. The journal of American history. 5 IT™ m ilatwarrtpt nf pfjjmrian ntt flI0lumb«0, JHjtp in battle they eat up after the fighting is over. They claim that the fleshof man is so good to eat that nothing like it can be compared to it in theworld; and this is pretty evident, for of the human bones we found intheir houses everything that could be gnawed, had already been gnawed, sothat nothing else remained of them but what was too hard to be eaten. Inone of the houses we found the neck of a man undergoing the processof cooking in a pot, preparatory for eating The habits of these Caribbees


. The journal of American history. 5 IT™ m ilatwarrtpt nf pfjjmrian ntt flI0lumb«0, JHjtp in battle they eat up after the fighting is over. They claim that the fleshof man is so good to eat that nothing like it can be compared to it in theworld; and this is pretty evident, for of the human bones we found intheir houses everything that could be gnawed, had already been gnawed, sothat nothing else remained of them but what was too hard to be eaten. Inone of the houses we found the neck of a man undergoing the processof cooking in a pot, preparatory for eating The habits of these Caribbees are beastly. There are three islands: this one on which we are, is called by thenatives, Turuqueira;3* the other, which was the first we saw, is namedCayre,3* and the third There is a general resemblance among thenatives of these three islands, as if they were of the same lineage. Theydo no harm to one another, but each and all of them wage war against theinhabitants of the other neighboring islands, and for this purpos


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