche after the manner ol 
wbereqf it is uttle Pinos, Which tak out manybowes to al partes. It car 
gathered, Teeth the leafe lyke toe A garrouu, nll the peere it is green, 
nee ches are the beth mhurde groe in a kuke Srounde tell 
tilled. im sn enceinte: e 
Hon it iiga- Chis Sulmmo the Zutat voa gather by iunpotttts 
tbered. ting Spuing terte pat tuttes in the rinde ol the tree, ſoꝛit 
is chinne and loft. and they ſet vnderneath it, nere vnto the 
tree tdinges like to diſhas made ur ware, wyithe is in that 
tountre v blacke,uhichtheytaue out of Hines that certeine 
sets waxe blacke Bees don make in tht chappinges of the grounde / 
5 A haue ſecne brought much ofthis Ware into Spayne and 
it was ſpente in Toꝛches but it was foꝛbidden that none of 
it chould bee ſyent, tothe mate which it catt from it, had ſa 
tuil a mel. that it code not bes ſuſtered. A hey dyd le this 
Ware in matters of Medieine, toꝛ thereof wers made Cere⸗ 
cloathes, which Wrought very good etkectes, in mitigating 
greefe of any colde tauſe it dildlusth any manner ol ſwel⸗ 
linges, and woozketh many other goed effectes. Okthys 
axe the Indians doo make veſſels like to a ſpoone, and 
fet them clofe to the Tree, that they may receiue the tical 
that commeth out of it, by the places where the cutting 
are made, and from thence they receiue it into thole bel 
ſelles: and it is needefill that it bee done in time of great 
heate that the cuttinges mare cake dut the Ricour, and 
in thys tyme lxkewiſe , there loketh out of the ioyntes 
of the ſapde Tree ſome Licour, and it is loft becaufe it is ſa 
little, and falleth into the ground: in the night time thors 
tommeth fooꝛth none. 
This licour, oz Bailamo is very much ett med amongſt 
the wien F 
