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	<title>Walrus Talk &#187; Healing</title>
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	<description>The Testimony and Other Writings of Paul D. Cardin</description>
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		<title>A Letter to the King of Spain by Cabeza De Vaca &#8212; An Interlinear Translation by Haniel Long</title>
		<link>http://walrustalk.com/3/healing/a-letter-to-the-king-of-spain-by-cabeza-de-vaca-an-interlinear-translation-by-haniel-long/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Nov 2008 20:13:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Walrus</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Healing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cabeza De Vaca]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Conquistador]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[(Published as The Power Within Us, 1944) Your Majesty, I am that Nunez Cabeza De Vaca who lately sent you a Relation of his shipwrecks and mis-chances during the eight years he was absent from your dominions. In painful doubt whether my words were clear enough, I write again. My meanings being new to your [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(Published as The Power Within Us, 1944)</p>
<p>Your Majesty,</p>
<p>I am that Nunez Cabeza De Vaca who lately sent you a Relation of his  shipwrecks and mis-chances during the eight years he was absent from  your dominions. In painful doubt whether my words were clear enough, I  write again. My meanings being new to your Majesty and at a hasty glance  unconcerned with your prestige, you might consider my narrative a poor  occasion for exercising your serene power of understanding. The fault  would then lie in me, not in what I have to say. Be my forgiving reader,  your Majesty. Grant me your grace.</p>
<p>I was at the battle of Ravenna in 1512. Between dawn and sunset that  day perished a thousand score. Young as I was, Ravenna taught me  something of how easy to tear asunder and destroy a man is, body and  spirit. In the days that followed, in my desolation first confronted  with slaughter, I saw a far off light, heard a far off strain of music.  Such words serve as well as any: what can describe a happening in the  shadows of the soul?</p>
<p>Again that far off flicker of music came to me in the disorders at  Sevilla in 1521, when I fought under the Duke of Medina-Sidonia.</p>
<p>Seven years passed without that flash of inward fire and I forgot  about it. Sevilla was then a marvelous, disturbing world. I saw the  heretics burning in the arms of the iron prophets. I saw Columbus as an  old man, Magellan as a young man. The sailors came ashore with parrots  and gold ingots and Indian girls.</p>
<p>Then I too sailed across the seas, Lord Treasurer of the expedition  of Pamfilo Narvaez.</p>
<p>All that day when we were in sight of Teneriffe I thought of my  grandfather, the conqueror of the Grand Canary. In my childhood I was  surrounded by the natives of that island, the Guanches, whom he brought  home as slaves. I listened to their vague and melancholy singing,  learned to be at ease with inarticulate people.</p>
<p>For the money to conquer the Grand Canary, perhaps your Majesty will  remember, Pedro de Vera Mendoza had pawned to the Moor his two sons, my  father and my uncle.</p>
<p>As I told your Majesty in my account of that journey, never had  expedition more calamities than ours. Some of our ships foundered from  hurricanes in the harbors of Cuba. The others we left behind  deliberately in the lagoons of Florida.</p>
<p>Our greatest misfortune, aside from our greed and ignorance, lay in  our commander, Pamfilo Narvaez himself. Pamfilo believed himself born  under a lucky star, though nothing justified such a belief. Before  Hernan Cortes he could have marched to Tenochtitlan. But he did not.  When Cortes and his soldiers were richly quartered in the palaces of  Montezuma, he could have replaced him in command. For that pur-pose was  he dispatched from Havana by Velasquez. But Cortes came flying on  horseback all the way to Vera Cruz, and talked Pamfilo&#8217;s soldiers away  from under his very nose. Pamfilo was not without a magnetism. But he  was cocksure, a braggart, and what was worse, uncertain of the line  between dream and reality. He forgot that Cortes burnt his ships only  after studying the jewelled emissaries of Montezuma, and becoming sure  of the value of the quarry. Pamfilo had nothing to be sure of. And yet  he pictured him-self another Cortes, he pictured another Tenochtitlan  concealed in the fronds of Florida. Having pictured these things he was  as certain that they existed as of the vein in his neck.</p>
<p>Your Majesty is at liberty to picture us under this aging, adipose,  credulous commander. Across that steaming land we marched with our armor  glittering and our horses covered with gaudy trappings, 578 of us,  towards utter ruin. Believing that on the page of history we would share  the glory of Cortes and his murderous band&#8230;</p>
<p>Pamfilo would summon the copper-colored natives and tell them with  gestures that he was search-ing for a city of the size and value of  Tenochtitlan. The Indians had never heard of Tenochtitlan nor of  Montezuma. But they had heard of a big town and pointed northward  exclaiming, &#8220;Apalachee!&#8221;</p>
<p>We marched and we marched, and had fevers and fevers. Yes, your  Majesty is at liberty to picture us.</p>
<p>Apalachee was no Tenochtitlan&#8230; We found it. It was in an immense  swamp, a large impoverished settlement of thatched huts, a place of  unbearable squalor.</p>
<p>There was nothing for it but seek the sea again and sail back to  Cuba. Our arms and armor made us feel like dolts, and we wished we had  pierced the jungle carrying carpenter&#8217;s tools. For now, without axe,  adze, or hammer, we had to build ourselves boats.</p>
<p>This is the tale of what men can and cannot do when they must do  something or die.</p>
<p>We built nine open boats. During the weeks it required, some of us  went with scant food, and those whose palates allowed it devoured the  horses.</p>
<p>Our 580 men had become 400 when at last we set sail and left behind  us the Indian marksmen and the snakes, neither of which in Florida err  when they strike.</p>
<p>Day after day tide and wind washed us out to sea and then washed us  in to land, along a dazzling and uncertain coast. From thirst, and from  the exposure to the frightful sun, our 400 became 40.</p>
<p>Who knows what was lost in these boats? Another Magellan, another  Camoens, another Cervantes, another St. John of the Cross&#8230;</p>
<p>No one has so sympathetic an imagination as your Majesty. You will  understand what I am not telling you; that I saw men jump overboard, mad  from thirst and sun. That I saw them swell and die slowly in delirium,  heard their words and songs pour out the pitiful contents of their  minds. That I saw men gnaw at corpses. And that these were Spanish  gentlemen.</p>
<p>It is curious to have so graphic a lesson in what life may become. We  had been a proud band, relying on our united strength, our armor, and  our horses. Slowly our strength disunited, until nothing that we had in  common remained to help any of us.</p>
<p>As I say, it is curious when one has nobody and nothing to rely upon  outside of oneself.</p>
<p>Yet again that music, that fitful run and flash of brightness I first  heard on the battlefield of Ravenna. Your Majesty is renowned as a  patron of music; here was a music it is possible you may never have  heard.</p>
<p>Somewhere on that coast a handful of us crawled ashore, and were fed  and tended by kindly Indians till we regathered nervous vitality for the  hopeless voyage to Cuba. We stript and launched the boat, first putting  our clothes aboard her. But a great comber capsized the rotten heavy  hulk, imprisoning and drowning three of us. The others emerged  mother-naked on the beach, shivering in the November wind of that  overcast afternoon.</p>
<p>The Indians came back and found us as naked as they were, and our  barge gone, and in tears. They sat down beside us and cried, too. I  cried all the harder, to think people so miserable had pity for us. I  have informed your Majesty of their tears and mine. These simple Indians  were the first relenting of nature to us in months and months. That  evening, for fear we might die on the way, the Indians made fires at  intervals along the path to their village, warming us at each fire. That  night and many nights after we slept beside them on the oyster shells  which floor their huts, wrapt in hides against the cold winds from the  sea.</p>
<p>While we were subjects of your Majesty, we had everything life  offers, and now we had nothing. To understand what it means to have  nothing one must have nothing. No clothing against the weather might  appear the worst. But for us poor skeletons who survived it, it was not.</p>
<p>The worst lay in parting little by little with the thoughts that  clothe the soul of a European, and most of all of the idea that a man  attains strength through dirk and dagger, and serving in your Majesty&#8217;s  guard. We had to surrender such fantasies till our inward nakedness was  the nakedness of an unborn babe, starting life anew in a womb of  sensations which in themselves can mysteriously nourish, Several years  went by before I could relax in that living plexus for which even now I  have no name; but only when at last I relaxed, could I see the  possibilities of a life in which to be deprived of Europe was not to be  deprived of too much.</p>
<p>Tempests came, we could pull no more roots from the sea-channels, the  canebrake yielded no more fish. People died in the flimsy lodges. News  came that five Spaniards further down the coast, men from another barge,  had eaten one another up till but one remained. This deed startled the  innocence of our Indians. They debated whether to kill us, to be rid of  us. Instead, they made us their beasts of burden.</p>
<p>In April the Indians went down to the sea taking us with them; for a  whole month we ate the blackberries of the sand dunes. The Indians  danced incessantly. They asked us to cure their sick. When we said we  did not know how to cure, they withheld our food from us. We began to  watch the procedure of their medicine men. It seemed to us both  irreligious and uninstructed. Besides, we found the notion of healing  Indians somewhat repellent, as your Majesty will understand. But we had  to heal them or die. So we prayed for strength. We prayed on bended  knees and in an agony of hunger. Then over each ailing Indian we made  the sign of the Cross, and recited the Ave Maria and a Pater noster. To  our amazement the ailing said they were well. And not only they but the  whole tribe went without food so that we might have it. Yet so great was  the lack of food for us all, it seemed impossible that life could last.</p>
<p>Truly, it was to our amazement that the ailing said they were well.  Being Europeans, we thought we had given away to doctors and priests our  ability to heal. But here it was, still in our possession, even if we  had only Indians to exercise it upon. It was ours after all, we were  more than we had thought we were.</p>
<p>I am putting my words together for whatever intelligence there may be  in the world. There is no other reality among men than this  intelligence; Sire, it is greatly to your glory that you can incarnate  it.</p>
<p>To be more than I thought I was &#8212; a sensation utterly new to me&#8230;</p>
<p>Starvation, nakedness, slavery: sensations utterly new to me, also&#8230;  The last of my fellow Spaniards on the island dies&#8230; Nothing to eat  after the sea-roots sprouted but the blackberries of the sand dunes.  Nothing to protect me from the attack of the terrible frost, or the  terrible sun. No one who knew my language&#8230; And it endured for months,  for years maybe&#8230; Everyone I saw as starved as I was. The human body  emaciated, the lean cheek, the burning eye &#8212; the ribs showing, each rib  distinct&#8211; the taut skin, the weak loins, the shrunken haunch and pap.  In the whole world there can be no poverty like the poverty of these  people. I could not stand it. I ran away&#8230;</p>
<p>At this time, as I remember it, I began to think of Indians as fellow  human beings. If I introduce this idea it is to prepare your Majesty  for other ideas which came to me later, in consequence.</p>
<p>These were days when I reassorted the pictures of my childhood, as a  child tums his kaleidoscope. I saw the Guanche slaves anew, and as  though I were one of them. I saw my grandfather through the eyes of his  slaves. I remembered, now without laughing, how he had tricked the  Guanches into slavery. He pretended to enlist them to sail from the  Grand Canary to conquer Teneriffe, and when he had them below decks he  battened down the hatches and set sail for Cadiz&#8230;</p>
<p>My grandfather&#8217;s brutality earned him the public denunciation of  Bishop Juan de Frias. This too I remembered.</p>
<p>In this wilderness I became a trader, and went to and fro on the  coast and a little inland. I went inland with seashells and cockles, and  a certain shell used to cut beans, which the natives value. I came out  with hides, and red ochre for the face and hair, flint for arrow points,  and tassels of deerhide. I came to be well known among the tribes, and  found out the lay of the land.</p>
<p>One day I heard someone calling me by name, &#8220;Alvar Nunez, Alvar  Nunez!&#8221; It was Alonso del Castillo, one of the captains of the  expedition. He said that Pamfilo&#8217;s barge had drifted ashore among  unfriendly Indians, and left of its occupants were only himself and  Captain Andres Dorantes, and Dorantes&#8217; black moor, Estevanico. We hid  ourselves in a thicket and laid our plans.</p>
<p>That summer, when the coast tribes came together for the summer  orgies, we four made good our escape westward.</p>
<p>Thus our 580 had become 400, our 400, forty, and our forty, four.</p>
<p>Certain natives came to Castillo. From ribs to cleft they were having  spasms, and they begged him to cure them. He prayed, and required us  anxiously to pray with him. When he had done praying he made the sign of  the Cross over the Indians, and their spasms left off. We knelt down to  give thanks for this new amazement.</p>
<p>Through this region there are no trails, and I lost my way. I found a  burning tree to spend that very cold night beside. In the morning I  loaded myself with dry wood, and took two burning sticks. Thus with fuel  and fire, I went on for five days, seeing nobody, but having the sun  with me by day and Mazzaroth and Arcturus by night. These five days I  felt a numbness of those organs which keep one aware of the misery of  existence. When curing sick Indians, I have struggled to shut out the  thought of Andres and Alonso (for we are self-conscious, knowing one  another&#8217;s sins); and in the effort of praying I have felt as though  something in me had broken, to give me the power of healing. But alone  in this wilderness no tissue of the body hindered the mysterious power.  Nothing of me, your Majesty, existed then out-side of that music I first  heard at Ravenna.</p>
<p>The sixth day I found my companions, who had concluded that a snake  must have bitten me. I told them we ought not to be self-conscious with  one another. That power we had felt flowing in us and through us could  not, in the nature of things, be acutely conscious of us as individuals.  It must come rather as wind comes to the trees of a forest, or as the  ocean continues to murmur in the seashell it has thrown ashore.</p>
<p>A gulf deeper than ocean yawns between the old world and the new; and  what by now I was accustomed to, would startle a burgher of Madrid or  of Salamanca.</p>
<p>At Sevilla in my youth, as I have said, I saw the heretics burning in  the arms of the iron prophets. This picture was with me often. Perhaps,  like me, those heretics had had to pick up their notions of the  Invisible as they went through life, and without the assistance of book  or priest. What I myself was learning, came from many blinding days in  an open boat, while men died beside me crying for their mothers; and  from living among these simple Indians, who insisted on our curing them  of their ills. And so my notions of the Invisible may differ from what  the books say. I mention it in passing, your Majesty.</p>
<p>When he assailed my grandfather openly in his cathedral, calling him  coward and fiend, did Juan de Frias follow a lesson he had learned by  rote? That good bishop had a heart and mind to which life itself could  speak, and speak forcibly.</p>
<p>Indians came bringing five persons shriveled and paralyzed and very  ill. Each of the five offered Castillo silently his bows and arrows.  Castillo prayed, we with him; in the morning the five were cured&#8230;</p>
<p>Indians came from many places. But Castillo was always afraid his  sins would interfere with his working miracles. The Indians turned to  me. I told Castillo it was no moment for indulging the idea of being  sinful, and then I followed the Indians to their ranch. The dying man  was dead; Dorantes and I found him with eyes upturned, and no pulse. I  removed the mat that covered him and prayed. At last the something in me  like a membrane broke, and I was confident the old man would rise up  again. As he did. During the night the natives came to tell us he had  talked, eaten and walked about. They gave us many presents, and we left  them the happiest people on earth, for they had given away their very  best.</p>
<p>Your Majesty may by now have had enough of our cures and curing,  exertions outside of Holy Church, and for the sole benefit of miserable  Indians. Yet so profound is your courtesy, I know, that you will let me  reveal all that is within my heart. We found ourselves so pressed that  Dorantes and the Moor, who had little taste for it, had to become  medicine men, too. Boys and girls, men and women, old men and women,  human bodies deformed, starved, wasted by affliction (only rarely one  sound and firm) . . . Their eyes followed us every moment. I do not  forget those eyes . . . Your Majesty, since I addressed you first, you  have become more mysterious to me and more majestic, and this increases  my sense of freedom in speaking to you. To the understanding of such  days and events this additional narrative becomes necessary, like a real  figure to walk beside a ghost. Those eyes &#8230; they thrust me out of  myself, into a world where nothing, if done for another, seems  impossible.</p>
<p>Months went by as in a dream. The nerve of vision no longer rendered  plausible that European world of which we had been a part. That world  grew fantastic, and fantastic our countrymen there. We ourselves were  only too real. From lack of clothing we had big sores and deep skin  fissures on our backs and shoulders, and it hurt us to carry the hides  we slept in. And it hurt us to find firewood among the cactus. My thighs  and arms bled so much I stood it only by remembering-and yet whom or  what did I remember? Was it a Person-was it a quality of life-was it an  emotion? Was it even a remembering, was it not perhaps a listening?</p>
<p>Often for a time it rained gently at dusk. soothing our thighs and  arms. In one such dusk we encountered squinting women in an opening.  They were afraid to run away from the three pale figures and the shadowy  black moor, for they us took to be gods floating about in the mist and  rain. They led us to a village of fifty huts. Here we cured, and  cured&#8230;</p>
<p>Our journey westward was but a long series of encounters. Your  Majesty, encounters have become my meditation. The moment one accosts a  stranger or is accosted by him is above all in this life the moment of  drama. The eyes of Indians who crossed my trail have searched me to the  very depths to estimate my power. It is true the world over. It is true  of a Spaniard meeting another on the road between Toledo and Salamanca.  Whoever we meet watches us intently at the quick strange moment of  meeting, to see whether we are disposed to be friendly.</p>
<p>Seeing our bodies, seeing my own, and Alonso&#8217;s, and Andres&#8217;, and the  black Moor&#8217;s, sometimes I think how once I was different, and we all  were. What would Dona Alonza Maldonado and her husband Dr. Castillo of  Salamanca think, if they could see their little boy Alonso today,  striding here ahead of me, lashed by starvation, scorched and baked by  the sun, his hair and beard unkempt, small about the flanks, his body  shriveled like a mummy?</p>
<p>In youth the human body drew me and was the object of my secret and  natural dreams. But body after body has taken away from me that sensual  phosphorescence which my youth delighted in. Within me is no disturbing  interplay now, but only the steady currents of adaptation and of  sympathy.</p>
<p>Your Majesty&#8217;s piercing mind glides pliantly through what is  interstitial and hidden. But upon me it was dawning only slowly that I  had it in my discretion to grant life and health to others . . . Imagine  me then perturbed; you are aware of what my training had been as one of  your Majesty&#8217;s soldiers.</p>
<p>Dark clouds rise to the south. To the west a great rainbow spreads  its double arc. Alonso strides sturdily towards it. After him comes the  Arab Negro from Azamor, whose black limbs endure every privation and  still shine with superfluous sweat. For this black moor am I specially  grateful. His reflections on our suffering do not reduce him to apathy.  No adverse heats and chills deprive his loins of their strength. He is a  sight to see, carrying a copper rattle in his hand, and on his shoulder  a green and orange parrot.</p>
<p>There was the afternoon we crossed a big river, more than waist deep,  as wide as the Guadalquivir at Sevilla, and with a swift current. I  speak of it again because I loved it.</p>
<p>There was the village where each Indian wished to be the first to  touch us, and we were squeezed almost to death in the sweating crowd &#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230;the village so solicitous to be blest that Alonso fainted of  exhaustion&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230;the village where a new custom began: the Indians who came with us  took from the villagers all their bows, arrows, shoes and beads. From  that time on, those who accompanied us took tribute of those to whom  they brought us. It made us uneasy, but the victims reassured us. They  said they were too glad to see us to feel the loss of their property and  besides, they could make good their losses at the next village, who  were very rich Indians&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230; the plain where first we saw mountains, very low, like white  sheep lying down&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230; the village where they were so pertinacious about touching us all  over that in three hours we could not get through with them&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230; the village where many had one eye clouded, and others were  totally blind from the same cause: which amazed us&#8230;</p>
<p>To clarify the same occurrences, words can be arranged differently,  as no one knows better than your Majesty. It was a drunkenness, this  feeling I began to have of power to render life and happiness to others.  Yet I was concerned about it. The concern was the important thing-not  the wondering about the nature of the power, how widespread it might be,  how deep, whether Andres or Alonso or Estevanico had it in equal  measure with me. What occupied me was whether I myself knew how to use  it, whether I could master it, whether indeed it was for me to master &#8212;  perhaps being a self-directing power that came through me. But after  one accustoms oneself to the idea, it is good to be able to give out  health and joy whether one man have it, or whether we all have it. Had  this thought occurred to your Majesty? Never before had it occurred to  me.</p>
<p>I said to Andres, &#8220;If we reach Spain I shall petition His Majesty to  return me to this land, with a troop of soldiers. And I shall teach the  world how to conquer by gentleness, not by slaughter.&#8221; &#8220;Why then a troop  of soldiers?&#8221; asked Dorantes, smiling. &#8220;Soldiers look for Indian girls  and gold.&#8221; &#8220;Perhaps I could teach them otherwise.&#8221; &#8220;They would kill you,  or tie you to a tree and leave you. What a dunce you are, Alvar Nunez!&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;And what will you do if we reach Spain again?&#8221; I asked Andres. &#8220;It  will be enough to reach Mexico,&#8221; he answered. &#8220;I may look about for a  rich widow, and spend the rest of my life as a rancher.&#8221; &#8220;I could not  care for such a life,&#8221; I said. &#8220;To each his adventure,&#8221; replied Andres.</p>
<p>It occurred to me that Andres might be afraid of the great power at  this period within us. I inquired of him. &#8220;Yes, I am afraid &#8212; who would  not be?&#8221; he answered, earnestly.</p>
<p>Another day, after he had been silent a long time, Andres said to us:  &#8220;If I could always heal these people and help them, I might be willing  to stay among them. I don&#8217;t know. But our present relation to them is  caused by our novelty, our transiency, and the surprisec at our good  works. That state of things would wear off. Besides, it is not miracles  these people need. They need everything fate has stript us of in  bringing us amongst them naked and on equal terms. Yet not quite equal.  We can remember childhood and youth in a land where people live in stone  houses, till the same fields year after year, build barns to store the  harvests in. The towns are related to one another and support the mutual  good. Each nobleman and alcalde is an avenue leading to the king; and  king, alcalde, thief, and village all bow to the will of God through  Holy Church.&#8221;</p>
<p>I take my time thinking these words over. They are true and yet I  cannot assent to them. Then I answer Andres: &#8220;When these Indians call  upon us to have mercy and heal them, is the power they feel in us  derived from stone houses, barns and tilled fields &#8212; from alcalde or  nobleman, or from Holy Church, for that matter? Let the truth be said,  Andres: All that we learned across the water we have had to throw away.  Only what we learned as babes in our mothers&#8217; arms has stayed with us to  help others.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;And what did we learn in our mothers&#8217; arms, good dunce?&#8221; asked  Andres, putting his arm around my shoulder.</p>
<p>&#8230; a mountain seven leagues long, the stones of which were iron  slags&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230; a night when the moon was round, and in its light a multitude of  dwellings beside an unexpected and charming river&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230; a man who some years since had been shot through the left side of  the back with an arrow. He told me the wound made him feel sick all the  while. I observed that the head of the arrow lay in the cartilage. I  prayed for an hour, and then grasped the very sharp thin stone which  served me as a knife, and cut open the breast. Feeling for the  arrowhead, I thrust my hand into the palpitating tissue of the body.  Your Majesty, that we human beings should be made of limp wet meat  appeared to me as strange as that we should be also air and spirit; and  in that hour nausea and a quick curiosity mingled with my pity&#8230;</p>
<p>This cure was a misfortune to us; it gained us fame in every  direction. We soon had with us three or four thousand persons. It went  past human endurance to breathe on and make the sign of the Cross over  every morsel they ate. In these parts mountain deer, quail, birds,  rabbits abounded, and what they killed the Indians set before us. They  would not touch it and would have died of hunger had we not yielded the  blessing they asked for. Besides, they asked our permission for various  things they felt like doing, and it soon wore us out. Even doing good,  it appears, can lead to ennui, even the sight of the happiness one  causes can satiate. And yet your Majesty will rejoice that heaven  vouchsafed us a weariness such as this, perhaps never before experienced  by a European.</p>
<p>Tribe after tribe, language after language nobody&#8217;s memory could  recall them all. Always they robbed one another, but those who lost and  those who gained were equally content.</p>
<p>Estevanico, the good black, the good link between the aloofness of  white men and the warm spermatic life of the Indians. Men, women and  children joked and played with him. What matter what he did, he was not  wearied of it. What matter what he did, the mystery failed not to act  through him to heal and restore.</p>
<p>&#8230; fifty leagues through a land of desert, with nothing to eat and  little to drink. Through villages where the women dressed in white  deerskin and people lived in real houses. . . people the best formed we  had seen, the liveliest and most capable, and those who best understood  us&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230; moonlight in another adobe village, and we four alternately  standing or lying down in the center of the plaza, and the Indians  running to us from all the houses with gifts, touching us and running  back to their houses for more gifts, running to us again and touching  us-a living glistening cobweb of runners in the moon-keeping up for  hours this naked flash to and fro from center to periphery, periphery to  center.</p>
<p>Your Majesty, such were the scenes in which I found myself treating  all human beings alike. I screw up my courage to confess it. Perhaps it  is the secret thing which life has it in itself to become&#8211;a long, long  march on the road, meeting people, thrown into relations with them,  having to meet demands often terrible and without the aid of mysterious  power impossible: demands of healing and understanding, and constantly  the exorcism of fear.</p>
<p>With a reasonable man and a timorous man and a carnal man as my  companions and even part of me. And who is any of us, that without  starvation he can go through the kingdoms of starvation?</p>
<p>And seventeen successive days of starvation.</p>
<p>And a sunset, on a plain between very high mountains, with a people  who for four months of the year eat only powdered straw&#8230;</p>
<p>And more starvation &#8230;</p>
<p>And permanent houses once more, where maize is harvested, and where  they gave us brightly decorated blankets. For a hundred leagues good  houses and harvested crops, the women better treated than anywhere else.  They wear shoes, and blouses open in front and tied with deer string.  At sunrise these people lift their clasped hands to the horizon and pass  them over their bodies. At sunset they repeat the gesture. As I watched  them at these devotions, I recalled a youngster from Cadiz, one of  those who died of thirst beside me in the open boat. That boy drank in  the beauty of Florida, watched palm and headland along the coast even in  his final delirium. I was sorry he had not lived on to see these  natives laving their golden figures in the gold of dawn.</p>
<p>At last we found a sign of our countrymen &#8212; what through months and  years we had been praying for. On the neck of an Indian a little silver  buckle from a sword belt, with a horseshoe nail sewed inside it &#8230; We  questioned him. He said that men with beards like ours had come from  heaven to that river; that they had horses, lances, and swords, and had  lanced two Indians.</p>
<p>The country grew more and more doleful. The natives had fled to the  mountains, leaving their fields. The land was fertile and full of  streams, but the people were wan. They told us our countrymen had burnt  all the villages, taking with them half the men and all the women and  children&#8230;</p>
<p>Then a day when Indians said that on the night before they had  watched the Christians from behind some trees. They saw them take along  many persons in chains.</p>
<p>Our countrymen, these slave-catchers, were startled when they saw us  approaching. Yet almost with their first words they began to recite  their troubles. For many days they had been unable to find Indians to  capture. They did not know what to do, and were on the point of  starvation. The idea of enslaving our Indians occurred to them in due  course, and they were vexed at us for preventing it. They had their  interpreter make a fine speech. He told our Indians that we were as a  matter of fact Christians too, but had gone astray for a long while, and  were people of no luck and little heart. But the Christians on  horseback were real Christians, and the lords of the land to be obeyed  and served. Our Indians considered this point of view.</p>
<p>They answered that the real Christians apparently lied, that we could  not possibly be Christians. For we appeared out of sunrise, they out of  sunset; we cured the sick, while they killed even the healthy; we went  naked and barefoot, while they wore clothes, and rode horseback and  stuck people with lances; we asked for nothing and gave away all we were  given, while they never gave anybody anything and had no other aim than  to steal.</p>
<p>Your Majesty will remember my indignation in my first narrative, that  Christians should be so wicked, especially such as had the advantages  of being your subjects. I did not at the time understand the true source  of my indignation. I do now, and I will explain it. In facing these  marauders I was compelled to face the Spanish gentleman I myself had  been eight years before. It was not easy to think of it. Andres and  Alonso agreed that it was not easy. What, your Majesty, is so melancholy  as to confront one&#8217;s former unthinking and unfeeling self?</p>
<p>It was many days before I could endure the touch of clothing, many a  night before I could sleep in a bed. Shoes were the worst. In the  Spanish settlements I dared not go barefoot, for provincials are the  most easily shocked of Spaniards. I had not valued enough the pressure  of earth on my naked feet, while permitted that refreshment.</p>
<p>At first I did not notice other ways in which our ancient  civilization was affecting me. Yet soon I observed a certain reluctance  in me to do good to others. I would say to myself. Need I exert what is  left of me, I who have undergone tortures in an open boat and every  privation and humiliation among the Indians, when there are strong  healthy men about me, fresh from Holy Church and from school, who know  their Christian duty? We Europeans all talk this way to ourselves. It  has become second nature to us.</p>
<p>Each nobleman and alcalde and villager is an avenue that leads us to  this way of talking; we can admit it privately, your Majesty, can we  not? If a man need a cloak, we do not give it to him if we have our wits  about us; nor are we to be caught stretching out our finger in aid of a  miserable woman. Someone else will do it, we say. Our communal life  dries up our milk: we are barren as the fields of Castile. We regard our  native land as a power which acts of itself, and relieves us each of  exertion. While with them I thought only about doing the Indians good.  But back among my fellow countrymen, I had to be on my guard not to do  them positive harm. If one lives where all suffer and starve, one acts  on one&#8217;s own impulse to help. But where plenty abounds, we surrender our  generosity, believing that our country replaces us each and several.  This is not so, and indeed a delusion. On the contrary the power of  maintaining life in others, lives within each of us, and from each of us  does it recede when unused. It is a concentrated power. If you are not  acquainted with it, your Majesty can have no inkling of what it is like,  what it portends, or the ways in which it slips from one. In the name  of God, your Majesty,</p>
<p>FAREWELL</p>
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		<title>My Miracle &#8211; From My Pastor&#8217;s Viewpoint</title>
		<link>http://walrustalk.com/3/healing/my-miracle-from-my-pastors-viewpoint/</link>
		<comments>http://walrustalk.com/3/healing/my-miracle-from-my-pastors-viewpoint/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Feb 2008 16:30:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Walrus</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Healing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Miracle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guy Ames]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hospice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hospitals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miracle]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://walrustalk.com/3/?p=115</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[While I was in the early stages of my hospice time, my later-to-become pastor, Guy Ames of Chapel Hill United Methodist Church in Oklahoma City, visited me several times.  It happened that he was starting a feature in the church newsletter called &#8220;Grace Happenings&#8221;.  In his first column, he wrote about my miracle. &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;- Grace [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>While I was in the early stages of my hospice time, my  later-to-become pastor, Guy Ames of Chapel Hill United Methodist Church  in Oklahoma City, visited me several times.  It happened that he was  starting a feature in the church newsletter called &#8220;Grace Happenings&#8221;.   In his first column, he wrote about my miracle.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p><strong>Grace Happenings – Chapel Hill United Methodist Church</strong><br />
February 11, 2004</p>
<p>Inspiration and Perspiration</p>
<p>Grace Happens</p>
<p><img style="margin: 10px; border: 0pt none;" src="http://walrustalk.com/grace.JPG" border="0" alt="Grace Happens" hspace="5" vspace="5" width="180" height="180" align="left" />Right  before Christmas I had the privilege of witnessing a miracle, one of  those events that logic and understanding don’t support. A family that  has been related to our church for sometime saw a loved one go from  health to the verge of death in just a few short days. Doctors told the  family that nothing could save this life, not medicine, not amputation  to stave off infection, not an extended hospital stay. Go home, call  hospice and prepare for the end. So that is what they did. They went  home.</p>
<p>People in our church and folks from far and near heard of the plight  and did what could be done: there were prayers, prayer chains, cards,  calls, even some meals delivered. We waited and watched and prepared for  the end. Then I received a call…maybe a miracle was in the works.</p>
<p>Now for years I’ve lived in between observing the miraculous and the  disappointing. So often I’m left as a pastor to try to offer some  explanation for the reasons prayers haven’t “worked”. I preach series of  sermons helping people to give some purpose to the hardships of life.  I’ve presided over funerals of children and teens and young parents.  None of that has fit very neatly into my understanding pf prayer and  miracles.</p>
<p>My youth was spent with Christians who sought miracles on a regular  basis. We prayed, we believed, we claimed, we expected miracles.  Sometimes there were great reports, sometimes there were intermediate  reports of good news. We looked for good news wherever we could find it.  Some of my friends began to believe that quoting certain Bible verses  ensured success in prayer, and if you did not experience their success  rates then you must not have faith. To tell you the truth, there were  times when I questioned my own faith in the midst of some of our family  trials and illnesses. There was even a time in my ministry when I was  afraid to pray for healing or blessings for fear that I would have to  explain what was going on when the best didn’t happen.</p>
<p>Over the years I’ve come to believe that sometimes miracles do occur.  I really can’t explain them easily. Sometimes they come to people I  really don’t believe should get them, some real scoundrels. Quite often  they occur with people who don’t have the kind of faith one would  expect. The very people we expect to receive miracles are the very ones  who seem to be left off the list. So you can imagine my surprise and  delight and even a little skepticism when I heard that a miracle might  be in the making.</p>
<p>The doctors were just as surprised as any when the blood poisoning  could no longer be detected, and the gangrene began to sluff off and new  skin was produced. Day by day this loved one improved. The joy that  invaded the family cannot be overstated. They have experienced a  miracle. Hospice has been sent away! Praise God.</p>
<p>I got to thinking about this. Life brings with it some really  difficult times. So much so that one cynical group of folks have printed  up a bumper sticker that reads, “Fertilizer Happens”. I think we need a  new bumper sticker that acknowledges that in a world of the unexpected,  sometimes grace happens. Sometimes God touches us when we least expect  it. Sometimes good comes to those of us who don’t deserve it. Sometimes a  blessing comes our way and we didn’t do one thing to bring it about.  Sometimes GRACE HAPPENS!</p>
<p>I really complain when bad things happen. I wonder if I celebrate as  much when grace touches my shoulder, my family, my friends. I’ve begun  to look around for more of the grace happenings in our world. As a  friend and colleague, Lesley Rose, would say, “God is good, all the  time. All the time, God is good.”</p>
<p>Guy Ames</p>
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		<title>The Miracle</title>
		<link>http://walrustalk.com/3/general/the-miracle/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 05 Jan 2008 16:28:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Walrus</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Healing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[My Miracle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miracle]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://walrustalk.com/3/?p=113</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On December 12, 2003, my family called for an ambulance and I was rushed to the emergency room in critical condition. I was hallucinating, I could not speak and I was in near total renal failure. Infections on my legs, which I was trying to treat myself, had turned sepsic. Gangrene was present. Within two [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On December  12, 2003, my family called for an ambulance and I was rushed to the  emergency room in critical condition. I was hallucinating, I could not  speak and I was in near total renal failure. Infections on my legs,  which I was trying to treat myself, had turned sepsic. Gangrene was  present. Within two hours of my arrival at the hospital I was put in a  drug-induced coma and placed on a respirator. The doctors&#8217; diagnosis was  grim: immediate double amputations above the knees and dialysis. Or  death.I was in that coma for 5 days, and during those days, my wife  agonized and prayed over the situation. Our first miracle was that I  survived those 5 days. And many doctors thought I could not survive  without the respirator. Then our second miracle &#8211; God gave Barbara the  grace, wisdom and courage to refuse the amputations.</p>
<p>I was taken off the respirator and dismissed from the hospital. I was  admitted into a hospice program and went home to die. When I arrived  home I had a fever of 106, I was still hallucinating and I still could  not speak. My organs were shutting down, as were the neuropathways in my  brain. I was actually in the physical process of dying. The hospice  team iced me down, put morphine patches on me and tried to make me as  comfortable as possible. My life expectancy was measured in days.  Perhaps even in hours. Funeral arrangements were begun.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s important to note that hospice was not treating my legs. Their  job was to make my death as painless as possible. I was being given a  strong, but common, anti-biotic and they were applying only saline  solutions to the wounds. Other than amputation, there is no cure for  gangrene. But the miracles that happened next were either to numerous to  count or they need to be lumped into one continuous miracle that lasted  almost six weeks.</p>
<p>First my temperature returned to normal. Then my kidneys returned to  normal functioning. And then the real adventure began. &#8220;But there is no  cure for gangrene,&#8221; they would say, amazed, as the gangrene dropped off  my legs and exposed fresh, new skin. &#8220;I don&#8217;t understand&#8221; and &#8220;I&#8217;ve  never seen anything like this before&#8221; were common refrains. After a few  weeks, it was obvious that, for some reason, I was not dying. But they  cautioned me that I would still lose a leg. I told them no. When I did  not lose a leg they, they said I would lose a foot. I told them no. When  I didn&#8217;t lose a foot, they said I would lose some toes. I told them no.  When I didn&#8217;t lose any toes, they said I would lose a nail. And I did.  But it grew back.</p>
<p>I entered the hospice program with two terminal conditions and a life  expectancy of only days. But we got a second opinion from God. He saved  me, healed me and restored me. I am now beginning to walk again. And on  the same two legs that God gave me 57 years ago. When the healing power  of Jesus Christ hits a body, sometimes all you can do is just stand  back and watch!! Praise His Name Forever!!</p>
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