By Right of Conquest, by G. A. Henty 
 
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Title: By Right of Conquest Or, With Cortez in Mexico 
Author: G. A. Henty 
Release Date: September 28, 2006 [EBook #19398] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BY RIGHT OF CONQUEST 
*** 
 
Produced by Martin Robb 
 
By Right of Conquest: Or, With Cortez in Mexico by G. A. Henty. 
 
Contents 
Preface. 
Chapter 1 
: A Startling Proposal. 
Chapter 2 
: Bound To Unknown Parts. 
Chapter 3
: The Voyage. 
Chapter 4 
: Among The Islands. 
Chapter 5 
: Shipwrecked. 
Chapter 6 
: Anahuac. 
Chapter 7 
: A Wonderful Country. 
Chapter 8 
: At Tezcuco. 
Chapter 9 
: Life In A Palace. 
Chapter 10 
: News From The Coast. 
Chapter 11 
: Cortez. 
Chapter 12 
: The Fugitives. 
Chapter 13 
: The Massacre Of Cholula. 
Chapter 14 
: In Mexico.
Chapter 15 
: Again At Tezcuco. 
Chapter 16 
: A Treasure Room. 
Chapter 17 
: The Insurrection. 
Chapter 18 
: The Rising In Mexico. 
Chapter 19 
: The Passage Of The Causeway. 
Chapter 20 
: At Tlascala. 
Chapter 21 
: A Victim For The Gods. 
Chapter 22 
: Home. 
 
Preface. 
The conquest of Mexico, an extensive empire with a numerous and warlike population, 
by a mere handful of Spaniards, is one of the romances of history. Indeed, a writer of 
fiction would scarcely have dared to invent so improbable a story. Even the bravery of 
the Spaniards, and the advantage of superior arms would not have sufficed to give them 
the victory, had it not been that Mexico was ripe for disruption. The Aztecs, instead of 
conciliating by wise and gentle government the peoples they had conquered, treated them 
with such despotic harshness that they were ready to ally themselves with the invaders, 
and to join with them heartily against the central power; so that instead of battling against 
an empire single-handed, the Spaniards had really only to war with a great city, and were 
assisted by a vast army of auxiliaries.
Fortunately, the details of the extraordinary expedition of Cortez were fully related by 
contemporary writers, several of whom were eyewitnesses of the scenes they described. It 
was not necessary for me, however, to revert to these; as Prescott, in his admirable work 
on the conquest of Mexico, has given a summary of them; and has drawn a most vivid 
picture of the events of the campaign. The book far surpasses in interest any volume of 
fiction, and I should strongly recommend my readers to take the first opportunity that 
occurs of perusing the whole story, of which I have only been able to touch upon the 
principal events. 
While history is silent as to the voyage of the Swan, it is recorded by the Spaniards that 
an English ship did, in 1517 or 1518, appear off the port of San Domingo, and was fired 
at by them, and chased from the islands; but it was not until some twenty or thirty years 
later that the English buccaneers openly sailed to challenge the supremacy of the 
Spaniards among the Western Islands, and to dispute their pretensions to exclude all other 
flags but their own from those waters. It may, however, be well believed that the ship 
spoken of was not the only English craft that entered the Spanish main; and that the 
adventurous traders of the West country, more than once, dispatched ships to carry on an 
illicit trade there. Such enterprises would necessarily be conducted with great secrecy, 
until the relations between Spain and England changed, and religious differences broke 
up the alliance that existed between them during the early days of Henry the 8th. 
G. A. Henty. 
Chapter 1 
: A Startling Proposal. 
On March 3rd, 1516, the trading vessel the Swan dropped anchor at Plymouth. She would 
in our days be considered a tiny craft indeed, but she was then looked upon as a large 
vessel, and one of which her owner, Master Diggory Beggs, had good reason to be proud. 
She was only of some eighty tons burden, but there were few ships that sailed out from 
Plymouth of much larger size; and Plymouth was even then rising into importance as a 
seaport, having flourished mightily since the downfall of its once successful rival--Fowey. 
Large ships were not needed in those days, for the only cargoes sent across the sea were 
costly and precious goods, which occupied but small space. The cloths    
    
		
	
	
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