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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/38815-8.txt b/38815-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..88b4857 --- /dev/null +++ b/38815-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5651 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Prowling about Panama, by George A. Miller + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Prowling about Panama + +Author: George A. Miller + +Illustrator: Alice Best + A. W. Best + +Release Date: February 9, 2012 [EBook #38815] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROWLING ABOUT PANAMA *** + + + + +Produced by Adrian Mastronardi, Alex Gam and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + +PROWLING ABOUT +PANAMA + +BY + +GEORGE A. MILLER + +ILLUSTRATED BY +ALICE AND A. W. BEST +FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE AUTHOR + +[Illustration] + +THE ABINGDON PRESS +NEW YORK CINCINNATI + + +Copyright, 1919, by +GEORGE A. MILLER + + +DEDICATED +TO THE +YOUNG PEOPLE OF THE EPWORTH LEAGUES +OF THE +CALIFORNIA CONFERENCE + + + + +CONTENTS + + +CHAPTER PAGE + + FOREWORD 11 + +I. WHERE THE PROWLING IS GOOD 13 + +II. THE TRAIL OF THE PIRATES 26 + +III. PICTURESQUE PANAMA 41 + +IV. A CITY OF GHOSTS 55 + +V. THE SPELL OF THE JUNGLE 65 + +VI. LIFE AT THE BOTTOM 76 + +VII. THE INTERIOR 93 + +VIII. ECONOMIC WASTE 109 + +IX. PANAMA AND PROGRESS 122 + +X. KNOWING OUR NEIGHBORS 144 + +XI. THE FAMILY TREE 160 + +XII. LATIN-AMERICAN HEART 178 + +XIII. THE CARIBBEAN WORLD 193 + +XIV. THE PANAMA CANAL 214 + +XV. PROWLING INTO THE FUTURE 235 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + + PAGE + +The Faithful Mule is the Ship of the Jungle 14 + +The Homeward Way at Nightfall 15 + +An Empire in the Making 19 + +A Few Good Roads on the Zone 21 + +Church at Nata, Oldest Inhabited Town in New World, + Founded 1520 24 + +The Jungle is the Place for Picnics 27 + +Even Farm Cabins Are Picturesque in Costa Rica 30 + +Ruins of Old Panama, the Most Romantic Spot in the New + World 33 + +Indian Woman at the Fountain 36 + +Baths--Wholesale and Retail 43 + +Convent Door 46 + +Official Lottery in Bishop's House, Panama 48 + +Ruin of Famous Flat-Arch Church 52 + +Eighth-Grade Room, Panama 53 + +Convent Garden 56 + +Romantic Old Convents Survive 58 + +Ruined Tower at Old Panama 60 + +Costa Rica Trapiche, or Sugar Mill 62 + +Papaya Trees 66 + +Bananas and Sugar Cane 68 + +Cacao Pods 70 + +Proposed Location for Rest Cure 73 + +Picturesque Jungle Towns 78 + +Tortillas are Staple 80 + +Jungle Folk 81 + +"The Cotter's Saturday Night" 82 + +Church Bells of Arraijan, Cast 1722 85 + +First-Grade Room, Panama 89 + +The Beautiful Savanas of Costa Rica 95 + +Shipping Costa Rica Vegetables to Panama 99 + +Good Pineapples Grow Here 103 + +Dead Timber in Gatun Lake Now Covered with Orchids 105 + +Interior Meat Market 111 + +The Flavor of Old Spain 112 + +Taking the Rest Cure 113 + +The Oxen Stage of Agriculture 115 + +Wayside Sellers of Fruit 117 + +The House Beside the Road 118 + +Wireless at Darien 123 + +Farm Grist Mill, Costa Rica 126 + +Happy Kindergartners, Panama 129 + +Young Costa Rica is Enterprising 131 + +Wooden Sugar Mill and Its Maker 133 + +Public Market, David 137 + +Indian Boy Goes to School 145 + +Washday in Costa Rica 147 + +Riverside Plantation 151 + +Jungle Products 154 + +San Blas Indian Chief 161 + +No Race Suicide Here 162 + +Jungle Guide 164 + +One Use for a Head 165 + +Beggars and Cathedrals 167 + +Far from the Madding Crowd 169 + +Seawall Church and School, Panama 171 + +Mandy Did Her Share 173 + +The Canal Digger 173 + +The Town Pump, Interior Village 175 + +Wayside Cemetery in the Jungle 176 + +Coconuts--So Good and So High 180 + +Boiling "Dulce"--Crude Sugar 183 + +Washing by the River 189 + +Costa Rica Farm House 194 + +Bananas Thirty Feet High 197 + +San Blas Indians Have "Poker Faces" 198 + +Where Styles Molest No More 201 + +Chinese Always Start a School 205 + +"Schooldays" 205 + +Three in a Row 212 + +Mother, Home, and--the Simple Life 212 + +Construction Days in Culebra-Gailard Cut 217 + +Gatun Spillway, Key to the Canal 224 + +Cristobal Streets 227 + +Fat Cattle of Coclé 228 + +Enchanted Islands in Gatun Lake 231 + +Panama Public Water Works, Interior Country 237 + +A Jungle Cathedral 242 + +Shoe-bills Are Small 248 + + + + +FOREWORD + + +The fine art of prowling may be achieved, but is more often a gift of +those to the manner born. Professional globe-trotters are not prowlers. +They are often the victims of their own sense of superiority. Personally +conducted tours are little help to real prowling, and professional guides +reduce the sight-seer to a machine for receiving "canned" information with +gaping mouth, while with his free hand he extracts tips from his reluctant +pocket. + +Prowling is an instinct, a sixth sense of locations and values. The +prowler must have intuition and imagination and perseverance and +historical perspective, but with these he must have something else--that +inner vision that finds values in everything human. The expert explorer +will find something interesting in Sahara, but almost any prowler will +have a rare time in Panama. + +Probably no spot in the New World has served as the location of so many +kinds of events and interests as this narrow neck of land between two +continents. Brief histories of it have been well written, and the visitor +should by all means read at least one of them. It remains for some seer +yet to tell worthily the story of the four centuries that link the last +discovery of the world's greatest explorer with the final achievement of +the world's most skillful builders. + +Panama furnishes an epitome of history. Nearly everything that has ever +happened anywhere in the world has had some counterpart or parallel in +Panama, and of the coming results of the new forces now released on the +Isthmus time alone can be the measure. + +This book makes no claims to consistency. Where contradictory +characteristics abound and motives are much mixed, both sides may be +faithfully set forth, but to reconcile them is a difficult matter. There +will be no unified and consistent life on the Isthmus until the advancing +civilization now there outgrows some of its present traits. + +Can one tell the truth about Panama and return to the Isthmus? That +remains to be proven. Much depends on the spirit of the prowler. As well +ask whether one can tell the truth about Chicago and be welcome to that +metropolis. Probably Chicago would pay no attention to the comment, but +Panama might take enough interest to notice. + +This is not a guidebook. Heaven forbid! It is merely a few notes of a +prowler who found Panama interesting. + + + + +CHAPTER I + +WHERE THE PROWLING IS GOOD + + +Panama is the great American curiosity shop. The first city founded by +explorers in the New World, the oldest town in America inhabited by white +men, the most conglomerate mixture of humanity on earth are in Panama. The +bloodiest tale of modern history, the most romantic story of American +exploration, the greatest engineering achievement of man all center in +Panama. + +If there be any interest in congested and sweltering humanity, any concern +for the problems of social uplift and personal reaction, Panama is the +laboratory for study. The cleanest and healthiest towns on earth are on +the Canal Zone, and the last word in shiftlessness and inefficiency is +also here. Superstition and science, rascality and rhapsody, efficiency +and squalor, graft and honor, all mixed and mingled--this is Panama. +Jungle and plain, valley and coast, tropic heat and mountain paradise, +fever-swamps and ideal sanitation, engineering success and life in the +primitive open--these too are in Panama. + +Strange and mysterious traces are still found of the days when the gold of +Peru was carried across the Isthmus on pack trains. Later the gold-seekers +of California fought their way along the route of the present Canal and +found ships on the west coast for the mines of Eldorado. If any survivors +still live, they can tell stirring tales of the days when it was well +worth a life to carry gold to Aspinwall. + +[Illustration: THE FAITHFUL MULE IS THE SHIP OF THE JUNGLE] + +It all began with Columbus himself when he sailed into Almirante Bay and +thought that he had found in Chiriqui Lagoon the long-sought passage to +India. What he really found, what was to follow his discovery, he could +not have dreamed, adventurer that he was! Almirante (Admiral), Cristobal +(Christopher), and Colon (Columbus) remain to-day to remind us of the +illustrious explorer who first set foot on Panama. But Columbus gave us +Panama, and never knew! It was Balboa who first saw the waters of the wide +Pacific from the summits of the Isthmian hills. It was Pizarro who packed +across the fifty miles of jungle the timbers of the ships which he put +together on the beach of the Pacific and with which he discovered Peru, +after indescribable hardships and repeated attempts to find the "hill of +gold." + +[Illustration: THE HOMEWARD WAY AT NIGHTFALL] + +On the Pacific side of the Isthmus was founded Old Panama, the first city +of the New World, where to-day majestic ruins stand, a fitting shrine for +the reverent pilgrim. And between Old Panama and Porto Bello stretches the +famous Paved Trail of Las Cruces. + +Along this trail lurked the trouble-hunters and makers of the sixteenth +and seventeenth centuries. For two hundred years the tinkle of the bells +of the gold-laden pack mules was never silent. On this jungle path, when +stolen gold was carried by the sackful, trouble was certain to follow. The +big trail was a pathway of blood, robbery, and intrigue. All the worst +passions and performances of depraved men turned loose and ran riot for a +century and a half. These were the days when life was raw and rough at +Panama. + +To-day the old trail is covered with palms and decorated with orchids. +Occasional stones trace the outline of the ancient highway. Where the +drunken and ribald song of the muleteer rose about the camp-fire at night, +canaries and parrakeets now chatter and sing. The soft caress of the +jungle breeze whispers no tales of the days when the trail could be traced +by the bleaching bones that lined the right-of-way. The jungle is nature's +great blotter for the sins, sorrows, and sufferings of an age now +forgotten--but it all happened in Panama. + +Panama is not all jungle. To the westward stretch great savannas, between +the mountains and the sea; miles and miles of smooth and level country +open, fair and well watered, only waiting for the tickle of American +cultivation to laugh a crop. It makes a real estate man's fingers itch; +but that is another story. Where a little cultivation has been +inadvertently perpetrated on the land, tall sugar cane, luscious fruits, +and toothsome vegetables attest the quality of the soil and the climate. + +Frequent rivers, numerous inlets on the coast line, occasional interesting +native towns, old churches, impossible "roads," meandering trails, +scattered herds of fat cattle, a few sugar mills, numerous trapiches (cane +grinders), fenced patreros (pastures), and everywhere the mixed-blood +natives--this is Panama in the western provinces. + +Panama westward is not all a flat country, however. Eleven thousand feet +into the sky rises the Chiriqui volcano, and a little farther west in the +same range stands Pico Blanco (White Top), at about the same height. +Thrown across the slopes of these lofty summits and half way up lies a +great and beautiful country, with a climate such as might have been +coveted for the site of Eden. Cool, comfortable, and salubrious is this +garden of the gods. In all the so-called temperate zone no land yet +discovered offers three hundred and fifty days per year of comfort and +health. To be sure, vacation pilgrims from the warmer coast country +sometimes make mention of cold feet upon first reaching this Mecca in the +mountains, but nobody finds fault on that account. Most of them like it. + +Chiriqui is a garden spot. Wide ranges of fertile soil, gentle slopes +rolling back against the mountain ranges, good harbors along the coast, +and occasional plantations with American improvements, mark the country as +the coming granary of the Republic. Rolling slopes and blossoming fields, +with a background of the never-failing come-and-go of the lights and +shades on the face of the mountains, form a picture not to be forgotten. +Always the summits and the clouds seem to be playing leapfrog in the sky, +and the whole upper world, looking down on the puny traveler, seems ever +trying to say something and never quite uttering its meaning. And he who +looks and listens finds himself trying to say it for them, and never can +he find the word. Perhaps some poetic soul will yet look upon these +heights and tell us what it is they are muttering. + +The coast line of western Panama is a fascinating shore. Like enchanted +islands rise bits of forest out of the sea and any of them might be the +castle site of the lord of the main. + +In and out between their wooded shores the steamer winds its way till it +dodges in through some narrow "boca" to find a tortuous channel leading to +a landing place, that must always be approached at the whim of the tide. +Whether there be a thousand islands or not, no one knows; but I have stood +on the steamer deck and counted fifty in sight at a time, while other +fifties rose up to meet us as those nearby dropped astern. Here and there +some lonely light blinks its vigil through the night, and the swells of +the Pacific break in fantastic sea-ghosts against the rocky cliffs. + +[Illustration: AN EMPIRE IN THE MAKING] + +Navigation of these waters is not a science, it is an art. The captains of +these coast craft know every tree and rock and river mouth for four +hundred miles, and make their way through tortuous channels by markings +that no landsman can see. There is one grizzled navigator, said to be +unable to read or write, who knows every marking on the coast for six +hundred miles, and in the long years of service has never made a mistake +or met with an accident. Possibly his success might be due to the fact +that what he does not know does not confuse him. His mental horizon may +not be very distant, but at least he escapes a lot of worry about things +that he (and you and I) cannot control. When the tides have a rise and +fall of eighteen feet, and all harbors are but shallow river mouths, the +negotiation of the coast ports becomes a matter requiring much accuracy of +judgment. + +The old trail across the Isthmus is the Mecca of many pilgrims who by some +searching find its scattered stones amid the riotous jungle. The later +trail was opened after the city of Panama was moved to its present site. +It began at Colon, followed the Chagres River to the present site of +Gamboa, and then wound its ways over the low summit of the hills down to +the new Panama and terminated at the "Nun's Beach," where now stand a +Protestant church and school. Here the pack trains were unloaded and the +high tides carried the rafts and lighters out to the ships waiting in the +little harbor. + +The dark days of Panama were the days after the gold trade failed. Even +the gold of Peru was not inexhaustible, and the trade across the Isthmus +could not stand continued centuries of robbery and murder. It had to end +some time, and end it did; and when the end came all the Isthmus lapsed +into a slough of despond and lethargy of inertia. For a century and a half +Panama was as forgotten as the Catacombs. + +But Panama went her way, whether anybody cared or not. The people left on +the Isthmus were the racial remnants of the mixture of mankind that had +found its way back and forth for two centuries, and they were fairly able +to take care of themselves. The rich forests and fertile soil would bear +fruit and food enough to sustain life whether anyone worked or not, and +the result was not the development of a virile race of men. How could it +be? Probably few spots on earth have had less incentive to develop hardy +and enterprising character than the Isthmus of Panama. + +[Illustration: A FEW GOOD ROADS ON THE ZONE] + +The prowler about Panama will find a wide variety of interests and +inspirations. Whatever his peculiar, personal fad he can find it +somewhere. Then he can prowl to his heart's content. + +If he prefers the sea, there are fifteen hundred miles of coast line to +explore with something new to every mile. Or he can launch out a bit, and +in a day's time make his way to the famous Pearl Islands, where are life +and industry so distinct that weeks mays be spent in studying the +development of a civilization, insular and unique. The coast of Darien has +boundless possibilities for the explorer; and the San Blas Islands would +keep the ethnologist busy for months. For an enchanted inland sea the +Chiriqui Lagoon is unsurpassed. + +If historical romance is desired, the prowling is certainly abundant; and +if the prowler is a lover of nature, wild and luxuriant, rioting in +marvelous and indescribable forms of overflowing life, he has but to equip +himself for jungle travel, and he will find wonders by the mile, and +fantastic nature piled mountains high and chasms deep. If it is mountains, +they are here in scenic beauty unsurpassed. If the explorer is a student +of human nature and cares to attempt the unscrambling of this blend of +blood that flows in swarthy faces, he will be busy here for a lifetime. +And if none of these will do, and the curious landsman will have nothing +short of the exploring of vast unchristened wildernesses where no human +foot has ever trod, and where strange and dangerous forms of unclassified +life wander at will through the overgrown forests, he will find it--and +doubtless he will find much more of it than he wants before he gets back +to civilization. + +If it is promotion schemes and development projects, then here at least is +a commodious place to put them. Here, in agricultural and colonizing +schemes, somebody will yet get rich--and other somebodies poor. + +If the prowler's interest is primarily social, and he would browse about +one of the most interesting cities in America, let him come to Panama. +Ancient Spanish streets, scrupulously clean--can these be found anywhere +else? Side by side, over and under, the sixteenth and twentieth centuries +run together. + +And what makes Panama to-day the crossroad of the world? For him who in +the love of engineering skill holds communion with high human achievement, +and prefers to prowl around the locks and docks, and study the marvelous +successes and adaptations and devices of the latest and greatest feat of +brain and hand, this is the very center of the earth. No man with a soul +for the poetry of mechanics can stand in a control house of one of the +locks and see the enormous gates swing back at the movement of a finger +without feeling that man, with all his limitations, has yet in his being +some image of the Creator. To see an ocean giant rise up slowly in the +teeth of gravitation and slip through the gates on to the higher level, is +to wonder whether the portals that look so gloomy to us may not, after +all, be not exits but entrances to a new and higher level of life. What a +text! The ship does not rise by straining but by resting in a narrow +place. And no ship ever yet got through the locks without a pilot. The +whole process is as silent as the forces of eternity. There is a lot more, +and it bears no copyright. Help yourself. + +[Illustration: CHURCH AT NATA, OLDEST INHABITED TOWN IN THE NEW WORLD, +FOUNDED 1520] + +And for the prowler in the region of philosophy, what a place! What +changes in the geography and commerce and industry and policies and +politics of mankind must follow this last achievement on the historical +Isthmus of Panama, "quien sabe?" ("who knows?") None but the Omniscient. +Trade routes and bank exchanges, commercial dealings and national programs +will all be affected by this three-hundred-foot wide highway of water. If +but some power the gift would give us to come back a century hence and see +what will be doing then! + +What social and moral transformations will be wrought in the coming years +by the release of spiritual forces through the new religious life and free +faith brought to Panama with the coming of the Canal? Out of the +soul-bondage of a system of superstition and ignorance will come a new +human consciousness of the worthiness of life and the high privilege of +living. Whether it is to prowl or prophesy, the material is abundant, and +the pilgrim will find rare material a-plenty all about him. Panama is +perplexing and peculiar, but he who finds the key to the riddle will be +kept busy. + +Perhaps the amateur explorer has a penchant for old churches. Here they +are. Seven of them, with a couple of first-class ruins thrown in. The rich +monasteries of Peru and Mexico are missing, but for that there is a +reason. Every bit of treasure was stolen as fast as accumulated. Yes, if +unmolested in the past, Panama would be a mine for the antiquarian to-day. +But any active imagination, even on half-time shift, can find here +material for romances, warranted to interest every member of the family, +at reduced prices, if paid for in advance. From the Flat-Arch Church to +the ruins of Old Panama it is good prowling all the way. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE TRAIL OF THE PIRATES + + +The present conglomerate of humanity living on the Isthmus of Panama is +the racial remainder of some very much mixed social history. Here were +enacted some of the most stirring stories and tempestuous times in +American history. In 1453 the Eastern Roman Empire fell before the +assaults of the Turks and closed the land routes to India. Nearly forty +years later Columbus set sail in his great effort to find a westward +passage for the commerce of Europe. In this he failed, but on his fourth +and final voyage discovered the Isthmus of Panama and landed on the shores +of the Chiriqui Lagoon, supposing that the beautiful inland sea must be +the long-sought passage westward. Here the town of Almirante still bears +his name. At Porto Bello and Saint Christopher Bay he made brief stops and +returned to Spain having no idea of the character of the isthmus that he +had discovered. + +On November 3, 1903, exactly four hundred years from the day that Columbus +set foot on the soil of Panama, the Republic of Panama declared its +sovereign independence and began its national life as one of the family of +American nations. + +In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the Caribbean main was overrun +by as unscrupulous and bloodthirsty a set of pirates as ever sailed any +sea. Even without these rascals there would have been trouble enough, and +with them the story is sufficiently lurid for the most melodramatic taste. + +[Illustration: THE JUNGLE IS THE PLACE FOR PICNICS] + +One name stands out above his fellows. The intrepid navigator who first +saw the waters of the Pacific set forth at the age of twenty-three as an +adventurer, and after various experiences embarked as a stowaway for his +second voyage. By personal persuasion he became the partner of his master, +and after founding a colony in Darien sent Señor Endico back to Spain in +irons for his pains. + +This left Balboa supreme, with the whole Castilla de Oro (Castle of Gold) +country before him for exploration. He at once sent Pizarro to examine the +interior and gathered the scattered fugitives from former expeditions. The +combined forces took the field against the Indians. When they reached the +domain of Comagre, the most powerful chief of the country, peace was made. +This chief was a real aristocrat with mummied ancestors clothed in gold +and pearls, and he gave to Balboa four thousand ounces of gold, sixty +wives, and offered to show him the way to a country beyond the dim +mountains where a powerful people lived in magnificence and sailed ships +of solid gold. He also entertained his distinguished visitor with tales of +a temple of gold called Dabaibe, forty leagues farther than Darien, and +said that the mother of the sun, moon, and stars lived there. + +Balboa's imagination was stirred by these stories and he prepared an +expedition of discovery. No temple of gold was found, but internal +dissensions and Indian attacks disturbed the peace of the colony. +Reenforcements arrived, and with them the title of captain-general. + +Balboa now set out on what was to be the most famous event of his life. He +had been promised the sight of a great ocean to the south, after he had +climbed certain mountains. Various Indian oppositions developed, but on +the 26th of September, 1513, at about ten o'clock in the morning, Balboa +and his men, from the top of a high mountain, saw for the first time the +waters of the vast Pacific. The priest of the expedition, named Andreas de +Vara, chanted a _Te Deum_, with the entire company on their knees. A cross +was raised, and the names of the Spanish rulers carved on the surrounding +trees. + +After meeting several Indian tribes the descent was made to the shore, and +Balboa waded knee deep into the surf and, waving the banner of Spain, +proclaimed that the new-found ocean and all land bordering thereon should +be the property of his sovereign. + +For a long time this new ocean was known as the South Sea, and Balboa at +once set about exploring the vicinity. The Pearl Islands were located, +taken possession of, and named. A later expedition by a less difficult +route crossed the Isthmus of Panama and conquered the Indians on the Pearl +Islands, bringing back plentiful tribute of fine pearls from the subdued +chief. + +The year following, in 1514, arrived the black villain of the story in the +person of Pedrarias, sent out from Spain as governor of Darien. This +disturber brought with him two thousand men. Balboa built a fleet of ships +on the Atlantic side, took them to pieces, carried them on the backs of +Indians across the Isthmus, put them together again, launched them in the +waters of the Pacific, and proceeded to explore the coast eastward from +Panama. On his return from this trip Balboa was arrested by Pedrarias on a +trumped-up charge of treason, and in the forty-second year of his life was +beheaded, while declaring his entire innocency of all treachery. Balboa +was a product of his age, and of faults he possessed a-plenty, but as one +of the great explorers of history his end was a sad reward for the +distinguished services that he rendered to the world. + +[Illustration: EVEN FARM CABINS ARE PICTURESQUE IN COSTA RICA] + +In 1515 an expedition crossed the Isthmus and camped near the hut of a +poor fisherman at a point called by the natives Panama. For this name +several explanations are given, one of them being that there were many +shellfish at this place. The meaning of the name is now lost, but in 1519 +the city of Panama was founded at this point by Pedrarias. Two years +later, by order of the Spanish crown, the bishopric, government, and +colonists of the Isthmus were transferred from the Atlantic side at Darien +to Old Panama. + +History now began in earnest by the Pacific. In 1525 a priest celebrated +in the cathedral at Old Panama solemn mass with two other men, Pizzarro +and Almagro, the rite being a solemn vow to conquer all countries lying to +the south. For this purpose an expedition was soon organized and sailed +away along the west coast of South America. This expedition met with +varying fortunes, but in time discovered the long-sought Peru with its +splendid temples and golden treasures. + +The first regular trail across the Isthmus led from Nombre de Dios to Old +Panama, crossing the Chagres River at Cruces. Later small boats sailed +from Nombre de Dios to the mouth of the Chagres and made their way up to +Cruces, where their cargoes were transferred to the backs of horses for +the rest of the journey to Panama. Later Nombre de Dios was abandoned for +Porto Bello, because of the very good harbor at the latter place. The old +trail was "paved" with stones for a part of the way, and the relics of +this old road may still be found in a few places amid the tangled growths +of the jungle. + +With the conquest of Peru and the discovery of gold in Darien, Old Panama +came rapidly to its own and soon became a city of great importance, being +for the time the richest city in New Spain. All the gold of Peru and the +rich west coast was brought to Panama to be sorted and packed across the +Isthmus, thence to be sent to Spain. Porto Bello became a rich town and +maintained great annual fairs up to the time of its destruction by +Morgan's pirates. + +The century and a half between the establishment of Old Panama as the +chief city of the Isthmus and its destruction in 1671 supplied one of the +tempestuous periods of history. It was on the Isthmus of Panama that the +American slave trade began and was continued for three hundred years. The +native Indians were so destroyed by the brutality and greed of the Spanish +conquerors that the expedient of importing black men from Africa was +devised in order to secure a labor supply for the country. Here arises the +historical precedent for the use of West Indian labor in the digging of +the American Canal. + +The best account of the sacking and destruction of Old Panama is that +written by John Esquemeling and published seven years after the event, of +which he was an eyewitness, being a member of the pirates' band. The +detailed account of this event, with the general pillaging of the Isthmus +by the English buccaneers, has been narrated with much exactness and great +interest. + +[Illustration: RUINS OF OLD PANAMA. THE MOST ROMANTIC SPOT IN THE NEW +WORLD] + +Stories of the great wealth of Old Panama in the day of its glory are not +hard to find. With the complete destruction of all this magnificence, the +present city was founded with due ceremonies in 1673 and much stone was +transported from the old city and built into the new. The cathedral was +soon built and stands to-day as solid as when first erected. The queen of +Spain sent detailed instructions for the building of the city, and among +other things directed that a safe wall for defense should be provided. +This was so well done that some of it still stands, an interesting relic +of the vigor and thoroughness of the civilization that produced it. Many +years passed in building these walls, and they were said to have cost ten +millions of dollars, most of which came from Peru. The story is told of a +Spanish king, who stood one day looking out of his palace window. When +asked what he was looking for he replied, "I am looking for those costly +walls of Panama; they should be visible even from here." A little +knowledge of the business methods of those days may throw some light on +the whys and wherefores of the high cost of the old walls. + +Twenty-six years after the founding of the present city of Panama an +effort was made to establish an English colony in Darien, but fever and +discouragement aided the Spanish in ending the venture. + +The eighteenth century is a monotonous one in Panama annals, marked mainly +by frequent encounters between the Spaniards and the Indians. Several +piratical expeditions ended in the scattering and murdering of the pirates +and restoration of Spanish sovereignty. + +When the great movement in South America for political independence swept +as far north as Colombia, and the decisive battle of Boyaca was fought in +1819, Panama was very strongly held by Spain as a place of maintenance for +her armies, and the city was at all times in a good state of defense. In +this same year, however, the first junta was formed for the purpose of +bringing about independence from Spain, and sentiment in favor of the +revolution grew very rapidly. Early in 1821 General Murgeon arrived with +the promise of high reward if he could compose the difficulties in Panama +and save the Isthmus to Spain. This he saw to be impossible, and after +having appointed José de Fabrega as coloner, he left for Quito. Fabrega, +being Isthmian born, cast his lot with the revolutionists and on November +28th, 1821, a large and enthusiastic crowd assembled with representatives +from all military and ecclesiastical organizations, and Panama was +declared to be forever free from Spanish dominion. A few loyal troops, +seeing their helpless position, laid down their arms, and the change of +government was effected without the shedding of a drop of blood--something +new in Panamanian affairs. Simon Bolivar sent over help for the +independents, but found the work done before his men arrived. + +After this political upheaval Panama slept on, and would still be dormant +to-day but for the discovery of gold in California in 1849. With a six +months' overland journey between the gold-hungry men of the Eastern States +and the gold-filled mountains of the West, the Isthmus suddenly came into +prominence as an easier way of reaching California. For seven or eight +years after the finding of gold not less than forty millions of dollars of +gold, twelve millions in silver, and twenty-five thousand passengers were +transported across the Isthmus annually. In 1853 the high-water mark was +reached, when sixty-six millions of dollars of gold were carried across to +the Atlantic side and shipped to New York. + +This sudden development of the pack train business brought to the Isthmus +a horde of Chileans, Peruvians, Indians, and mixed breeds, among whom were +the inevitable plunderers and spoilers. The trail was again marked by +blood and treachery. Many an unhappy pilgrim lost his riches, and not a +few lost their lives on the way. At last the authorities were aroused to +the necessity of making safe this highway suddenly become so important to +the world. + +[Illustration: INDIAN WOMAN AT THE FOUNTAIN] + +The year of the first gold rush saw the organization of the Panama +Railroad Company. In 1846 three American business men organized under the +present name and secured a concession from New Granada for forty-nine +years with such conditions that no ship canal could be constructed across +the Isthmus without the consent of the railroad company. When the name of +New Granada was changed to that of Colombia, the time was extended to +ninety-nine years. This concession in time came to be very valuable, and +the French Canal Company found it necessary to buy out the Panama Railroad +in order to secure control of the exclusive right of way across the +Isthmus. Later, when the United States acquired the control of the French +possessions in Panama, the Panama Railroad became one of the most valuable +assets on the list. By conditions of the concession, this road was bound +to pay to Colombia the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars per +year. After various transfers and deals this still holds in the form of +the obligation of the Panama Canal to pay this sum annually to the +Republic of Panama. + +The story of the early construction days of the Panama Railroad are as +exciting as those of the Morgan Pirates, with a far better outcome. Labor +troubles were many and bitter, and it became necessary to hold men in jail +until they were willing to work. The attractions of the California gold +fields were too much for the cupidity of men who saw daily pack trains +loaded with gold from the Eldorado of the Northwest passing their wretched +hovels and taunting them with visions of easy riches. But the work +proceeded, and after interminable troubles with the black swamp between +Aspinwall (Colon) and Gatun, the road was finished as far as Gatun in the +year 1850. In 1855 the line was finished to Panama and the romantic career +of the most prosperous short railroad in the world was well under way. + +Charges for freight and passenger travel were enormous in the early days +of the road. The fare was fifty cents per mile, with all baggage extra. +Freight was carried across the Isthmus for twenty-five cents per pound, +but so terrible were the old pack-train conditions that the travelers of +that day were more than willing to pay such prices for the luxury of +crossing the Isthmus by the railroad. + +At last the Colombian government took up the matter and the passenger rate +was reduced. Ten cents per pound continued to be the freight charge for +years. The road made vast profits, and by a combination of rates with the +steamship companies maintained a monopoly of travel. A few years after the +completion of the railroad the pack-train men and outlaws, deprived of +their plunder by the road, became very active as brigands, and on one +occasion perpetrated a riot that cost sixteen Americans their lives and +brought the United States and Colombia to the verge of open rupture. + +As far back as 1515 a German named Schoner drew a map of the American +continents with a clear line for a canal through the Isthmus. In 1581 an +actual survey was made for a canal, but nothing was done about it. In 1620 +Diego de Mercado submitted a long report to Philip II, but the monarch +turned it down, saying that since God had joined the continents together, +it would be impious to try to separate them, and a death penalty was +decreed for anyone so rash as to try to undo the works of God in this way. +In 1827 an engineer was sent by Simon Bolivar, president of the New +Granada federation, and a report was made commending the project of a +combined rail and water route. In 1838 a French company aroused so much +enthusiasm in the canal project that an expert was sent by the French +government to look the ground over. He reported that a sea-level canal +could be dug without going deeper than thirty-seven feet, but the idea was +again abandoned. Two American investigations were made in 1866 and 1875, +and about this time much interest was aroused in the then new Nicaragua +project. + +The popularity of the Suez Canal, successfully completed in 1869, led +directly to the DeLesseps organization of the Panama Canal Company. +Agitation began in 1875 and in the year following a right of way was +secured, but with the Panama Railroad concession standing in the way. + +The story of the work of the French Company, the New Canal Company, and +the final completion of the work by the United States government, is told +elsewhere. + +Now that the trail of the sixteenth-century pirates has become the most +famous inland waterway of the world, we can read with complacency the +story of the wretched times during which the Isthmus was the scene of +constant strife. Verily, Panama was not a very good place for sightseeing +in those days. The prowlers of the infested jungles and blood-stained +trails were not such as we would select as traveling companions to-day. If +any modern prowler becomes despondent and is tempted to complain that the +former days were better than these, let him read the story of Old Panama, +and then consider conditions as they are on the Isthmus and the Zone +to-day, and he will find food for reflection. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +PICTURESQUE PANAMA + + +A Panamanian cart loaded with English tea biscuit, drawn by an old +American army mule, driven by a Hindoo wearing a turban, drove up in front +of a Chinese shop. The Jamaican clerk, aided by the San Blas errand boy, +came out to supervise the unloading. The mule wriggled about out of +position, a Spanish policeman came along and everybody got out and +"cussed" the mule. + +That is Panama, every day. Across the street is an Italian lace shop run +by a Jew. Next door is a printery, operated by a Costa Rican. Just beyond +is a French laundry conducted by a man from Switzerland, and on the next +corner is a beautiful Chinese store where they sell everything from Japan. +Cloisonné and lacquer and curious carvings, silks, embroideries, +scientific instruments--they are all here. You can buy Canton linen, +Hongkong brass, Nikko carvings, Hindoo embroidery, German cutlery, French +microscopes, Canadian flour, New York apples, and California grapes all +within a block. And the products of Central and South America are all +about. + +The street in front of the shops is full of Panamanians, Peruvians, +Ecuadorians, Chileans, Colombians, and San Blas Indians, besides some +representatives of every country of North and South America, Europe, Asia, +and Africa. Canal Zone Americans walk past Yankee business men, and native +police crowd the mestizos off the sidewalk. + +Panama is a jitney town, and the honk of the never-silent horn punctuates +the clang and dash of the trolleys and automobiles down a fifteen-foot +street in a mad race to see which can get through first. Overhanging roofs +nearly touch above blooming orchids and talking birds that scream across +the narrow streets. Gloomy interiors and stumbling stairways lead up to +spacious apartments and breezy balconies. Above are occasional +roof-gardens. All the rooms have high ceilings, all the streets are paved, +and all the kids wear clothes--sometimes. + +There is no possible human shade or tint that is absent here. The +Anglo-Saxons are white, more or less. The Jamaicans are black, mostly. The +Panamanian is most often a soft and pleasing brown, done in a number of +wholly unmatchable tints. And the natives from these many sunny countries +round about are of every known color-tone, from chrome yellow to Paris +green. This is the human kaleidoscope of the earth: shake it up and you +will get a different result every time. + +You may not like it, but you can never truthfully say that Panama is not +interesting--all the time. + +The streets are clean. Daily sweepers and nightly garbage men take care of +that. The sidewalks are narrow, of course. Perhaps these two-foot +sidewalks account in part for the innate courtesy of the Latin mind. One +must be either polite or profane when he makes his way along these little +ledges, often two or three feet above the street. A portable stepladder +would help some. + +[Illustration: BATHS--WHOLESALE AND RETAIL] + +Some of these houses are old, very old. A few are new; most of them have +stood here one or two hundred years. There are many three stories high, a +few boast of four stories, but the most of them have but two. Third +stories are popular because of the breezes that blow and make life +comfortable. + +Plazas are small, but parked and well kept, and they are used as only +Latin-Americans know how to use a plaza. The little ones are garden-spot +oases in the deserts of bare walls and wide eaves. Santa Ana Plaza is the +heart of the city, and there is no hour of the day or night that there are +not people there. If you really wish to see the world go by, sit on the +stone bench at Santa Ana Plaza and look about you. If you stay long +enough, you may see anybody, from the latest naked brown baby to the last +chosen president of any country you may name. + +Sitting in the plaza is a business by itself in this country. The North +American uses a park as a short cut, cross-corners, to get somewhere. But +with the tropic citizen, the plaza is an end in itself. He is not going +anywhere, he is just sitting in the plaza. He may not even be called a +bench-warmer--the bench is already warm. He is sitting in the plaza--that +is all. + +The band-night parade in Santa Ana Plaza is an institution. Around the +central garden they saunter, to the swing of the very good music from the +central pavilion. The outer walk is wide, and so is the parade. Clockwise +walks the inner circle, three abreast, all young men. In the opposite +direction saunter the young women, also in threes. 'Round and 'round they +go, talking, laughing, listening, looking, lingering, while the band plays +on. It is a good band too. And not the least of the exhibit is the clothes +the women wear. In matter of graceful and apparently comfortable costumes +the Panamanian girls need apologize to none of their northern sisters. Who +is to blame the boys if they keep on walking around for the sake of seeing +the seeable, especially when she may be quite worth watching? Every added +turn means one look more. It is all very dignified and proper, but human +nature is the same old composition in every land, and the blood in the +heart runs red, no matter what the tint or tan without. In a land where +the customs of chaperonage are exceeding strict, and no young woman is +supposed to be left alone with any young man for the briefest moment, it +is easy to see why the band nights in the plaza are popular. Ostensibly +the young women, after the manner of their kind, have no interest in the +young men, but just the same, their soft brown eyes have the same old way +of wandering at the right moment; it is the same old trick and it works in +the same old way. + +The cathedral plaza is rather a different matter. Here gather the elite, +in numbers on concert nights, and more or less on other fair evenings. The +grown-ups sit about on the benches and the children run and play, +care-free and comfortable. Well-dressed and content, these are the best of +the old native stock that used to live "inside" the walls of Panama that +the Spanish king thought he should be able to see. There are usually a few +Americans with the crowd, and it is a peaceful and restful family scene. +Were it not for the incessant clatter of the trolleys and jitneys the +place would be a good rest-cure. But as matters now stand, there is too +much pandemonium for any permanent peace. + +[Illustration: CONVENT DOOR] + +Out at the point of the seawall, near Chiriqui Prison, stands an old stone +sentry box. It appears to belong to the prison now, but there was a time +when the outlook from that point on the bay of Panama was the viewpoint of +Panamanian life as it faced the Pacific and marked the place of departure +for shores unknown. It is prosaic enough now to stand beside the little +old stone tower and watch a big liner leave the canal and throw back its +smoke-plume as it steams out to sea, having left the Atlantic Ocean seven +hours before. Gone with the days of the explorers and pirates are the +mystery and menace of it all. The sentry box meant something then. Its +lone occupant scanned anxiously the horizon for the sail that might mean +fresh plunders, news from the world beyond, bountiful booty or stolen +treasure, or perchance a fight to the finish with other pirates as +unscrupulous as the villains on shore. Now the children gather there at +sunset to play, care-free on the high wall overlooking the Gulf of Panama. + +Old Spanish houses are built with the yard inside. It is delightfully +intimate and cozy, but not very democratic. Green and clean and cool are +these little parked "interiors" of the better houses. Some of the common +patios are dirty and disheveled, and the worst of them are better left +alone, but the American Health Department looks after the sanitation of +them all. + +Chino (Chinese) shops sell everything, but, aside from the fine stores on +Central Avenue, are mostly devoted to native trade. Out in the interior +the Chinese storekeepers transact practically all the business of the +country. Wherever there are two or three families gathered together, there +the Chinese storekeeper is sure to appear, ready to harvest any small or +large coins that may be in circulation. + +There were at one time about five hundred saloons of all sorts in Panama, +This number has been greatly reduced with hope of complete extinction, +owing to the exigencies of the near-by American soldiers on the Canal +Zone. The monthly payroll of the Zone is a stream of gold, and it is a +case of losing that gold or cleaning up Panama. Military orders and +voluntary boycotts made Panama a lonesome town for the latter part of +1918. + +[Illustration: OFFICIAL LOTTERY IN BISHOP'S HOUSE, PANAMA] + +There is the official lottery, suspiciously located. To be sure, the +bishop does not personally supervise the drawings, and perhaps he does not +get anything out of it, but no one who knows Panama claims such to be the +case. When did the hierarchy ever oppose a gambling game that promised +profit for the cause? Gaunt, hungry-looking cripples and pobres hang about +the corners selling lottery tickets. Evidently, none of the profits come +to these unfortunates. + +Panama City has its neighborhoods like any other Old-World town. "Inside" +the old wall includes the original fortified town on the little peninsula +jutting into the bay. Here live officials, professional and business men. +Beyond this lies the town that overflowed the wall and now reaches down to +the park in front of the Tivoli Hotel. This is the barrio of Santa Ana. +Caledonia and Guachapali and San Miguel lie across the railway and serve +to fill in the space between the Spanish town and the Exposition grounds. +A mile and a half beyond the palaces of the exposition lies Bella Vista, +beautiful for situation and rivaling Southern California for its real +estate enterprise. Over toward the Canal is Chorilla between the Cemetery +and Ancon Hill. At the end of the five-cent car fare on the line to the +savanas is the famous--or infamous--bull ring. Who said that bullfights +had been abandoned? Not much. Between bullfights and prize fights the +season is not allowed to drag, and it must be admitted that the number of +American patrons of these brutalizing contests is not to the credit of the +kind. + +The open market where the fishermen come ashore is one of the show places +of Panama. Pangas and chingas and craft of every sort, except the modern +kind, bring in on high tide cargoes of bananas, coconuts, charcoal, +camotes, rice, sugar, syrup, rum, papayas, mangoes, lonzones, chiotes, +poultry, pigs, ivory nuts and a score of fruits and vegetables unnamable +by the uninitiated. When the tide recedes the boats lie high, if not very +dry, and the unloading proceeds apace. It is an interesting and lively +scene, and the bicker and barter go on by the hour. + +Hard by is the big native market, resort of housekeepers and servants in +search of commissary bargains. This one is fairly clean and is the morning +recreation of thousands of shoppers. + +Panama has its theaters, of the sort to be expected. One of the movie +houses compares well with the best anywhere, and most of the others are in +good condition. The national theater is a credit to the country and forms +a section of the national palace. On the Canal Zone the clubhouses, +sometimes called Y. M. C. A.'s, put on several picture shows a week in +commendable effort to supply recreation to their patrons. + +The architecture of the old churches is a bit disappointing to travelers +who have seen the splendid buildings of other Latin lands. The Cathedral +has two modern towers, a clock in one of them, and the twelve apostles in +life size on the façade. The Jesuit Church by the Malecon is very old and +rather interesting. Recently a new concrete tower has been added, of +striking appearance, but not closely in conformity with the architecture +of the church. This church contains a famous old painting of purgatory and +heaven, and down below, the flames of the lost. It is notable that in the +place of purgatory are bishops, priests, and kings. There are ten people +in heaven, and ten in purgatory, and of each ten three are women. +Query--Where did the painter think that the women belong? It is an +interesting question, especially for the women. + +The big Merced Church on Central Avenue has a curious and interesting +little street chapel on the corner of the sidewalk, and here are arranged +curious exhibitions at Christmas and Easter. I saw here the ancient +village of Bethlehem, with the inn and manger and oxen; but there were +also a miniature lake with a steamboat, and a grocery wagon delivering +goods to the ancient Bethlehemites. The stores bore advertisements of +patent breakfast foods. + +No place can be truly romantic until it possesses some good ruins, and +Panama claims distinction in the old Flat-Arch Church near the palace. The +interior is now used as a garage, and no one but the tourist seems to +think the place of any interest. Two blocks away stands the façade of the +fine old stone church that has been a ruin now for years. The interior is +now a stable, and the old walls of the college have been used for the +construction of a modern cheap tenement house. The stone front of the old +wall stands as a fine example of the architecture and building of 1751, +when the church was finished. + +The San Filipi Neri Church, at the corner of Avenida B and Fourth Streets, +is made from stone carried in from Old Panama. This church is said to have +the most beautiful interior in the city, but, as it is very rarely opened +to the street, the visitor will have to accept the statement without +opportunity to judge for himself. + +[Illustration: RUIN OF FAMOUS FLAT-ARCH CHURCH] + +The savanas lie northeast of Panama and beyond the ruins of Old Panama. +The rolling slopes of green and the growing number of villas will make +this strip of country valuable and famous before long. + +Of Panama's hotels not much need to be said, except that they are good of +their kind. Latin hotel standards are different from those of North +America, but good judges of hotel life have pronounced those of Panama to +be quite endurable. + +There are always two or three daily papers in Panama and an indefinite +number of weeklies. An immemorial custom exists by which when any citizen +has anything on his mind that he feels he should unload to the profit or +otherwise of the public, a printed pronunciamento is issued and circulated +about the streets by boys, handed out freely to everybody in sight. This +really effective method is sometimes used for important matters of state. + +[Illustration: EIGHTH-GRADE ROOM, PANAMA] + +The educational system is modeled upon the best Latin-American standards, +with primary schools of four grades throughout the Republic. Provincial +centers have schools with two, and in a few cases four years more. The +National Institute, at the foot of Ancon Hill, maintains a normal school +for men and a liceo which grants the degree of Bachelor of Arts upon the +completion of about the equivalent of the American college freshman year. +The young women are given a normal course in the Women's Normal School at +the Exposition grounds. There is no coeducation above the primary grades. +The Agricultural Experimental Farm and School, abandoned as an experiment +station, is used as a reform school. + +Taboga Island lies off shore and furnishes a point of much interest. It is +the week-end Mecca of the Zone people and also of many of the Panamanians. +There are a good American hotel, several fair native hotels, good fishing, +tramping, an interesting native village, a healthful climate, and a fine +view--and all within ten miles of Panama. + +If the prowler is looking for real adventure, he can seek for it on Gocos +Island, three hundred miles south of Panama. Here are said to lie hidden +somewhere ten millions of dollars' worth of treasure, stolen from Callao +and other points between 1820 and 1830. Harvey Montmorency wrote it up in +a book entitled On the Track of the Treasure, and so well did he tell the +story that four large expeditions have been organized and sent to find it. +One man is said to have found a little gold for his pains, but the others +went home poorer than they came. And if these are too easy destinations, +there lie the Galapagos Islands off the coast of Peru, said to contain +many possibilities, of many kinds. Peru is supposed to have the islands on +the market, and anybody with the money can purchase one, all his own. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +A CITY OF GHOSTS + + +No one has ever satisfactorily explained the existence of ghosts in an +enlightened world, but I have a theory that they survive because they +render a real service. They lend interest to life and at least keep us +from forgetting the super (or sub) natural. + +Likewise ruins have high value as a link with the past, and with neither +ruins nor ghosts life would become a very flat affair. And if ever a spot, +by history, tradition, situation, and present condition, was marked for +rendezvous purposes by all the tribe that gibber and squeak and wander at +night in the dark of the moon, that place is Old Panama. + +The history of Old Panama has been told, and well told, by other writers. +Read it there, and read it before you see the place. Many pilgrims go out +there, poke about among the ruins for a quarter of an hour, and exclaim, +"Is this all?" Without the story the most appreciative pilgrim will miss +the flavor of the place, but without a little romantic appreciation both +the story and the ruins will fall short of revealing all that the place +has to give. + +The old town site was a hopeless jungle until the National Institute, +under the leadership of Dr. Dexter, cleared away the brush and laid bare +the traces of streets and buildings. To-day the place is in good condition +and one may wander about at will and dream to his heart's content. It is +no place for joy rides, and the roadhouse is a blot on the place, but +there are people still who see nothing but a refreshment counter and +worthless stone heaps. + +[Illustration: CONVENT GARDEN] + +One of the favorite amusements of tourists and other people used to be +that of digging for treasure at Old Panama. No one ever found anything of +value, but it made a fine story to tell upon return to the States. "When I +was digging for treasure in Old Panama"--just say it and see what a flavor +it has. It is most probable that if the ruins were located in a cooler +climate, there would have been a great deal more digging. Under a tropic +sun, however, it takes considerable bait to induce anyone to indulge in +such vigorous exercise. + +The treasure idea is easy to locate. Peruvian gold was all brought up to +Panama and stored in warehouses until it could be packed across to Porto +Bello. There were endless fighting and plots and schemes and robberies and +murders connected with the gold trade. Many a man lost his gold, and many +a man his life. And, in consequence, some of the gold was also lost in the +mêlée. What more natural, then, than to look about for this lost treasure +in the place where most of it was stored? + +Now, there may be millions of dollars' worth of old gold somewhere about +Old Panama. The only difficulty is that no one ever yet has been able to +find any of it. The probability is that no gold was ever left there long +enough to be very much lost, and the men who did the fighting also took +care of the gold. But that does not prevent any one from "digging for +treasure in Old Panama" if he wants to do so. + +Nevertheless, there is treasure in Old Panama, and it is to be had for the +digging. But the digging will be, not amid the rocks, but into the history +of the place. And the digger will find rare nuggets for his pains. Balboa, +Pizarro, Pedrarias laid out this town, and set the pace for the wild and +unprincipled years that followed. And Henry Morgan, adventurer, pirate, +and general rascal, ended the story as it was begun--in crime and blood. + +[Illustration: ROMANTIC OLD CONVENTS SURVIVE] + +Accounts of the construction and character of the old city represent it to +have been builded with much magnificence. All the woods used in building +were of the fine native mahoganies, and there were hangings, tapestries, +and paintings in the sumptuous houses of the men who became enormously +rich from the traffic of the times. Returning ships from Europe brought +luxuries as well as necessities, and the gold trade people maintained +regular fleets of ships and put Panama in close touch with the life of the +age. There are described two large churches, a cathedral, a "hospital," +over two thousand large houses, and several very large establishments for +the care of the great number of pack animals used on the trail. Large +quantities of gold, silver, pearls, and gems of various sorts were in +evidence. In the day of its glory Panama was a veritable Arabian Nights +city, with some two hundred warehouses for the storing of stolen treasure. + +The story of the destruction of the old city is one of shocking cruelty +and lust, and merely furnishes the last chapter of the same tale of crime +that marks the history of the Isthmus from the finding of the Peruvian +gold to the days when the murderous pillages of rival pirates finally +destroyed the commerce of the Isthmus and left Panama little more than a +memory of former glories. The burning of Old Panama marks the turning +point in Isthmian history and closes forever the days of conquest. About +this time the vast supply of Peruvian gold became exhausted, and between +the failure of loot and the destruction of trade by brigandage the Isthmus +fell into neglect and was nearly lost sight of by the world for two +hundred years. + +Anyone who knows the story of the place will find the ruins fascinating +because they show a construction of the days when men built strong walls +because nothing else would stand the strain of the lives they lived. Some +of the walls stand as firm and strong to-day as they did three and a half +centuries ago, and unless removed by the hand of man they will stand here +a thousand years hence. And when a wall stands for centuries in this +tropic climate of disintegration it is a wall to remember. + +[Illustration: RUINED TOWER AT OLD PANAMA] + +Most conspicuous stands the old church tower, splendid and defiant amid +the wreckage about its feet. Straight and strong it lifts its lofty head +above the treetops, and, viewed from any angle, is a majestic figure. +There is no construction in modern Panama to-day that may be compared to +the grand dignity of that sentinel tower. Like some old prophet, amid the +ruins of a wayward people, the tower raises its head and stands in mute +but noble witness to the reality of the things that endure. For the tower +was honestly built, and therefore stands. Against its solid walls, builded +from their rock foundation straight upward, the ravages of time have made +but little impress. + +The tower was part of the cathedral, and the cathedral was one of three or +four great churches. Of at least two others well-preserved ruins still +remain, and are well worth careful study. The reddish-brown coloring of +the old walls and the vine-covered stone help furnish endless temptations +for the artist, but no one has yet given adequate expression to the +splendid possibilities of these ruins. + +Still more interesting vistas open to the mind's eye of the student with a +constructive imagination. There were churches many and large and beautiful +in Old Panama. And there were pirates wild and wicked and hated in Old +Panama. Who "ran the town"? The pirates or the priests? What relations +existed between the two? And if there were churches of such great beauty +and strength, why were there also the terrible pirates? What were the +churches doing that they did not bring about a better city? + +These are hard questions, but to anyone who knows conditions to-day, and +who knows that conditions to-day are better than they were in Old Panama, +the answer is not far to seek. The hungry and helpless peons did not give +the money to build those costly churches, though they doubtless did the +hard work of construction. And if the pirates were good givers--and they +doubtless were, under promise and threat--then they also influenced the +general scheme of things in Old Panama. In short, the churches of Old +Panama did not make a very good town of it. + +What a story Jack London could have written here! It is too bad that he +did not find Old Panama before it was too late. Not only the ruins, but +the vista of royal palms along the beach, with the little +red-white-and-blue crabs scurrying about at high tide, unite to raise a +sense of romance that starts the wheels of fancy revolving in one's brain. +All one needs is a "long, low, rakish black craft in the offing,"--there +it is now, the very thing, a big chinga, fifty feet long with four sails +and twenty-five men on board, luffing and tacking about into the little +bay just around the point. Pirates or fishermen--don't inquire too +closely; either will do, and both are useful in romance. + +[Illustration: COSTA RICA TRAPICHE, OR SUGAR MILL] + +In one of the churches are some old graves, where some natives have been +buried, partly for convenience and perhaps partly from sentiment. Fine old +walls stand earthquake-cracked, but still strong. Of roofs there are, of +course, none. And back of the church are still intact the foundations of a +house said to have been the house of the governor, and the vaulted arches +of the old cellar storehouse are still intact. A native lives in a shanty +near by, and he greets the visitor, not with the information that might +make him useful and get him a tip, but with the vacant optimism of those +who feel that somehow something is coming to them whether they earn it or +not. + +As for the natives, none of them know anything about the place. The few +that live there are of the sort that would camp under the nose of the +sphinx and never look up into his face. But the reader of this can well +spend a half day amid the most fruitful prowling anywhere in Panama. He +may gaze at the splendid tower till the broken walls about it rise again, +and the old tiled roof once more covers the worshiping congregations +within, and the drone of mass and the fragrance of incense again ascend +before the high altar. And down the old street, with its one-story houses, +once more wind the pack trains and muleteers and men and women and +children. There is excitement everywhere, and commotion and cursing, and +everybody runs down to the beach. And if you will turn about and gaze out +to sea, you will see there a curious craft with freakish sails, and when +it drops anchor and the boat pulls ashore, you will see old Almagro +himself step out on the sands sword in hand, and with rough and profane +commands, take charge of the unloading of his golden cargo. There will be +wild times in Old Panama to-night, for the pack trains have returned from +Porto Bello with a cargo of rum, and the sailors from Peru have been long +at sea, detained by unfavorable winds, and, like sailors of other times +and climes, they are thirsty. Out from the church door comes the tonsured +priest; he shakes his head, shrugs his shoulders, and makes his way down +to where the great Almagro stands, a commanding figure amid the confusion. +For the commander has the gold, and, like all explorers of his time, he +will be in need of a proper blessing by the priest; and the padre, being +human, can use a little of the gold. + +But while you gaze and dream, "dear reader," the vision fades and "the +tumult and the shouting dies," and there stand the ruins, and there swings +the sweep of the tropic sea, and you are again in the twentieth century, a +little richer in mental imagery for your short excursion back into the +sixteenth. + +Which is to say that dreaming is easy at Old Panama. Try it yourself. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE SPELL OF THE JUNGLE + + +What the desert is to Arizona and the ice to Alaska the jungle is to +tropical America. He who has never traveled through a tropical jungle on a +trusty mule has missed something out of his life. He should go back and +begin over again. + +The jungle is much maligned and often misinterpreted. The jungle has a +place in the agricultural life of the tropics, but it has also a place in +the æsthetic and moral life of mankind. Here at last there is room, and +the starved and stunted life may relax its struggle and strain and expand +under the luxuriance and exuberance of a world where all the forces of +life overflow and run riot in a thousand fantastic forms of energy and +growth. Like the uncharted vastness of the polar sea and the unbounded, +shimmering mirage of the wide desert, here at last there is plenty and to +spare. When a man has stinted and economized all his life on a New England +hillside amid stones and stumps, the jungle takes the load off his soul +and sets him free in a universe of new and untested dimensions. + +The jungle is misunderstood. There are jungles unworthy of the name, but +these vast Panamanian hothouses are a different matter. They are not the +bottomless morasses of deadly snakes and poisonous vapors. Since men have +learned how to live in the tropics these terrors have largely retreated to +the highly colored accounts of tropical travelers who took one look and +fled--to write a book of timely warning to the uninitiated. These jungles +are not the haunts of hidden horrors and poisoned arrows. Ferocious +tree-dwellers may inhabit the unknown recesses of the upper Amazon, but +they do not live in the jungles of Central America and Panama. + +[Illustration: PAPAYA TREES] + +It takes just three conditions to make a good jungle, and these three are +all present in this fascinating country. Moisture, temperature, and soil; +mix them in the right proportions and you can produce a jungle at the +North Pole, but nowhere can the mixture be located except in the tropics. +When one remembers the painstaking toil expended on the rocky fields of +northern New York and then turns to a land where the problem is not to +encourage but to prevent growth, one wonders how it happened that our +ancestors blundered into an environment reeking with difficulties when +they might have had all this overflow of abundance for the taking. + +There are several brands of jungle, to be sure, and distinct differences +of kind may be located easily. The jungle of the overflowed level river +land is a very different formation from that which climbs over the rolling +hills and up the mountain slopes. But everywhere there is the same +reckless riot of power and life. Fantastic growths are here just because +there is so much growing to do and so much energy back of the roots that +there are not conventional forms of life enough to go around and life +boils over in every conceivable absurdity of form and habit. This is no +place for a niggard. But it is a splendid antidote for smallness of soul +and for that dried-up-ness that settles down like a pall upon the spirits +of men who never in their lives have had enough of anything or breathed an +atmosphere of abundance. + +It must be a petrified soul that can resist this wanton abandon of +vegetable life. How a man can spend three days in this full-blown +exhibition of vital energy at work in the vegetable world and ever be +small again is more than can be readily understood. + +Here is a world where no one ever need cry for more; there is too much +already. After a few days of it one longs to get out in the open, to see a +barren spot somewhere just to rest the surfeited soul a bit. It's all for +the asking; in fact, there is no chance to ask; it is poured out of the +horn of nature's plenty, and all the color and charm and fantasy and music +and laughter and glory of it are piled in wild profusion a hundred feet +high, and you cannot get away if you will. Nature at least has a chance to +show what she can really do, and it is yours for the looking. + +[Illustration: BANANAS AND SUGAR CANE] + +What makes up a jungle? Well, that's hard to say. There are mighty trees +of cedar and mahogany and a hundred lesser breeds, lifting their heads +into the tropic sky. There are palms and giant ferns of course. There are +wonderful purple and magenta and crimson-topped trees, whose glaring flat +colors fairly shriek at you like the bedlam of a paint box let loose on +the sky. Sturdy lignum vitæ trees stand conscious of their high value and +rare qualities. Ferns in profusion, vast, variegated and immense, line the +banks of streams and hide in the shadows of the great trees. Orchids, of +course, winding streams strewn with the flowers and foliage of the dense +mass overhead, entrancing water streets and winding Venetian tunnels +through forests so thick that the sun never penetrates the shadowed +fastnesses below. There are paraqueets, parrots, singing canaries, +alligators, bananas, bamboos, singing winds, warbling bluebirds, +blackbirds that can render a tune, purples and blues and crimsons and +browns, all poured out and mixed together without stint. It is fascinating +for a few hours, but after a time you get overloaded and are ready to cry +"Enough." It's great, but a little stupefying till one gets used to it. + +The jungle of the mountains is essentially different from and more +interesting than that of the level swamps. Both are largely uninhabited, +for men naturally like to have a little outlook both for their lives and +about their habitations. + +But the growth is about equally dense, provided the soil and moisture are +right for the production of real jungle. From Puerto Limon to Almirante is +about one hundred and twenty miles overland, and there was a time when +practically every mile of this distance was untouched jungle. The United +Fruit Company has conquered most of it, until there is now but a day's +journey on horseback through the connecting link between the two railroad +terminal points at Estrella and the Talamanca Valley. The one hundred +miles of rails run almost entirely through the endless fields of bananas. +But once this was all primitive wilderness; that is, we think it was, but +some of the superintendents of this clearing and planting work say that +they have discovered numerous evidences that there was a time in ages past +when practically all of this vast area was under some sort of cultivation. + +[Illustration: CACAO PODS] + +There would be a railroad now across the gap of twenty miles but for the +fact that this gap includes a mountain range with rushing rivers and +steeps, gorges and almost impenetrable forests. Occasional travelers cross +this range by the aid of sturdy mules, but there is yet nothing that could +by any strain of language be called a trail. There is simply a "blaze" +through the forest and occasional marks where some floundering traveler +has preceded the venturesome explorer through the depths of some yawning +mudhole. + +I crossed this range on a day when the sun was shining overhead, but only +two or three times did its rays fall upon the "trail." The overhead growth +was so thick that there was nothing but dense shadow below. A hundred and +fifty feet these immense trees rose into the air, carrying upward with +them festoons of hanging vines, swinging rattan, and clinging orchids. +Curious enough are some of these trees, with their winding external +buttresses and thin flanges thrown out to brace against the winds. Banyan +trees reach out their long arms and drop their fingers down into the soil +and take root and continue until the tree literally "stalks" its way +across the mountain side. There are rubber trees and cedar trees and +mahogany trees and prickly poisoned trees that are the terror of the +natives, and trees bearing all manner of jungle fruits and flowers and +swarming with chattering birds and creeping things. Rattan "ropes" an inch +in diameter and two hundred feet long trip the unwary traveler, and it is +useless to try to break them. They are like steel cables. Wild birds are +plentiful, occasional baboons bark and bray, and the mountain streams +splash and plunge their way through the ferns and flowers. The Estrella +River forms the highway for several miles, and its rocky torrent must be +forded a score of times. + +He who has never tried to travel this "road" has a new experience in +store. There are hillsides that are all but perpendicular, which would not +be so bad, but they are a mixture of clay and soapstone and moisture, and +it is practically impossible to stand erect without holding on to nearby +saplings. How a laden mule can navigate such a causeway of destruction is +a mystery to be explained only by people who understand mules. And I rode +a mule whose mastery of the art of trail-navigation left nothing to be +learned. In the ignorance of my novitiate I alighted before the first +precipitous descent to which we came. The mule, with the conservatism born +of experience, took his time to make the descent, and I essayed to go +before and show him how to do it. He watched me with intense interest, +while I gingerly approached the edge of the slippery declivity and started +down. As a descent it was a complete success. At the second step I slipped +on the wet clay and went rolling and coasting to the bottom, whither I +arrived in record time, plastered from head to foot with the raw material +of which pottery is made. I struggled to my feet and looked up at the +mule. He still regarded me intently, and I think that he winked, at least +his ear did. Then he deliberately put his front feet over the edge, +gathered in his hind feet, and with all fours together, sat down and +gracefully slid to the bottom of the hill. He arrived right side up at the +bottom, munching a mouthful of grass, which he seized in passing on the +way down, and turned to look at me with an expression that needed no +interpreter. And I took the hint and stayed on his back most of the day. + +After a solid day of this dense growth where we could not see more than a +stone's throw at any time it was with a distinct sense of relief that we +caught sight of daylight at last through an opening ahead and came upon +the fringes of the Talamanca plantation. + +[Illustration: PROPOSED LOCATION FOR REST CURE] + +The Talamanca Valley is something quite worth while in itself. Years ago +it was inhabited by Spanish refugees who fled back from the bloody attacks +of the ravenous Caribbean pirates of the sixteenth century. Their little +plantations were not large and the land was not cleared very thoroughly, +but they shifted their planting places until much of the present area was +covered sooner or later with platanas. The view of this valley from the +hillside is surpassingly beautiful. Thirty miles long, ten miles wide, and +surrounded by mountains and forests, the whole floor of the valley is one +vast, waving, level field of bananas, and there are few things better to +look upon than a valley level full of banana tops. From twenty to forty +feet high they stand, and their long, shady corridors are like the aisles +of some great series of cathedral chapels, waiting for worshipers within. +Through the middle of the valley runs the stream of the upper Sexola River +with its three tributaries and their bluffs. The Changuanola Railway, +which is the name under which the United Fruit Company moved its bananas +and its men in this great plantation, runs the length of the valley, and +the line of rails is punctuated by the white cabins of the black employees +and the houses and offices of the plantation superintendents and foremen. + +Dominating the whole valley stands old Pico Blanco, or White Top. There is +no snow at the summit, but there is nearly always a white cloud cap there, +hence the name. This noble mountain is the interest and admiration of all +dwellers in the valley. Its top lists eleven thousand feet above the sea. +It is not as high as Pike's Peak nor Shasta, but it towers well up toward +the level of Fujiyama, and beside it Mount Washington looks like a pigmy +and the Adirondacks are mere foothills. Back in the cañons and forests of +the mountain range live the curious Talamanca Indians, whose tribal +customs indicate a close affinity between their ancestors and those of the +famous Indians of Quirigua. + +The difference between the jungle and the dividend-paying plantation is +one of organization, capital, administration, and toil. Add these to the +jungle and you have the plantation. Take them away from the plantation and +in a very short time the jungle is again supreme. Crowding around the +corners, peeping over the edges, and creeping ever onward, the jungle +pushes its jealous way behind the footprints of the men who essay to +conquer its wild ways. But once defeated, the jungle becomes a slave +bearing costly burdens for its master--man. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +LIFE AT THE BOTTOM + + +"Forty years ago I took a bath, and the next day I felt chilly, and +then--" + +"Never mind forty years ago. What is the matter this morning, and why have +you come to me for medicine?" chants the seasoned employer of plantation +labor. + +"That is what I was telling you, señor. Forty years ago I took a bath, and +the next day I felt chilly, and then I thought that I had made a mistake, +and so I went--" + +"Now, see here. I have no interest nor curiosity about forty years ago. +What is the matter with you now?" + +"Be patient, señor. This is important, and I will tell you all. Forty +years ago--" and after devious dodgings the tale terminates in a case of +fever or indigestion, or mayhap only plain drunk. + +It is ever thus with the tropic tao, or peon, or ignorante, or whatever +may be called the people who have grown up with the soil and have risen +not any above it. The petty official who hears complaints in any tropic +land listens to marvelous reminiscences through deep jungles of +imaginative memory before reaching present facts. + +"Twenty-five years ago I had the toothache, and then the next week I had a +bad dream, and after that I had no suerte [luck] at all, until one saint's +day I drank rum and ate rice, and the rice make me sick--" is merely the +opening chapter. + +Every employer of tropic labor must be judge and jury for a docket of +petty cases that have to be adjusted if the wheels of industry are not to +be paralyzed in their work. Newcomers at this business of sitting in the +seat of judgment hear marvelous stories of oppression and outrage, in +which the accuser is always innocent--and always alone, if possible. But +experience breeds disillusionment and skepticism deep and wide, and soon +the amateur Solomon learns to distrust every story, most of all the first +one told. For, after the plaintiff has sworn that he is telling the truth, +or may all the saints strike him dead, and has unrolled his woes in +orderly sequence, he stands with critical eye, watching to see what +impression his art has made upon the puzzled personage of power. + +And when the adjuster of affairs scorns the tale and says, "Get out with +you. I don't believe a word of that stuff," the beggar bows and smiles a +deprecating smile and begins all over again with a revised version of the +case, which bears very little resemblance to the first story, and again +stands back to observe what better success he may hope for this time. And +there appears to be no end to the ready versions and variations of the +woes of the downtrodden exponent of virtue whose humble bearing seems to +exude virtue from every protruding bare spot through his rags. "Last +Wednesday morning, I got up, and--would you believe it?--there was nothing +in the house. There was no yucca [counting off on his fingers], +no plantanas, no huevos, no carne, no mais, no azucar, no +arroz--absolutamente nada. Yes, it was last Wednesday--no, no, señor, I am +a liar--it was last Tuesday morning. And, señor, my children were hungry, +and I remembered that there was nothing--" and so on the story goes to its +climax in the claim that a certain party, not present, owes the complainer +fifty cents for real or imaginary value bestowed, and will the owner +please collect the fifty cents for the starving children? + +[Illustration: PICTURESQUE JUNGLE TOWNS] + +And if this tale is unsatisfactory, comes immediately a fresh version to +the effect that it is another man who owes a dollar because he tramped +across some young corn and spoiled the crop. + +It is this fertility of imagination that makes up for any sort of accurate +information. To the American the amazing thing about these people is that +they know so little about their own very interesting country. The American +must know in order to boom his town, but the tropic native has no idea of +booming his town. There is no fun in booming, there is nothing to boom, +and a boomed town would be always stirring about or starting something, +and would be a nuisance anyway. + +I stood in a village, quaint and curious, and wondered how old it might +be. The bells hanging to a cross beam in front of the old church bore +figures on their rims--1722, they said; and they looked it, every inch--or +year. + +Came the young curate of the parish, a good-looking and intelligent +native, who talked a little with us pleasantly, and lured us into the old +church, where he immediately improved the occasion by getting the +collection basket and holding it under our noses. "It is a special saint's +day," he explained. + +"How many people live here?" + +He could not tell. + +"How old is the church?" we wanted to know, thinking to get a morsel of +information for our crumb of contribution. + +He did not know. The question was entirely new to him. He had been born in +the town, and later showed us with pride the house in which himself, his +mother, and his grandmother had been born, but as to the number of +inhabitants or the age of the church it had never occurred to him to +inquire. + +But presently inspiration came to his aid. There was an ancient woman +still living at more than a hundred years; surely she would know the +answer to some of these curious questions. + +[Illustration: TORTILLAS ARE STAPLE] + +We called on the old woman. She was nothing but bones and parchment, +sitting with her chin on her knees on a small platform of slats which she +had not left for over two years. She claimed one hundred and two years, +which was undoubtedly correct, as baptismal records are usually accurately +kept. She certainly looked the part. The studiante sat down on the "bed," +placed his hand kindly on the old woman's shoulder, and told her that +though she was blind there were three strangers who had come to see her +and congratulate her on her great age. She was pleased and said so, but +her mind was as feeble as her body, and there was little that she could +say. When asked as to the date of the "blessing" of the church, she said, +"O yes, certainly I can name it--it was on Saint John's day." + +"That's fine," enthused the curate. "Now, what year was it, grandma?" + +"Ah, that is another matter. I can't tell you now, but if you will come +to-morrow, I may be able to remember it then." + +[Illustration: JUNGLE FOLK] + +We left the next morning, of course, without the date of the dedication +day, but what information was lacking on this point was amply made up in +information concerning the population. We asked seven people the question +and received seven different answers, ranging from three hundred to five +thousand. We counted a hundred odd houses, indicating six or seven hundred +people, but no one there had any idea or any interest in the matter. What +difference did it make anyway? + +The town of Nata, eighty miles west of Panama, was founded in 1520, one +year after the founding of Old Panama, and one hundred years before the +Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. Old Panama has been a ruin for two and +one half centuries, leaving Nata as the oldest inhabited town in the New +World--no small distinction. + +[Illustration: "THE COTTER'S SATURDAY NIGHT"] + +I asked the leading official if he knew how old the town was, and he said +that he understood that it was "very old." When I suggested that it was +the oldest town in America he nodded politely and talked of something +else. I called on the priest, an intelligent and friendly man, who also +understood that the town "was very old," but its priority of claim to the +oldest living municipal inhabitant of the Americas had little interest for +him. He talked on, complaining bitterly of the bad morals of the people +and the small financial proceeds which the parish yielded its spiritual +leader. + +It is easy to disparage any people, especially if they speak a different +language from your own. Most of the things said against the illiterate +natives of any country are true, but the trouble is that they are only a +small fraction of the truth. + +A large employer of native labor, who took pride in treating his men well +and paying them promptly, complained to me that he never could keep steady +labor on his place for the reason that the men earned enough in one week +to keep them drunk for the next fortnight, and hence worked only one week +out of three, leaving their families to starve or shift for themselves as +best they might. And he told the truth. + +But he did not tell it all. This same employer distilled the rum on his +own place and regarded it as a paying business. When other employers +raised the price for labor and produce he refused to do so on the ground +that the more they had the worse off they were. On the surface it might +seem to be true. + +But these same laborers, even saving all possible margin of wages, could +not have lived in anything like comfort on sixty-five cents per day. Most +of them never see a newspaper, and could scarcely read, and not at all +understand it if they did see it. There is not an item of news, a trace of +historical knowledge or perspective, a gleam of scientific understanding, +a moving picture show, or a lecture on any subject, or a musical program, +nor any one of the thousand things that add interest and widen the horizon +of life--none of these things ever enter the remotest areas of his +consciousness. He lives in the flat, narrow confines of a life so small, +so cramped, so possessed by superstition and terror and ill will that he +is not many removes from the cattle with which he works. When this man +would celebrate his saint's day he gets drunk, organizes a bull fight, and +gives vent to every low impulse of his nature. + +Is it any wonder? The only tingle of interest that touches his soul comes +from adventures in the realm of unfaithfulness and drunkenness. How many +of the rest of us would do any better if born and bred in the mire of his +social inheritance? + +There is such a thing as moral hookworm. Saint Paul called it by another +term, but its symptoms are unchanged. The unshod soul, shuffling through +the mire of degradation, acquires from the lower stratum of his +environment the infection of a spiritual destitution that lowers moral +vitality to the minimum. + +How comes this benumbed conscience and depraved practice! What is the +matter that the average of legitimacy for all Central America is thirty +per cent of the total population, while the seventy per cent are born of +unmarried parents? + +It is not for lack of churches. Every town has its church, and the church +is invariably the best building in the town. It stands on the plaza, +commanding, central, and usually more or less beautiful. One can scarcely +get out of sight of a church tower in any thickly settled, level country. +And the churches are large enough to contain almost the whole population +of the town, at least by taking them in several installments at mass +hours. + +[Illustration: CHURCH BELLS OF ARRAIJAN, CAST 1722] + +It is not for want of priests. There are priests in every town, and most +of them carry out pretty faithfully the routine of ecclesiastical +observances that make up the day's program. Black gowns, tonsured heads, +and beads and rosaries are seen everywhere, and the padre is usually the +most influential man in the town. + +It is not for want of religion. Every house of any pretensions has its +holy pictures, often its crucifix, and usually its rosary. Women in +numbers attend mass and go to confession. + +It is not for want of opportunity on the part of priests or church. It is +not because of "church competition." Here we have a unity complete and +final. + +For three hundred and ninety-eight years the priests and their church have +had sole, exclusive, and continuous occupation of Nata, the oldest town in +America. I was probably the first Protestant missionary who ever walked +the streets of the place. Here in the oldest town, with the longest +occupation and the undisturbed opportunity, should be found a fair chance +with these people. + +And what has it done? The open-minded and friendly priest complained +bitterly of the fact that in his parish only five per cent of his people +were born of married parents. Ninety-five per cent were registered on his +books as "Naturales." The year before he had administered over three +hundred baptisms and had celebrated only three marriages. "I can't get +them to marry," he groaned. "Practically speaking, almost no one is +married." + +Is Nata worse than other towns? Possibly so, but it must be remembered +that the "church" has had a longer chance there than in any other city in +all America, and perhaps when the other towns have been exposed for the +same length of time to the system, they will show equally advanced +results! + +There is this thing to be said about the characteristic attitude of the +average priest toward his people: he always despises them. In many lands I +have found this to be true. Discouraged by the failure of his system to +produce spiritual life, or even good morals, he complains bitterly that +the people are indifferent, careless, negligent, immoral, unfaithful, and, +not least of vices, they are poor pay. If they are these things, no one +knows it better than the man who hears their secret confessions. And that +this man should come to a chronic attitude of distrust toward the products +of his own spiritual husbandry is one of the severest indictments against +the system that produces indifference on the part of the people and +cynicism in the heart of the priest. + +What was the church doing to remedy this situation with its deadly +monotony, its superstition, ignorance, and immorality? + +The church was maintaining its round of formulas, saints' days, masses, +confessions, baptisms, funerals for-what-the-traffic-would-bear. Showy +processions and occasional celebrations were the circus and movie for the +people. And on the confession of the troubled priest himself, there was no +moral result. Out of the dead past stood a mummied memory of the once +living church, and its mumbled incantations had no power to make the dry +bones live. + +The only power that seems able to stir new life in the old mausoleum is +the advent of a vigorous Protestant work. In rage and bitterness the +powers bestir themselves and begin to defame and persecute their +disturbers, and in the end, they inevitably give some attention to +reviving their own decaying program. + +How can a man be well when he is one hundred dollars away from a doctor? +With four doctors located among two hundred thousand people scattered over +a radius of forty by a hundred miles, and all fees exorbitantly high, what +is a poor man to do when illness overtakes his household? What is he to +do? Why, nothing at all, except await the end, either of his illness or of +both infirmity and himself. What the missionary needs is no less Bibles +than castor oil and quinine and iodine. I think that I would begin with a +moving-picture program and a clinic, and when a little physical health +appeared, and some sort of interest began to loosen the rusty hinges +before what occupies the mental space, I would begin to talk of something +to make life worth living. It was the way of the Master to heal and teach +and arouse, and the whole program of missionary work might be founded on +"I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more +abundantly." That is the key to the process. These people are not bad; +they are crippled. They are not vicious; they are lifeless. They are not +rebels: they are very much untaught, backward children. + +[Illustration: FIRST-GRADE ROOM, PANAMA] + +The system of public schools is growing apace, but it has a tremendous +task, small support from the parents, and often open opposition from the +priests. In one town a citizen remarked that on examination day at the +close of the term not a single pupil came to school, but that it made no +difference, as they were all promoted and would live just as long whether +they were promoted or not. (How I would have enjoyed that, as a boy!) In +another town the supervisor had criticized unfavorably the people for +certain careless habits, whereupon the teachers took offense, all resigned +and closed the schools. The secretary of education siding with the +supervisor, all schools remained closed, and the children were happy. + +There is one safety valve left for people in such lives, and that is the +world-old prerogative of talk. In the long evenings, by the roadsides, on +the street corners, over the balconies flows an endless stream of talk. +Prattle and chatter and gossip and slander flow on and make up the only +scenarios the people know. Most of it is harmless. Some of it is aimless, +and all of it is fruitless of anything except to save the mind from utter +blankness. + +They were chattering away in the evening, three or four women seeming +unconscious of me, a traveler stopping for the night. One subject held +undivided attention for much time--What shall we cook for breakfast? And +from that it was but a step to that eternal solace of feminine +conversation--the shortcomings of men in general and husbands in +particular. One of the animated declaimers arose, struck a dramatic +attitude, and said, "To expect that any man should be of any use about the +house is impossible," and the eloquent shrug of her shoulders underscored +the remark. In vain I broke in and protested that in the United States it +often happened that the men were successfully commandeered and detailed to +the work of kitchen police, but the only reply was an arched eyebrow and +another shrug. "Tell that to the marines," was what she meant. + +There are two measures of quantity. Either it is "No hay sufficiente" +("There are not enough") or "Hay bastante, bastante" ("Plenty, plenty"). +The population of the next town is one or the other of these measures. The +distance to the river, the crops, the number of children in the family, +the tale of the years that is told--it is all one thing or the other. And +the standard, in contrast with the artificial measures of a high +civilization, is at least true to life. Either there is enough or there is +not enough--that is about as close a distinction as the day's experience +affords. For that matter, all the rest of us are on one side or the other +of the same cleaving line of necessity. + +That everybody should blame everybody else for whatever may happen to be +the matter is the most natural thing in the world. Whom shall we blame if +not some one else? + +It is the fault of the officials that the country is poor. It is the fault +of the large landowner that there is no development. It is the fault of +the municipalities that the towns are not better kept, it is because of +the officials that justice is not better administered. It is the fault of +the Canal Zone that the good days are gone forever, and it is the fault of +the American government that there are certain restrictions on native +tendencies to move forward by the backward jerks of revolution. A Costa +Rican once said to me, "This war in Europe amounts to nothing; but if we +could get up a good old-fashioned revolution, I would be on the job +to-morrow." + +The virtues of these people are a surprising list, considering their scant +opportunities. They are kindly in dealing with foreigners who show +themselves friendly. They do not as a rule abuse their children, which the +West Indian is apt to do if he is of the baser sort. The native is +hospitable and courteous and always willing to oblige, provided he knows +what to say or do. To be sure, the inventory of his information is +disappointing, even concerning such subjects as the distance to the next +town and the market value of rice, but he will tell all he knows and share +what rice he has. Traveling through the country alone, I have been shown +every kindness and entertained with the best that was to be had, and often +sent on my way without being allowed to pay for what I had received. "Do +you think I would take money from a guest?" protested a hospitable host +with whom I had spent the night and who had fed my horses, the guide, and +myself, and had entertained us all evening with discussion of many +matters. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +THE INTERIOR + + +We had reached the town of Anton the day before, and I had sent the guide +back with the horses and purposed to make my way alone. The morning was +fresh and balmy, as befitted the dry season, even if a night spent on an +antiquated cot in a room next to that occupied by a man with a racking +cough and a rooster with a clarion voice, were not a perfect repose. The +_rapport_ between the fowl and the afflicted was complete: when one of +them broke the silence, the other immediately took up the refrain. At +breakfast I suggested to the good wife of the host that I had heard that +if a board were placed above a rooster's head so that he could not stretch +upward, he would not crow. She was all solicitude at once at the +suggestion that the noisy cock had disturbed my slumbers, and I had to +protest my indifference to such serenades. + +Down the street I found a little store where the owner had a horse or two +to hire upon occasion. Thirty minutes of bicker and I was astride a wiry +little native pony to which a bridle was unknown, and out through the +stately palms and luxurious bananas I made my way to the open country +eastward. The river was thronged with horses led to water, and women busy +with their domestic laundry. It was quaint and picturesque. In some such +manner might the ancient Egyptians have gone about their morning tasks. I +have seen exactly the same procedure in the Philippines and by the rivers +of southern China. + +A mile or two from the town the trail mounted a rolling hillock and I +pinched myself to remember that I was not in New Mexico. Straight ahead +rolled the almost level llanos for miles until they were lost in the hills +by Chame, and the purples and pinks of the six-thousand-feet summits were +like a frame for a picture whose southern limits were in the glint of the +blue summer sea. It was a picture and a promise. For two hours the nervous +little pony followed the trail across the smooth plains and frequent +streams. If ever a land was spread out as a challenge to the plow and +seeder, here it was. + +I sought a colonization site, where I had heard of a dozen plucky +Americans who were undertaking a plantation on cooperative lines. At last +I found it in the midst of as fine a tract of land as lies beneath the +tropic skies. An old-fashioned farm dinner made life worth living after +native "chow" for days. Modern tractors, plows, a ton of cotton seed, and +other signs of enterprise did much to make the place seem like somewhere +in the great Southwest. But the enterprising Americans were harboring no +delusions regarding the nature of their undertaking. They meant business +and had counted the cost. + +[Illustration: THE BEAUTIFUL SAVANAS OF COSTA RICA] + +An American on the Canal Zone invested his savings in land in the +interior, and during the vacation built a good wire fence. On his second +visit the fence was totally destroyed by ax, fire, and wire-cutters. The +owner appealed to the local alcalde, a brother of the provincial governor. +He demanded redress for his wrongs. The judge heard his story, and then, +striking a dramatic attitude, smote his breast, and exclaimed, "If these +my friends had not done this thing, I should have done it myself." Which +was to say, no foreigners need apply in those parts. It is probable that +this outrage could not occur under present conditions. + +"The Panama politician thinks that all the republic begins in Las Bovedas +and ends in Las Semanas," remarked a plantation owner of the interior +country. + +Whether this is true or not, few people realize or know anything of the +splendid country that lies back of the Canal Zone and out of reach of the +flitting traveler. To the average Canal Zone employee all Panama begins at +dock seven and ends in the Administration Building. And for the tourist +who comes to do the Canal in a day, of course, everything begins with the +Washington Hotel and ends with the Tivoli. + +But Panama is something vastly more significant than a couple of +slow-service, high-priced hotels. The Isthmian Republic is an empire in +possibilities, entirely apart from the Canal Zone, though the development +of the latent riches of the country is most vitally related to the Canal +enterprise. And the rich belt of land that binds together two continents +is something very much larger than the interesting little city that bears +the name of Panama. + +Back of the ten-mile strip controlled by the United States stretches a +land abounding in natural resources which make it potentially a factor of +agricultural and economic importance. To the uninformed citizen of the +United States and other countries the Republic of Panama is a mere +shoestring tying together the two continents, lest the pair become +separated and one of them lost. We look at the Isthmus in contrast with +the two vast continents that lie to the northwest and southeast, and the +connecting link appears small. Panama suffers from comparison with its big +neighbors. + +Compared with well-known and important insular holdings in the Caribbean +group, Panama assumes entirely different proportions. Panama is two thirds +as large as Cuba and has one third of Cuba's population. Panama is about +the size of Portugal, is four times as large as Salvador, seven and one +half times as large as Jamaica, and nine times the size of Porto Rico. +Panama is as large as all New England except Maine, and nearly equals the +combined area of New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and West Virginia. + +There are interior areas of well-watered, rich soil that equal whole +States in size and yet are entirely unknown to many residents of the Canal +Zone. The Chiriqui Province has a coast line of one hundred and +thirty-three miles and contains as much land as Delaware, Rhode Island, +and Long Island combined. The rich agricultural region in the provinces of +Coclé, Veraguas, Los Santos, and Herrera is as large as the State of +Connecticut. The region east of Panama City reaching out to Chepo is as +large as Rhode Island, and in the Darien country is an area almost +unknown, but abounding in rich resources which would cover the map of New +Jersey with a good margin. + +It is supposed that no one lives in this large territory except the +Americans on the Canal Zone and inhabitants of the two cities of Panama +and Colon. This is also indicative of ignorance. The Republic of Panama +has two thirds as many people as Paraguay or Jamaica, and, as previously +stated, one third as many as Cuba, as many as Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho +combined, or is about equal to Utah, Nevada, and Arizona put together. + +On the basis of resources and soil and climate and accessibility to +market, Panama can support a population many times her present numbers. +Her capacity for supporting population from her own products is larger +than that of most of the States of the Union, acre for acre. Panama's +resources are as good as those of Jamaica or Porto Rico or Cuba. On the +basis of Jamaican population there should be six and one half million +people in Panama, and if the number of people per square mile were equal +to that of precipitous Porto Rico, we would have a population in Panama of +ten and one half million, which is more than live west of a north and +south line drawn through Denver, Colorado. + +That no such population lives to-day in Panama is due to political causes +more than any other factor. The population of Porto Rico has nearly +doubled since American occupation exchanged the old regime for the new. +The barren deserts of the great Southwest are becoming fertile and +populous regions because the people who are possessing the land have a +fair chance, and know that they will be assured a market for their produce +and security for their lives and property. Given political security, +monetary stability, market accessibility, and assurance of economic +cooperation on the part of the government, there are no immediate limits +to the population that Panama may support in comfort. + +[Illustration: SHIPPING COSTA RICA VEGETABLES TO PANAMA] + +Political stability for the government of Panama is assured by the +relations which exist between the United States and the Isthmian Republic, +a condition which exists in no other Spanish-American republic. The +proximity of the Canal assures a world market. The climate and soil and +water supply nature has provided with lavish hand. Sanitation and hygiene +have become exact sciences, and the matter of retaining good health in the +tropics is no longer a problem. There is still good land to be had on +favorable terms, but the supply will soon be controlled by monopolists who +are seizing the present opportunity to load up their future bank accounts, +while war conditions produce a general depression of the world's +development forces. + +The present interior population includes three distinct classes of people. +The original Indian stock still exists, pure and often wild, in the high +mountains and remote regions of the country. These Indians are beginning +to emerge from their fastnesses and get acquainted with their neighbors, +now that they are sure of police protection when they come out. But their +number is small and they are a negligible factor in the totals. + +The West Indians are an importation, and while they are easily adapted to +the climate and form the staple of labor supply for the Canal, they are +not the Panamanians and never will be except as they mix with the native +stock and shade off the colors that exist in such confusion. The Negroes +and Panamanians are much more distinct in the interior than about the Zone +with its terminal cities, where the remnants of humanity have been stirred +together for four hundred years. West Indian populations exist in +predominance only on the plantations of the United Fruit Company, where +they supply the labor for the operation of these vast enterprises. + +The Panamanian is the predominant man in the interior country. He is not +black, nor is he entirely white, but he has straight hair and features +that indicate that he is a descendant of the original Indian stock, mixed +with the Spanish conquerors who overran the country in the sixteenth and +seventeenth centuries. + +Probably the Panamanian has had less opportunity for advancement than the +people of any other country in America. He has had no chance for national +life or political self-expression. He has been the victim of the most +vigorous and long-continued era of piracy and plunder that the New World +has experienced. He has suffered from bad leadership when he has had any +leadership at all. He has been exploited by everybody who came to the +Isthmus. From the days of Morgan down to the formation of the present +Republic, under American protection and guarantee of peace within and +without, this native has been the outcast of the world and the national +goat of the American flock of nations. He has been kept in ignorance and +superstition by the exclusive control of a system of religious oppression +and subjection, and if by chance he happened to acquire anything worth +getting, somebody was always ready to take it away from him. + +This native supplies the labor for such enterprises as have been launched +in the fertile western regions of Panama. With anything like good +treatment he gives a return for his wages, and if he has a chance to +acquire sound health, an intelligent outlook on life, and a share in the +results of his labors, he can be made over into a good citizen. He is not +a bad citizen now, but he is very much undeveloped. + +The products of this great interior region are many and their proceeds in +the world's markets are profitable. Present prices make large +opportunities for investment, and a reorganization of marketing facilities +will mark the beginning of an era of prosperity for Panama. The list of +products now being raised in and exported from Panama is a surprisingly +long one, and the total of returns from these commodities would give a +western real estate promoter material for many prospectuses and promises. + +The chief products of the country at present are bananas, lumber, rice, +sugar, cacao, meat, citrus fruits, corn, coffee, and coconuts. But there +are a hundred other products, many of which indicate large returns if +produced and marketed on a commercial scale. Rubber, ivory, nuts, hides, +beans, pineapples, potatoes, yams, yucca, cotton, tobacco, plantain, a +long list of fruits and vegetables of high value, and a number of minerals +are but a few of the useful commodities now being supplied to the markets +of the Canal Zone and the world from the interior country of Panama. +Nearly every vegetable that grows in the temperate climate does well in +Panama. Some of the native fruits, such as papayas, mangoes, and alligator +pears, are of delicious flavor and high value. The waters of Panama abound +in vast quantities of fish, and there is supply for a number of fish +canneries. Live stock thrives and is produced in considerable numbers in +the provinces of Coclé and Chiriqui. The Canal Zone is now being used as a +farming enterprise and stock grazing range by the administration of the +Zone with the intention of making the Zone area self-supporting in meat +and fruit and vegetables. + +[Illustration: GOOD PINEAPPLES GROW HERE] + +With an average import trade of ten millions and an export of more than +half that amount, Panama is even to-day a factor in the world's markets. +It must be said that the largest item on the import list is that of goods +shipped to the Zone, and that the chief export is bananas shipped from +Almirante, but these items indicate large possibilities in further +developments of territories as yet untouched. + +The interior of Panama includes three general types of country, very +different in climate and produce. The high mountains are a large area of +country, much of which is fertile soil clear to the peaks, and all of +which on the northern slopes is covered with jungle and forest. These +wooded slopes are wet with abundant rainfall, and luxuriant foliage of +tropical forms bewilders the traveler with illusions of fantastic +creations of nature run mad over the earth. These mountainous parts are +for the most part uninhabited, except by the more or less wild Indians, +who live apart much as they were living four hundred years ago. No white +men have tried to maintain themselves in these regions, and in some +districts it is said that a white man's life is unsafe overnight. Tropical +beasts and reptiles and birds abound among the weird forms of vegetation +that seem to be perpetrating grotesque jokes on the bewildered visitor to +the regions beyond the realm of civilized habitations. There are as yet no +efforts made to establish towns or plantations in this country. Yet if +cleared and cultivated, these regions are capable of supporting a +population as dense as that of Porto Rico, where the steep hills and rocky +peaks are covered with a population of over three hundred per square mile. + +The jungle lands of Panama are elsewhere described, and where there is a +jungle there are always rich land and abundant water, sometimes too much +water and need of drainage. The Canal Zone is mainly jungle land, and +where it has been cleared for cultivation excellent results are attained. +The cost of clearing this jungle is not so great as would appear from the +fact that for bananas and many other forms of crop the trees and brush are +cut down and after a time burned, and no further effort is made to clear +the land except about four cleanings per year with a machette. Anything +like plowing is un-thought of for bananas and some other leading crops. +Even sugar is often planted and left to shift for itself, under native +methods, which are subject, of course, to improvement. + +[Illustration: DEAD TIMBER IN GATUN LAKE NOW COVERED WITH ORCHIDS] + +The third class of land in Panama is the level or rolling prairie land +known as savanas or llanos. These lands lie for the most part in the +valleys back of Bocas del Toro and along the southern, or Pacific, coast +of the country. From Chame to Cape Mala a belt of level country sweeps +around the Parita Bay. From ten to forty miles back of the coast rise the +high mountains, and this fertile strip of country averages about thirty +miles in width and is over a hundred miles long. Rolling country extends +on west of this plain, but the plain itself contains enough good farming +land to feed several millions of people. It is watered and drained by +frequent rivers which cut across from the mountains to the sea every three +or four miles and furnish every facility for cultivation. Most of this +level country is first-grade soil and is adapted to the growing of almost +any of the products of this tropical land. The general appearance of this +open country suggests New Mexico or Southern California much more than any +land below the tropic of Cancer. Its numerous towns and occasional good +roads suggest a newly opened territory in the west, where there are +abundant opportunities for growing up with the country. The newcomer is +apt to be deceived into thinking that all things are now ready and all he +has to do is to move in. + +In the extreme western part of Panama lies the great Chiriqui Province +with its best-developed region in the entire Republic. Here are great +cattle ranches, sugar fields, rice plantings, cotton farms, cornfields, +and here are American companies working to develop modern civilized +conditions. Here is the Chiriqui Railroad between Pedrogal and Boquette, +with a branch running westward. More interest has centered in this region +than in any other part of Panama, and if the proposed railroad from Panama +to David is ever built, the whole southern slope of western Panama will +suddenly appear on the map of the world's granaries. + +Road-building presents no unusual difficulties in this region such as +confronted the Americans in the Philippines when they built the Benguet +road up from Dagupan. Rainfall is high, but the country is comparatively +level and well drained, and in many of these western provinces a graded +dirt road has kept in good condition for ten years without repairs. During +the dry season it is now possible to travel by coche over much of this +country. + +The climate of this interior country is dryer and cooler than that of +Panama, which lies in the jungle area. In the dry season, which is also +the windy season, and lasts in western Panama from mid-December to late in +April, health conditions are excellent, and with proper precautions they +are good all the year around. Needless to remark, the natives take no +precautions whatever. + +Good drinking water can be secured by sinking properly located wells, and +this water shows freedom from minerals of a deleterious nature. There are +seaports for coast vessels at almost every river mouth, and roads lead +back from these to the interior towns. + +There is a fascination about travel through these interiors. But the trip +must be made during the dry season. We left a large town one morning, +paused on a hilltop to take a picture, which included a troop of cavalry +out on a practice march. It was late, and the three of us departed at good +speed, soon outdistancing the soldiers. Two days later a chance traveler +informed us that the military men were anxious to interview travelers who +had broken the rules with a camera and then vanished from sight. We passed +the encampment on our way back, hung about town two hours, and proceeded. +That night a solitary mounted soldier paused by our camp and remarked, +"I'll bet you are the fellows they are hunting." We suggested that we were +waiting to be found. Two weeks later, a secret service man called and +inquired as to our business on that trip. Which is to say that Panama's +interior is a roomy place in which a man might easily lose himself or find +an empire. A good government, an infusion of energy, and a supply of +capital will make a rich land of nature's great virgin farm. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +ECONOMIC WASTE + + +If it is true that South America is the victim of a bad start, it may also +be said that Panama is the net result of a continuous and consistent +follow-up campaign of wholesale demoralization through a long period of +years. + +Beginnings are apt to be determinative, and when reenforced by continuous +applications of similar influences, are sure to set a stamp on a long +period of civilization. Three centuries of rule or misrule make a +considerable impression on any people. There is something more than +climate to be taken into account in the search for causes of the present +conditions in Panama. + +The entire colonial program of Spain differed radically from that of the +English in Canada or the United States in Hawaii or the Philippines. The +leading motive of the conquistadores was the love of gold. Plunder, +rapine, and devastation followed in the trail of the adventurers who +fought their way across Panama and conquered Peru. Missionary zeal there +was, but so mixed were the motives of these early heralds of the cross +that the occasional man of pure and peaceful methods was often supplanted +by the monk who used all means that he might make "Christians" of men who +had no alternative but to be baptized or destroyed outright. "Better be +dead than be damned," thought the energetic priests. Never was a dastardly +deed wrought by the conqueror but there was a priest at hand with heaven's +blessing on the crime. If this is doubted, read the unchallenged +Prescott's Conquest of Peru. + +Spanish colonial policies had small regard for the rights or development +of the conquered. It was one of the viceroys of Mexico who said, "Let the +people of these dominions learn, once for all, that they were born to be +silent and obey, and not to discuss nor have opinions in political +affairs." + +The native village of the far interior country, away from the main roads +and untouched by uplifting influences, exhibits the situation at its +worst; but even so, these same villages exhibit a better condition than do +the wretched Indian huts of the high Andes farther south. The population +of these distant barrios on the Isthmus can hardly be classified on +distinct lines; every symptom is accounted for and every unfavorable trait +explained by historical factors and social forces that have combined to +make remote Panama what it is to-day. There can be no radical change in +these conditions until some new program of social uplift, educational +progress, and spiritual life is introduced to cause a fresh reaction and +begin a new life. + +The ignorant native hears an intolerable burden of superstition. His +contact with the form of church life that exists in these towns is mainly +expressed in the celebration of occasional fiestas and the payment of fees +for services rendered, and supposed in some way to benefit the contributor +or his dead relatives. If "the test of a religion is its results upon a +people," then the impartial observer must draw his own conclusions. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR MEAT MARKET] + +That these interior towns are intensely conservative is to be expected. +How could it be otherwise than that the methods of the fathers should be +good enough for the sons? If human progress is not the result of dominant +inner forces resident in human nature, but comes from the application of +external stimuli, then the Panamanian may have some excuse for his +situation, in a social history that has afforded little incentive for +exercise of enterprise or industry. + +[Illustration: THE FLAVOR OF OLD SPAIN] + +If the far interior of Panama is to be judged by present industrial +efficiency, the case is lost before the trial begins. General absence of +everything that marks a high grade of living emphasizes the failure of the +status quo. Incompetence, bad management, childishness cry aloud from +rotting buildings, rusting machinery, neglected plantings, impassable +"roads," and impossible officials. Streets knee-deep in mire, mud-floored +houses, through which pigs wander at will, shiftlessness, dirt, +insanitation are the register of the wet season in interior Panama. The +outstanding church building is often itself dirty and disheveled. +Sidewalks exist only as balconies for individual houses, and vary in +height at the caprice of the builder, making the middle of the street the +only convenient highway for the passers-by. + +The bulk of this out-of-the way business is handled by the ever-present +Chino with his little tienda. If there is no Chinese store in the town, it +is because the town is too poor to support one. Business involves effort +and industry, both distasteful to the native, but breath-of-life to the +Chinese. + +Inspection of some native towns creates the impression that everybody just +sits around all day. Along the streets the people lounge the idle hours +away. Hundreds of young men lie about, rocking in chairs, lying in +hammocks, hanging about corners. Women slowly move about their household +duties, but the men are experts at the rest cure, and scarcely move at +all. Once a young man gets a pair of shoes and a necktie, his industrial +career abruptly terminates, and thenceforth he toils not, neither does he +spin. He has arrived and is content. + +[Illustration: TAKING THE REST CURE] + +Lack of energy brings inevitable localization of all interest and action. +Most of the people have never been any distance from home and have no +desire to travel. Travel means exertion of some kind. I asked a guide to +go one day further than the first-day trip for which I had hired him, and +he returned an embarrassed and deprecating smile, as if I had asked him to +go to the French front. It was too far from home. + +It is impossible to get information worth anything about the country. "How +many people live in this town?" brings one of two answers. Either it is, +"I do not know," or it is "Bastante" ("Plenty"). "How far is it to Los +Santos?" brings something like, "Señor, when the sun is there [pointing] +you set out on your journey, and when it is over there, you will arrive." + +We crossed a well-traveled road. + +"Where does this road lead?" + +"To the port, señor." + +"And where does the other end of it go?" + +"To San Pedro, señor." + +"How far is it to the port?" + +"The same distance as to San Pedro." + +"And how far is that?" + +"Bastante lejo, señor" ("Plenty far, sir"). + +Cultivation of crops is unknown. When the brush and trees are cleared the +stumps are left about two feet high; it is easier to do the chopping at +that point than lower down. After the fallen growth has sufficiently dried +out it is burned off and the stumpy field usually planted to corn. This +corn is allowed to shift for itself until ripe, and after the stalks have +rotted awhile the land may have an application of grass seed and be used +for pasture, in hope that the stock will wear down the stumps until it +becomes at last possible to perform an athletic feat, called for want of a +more accurate term, "plowing." I saw four oxen all pulling in different +directions, while a plow occasionally disturbed the weedy surface of the +ground and turned up irregular lumps of hard soil. The proprietor looked +on with pride and asked if I had ever plowed. I had. Did I plow like that? +I did not. When this plowing has been acted out, and some sort of +clod-breaking has taken place, sugar cane is planted, and the work of +cultivation is ended. For a dozen years the cane will produce annual crops +of more or less value without any attention whatever other than the +cutting of the cane when ready for the mill. + +[Illustration: THE OXEN STAGE OF AGRICULTURE] + +An interior road is an experience. A road is a route of travel along which +various persons make their way as best they are able, under such +conditions of weather and impassability as happen to exist. In the dry +season some of these tracks wear down to a condition in which a cart can +be coaxed over the right-of-way. In wet weather nearly all the native +thoroughfares are wholly impassable except for sturdy oxen, which plow +their way through the mud and sinkholes with deliberation born of long +practice. + +The man at the bottom of the scale is not to blame for his situation. He +is the victim of a system that has made it exceedingly unwise for him to +do anything other than what he does. + +Poverty is the only protection of the people. For nearly two centuries +pillage, plunder, piracy, and murder were the record of the Isthmus. Every +buccaneer who sailed the Spanish main seems to have made a business of +taking a chance at the Isthmus. It was open season for every kind of crook +work that the minds of men could invent. Most of this activity was +confined to the trade route in the middle of the Isthmus, but the +influence and terror of this bloody age extended both ways as far as the +country was inhabited. The common people were exploited, plundered, +murdered, enslaved, and beaten at every turn. + +Only a fool would work when to work meant that his head was marked for +immediate oppression. If he forgot himself and got hold of anything of +value, some one was ready to take it away from him without delay; and if +he objected, he lost both his property and his head. + +The social dregs that strayed to Panama or stayed in Panama in those lurid +days were men without character, conscience, or capacity for industry, +other than in their favorite occupation of despoiling some one else. + +These pirates and plunderers are gone, but they have left their tracks and +traces in the civilization of the Isthmus. The common people to-day are +mild and submissive; no other type could survive. It is possible to exist +in dire poverty and pass the time without land or property, and that is +the only kind of existence that holds any promise of peace to the man at +the bottom. + +[Illustration: WAYSIDE SELLERS OF FRUIT] + +There have been efforts on the part of the leaders of Isthmian life to +inaugurate a new era and bring about improvements. These efforts have been +spasmodic and usually complicated by political considerations. Large +appropriations have been made for roads, public buildings, machinery, +schools, and mills, but while the money has been expended, it has gone +like water in a sandy desert, and graft and inefficiency have swallowed up +the funds with little or no results. + +It has been supposed that appropriations for bridges, public markets, or +good roads would in some way take the place of industry and thrift and +bring good times. Half-finished markets rear their ghastly skeletons in +town centers. Rusting road-rollers stand idle, decaying machines lie +neglected, and half-finished public works are covered with cobwebs. Nobody +notices, no one cares, and nothing is done. + +[Illustration: THE HOUSE BESIDE THE ROAD] + +A railroad was built with the evident idea that it would bring prosperity +to a section of naturally rich country, but a railroad without crops is +useless, and crops without labor are impossible, and labor without +adequate returns is worth still less than it costs. The economic structure +rests on the man at the bottom, and when this human foundation is the prey +and target of every one above him the result can be nothing other than +general distress and inefficiency. + +In some sections of the interior, as in the provinces of Coclé and Chitré, +meat cattle of good quality are raised. Shipping facilities to the Panama +market are very good. There is no regular inspection, but the cattle are +uniformly healthy and in good condition. The cattle-raising end of the +trade is all right, but the market is a different matter. The cattle +buyers in Panama are organized into what is known as the meat trust, and +these buyers hold the sellers in subjection. Prices are kept down to the +lowest possible basis, and monopolistic methods so well known in North +America are in full swing. + +Individual holders of interior ranchos have made earnest efforts to +produce foodstuffs and introduce definite reforms into the methods of +farming, but such persons have usually served as fearful examples to their +neighbors. In an industrial system in which the one method of the man at +the top is to keep his eyes open and whenever he finds anyone who has by +chance or industry accumulated something, take it away from him--this does +not stimulate long hours and speeding-up on the part of the men who do the +work. + +When the United States took over the Canal Zone and paid the purchase +price to the new Republic of Panama, a good appropriation was made to the +interior provinces for the building of a system of highways as the first +step in a general improvement of the country. Most of the provinces have +little to show for this expenditure of money. In one province reports were +received that the money was being handed out in petty grafting operations +and for political purposes and that no road was being built to speak of. +An American engineer was sent to investigate. He reported the facts and +was later put in charge of the "work." He reorganized the entire +construction force, and at the expense of less than twenty thousand +dollars built a road which has stood without repairs for a dozen years, +and is in good condition to-day under heavy usage. But the reorganization +pulled down on the engineer's head the wrath of the entire officialism of +the province, and finally the men higher up in authority denounced the +American for upsetting the smooth-working system at their expense. He had +committed the unpardonable error of using the money to get results and +build the road for which it was appropriated. + +This is interior Panama at its worst. There are Americans who have +invested their money and their personal supervision in the development +enterprises in Chiriqui, and they are hopeful of better things. There are +officials who are genuinely anxious to see a better age begin. And the day +will come when this fair land will make men rich by the abundance of its +products and the certainty of large returns upon development work done +under favorable conditions. But the conditions do not yet exist in any +stable form. + +All of this is Panama at its worst, and forms but the background of +contrast for the picture of the fine possibilities that lie in the soil, +and in the unreleased resources of a human stock that has never had a fair +chance. Once separated from hookworm and superstition, given an industrial +education, and assured competent leadership and certain returns for toil, +and the lot of the Panamanian is no more incurable than that of any other +victims of a bad system. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +PANAMA AND PROGRESS + + +The coat of arms of the Republic of Panama bears the inscription, "The +repudiation of war and homage to the arts which flourish in peace and +labor." Under the existing treaty with the United States the first part of +this excellent motto is guaranteed. Panama is a providential Republic and +presents some of the finest possibilities of the American tropics. The +educated Panamanians have not been slow to proclaim these rich resources, +but no large advance has been realized yet. The government of Panama has +been friendly to promotion plans and development projects, and has +undertaken some ambitious enterprises on its own initiative, but the +results have been on the whole disappointing. + +American business men who have lived in Panama feel that no permanent +success can be assured to such undertakings without the backing of the +United States government. The officials of Panama naturally do not look +with enthusiasm upon this idea and prefer to keep development enterprises +within their own jurisdiction. And serious effort has certainly been made +by the Panamanian government to support some of the enterprises projected +by native and foreign capitalists. + +[Illustration: WIRELESS AT DARIEN] + +The causes of economic backwardness and social conservatism are not +difficult to locate and describe. From the cruel savagery of Pizarro and +Balboa to the model communities of the Canal Zone is a far step. In the +past seventy-five years the city of Panama has passed through a thousand +years of social evolution, and in five years after Panama became an +independent and sovereign nation the city was transformed, the government +reorganized, and something like twentieth-century conditions replaced the +filth and disease and squalor of the old days. + +The prowler in social history will find plenty of material here. By all +the precedents of progress Panama should have been prosperous centuries +ago. While other cities of coming metropolitan centers were yet barren +wastes and sleeping wildernesses Panama was on the highway of the world. +When New York and San Francisco and Chicago were inhabited by birds and +squirrels Panama was known everywhere. Panama had a century the start of +all North America and was the pawn of kings and the gateway of empire +before the Pilgrims landed in New England. If there be any advantage in an +early start, Panama should have led us all in the race for a commanding +position in the New World. + +There is much in location. A single foot on Broadway is worth more than a +farm in the desert. Great cities have great positions on the map, and +Panama began with a situation to which the world simply had to come. A +dozen different solutions of the transportation problem presented by the +Isthmian power and navigation were proposed, but it always came back to +Panama. Here is the narrowest part of the connecting link of the +continents, and here is the lowest point in the continental backbone. +Without lifting her hand or voice, Panama had but to dream and wait till +the world should come and pour into her lap the commerce and progress of +the modern age. To-day Panama is on the direct line of travel between +almost any two great cities at opposite ends of the earth. Melbourne and +London, New York and Buenos Ayres, Port au Spain and Honolulu--draw the +lines, and they all pass through Panama. + +It is an accepted axiom of unthinking people that gold and prosperity are +synonymous. If this were true, Panama should be the most prosperous and +progressive of all cities of the earth to-day. More gold has been carried +through her streets, and stored in her warehouses, and handled by her +people, than in any other city of the Americas. The Peru of the Conquest +was lined and lacquered with gold. The palaces of the Incas and the +Temples of the Sun were plastered and burnished with gold; and for a +century this gold was loaded into European ships, taken to Panama and +packed across the Isthmus and then reshipped to Europe to fill the coffers +of profligate kings and bolster up the fortunes of fallen states. All of +it came through Panama; and if much of it did not remain there, it was not +due to conscientious scruples on the part of the Panamanians. If a stream +of gold could bring progress, Panama should have led the world for three +hundred years. + +Probably the modern Republic of Panama is one of the very few endowed +governments in the world. The purchase price of the Canal Zone, invested +in New York real estate, yields an annual revenue which forms a part of +the government budget. The annual payment of $250,000 by the Canal Zone +also helps. Since the beginning of the French Canal enterprise a +considerable part of the monthly payrolls of the Canal builders has found +its way into the till of the merchants in Colon and Panama, and these +terminal cities have largely lived on the Canal Zone trade. Certainly, +Panama has even to-day some peculiar financial advantages--and if these +could bring prosperity, Panama should be prosperous. + +[Illustration: FARM GRIST MILL, COSTA RICA] + +When the California gold rush began in 1848 Panama awoke from her century +and a half of slumber and trouble began afresh. Again there was gold on +the Isthmus, and again there was crime. Hundreds of ships discharged their +cargoes and passengers on one side of the Isthmus, and the trip across was +one not to be forgotten. + +Now that the world has once more had to fight out the old battle of free +institutions, it is worth while to remember that the oldest independent +nation of the modern world is Panama; and that the first of the Spanish +colonies to achieve freedom from the misgovernment of the old country was +this same little nation on the Isthmus. Tired of the kind of supervision +which she had been undergoing from Europe, in 1826 Panama revolted, set up +political housekeeping for herself, until she was later merged with the +free New Granada--the modern Colombia. + +If political independence has anything to do with advancement, then Panama +should be very advanced indeed, for she led all her neighbors in achieving +national separateness. The independence movement that swept over the +western world a century ago affected Panama profoundly, and the microbe of +political freedom soon produced a well-developed case of revolution--and +the revolution was a success. Four score years afterward Panama again +established her independence without the shedding of a drop of blood. If a +spirit of independence can make a people prosperous, then Panama and +prosperity should mean the same thing. + +Panama has some peculiar political advantages to-day. Where other nations +maintain their political sovereignty and internal peace at the cost of +huge sums of money and by means of armies and battleships, Panama is +spared this enormous drain upon her resources and men and money, and finds +her political independence guaranteed against all the nations of the +earth. Likewise she is sure of internal peace and is the only really +war-tight, revolution-proof country in Latin-America. By the treaty +entered into between Panama and the United States, in return for the Canal +Zone and other concessions, the United States guarantees the independence +of Panama and agrees to step in at any time when it may be necessary and +maintain order throughout the Isthmus. The Panamanians are not +enthusiastic over this situation, and some of the politicos inwardly +resent very bitterly an arrangement which makes impossible their chosen +profession of agitators and revolutionary leaders. + +There are people who tell us that the basis of national progress is +economic and commercial. Given a land with all large resources, we shall +perforce have a progressive people. Measured by this standard, Panama +should lead all the rest. Her thirteen hundred miles of coast bound a +narrow empire, but an empire of wonderful possibilities. Her inexhaustible +soil, her frequent rivers, her rich jungles, her broad savanas, her high +mountains and dense forests, her mines and climate and rainfall, and a +world market right at her doors--all that nature could do to lay the +foundations of material wealth seems to have been done here. + +If so-called modern science and engineering skill can bring prosperity, +then the Isthmus of Panama includes the site of the world's last +achievement in engineering, sanitation, and organized efficiency. Health +conditions on the Canal Zone are better than in many cities of the United +States. General Gorgas said that there were three causes for which the +Americans left Panama in the old days: yellow fever, malaria, and cold +feet, and that of the three the last caused more desertions than the other +two combined. It is worth noting that the first two mentioned have now +vanished entirely, and it but remains to find a preventive for frigid +pedal extremities to make the tropics a white man's land. + +[Illustration: HAPPY KINDERGARTNERS, PANAMA] + +Panama and Colon to-day are clean and healthful. Even the tropical buzzard +that hovers over every town and crossroad in this mid-America world has +disappeared from these cities--starved to death. The American Board of +Health looks after the garbage cans and backyards and drains, and woe be +unto the unhappy mosquito that inadvertently wanders into this forbidden +territory. The entire country is now free from yellow fever, and while +there is some malaria in the lowlands during the wet season, health +conditions are far better than might be supposed. + +The question of climate raises visions of burning days and sleepless +nights. To people who have never lived in the tropics any lurid tale is +plausible. But these tales of torment do not come from dwellers in the +tropics, but from overheated imaginations of writers of fiction who find +the tropics a rich field, because most of their readers know nothing of +the subject. There are more comfortable days in Panama, per year, than in +New York. There is rarely a night when one cannot sleep in comfort. If +there were nothing the matter but the climate, there would be no reason +for shunning Panama. + +By all the rules of the great game of getting rich, Panama ought to be +both prosperous and progressive. Seemingly every chance has come her way. + +Yet the visitor does not find Panama as a whole either rich or energetic. +The terminal cities, Panama and Colon, have lived pretty well off the +proceeds of the Canal Zone, but the great interior country is sparsely +inhabited by people who are neither prosperous nor progressive. Poverty, +indolence, and dirt abound throughout the provinces. Education is +attempted, and the present system, when perfected, will afford fairly good +rudimentary training, but as now conducted it is a promise as well as a +performance. With a high illiteracy the people of Panama cannot be said to +live on a lofty intellectual plane. Not one man in a thousand makes the +slightest attempt to improve the country, or takes the least interest in +what the world is doing. + +[Illustration: YOUNG COSTA RICA IS ENTERPRISING] + +In the capital city are educated and refined men, both prosperous and +progressive. Their activities are divided among business enterprises, +professional callings, and political activity. Very few of these men are +interested in development projects to any extent. Agriculture as a basis +of national wealth has little place in their thinking, unless somebody +else can be induced to attend to the agriculture while they themselves +take care of the wealth. Working on a farm is all right for ignorantes and +peons, but has no interest for a gentleman. The development of natural +resources is not interesting unless it affords a percentage of some sort, +to be earned without effort. The unfortunate fact is that such modern +conditions as exist in Panama to-day have largely been brought to her +ready-made, which may be why she does not take more interest in them. + +The question of morals and marriage laws is one which had better be let +alone unless the prowler is prepared to find some very unpleasant things. +All children are baptized, and, as before explained, the baptisms are +registered and classified either as "Legítimo" or "Natural"--the latter, +of course, being illegitimate. Only thirty per cent of the births of the +Republic as a whole, are born of married parents. The reasons for this are +not so simple as may at first appear. Panama has to-day a civil marriage +law, but unless a man has abundant leisure, endless patience, and can +afford to hire a lawyer or two, he had better be married somewhere else. +Evidently, influences were brought to bear upon the framers of the civil +law which induced them to overload it with requirements that make it +exceedingly unpopular. No voice of protest is raised against this +scandalous moral situation on the part of the priests of the established +church, who merely shrug their shoulders and shake their heads and say, +"What can you do about it?" Certainly, they themselves do nothing at all +except to ignore the situation. + +There have been physical factors that have militated against the progress +of Panama. While the climate is comfortable, most of the time it lacks +stimulus. There is no "kick" in it. Without occasional respites in a +higher altitude and cooler atmosphere, the man from the north loses his +driving power and his wife sometimes gets a case of nerves. Four hundred +years of it will take the energy out of any man; and many of the present +inhabitants of interior Panama appear to have lived here for about that +length of time. For the development of high human efficiency it is +required in a climate that it be something more than comfortable. It +should at times be uncomfortable, and occasionally exasperating. + +[Illustration: WOODEN SUGAR MILL AND ITS MAKER] + +The workers of the Rockefeller Foundation have found eighty per cent of +the people of the provinces afflicted with hookworm. Highly commendable is +the work done by these representatives of the Institute, but so long as +the common people know nothing of sanitation, clean and pure food, present +conditions will continue. And physical "hookworm" is accompanied by a +similar mental condition. There is a moral hookworm throughout the +country, and life slumps down to a hand-to-mouth drag from one day to the +next. Both physical and mental conditions are better in the cities, of +course, but there is still room for a moral prophylactic. + +There are social forces which have largely accounted for this result. +Possibly no place in the world shows more mixed blood than Panama. Shades +and colors and tints and tones there are, and blends indescribable and +also impossible to analyze or trace. The artists tell us that the +combination of the primary colors with white results in a tint, while +blending a primary color with black gives a shade. Well, most of these +tones are shades, for the same scientific reason as that mentioned by the +artist. From the Caribbean world has come its contribution of the West +Indian Negroes, with consequent shady result. + +The social results of this mixture are various and distressing, but well +understood by anyone who has lived in the interior of Panama. Even the +cities are affected in the same way. Social standing, political +availability, and personal influence are largely determined by the degree +of whiteness--or darkness--that prevails in the skin. And the general +desire of the ignorant and unmoral native of the interior to "lighten up +the breed" has led to a moral situation that bodes no good for the +away-from-home white man who may be living for a longer or shorter time in +the up-country provinces. + +Any aggressive North American, especially if he be from the West, looks +upon the splendid areas of land, the fine rivers, the dense forests, and +the other untouched resources of this rich country with amazement, and +begins to plan development projects and dream of organizing syndicates, +but the native loses no sleep over such vain imaginings. If he dreams at +all, it is of his food if he be poor, and of politics if he be rich. +Development in the North American sense is a disgrace, and no job for a +gentleman. The smooth savanas may lie there untouched till kingdom come, +for all he cares. The only interest in life is political manipulation. Law +and politics are the two occupations most esteemed, and Panama is not +different from other countries in the frequent association of these two +professions. + +Whence comes this emphasis on political activity, to the neglect of +commerce and agriculture? It comes from Europe with the early inheritance +of the first settlements and rulers of this Latin world. For them any form +of physical work was dire disgrace. "These two hands have never done an +hour's work" was a boast and badge of quality. The climate of the tropics +made this philosophy of life easy to accept and follow, and what the +leaders lived the followers did faithfully keep and perform. Of course +somebody had to do a little work and raise a few vegetables and cattle, +but the game was to find the unfortunate worker and then take away from +him the product of his toil. Thus the getter lived without work and taught +the loser the uselessness of further exercise. + +By way of clearness these conditions are here described in their worst and +final form. Bad as they are, they are not the whole truth. It takes more +than mixed blood and hookworm and snobbishness to account for the present +social conditions of Central America. + +If moral conditions in Panama to-day are not ideal, it is not due to any +absence of church or lack of religion. With the explorers and conquerors +of the sixteenth century came the missionaries and priests. Crosses were +set up, bells were hung, masses were said, and everywhere the elaborate +ritual of the Spanish church was maintained. Whole villages were +"converted," baptized, and labeled as good Catholics in a day's time. +Massive and beautiful churches were soon built in centers of population, +and every village has its church, often representing nearly as much value +as half of the houses of the town combined. + +From the beginning until the coming of the North American to finish the +Canal the Roman Church has had exclusive and uninterrupted occupation of +this entire territory. There has been no competition, and there have been +no interferences with her moral and spiritual leadership. + +[Illustration: PUBLIC MARKET, DAVID] + +But in spite of this situation, or perhaps because of it, moral conditions +are what they are in Panama to-day. Out of the closed Bible and the bound +consciences of this system have come social incapacity and intellectual +helplessness in all the fields of human activity. Most of Latin-America +has not yet learned that the intellect, like the nation, cannot exist half +slave and half free. Only free consciences can guide free citizens to the +founding of free political institutions and social activities. A +successful democracy can never be reared upon a foundation of superstition +and spiritual despotism. More than all other factors this moral blight and +spiritual dry-rot is what is the matter with Panama. The moral and +spiritual climate of a people has more to do with the growth or +destruction of a spirit of progress than do thermometers and telephones +and declarations of independence. Until the spirit of a Panamanian becomes +a free spirit and he is permitted to think and worship after the dictates +of a free conscience, Panama can never become a progressive nation. + +Highly favored among the nations of the earth, this little country affords +a strategic opportunity for the setting up of a national experiment in +development and progress. If this undertaking is to succeed, there must be +added to the large economic, social, and strategic resources of the +country the element of a free spirit and an enlightened conscience. Out of +these will come a sense of the dignity of labor, the worth-whileness of +education, and the development of the now dormant resources of this +beautiful land. + +The problem of progress in Panama is inevitably linked with that of +Protestantism. Work was begun by the Methodist Episcopal Church in Colon +under Bishop William Taylor, and a strong West Indian congregation was +gathered. This was later turned over to the Wesleyan Methodists, who +maintain considerable work among the West Indians of the Caribbean +Islands. With the purchase of the Canal Zone by the United States, the +Methodists began to plan for work in Panama and eventually established a +Spanish church and school at the head of Central Avenue, opposite the +national palace. But no serious effort was made by this denomination to +meet and master the problems that arose from exclusive Protestant +occupation of the Spanish-speaking section of the field until the time of +the noted Panama Congress in February, 1916. Here met representatives of +the Protestant movement in all Latin-America, and general principles of +comity and cooperation were established and adopted. Under this working +agreement, the Spanish work in the Republic of Panama was assigned to the +Methodists as a unit of responsibility. To this area Costa Rica was later +added. West Indian work was not included in this survey, and it is to be +hoped that some similar representative and authoritative body may yet +undertake to bring order and comity out of the unorganized, though +friendly, confusion of West Indian denominational programs now existent. + +The Pan-Denominational Congress of 1916 made definite the responsibility +for Spanish work in Panama, and the denomination now in charge of this +field is working on a program somewhat adequate to the strategic +importance of the very conspicuous location beside the Canal Zone. When +fully realized and in operation, this program of work will wield a wide +influence in the Spanish-American world. A large factor in this new +program has been the interest and enthusiasm of the young people of the +California Conference Epworth League, who have done much to make possible +an enlargement of the work undertaken. + +Too much praise cannot be given to the earnest and efficient missionaries +who founded and have maintained this mission. The Seawall Church has +already sent out its influences to the ends of the earth. The standards +and results attained in Panama College, so far as that institution has +been developed, have exerted a strong influence on the educational and +moral life of the city and of the republic. The work in 1919 included a +Spanish base at the Seawall location, with its church and school, and +American congregation, a West Indian school and church in Guachapali, a +Spanish mission Sunday school and evangelistic service in the school +building kindly loaned by the Wesleyans, a Spanish mission school and +preaching service in Guachapali, a West Indian Sunday school and service +at Red Tank, and a Chinese mission near the market. Present plans for +future expansion include, in addition to the work now under way at David, +an adequate program of interior education and evangelization, an +industrial and agricultural school, a strong institution church in Panama, +an institution of higher education, and adequate work in Colon. + +This mission shares with the Northern Baptist Convention and the Northern +Presbyterian Church denominational responsibility for most of Central +America. The Baptists have work in Honduras, Salvador, and the +Presbyterians in Guatemala and in Colombia, further south. The Methodists +complete the chain by the occupation of Panama and Costa Rica, in which +latter republic work was begun in the latter months of 1917. Costa Rica +presents an attractive field with its good climate, fertile country, +Spanish-speaking population of intelligence, and large capacity for +progress. The new mission met with success from the start and promises +rapid growth. + +The three denominations named are working together in complete harmony and +have developed a unified program of Christian education for Central +America, as the beginnings of further coordination of effort. There is no +overlapping, no competition, and, above all, no overcrowding, in this +promising but sparsely occupied field. The Protestant denominational front +on this field is well unified. + +There are several independent missions working in this field, some of +which do not find it in their purposes to unite in any general movement, +and none of which place emphasis on education. Chief among these is the +Central America Mission which maintains workers in all the republics of +Central America who confine themselves largely to evangelistic effort. + +All of the Central republics have constitutional religious liberty, and +the work of Protestantism is officially welcome everywhere. Of petty +persecutions and ecclesiastical opposition there are numerous examples. +The spirit of the Inquisition still smolders beneath the surface, but the +new spirit of world-democracy makes more and more grotesque and futile the +intolerance and bigotry of the Dark Ages. + +Protestantism in Latin-America has been in the van of every movement +toward progress and has contributed much toward the foundations of the new +era. Without the Protestant movement, the present state of advance would +be impossible. To-day Protestantism is in the anomalous position of being +inadequate in equipment and manpower to meet the situation created or to +supply the demands arising everywhere for adequate expression of free +institutions. The lump is large and the leaven has been small, but the +contagion of liberty and the awakening of conscience demand an adequate +equipment and program. + +There is promise of a new and worthy approach in the large purposes of the +great denominations to undertake in adequate manner a program of +world-reconstruction made imperative by the close of the great war. The +collapse of all but moral and spiritual forces as a guarantee of peace +renders all former alignments obsolete and forces the church to new +methods and more comprehensive undertakings. It is now resolved to go up +and possess this goodly land on the mere borders of which we have lingered +for nearly a century. The coming generation will see a reorganization and +reconstruction of the Protestant program in Latin-America, and before the +end of the twentieth century this mighty continent will have attained a +noble citizenship in the neighborhood of great races. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +KNOWING OUR NEIGHBORS + + +Whatever the cause or results, the fact stands that we are not well +acquainted with our nearest national neighbors. Like the modern +city-dweller, we know least about those who live nearest. The North +American knows more about the other side of the world than he does about +those who live on the same continent with him. Neither the North American +nor his southern neighbor has treated the other fairly. + +Many of us have not yet discovered that there be any Latin-American. Some +one lives south of the line, of course, but that fact has made little +impression on our minds. In our mental geography the American world shades +off into a hazy and troubled region southward about which we have known +little and cared less. Our geographical studies have helped us but little. +It is possible to know every physical fact about a country without knowing +the hearts of the people. + +It is an anomaly that we know less about our Latin neighbors than we do of +Europe or Asia. By historical ties and constant reminders of commerce and +immigration we are aware of our transatlantic cousins. We have discovered +the Far East and have some interest therein, even though it be the +interest pertaining to a museum or a menagerie. But until very recently +neither immigration, commerce, nor curiosity has stirred us to +acquaintance with our continental neighbors. + +[Illustration: INDIAN BOY GOES TO SCHOOL] + +This ignorance is part of our general antebellum attitude toward all the +world lying south and east. In fact, we never bothered much with anybody +outside of the United States. Over a century we lived on, secure in the +idea that we were immune from European militaristic contagion and +all-sufficient unto ourselves. The rest of the world might perchance sink +into the sea, but we would go on blissfully without it. Our "free +institutions" were self-sufficient and all-inclusive. And because we were +able to compose our own troubles and keep out of other peoples' quarrels, +more or less, we assumed that we were automatically superior to the rest +of the world, "of course." + +We of the United States have been likened unto a householder living on a +plot of ground rich enough to support his family. Resolving not to become +entangled in neighborhood alliances, he constructed a hundred-foot wall +about his property and lived securely within. The right-hand neighbor +might be an anarchist and the man on the left a cannibal. If the man in +the rear were a polygamist and the dweller across the street had a habit +of using firearms indiscriminately it mattered nothing to the +householder--so long as the wall held. But it came to pass that an +earthquake destroyed that wall, and the said exclusive citizen suddenly +found himself out on the street with his neighbors. And behold, it +mattered much what sort of neighbors they were. There was nothing to do +but get acquainted and help make the neighborhood a decent place in which +to live. + +Since the world war has battered down the wall with which we sought to +separate ourselves from other nations, we have nothing left but to +recognize and accept our place in the national neighborhood and do our +share to make it decent. + +The Latin-American has been at a disadvantage in the character of the +continent in which he lives. South America is a land for promoters, +organizers of industry, hardy pioneers of production, engineers, planters, +and rugged explorers of commercial frontiers. The poetic and artistic +temperament of the Latin has suffered an unfair criticism because of the +ill adaptation of his temperament to his environment. Sunny Italy and +picturesque France and vine-clad Spain were more to his tastes and +abilities. That he has done as well as he has speaks much for his +adaptability to a situation better suited to a more executive type of +character. Give him a chance in his own best environment and he shows +capacity of high achievement. + +[Illustration: WASHDAY IN COSTA RICA] + +Probably the two most arrogant travelers have been the Englishman and the +American, but our British cousins have assumed their superiority with +silent contempt, while the newly rich America globe-trotters have vaunted +their ignorance from the piazzas of every tourist hotel and upon the +steamer decks of every sea. It is really not strange that we failed to +notice the very considerable and important populations of countries lying +at our doors. + +The North Americans are not travelers. Few of us do go anywhere, and fewer +still know how to travel successfully. The poorest traveler in the world +is the society tourist who goes about trying to reproduce home conditions +in a foreign land. So far as possible he escapes the life and message of +the country in which he sojourns and returns with little else but tales of +social functions, a la American, and comparative accounts of expenses at +tourist hotels. From the first day out he isolates and fortifies himself +against the very things that travel alone can give. He brings home a few +trinkets made to sell, some cocksure criticisms of customs, people, and +missionaries, and a swelled head. But he has been abroad--save the mark! + +Travel is a specific for provincialism, but it must be real travel and not +imitation home-swagger. Intelligent and sympathetic travel breaks up the +hardening strata of thought, pushes back the narrowing horizon, loosens +the set fibers of the soul, and is the surest cure yet known for mental +arterial sclerosis. The right kind of travel shifts the viewpoint, +readjusts life forces, and shakes up the provincialism of the man with the +"township horizon." And when the disturbed atoms of character reassemble +it is in a different mode and with a new cycle. + +It is to be said that the South American has not taken much interest in +us. Since he has made out to get along without us, he cannot be very +important. The Oriental has shown some desire to move into our basement, +or at least the woodshed or the washhouse, and we have discovered him. The +European has shown his good taste by coming over and moving right in with +us, and in time we cannot distinguish him from ourselves. But the South +American has gone his way, and in the main has minded his own affairs, and +therefore cannot amount to much. If he were a social problem, we would +know him better. If he had a penchant for the police force or an itch for +office among us, we would cultivate his acquaintance, and perhaps invite +him to call. + +During the past two decades the once despised Chinese have become popular +among us. Their utter difference from ourselves, their solid human +qualities, their marvelous vitality, their commercial solidarity, their +response to the stimuli of the modern world, their astonishing +versatility, their wonderful national history--these and a hundred other +things stir our imagination, and we have rather suddenly discovered that +we like the Chinese--especially at a distance. + +We are well aware of Japan, not so much through any perceptions of our own +as through Japan's insistence upon attention. We can on short notice make +out a rather comprehensive list of Japanese characteristics, and, in +truth, we find Japan interesting. The marvelous energy of her people, her +high ambitions, her Oriental viewpoint, her great commercial and military +successes, her artistic setting, her marvelous skill of hand, and, not +least, her abundant interest in our own affairs--these and other items +make it quite the thing to be interested in Japan. But who cares anything +about a lot of dirty peons? They are not in good form. + +But this interest in the Orient is more curiosity than it is race +sympathy. There is a great gulf fixed between the yellow man and the +white, and racially that gulf can never be bridged. The occasional +marriages between the East and West need no comment; they tell their own +story. Neither China nor Japan can ever become American in any racial +sense. When Chinese and Japanese come to America for any but educational +and temporary purposes, they set up Chinatown and little Japan wherever +they go. American character is a most complicated composite of many races, +but from Tokyo to Bombay there is no Oriental factor that will blend with +the mixture of races that makes up America. + +Our Oriental interest is confined to the races that have impressed +themselves upon our imagination. The Philippines, in spite of our national +relation to the islands, do not seem to us very real nor very important. +They will soon be keeping house for themselves, and then we shall forget +them except as an interesting historical incident. And as for India, that +is British, and about all we know is that the Hindu wears a turban, +maintains a very undemocratic caste, exists in unaccountable numbers, is +subject to annoying and frequent famines, and on the whole is a rather +helpless lot, except as some bearded fakir entertains companies of badly +balanced American society women with hyperbolated essence of sublimated +nonsense. + +[Illustration: RIVERSIDE PLANTATION] + +But the Latin-American is blood of our blood, kin of our kind, and lives +on the same continental street, which is why we are so little interested +in him. He is neither quaint, curious, nor crazy. He is not good for +first-page headlines except when he breaks out in revolution or forgets +our Monroe Doctrine. There is no fixed gulf of difference between him and +us, and in the final fusing of American character he must contribute a +large part. + +To ignore the Latin-American is to be convicted of historical ignorance. +From Dante to the great South American leaders and scholars of to-day the +Latin races have been neither sleeping nor idle. During the last five +hundred years more than one half of Western history has been made by Latin +races. It was a Latin who discovered America. Another first sailed around +the globe. Latin peoples explored, conquered, and settled both Western +continents, and gave a language which has become the permanent speech of +two thirds of the Western world. To call the roll of artists, painters, +sculptors, poets, dramatists, novelists, musicians, explorers, +missionaries, and scientists for the past five centuries is to prove that +a majority of the names mentioned in the world's illustrious hall of fame +are from Latin races. To mention Curé, Pasteur, and Marconi is to remind +us of the scientific progress of modern Latin minds, and to speak of +France and Italy as pioneers in democracy is to keep within the facts. It +was in Italy that Browning and Tennyson and George Eliot and a host of +other writers found inspiration and material to feed the fires of genius. + +Whatever may be said of the modern degeneracy of the dominant religious +system of Latin-American countries, it is true that the sixteenth century +saw in Spain one of the most virile and comprehensive missionary movements +of all history. Never before nor since have missionary efforts been +projected on so vast a scale or by so powerful procedure. Monks and +priests went out and established the cross and the confessional through +the Western world and in the islands of the sea, and, whatever else we may +say, there can be no disparagement of the permanency of the results of +these conquests. The Latin world is still dominantly Roman in its +religious life, and shows very positive preferences for the religion of +the conquistadores. To give a language and a religion to two thirds of the +American continents is not the work of weaklings nor of degenerates. + +This Latin neighbor of ours not only lives on the same street but he lives +in a bigger and better house than ours. To the "lick-all-creation" type of +Fourth-of-July American this is rank heresy, but facts have little regard +for fireworks. With twenty-eight per cent of the population of the +Americas, the Latin holds sixty-five per cent of the territory and fully +the same proportion of natural resources. His soil, his rivers, his +mountains, his harbors, his mines are as good as ours, and he has more of +them. In the western hemisphere he controls the longest rivers, the +highest mountains, the largest area of habitable land, the longest +seacoast, and the entire inexhaustible fertility of the tropics. His +untouched and uncharted natural resources are beyond computation. His +estate is second to none in the entire world, and he could spare enough +for the crowded millions of India or the swarming islands of Japan and +never miss it. All of this we would have discovered sooner but for the +world war, which focused all attention on the main issue and postponed the +direct results of the successful completion of the Panama Canal. With a +normal supply of shipping, the west coast alone of South America would +keep the Canal busy much of the time and affect American markets +profoundly. + +[Illustration: JUNGLE PRODUCTS] + +In material achievements our neighbor has not been idle, though some of +his attempts have resulted in failure or fiasco. He has built great and +beautiful cities, he has constructed long and difficult railroads over +tortuous mountain systems, he has developed huge industries and organized +big commercial enterprises. He has produced a civilization in keeping with +his character, artistic, homogeneous, progressive, and on a high +intellectual plane. His libraries, theaters, and public buildings are a +credit to his taste and skill, and his churches are massive and stately as +the rock-ribbed mountains that tie together the whole system from El Paso +to Patagonia. + +We have heard more or less of a Pan-Americanism, but we have never taken +it seriously. As subject for diplomatic papers, magazine articles, and +after-dinner oratory the all-America idea has been a refuge of +word-venders. But so long as the bulk of South American trade was with +Europe our brand of fraternal talk was harmless--also helpless; and the +reason for our failure to do business with South America has not been +entirely the neglect of our shippers. The larger exports of South America +have all been to Europe, and with ships loaded both ways the American +exporter was hopelessly handicapped in his effort to secure favorable +freight rates. When American salesmen tried to compete with German and +French and Spanish exporters they always failed to secure freight rates +that gave them an even chance. + +For years American manufacturers ignored the Orient and lagged far behind +European dealers in the same class of goods, to their own large loss. The +same neglect has produced the same result in South America. Germany +pursued a very different policy. Without trumpet or flag Germany sent her +agents to practically every Latin-American center and seaport, and there +the unostentatious German proceeded to control as much business as +possible, and generally get hold of the situation. Often he took unto +himself a wife of the country, but never for one day did he forget that he +was a representative of the Vaterland. His house, his furniture, his +methods, his ideas were one hundred per cent German. An American ship +doctor went ashore from a German liner in a small South American seaport +and stumbled upon the inevitable German man of business. He was invited +home to dinner and shown through the house with much pride by the +half-German children. One after the other, furniture, books, pictures, +clothing even were exhibited and with every article was repeated the +formula, "Es war in Deutschland gemacht." It was a great game, and it was +working along smoothly until things slipped in Europe, and now the end no +man can see. But there is going to be a great chance for American capital +and enterprise and business energy in the years when German energy will be +needed at home. + +In one of the Central American republics an American, while present at a +social function, remarked casually to a friend that in his opinion the +cure for the political upheavals of that country would be in the polite +but firm intervention of the United States. A German business man, +overhearing the remark, hastily interposed, "Not at all, sir; that is what +Germany is in this country for." With a concerted and well-considered +policy of business extension in South American countries Germany deserved +the commercial advantages that she had gained in the twenty-five years +preceding the war period. + +When questioned as to the remarkable success of the German commercial +propaganda, South American leaders rarely fail to mention the fact that +the German business man in Latin lands invariably speak the language of +the country. Catalogues are issued in Spanish or Portuguese, as local +conditions require. Measures, technical terms, and methods of handling +goods are all adapted to local usage, and the South American merchant is +considered and consulted in all the mechanism of exchange and handling of +goods. Contrasted with North American ignorance of conditions and ignoring +of language and custom, it is not strange that Europe has controlled the +trade of Latin-America. + +In view of all that is involved of national development, international +entanglements, commercial expansion, and racial affinity, it would seem to +be about time that we become acquainted with our neighbors, or, rather, in +our neighborhood. If we are going to live on this great American highway, +it may be well to be on good terms with the rest of the folks. + +Aside from commercial and linguistic considerations, there are four +reasons for our ignorance of the lands and people south of the United +States. + +1. The American people are not well acquainted with any other people on +earth. Geographical isolation has had much to do with this, and racial +self-sufficiency has had still more effect upon our lack-of-thinking about +our neighbors. Had South and Central American countries been pouring +millions of immigrants into our cities, we would know something about +them, but the Latin has had no need to immigrate, since he has more room +in his own house than he could find in ours. + +2. American travel abroad has been practically all to Europe, with an +increasing number who have seen something of the Far East. And it is +impossible to be anything but densely ignorant of any people whose faces +we have never seen, whose country we have never visited, whose history we +have ignored, and whose language we cannot understand. No real interest is +possible without knowledge, and the main trouble between the American and +his neighbors is plain ignorance. + +3. The war with Spain in 1898 resulted in much indifferent prejudice on +our part against everything Spanish. Spain was not prepared for the blow +that fell upon her, and perhaps her colonial system deserved the +destruction that was administered, but we came out of the war with a more +or less good-natured contempt for anything and everything that savored of +Spain. We escaped with little or no spirit of hatred or lust of conquest, +but we marked down the Latin world at bargain prices--and then let Europe +walk away with the bargain. As a matter of fact, Spain has little to do +with the American situation. Spain herself in the past fifteen years has +made rapid strides forward, but in the average American mind anything +Spanish cannot be very efficient. + +4. Our Monroe Doctrine has begotten a certain arrogance of attitude toward +all our southern neighbors. Our attention has been called southward only +when revolution or anarchy or European interference has compelled us to +take a hand for our own ultimate self-protection. It is only when our +neighbors have failed to keep the peace and have threatened to carry their +quarrels into our yard, or have been in danger of being beaten up by +European military police, that we have taken the trouble to notice them. +From this situation it was inevitable that an attitude of patronage should +arise, and patronage is not a basis of national cooperation or mutual +understanding. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +THE FAMILY TREE + + +When came this Latin-American? Is he a mystery, a complex, or a racial +conundrum defying analysis and baffling understanding? So many people have +said. Others have reported a something impossible to name or describe +about this man from the southlands--all of which is nonsense. There are +few human mysteries when once we have the key. Any people may be +understood if we know their racial origin, social history, and +reaction-power. Such knowledge usually explains these so-called race +peculiarities. + +As North Americans we are ourselves the present product of social forces +that have driven us for centuries past. With a northern European race +origin we have been mixed in many molds and infused with many tinctures +till we emerge a new blend of blood. This new and vigorous stock shows a +reaction-power that has made much of educational, scientific, and material +opportunities, but, after all, these traits themselves are largely the +result of the social stimuli of the past five hundred years. Had our +ancestors in the sixteenth century removed to Spain, we should all now be +Spanish dons. + +If we could know the social, religious, intellectual, domestic, +industrial, and political environment of a people, we could account for +ninety per cent of race characteristics. And this social history measures, +not only potent forces and compelling sanctions, but itself in turn +registers reactive power and character values. + +[Illustration: SAN BLAS INDIAN CHIEF] + +The Latin-American has no cause to apologize nor explain when we inquire +into his racial antecedents. Out of the remote ages of antiquity a branch +of the human family moved westward, and on the Italian peninsula developed +a civilization and founded a city that in time dominated the world. The +lust of conquest and the intoxication of power debauched the rulers of +Rome, but the rising Christian Church took over the scepter, and for +fifteen hundred years Rome dominated the civilization of the world. +Fundamentally, there was no difference between the blood of southern and +western Europe, and but for the corrupt and demoralizing influence of the +papacy and its trailing blight upon the human spirit Rome might still have +been the dominant power of European civilization. The abuses that +compelled the Reformation also vitiated the Latin spirit. The wakening +life of the sixteenth century shifted the center westward but the blight +of papal despotism kept the Latin races from their full share in the +developments and democracy of the modern age. And now that the Teutonic +peoples of the north have become the victims of the most deadly despotism +that the world has yet produced, it is possible that the center and motive +of progressive thought in continental Europe may again swing to the +southern peoples. + +[Illustration: NO RACE SUICIDE HERE] + +No one can trace the splendid march of the Latin races through the +conquests and explorations and discoveries of the later fifteenth and +sixteenth centuries and then read the record of achievements down to the +present time and still maintain that there is anything decadent about the +Latin races. Had the Roman yoke been broken from the Latin neck as it was +from the Teuton, we should have had a very different tale to tell, and the +dominant civilization of the twentieth century might have been Latin +instead of Saxon. + +A closer examination of the social factors that have dominated the +Latin-American world and produced the present composite result on the +western hemisphere reveals three decisive factors that have in combination +produced our neighbors. + +All Latin-America reflects a European background. Nearly all relations of +life are defined in European terms. Out of the more or less subconscious +inheritance and ideals of European origin arise the sanctions of social +relations. Ideals of politics, business, education, home life, social +customs, and religion all come from this fountain of associations. The +church in South America is the church in southern Europe. The collegio is +not the North American college, but the European school which grants a +Bachelor of Arts degree at what corresponds to the end of the freshman +year in an American college. South American "republics" have their "prime +ministers," and the electorate is on the European basis. The presidents of +some of these republics exercise more arbitrary power than the king of +England or the entire executive of the United States. They are European +"presidents." Revolution is not the incurable habit of the "people" but +the profession of a few adventurers who oppress and afflict the +long-suffering and usually silent populace. This is not saying that +revolution is a characteristic of European political procedure, but that +the forms of representative government imposed upon the ideals of +dictatorship and monarchy produced the curious mixture of revolutionary +political progress known as a South or Central American "republic." South +American democracy is a hybrid product of European ideals and American +forms of government. Naturally enough, it is neither one thing nor the +other, and will not be anything very different until new forces are +brought to bear upon the political life of the Latin people. + +[Illustration: JUNGLE GUIDE] + +A second factor in the making of the Latin-American is his isolation for +three hundred years from the currents of Western economic and political +life. Practically all our North American stock of ideas and social +sanctions has been developed since the Pilgrims landed in New England. The +great basic impulse that sent men and women westward in search of +religious liberty has persisted and widened and developed a homogeneous +system of political ideal that has become the unquestioned background of +our whole political system. From free consciences have come free +institutions, free schools, free votes, and as long as it lasted, free +land, unrestricted economic opportunity, and a welcome to the world. Upon +this foundation have been reared American independence, modern democracy, +higher education, the feminist movement, scientific advance, and American +Protestantism. + +[Illustration: ONE USE FOR A HEAD] + +Certain influences from this stream have affected Latin-American life. The +nomenclature of South American politics is that of the United States, and +many constitutions contain provision for every modern practice. But these +model constitutions are like a beautiful and costly piano imported into a +home where no one knows how to use it. It takes a democratic spirit to get +democracy out of a democratic constitution. The best piano yields only +discord, and the most advanced constitution does not prevent revolution if +there be no musicians or statesmen to play and administer. People living +beside the stream of democratic progress have caught the names and forms +drifting on the current, but only those people have advanced with the +current who have not been tied to the shore by moral and intellectual +despotism. + +The influence of geographical nearness is slight beside that of historical +background and social relations. Mexico is much closer to Spain than to +the United States. After twenty years of successful administration of the +Philippines on the most colossal scale of national benevolence that the +world has ever seen, nearly all the Filipinos who had reached maturity in +1898 are still Spanish at heart and out of sympathy with American ideals +and administration. If the United States can hold the islands until every +person who was ten years old or over in 1898 is thoroughly dead and safely +buried, there will be a chance for some form of democracy, but the +old-time leaders will retain so long as they live the ideals derived from +three hundred years of Spanish administration. + +If there are in the mountains of the South isolated neighborhoods that +have been passed by in the current of modern American progress, and are +to-day practically ignorant of all that makes up American life, even +though surrounded on all sides by the march of a virile and restless race, +what must be the results of the isolation from this stream of North +American development, of the whole Latin-American race, while maintaining +close and vital connections with European standards and ideals? + +But Latin Americanism can never be explained merely by its European +background and its isolation from the progress of North America. The +keynote to the present product in Latin lands is to be found in that +system of religious despotism that has checked the free growth of every +people whose life it has dominated. + +[Illustration: BEGGARS AND CATHEDRALS] + +Jesuitism is what is the matter with the civilization southward. We have +had Romanism and Jesuitism in the United States, but people who have never +seen any form of these forces except that which has developed in the free +air of North America have much to learn. Romanism checked and balanced by +a virile Protestantism and a democratic political life is an altogether +different institution from Romanism dominant, degenerate, and intolerant. +The latter becomes the religion of the bound Bible, the chained spirit, +and the crippled conscience. It is the center of spiritual infection and +the microbe of moral weakness. No land has ever advanced under its +leadership. Like a blight on the human spirit, it has cast its spell of +ignorance and superstition over the millions of men and women who have had +no other ethical code or spiritual leadership. + +It has been claimed that the rigors of New England winters had something +to do with the sturdy New England conscience. But the Pilgrims brought +their consciences with them, and the climate came near exterminating the +colony. If the Pilgrims had landed in Cuba and the Spanish in Boston, +civilization might be very different to-day. If rigorous climates produce +vigorous men, how is it that some of the most terrible of men sailed the +Caribbean sea and devastated the whole mid-American world, while the +northern coasts of the Atlantic never saw a pirate's sail? The tropical +zephyrs of the Bay of Panama never softened the tempers or dispositions of +the bloodthirsty men who came near exterminating whole populations and +left a trail of blood and terror behind them. And these same +unconscionable scoundrels used to attend mass and plant wooden crosses +wherever they went. + +The effort to account for South American civilization by climate falls to +pieces before the splendid and bracing altitudes of the Andes, the ideal +conditions of Argentine, Uruguay, and Chile, and the delightful regions of +the higher elevations of Central America. There is nothing inherently +demoralizing in the climate of lands inhabited by the Latin peoples in +America, but there is something distinctly vitiating in the moral miasma +breathed by these peoples for three hundred years. If cold climates +produced inflexible consciences, the Eskimos ought to be the most +conscientious people on earth. But the moral climate of Jesuitism has +produced a uniform effect everywhere that it has supplied the soil for +soul-growth. + +[Illustration: FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD] + +It is impossible to grow liberty of life, apart from its natural soil and +necessary nourishment. If we are to have free institutions, we must first +have free men. We cannot have a stream of water without a flowing +fountain, nor ripe fruit without a living tree. Political liberty is +impossible without moral freedom, and it is idle to expect independence of +political action without the established right to think for oneself. When +consciences are forced into fixed and prescribed molds it is useless to +ask that men turn about and practice the principles of a free democracy. +Majority rule is meaningless where the confessional dominates the +consciences of men. If we apply these factors in the social history and +life of the Latin-American to the traits of his development most subject +to criticism, we find much illumination. Out of all the discussion three +items emerge, each significant and each closely related to the factors +just mentioned. + +The Latin mind is given to an idealism that reaches out for large things +but often stops short of large actual realization. Out of this tendency +grow weak initiative and superficial standards. As evidence of this +characteristic may be cited the tendency in education to stress the +superficial and showy features of the curriculum, leaving in the +background the foundations and essentials of the intellectual life. +Anything that makes a good appearance is given place over the less +spectacular realities. In architecture, a florid ornamentation is +achieved, even at the expense of good plaster and proper surface stone, +later with the resultant unsightliness. + +[Illustration: SEAWALL CHURCH AND SCHOOL, PANAMA] + +Deductive processes of thought are much in evidence. In outlining a plan +of provincial government, or a system of national education, the paper +plans will include every needed feature of a complete and theoretical +system, without much regard for the local needs and actual conditions +under which the full scheme is to be realized, which in all probability it +will never be. To have projected and announced a grand undertaking in any +department of human life is as important as to have accomplished +something. It is the grand-piano constitution and the one-finger +administration. It is not hard to find automobile undertakings and +wheelbarrow accomplishments. + +Now, all this is not cause for railing accusation but for thoughtful +analysis. And the dominant cause is not far to seek. Where effort to +translate ideals into realities is met by a barrier of official +indifference, it is not strange if men give their time to dreaming rather +than actualizing their visions. Where belief and conduct are prescribed +and commercialism dominates the moral lives of men, it is easy to see that +initiative is crippled at its source. Where a people is divested of +responsibility for the final outcome and taught to pay the price and +"believe or be damned," it is a rash spirit that will try to do more than +dream dreams and write books and project utopias. Without the incentive of +encouragement to produce practical results, no real efficiency has ever +appeared among any people. There are accusations of moral duplicity among +Latin-American peoples. More serious and fundamental than impotent +idealism, this defect registers itself in perversion of public trust, in +the degradation of public office to the uses of private gain, in +deception, graft, and greed. Promises are easy, but performances are +delayed until the would-be enterprising citizen gives up in despair. + +In regard to this two things are to be said. In the first place, our own +records as a people will not bear any too close inspection. Aside from +race riots and labor disturbances, our Civil War furnishes our only +revolution, except the one that produced the original United States. But +when it comes to political prostitution of public office and the invention +of grafting schemes, large and small, our own history does not give us +much ground for boasting. And many a "revolution" has caused less +bloodshed than a North American labor row. + +[Illustration: MANDY DID HER SHARE] + +Further, so far as there is a difference between the conduct of the North +and South, the explanation is not far to seek. Once admit the validity of +the principle that it is right to do wrong for a good end, and a whole +stream of moral duplicity is turned loose in public and private life. +Jesuitism will account for almost any moral lapse in a land where all +thinking has come under the spell of a creed in which the end justifies +the means. + +[Illustration: THE CANAL DIGGER] + +Let this principle be ever so carefully guarded and proscribed, so long as +human nature remains what it is, where personal interests are at stake the +individual is going to be his own final judge of the value of the end for +which the means are devised. And on the basis of every man adapting means +to his own ends we have moral chaos. + +Much has been said of the personal immorality of many people of these +southern lands. That the Latin-American is in any whit behind his northern +neighbor in the integrity of his personal and domestic life remains to be +proven. That his deflections from the straight and narrow path are much +less concealed and by him are regarded as of small account is to be +conceded. Here, again, the cause is not far to seek. With a sacerdotal +example loose and irresponsible, it would be strange indeed if the men of +South America showed a higher personal chastity than their spiritual +leaders and moral guides. + +The third accusation brought against our neighbors is that of political +undemocracy. Government by revolution is said to be the rule, and an +election in which the "outs" win a victory over the "ins" is practically +unknown. Victorious majorities are governed in size only by the discretion +of the dominant power, and the Latin mind seems a stranger to the +fundamental principle of accepting a majority decision as binding until +the next election. + +To accept gracefully a majority decision against himself or his party is +an art slowly acquired by any politician. On the playgrounds we see this +trait; in amateur clubs and literary societies we find it; in the arena of +political strife it does its worst and results in a state of affairs in +which revolution becomes the general substitute for elections. + +I stood one day on the campus of a Christian college in a Latin republic. +The young men were playing baseball, and they were playing it well. I +discovered that baseball was a regular part of their curriculum, that they +were required to play so many games per week, and that they received +credit for the games, provided they were played according to rules. When I +inquired as to the reason for this I was informed by the efficient +director of the school that baseball was in his opinion one of the most +important subjects in the course. "There are two things that we can teach +through baseball better than any other way. One is team work--a fellow +can't play the game alone; and the other is the art of accepting defeat +gracefully. Half of the boys must be defeated every day, which is an +invaluable drill for them." + +[Illustration: THE TOWN PUMP, INTERIOR VILLAGE] + +Even as we discussed the matter, a tall fellow got into a dispute with the +umpire, and after a dramatic flourish swung his arms in the air and +shouted, "No juego mas" ("I will play no more"). + +"There--do you hear that?" remarked the director. "That is what we are +trying to cure." + +As far as my observation has gone, nobody except the educational +missionary is trying very hard to cure this most unfortunate trait in an +otherwise very fine character. + +[Illustration: WAYSIDE CEMETERY IN THE JUNGLE] + +Here, again, it is not difficult to trace this stream to its sources. We +understand much better since 1914 whence came this political peculiarity. +The ideals of European politics have been transferred across the Atlantic +and their fruits on foreign soil have not been tempered by the vigor of +free institutions grown strong in the processes of centuries. If +Central-American republics are only constitutional monarchies in which the +monarch governs the constitution, there is very good reason for the +anomaly. If it is true that there is not a single republic on American +soil south of "the line," then it is to be said that there never can be +such a republic until Latin-America ceases to think in terms of European +history and Jesuitism is broken from its hold on the moral consciousness +of the men who make and unmake republics in the Latin world. Successful +republics have been developed in that turbulent but onmoving stream of +Western and modern ideals that has found its most complete expression in +the United States, but which has also tinctured the thinking and +influenced the political processes of practically every country on earth +except Prussia. We ourselves are not perfect yet, and it behooves us to +withhold the stones from our neighbors until we can show a clean record. +We will have some distance to go before democracy is a finished product, +and it will be a good plan to take the neighbors along with us. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +LATIN-AMERICAN HEART + + +Much misunderstanding has been due to faulty methods of approach to our +southern neighbor. Political diplomacy, commercial competition, and +military displays will never get to the core of this international apple. +The Latin-American is a man of heart, and until we recognize this fact we +shall fail to understand him. Sympathy and courtesy will avail more than +battleships and boycotts. This man is a born diplomat and has high +intellectual development, but the deep and dominant motives of his life +are his friendships and affections. + +If we know the ruling motives of men and races, we may avoid nearly all +the misunderstandings and incriminating accusations that arise when we +occupy different points of view, but matters look very different when we +get at them from the viewpoint of the other man. + +Seeming contradictions dissolve and weaknesses appear as unsuccessful +aspirations. Our complaints of low initiative become more reserved when we +remember that spiritual slavery is a certain antidote for the pioneering +spirit. The presence of a high though fruitless idealism amid +insurmountable difficulties attests a virile and buoyant spirit, captive +and caged. Where toil has been treated with contempt for ages nothing +short of economic helplessness can follow. + +As for financial faithlessness, who shall throw the first stone? If once +we begin to justify the means by the end, commercial life is going to +suffer. If we begin to complain about the insecurity of political +institutions, we need to remember that democracy is one of the first and +finest fruits of a free mind and heart. And we have not yet ourselves +arrived sufficiently to do any boasting. + +To know our Latin-Americans as personal friends is to attain a new +viewpoint on the whole Pan-American problem. We may not blind our eyes to +their defects more than to our own--there are plenty of both; but +understanding brings explanation of many things, and if we know all and +understand fully, we may come to a different verdict. The southern man far +surpasses us in certain traits of which we have taken small account and in +which we are racially deficient. When given free opportunity, satisfactory +response appears to the stimuli of democracy and initiative. + +To know personally the Spanish-American is to become aware of his keen +intuitions, his high personal charm, his strong sympathies, his +constructive imagination, and his hearty idealism; and whatever else he +may be, he is loyal to his friends and their interests. He may not be so +intent on doing something, but he has time for social graces and arts, and +possesses an innate refinement and grace of character that we take pride +in having neglected. + +[Illustration: COCONUTS--SO GOOD AND SO HIGH] + +The Latin at his best is the racial goal of South America. Who cares to be +judged by the social leavings of his own country? The South American best +is intelligent, refined, and faithful to trusts. His mental processes are +touched with a constructive imagination that finds high expression in his +abundant art and literature. With a nervous, artistic, and sensitive +temperament, he responds quickly to friendly approaches and stands ready +to do his full share in social obligations. + +That peons and ignorantes are not thus described is only to say that the +tramps and social unacceptables of any country are not to be classed with +the intellectuals and social leaders. + +The personal equation is apt to be decisive in South America. Commercial +travelers learn this to their profit or loss, as they adopt or disdain the +ruling motives of the men with whom they deal. It may do very well in some +cities of the United States for the breezy commercial traveler to display +his samples, deliver his oration, and give the merchant three minutes to +take or leave the best goods on earth. Such methods in Spanish countries +means no business at all. Selling goods in South America is a social +function in which are involved members of the family and, incidentally, +some very pleasant hours. Any sort of make-believe is useless. Unless a +man really likes the people he had better abandon any plans to do business +with them. He may get on in Chicago, but in Bogota he will be very +lonesome. + +When a man sells goods on talk he may dispose of inferior qualities +occasionally, and trust that he can talk enough faster next time to make +up for his loss of standing; but when goods are sold on friendship a +single mistake in quality means ruptured relations and the end of +commercial confidence. And where friendship furnishes the basis of +business the buyer will protect the seller in return for uniform good +treatment on his part. Like all other racial customs, when once it is +understood the system is not so unreasonable as at first appears. + +An Englishman traveling in South America told me that on one occasion he +sold a large bill of goods on credit to a man who proved to be a rascal. +As the time for the return of the salesman and the payment for the goods +drew near the buyer tried to sell out his entire stock at half price, with +the intention of leaving the country with the money. But all the other +merchants were friends of the salesman and refused to take advantage of +the situation, to the loss of their friend. They preferred to lose their +own profits. + +Business in Latin-America is a personal matter. If a deal goes wrong, +somebody is responsible. North American business has a large impersonal +element, and the man who makes a bad bargain usually feels that he had +himself largely to blame. The joke is on him, and he will exercise more +shrewdness next time. But the southern merchant views the case +differently, and it behooves the salesman to handle only goods that will +move to the profit of the buyer. + +When once this basis of friendly confidence is well set up it is easy to +consummate large transactions with very little preliminary investigation. +The capitalist is more interested in knowing what his trusted friend +thinks than in getting data upon which to base his own conclusions. + +[Illustration: BOILING "DULCE"--CRUDE SUGAR] + +National ambassadors and Christian missionaries soon learn what the +business man found out long ago: that there is only one road to successful +relations with these people and that is the way of the heart. Neither +minister nor missionary nor merchant can succeed unless he genuinely likes +the people with whom he is dealing. Any missionary who is afflicted with a +sense of superiority had better look up the sailing dates of any steamer +line connecting with the United States. + +In meeting strangers the right kind of a letter of introduction has high +value. Let the letter be from a personal friend, and the homes and hearts +are opened in a way that surprises the more coldly formal man from the +north. It is a cheering and heartening experience to present a good letter +to a fine family and be received with a cordiality and genuine hospitality +that leaves no doubt as to the honest motives of the hosts. + +But how are we to find the road to the heart of any people unless we can +speak to them in their own tongue in which they were born? The interpreter +does very well for trivial and formal matters, but who wants to use an +interpreter in his own family? Here is where the "United Stateser" gets +into trouble. As a linguist he does not shine; in fact, he is barely +visible in a good light. He considers it beneath him to take the trouble +to learn anyone's language. Why should he? He can speak English already. +If anyone has anything to say to him, let him say it in English; and if he +cannot speak English, then surely he can have nothing worth saying. It is +a ready formula, but it fails to reach the hearts of men who do not happen +to have been born in the United States. + +The Latin is a better linguist than his neighbor to the north. Nearly all +the better class people speak some English, though they are very modest +about the matter. Practically all of them speak two or more languages. But +even if they do surpass us in speech and can use some English, we are not +excused from acquiring a working knowledge of the language of the people +with whom we are to deal. The increasing development of Spanish teaching +in North American schools is one of the most helpful signs of the times. + +Nowhere does the innate courtesy of the Latin-American shine more than in +his bearing toward the novice who tries to learn his language. We of the +United States are wont to laugh at the linguistic struggles of the +stranger within our gates, but not so with the South American. He is a +gentleman, and will take immense pains to assist anyone who makes an +effort to talk to him. He seems to regard it as a compliment that anyone +should try to use his language. Any faltering effort will receive +immediate encouragement. + +A volume could be written about the comical blunders of North American +tyros in language learning. A hundred or two garbled words, vigorous +guessing and violent arm action make up the linguistic equipment of some +would-be "interpreters." Mixed English, Spanish, jerks, and profanity will +do wonders where there is nothing else, but as substitutes for language +they are far from ideal. Classic is the story of one of these interpreters +who struggled in vain to deliver the meaning of his friend to a native, +and at last gave up in disgust, regretting that he "ever learned the +blamed language anyway." + +Spanish is possibly as easy to learn as any language other than that of +one's native land. Aside from its complicated verb and annoying gender, it +has few difficulties that need cause acute distress. But the score of +"easy methods" without teachers are to be avoided. There is no easy way to +learn a language. It takes work, hard work, and a lot of it to learn a +second language. But it can be done, and to acquire a new medium of +expression, even in middle life, is an experience not to be taken lightly. +It is above all things interesting. It comes at last to this: the only way +to speak, write, or read Spanish effectively is to learn it. Short cuts +bring short results. + +And the only road to a worthwhile understanding of the Latin-American is +that of a sympathetic personal acquaintance and genuine friendship. It is +a matter of heart more than of head, and unless the North American has a +heart himself he had better acquire one or abandon his efforts to deal +with the Latin-American. + +To the traveler from the Orient Latin-America is easy to know. There is +much in Spanish ceremonial, love of life and color and rhythm, the innate +chivalry and politeness, so often absent from the direct processes of the +North American, to suggest the peculiar charm of the Orient at its best. +The ornateness of architecture appears in the East and West in nearly +equal measure. When it comes to elaborate speeches and flattering +expressions, not even the honorifics of ceremonial Japan have much +advantage over the gracious and complimentary extravagances of the +Spanish-American. + +It was at a school entertainment that the director, who spoke excellent +Spanish, was unavoidably absent, and the writer was pressed into service +at the last moment to explain some stereopticon views and make a few +announcements. The language was that of a tyro and must have afforded +material for much amusement to the cultured parents of the school +children. But no one laughed, and as a reporter for a Spanish paper +chanced to be on hand, the morning edition stated that the entertainment +was a high success and that the views were described in the choicest of +classic Spanish while the announcements were delivered with a diction of +the purest and highest type. It was the conventional manner of describing +any public event. + +This temperament leads to oratory as rivers run to the sea. Given a few +ideas for a start, and any educated Latin will deliver an extempore +oration that suggests weeks of careful preparation. Rounded periods and +classic expression mark every polished phrase. + +Probably the most perplexing and annoying thing about the North American +in the eyes of his southern neighbor is our incessant hurry and rush. We +may be millionaires in money but we are hopelessly bankrupt in time. And +the South American is both millionaire and philanthropist in time. He +always has a surplus and is willing to use it--and his friend's too. Some +of our hurrying about is regarded as a great joke. Clayton Sedgwick Cooper +quotes a Bengalese of Calcutta as regarding a certain Englishman as "one +of the uncomfortable works of God." Such are we of the United States in +the eyes of our southern friends. + +The formalities of social life are of vast importance to the Panamanian, +and they are also important to the North American who wishes to transact +any sort of business with officials and educated men of any class. Dress +suits and high hats are not to be despised if one is to get on in the +capital city. Neither are business and politics to be separated if any +business is to be done. + +During 1918 the death of President Valdez within a month of the +constitutional date of the national election created a situation in which +the election board was controlled by one political party and the police +department by the other, spelling inevitable trouble. Military authorities +on the Canal Zone took a hand and sent over a troop of cavalry to police +the city during the election week. At sight of the soldiers panic +possessed many women and children, who had been told that the Americans, +if they came, would shoot down all persons on the street without warning. +A few hours convinced the populace of the error of this widely circulated +report, and the election passed peacefully, the party in office winning. + +Panamanian officials are uniformly courteous, kindly, and will go to any +reasonable length to grant any proper request, especially if it comes from +a friend. I have called on various men in high authority many times on +diverse matters and have never failed to be received cordially and given +the best of personal treatment. It has occasionally happened, however, +that after leaving the official I tried to recall just what he had stated +or agreed to do, and had difficulty in finding anything definite. + +[Illustration: WASHING BY THE RIVER] + +Perhaps Latin character reaches its highest level in family life. The +women of the Latin race are noted for natural grace and comeliness, and in +their own homes they give themselves to their husbands and children with a +devotion to which some of the club women of northern lands are strangers, +as well as their families. Motherhood is a high calling before which all +else must give way. The open life of the northern family, with its easy +conventions and free hospitality, is largely unknown, but a close and +intimate family life is built up essentially stronger in some features +than anything found further north. The Spanish home is a very select and +secluded affair, into the charmed circle of which only the most intimate +friends may enter. + +This wife and mother usually knows nothing of her husband's affairs, and +has little freedom of the streets or public places. There is none of that +comradeship in business interests often found in the States between +husband and wife. + +The señoritas, or young women, of these homes are decidedly feminine. They +make much of cosmetics, but they do at least spare us the assorted colors +of the hair dyer's art. And they do not make a holy show of themselves on +the street, with loud manners and conspicuous costumes, as if to attract +attention of all passers-by. It must be said that some of the better class +young women of these countries are "stunning lookers," and are always +attractive and well bred, but with limited educational advantages they are +apt to be shallow conversationalists. Many of the men prefer them that +way. For a woman to know too much about business and politics detracts +from her distinctly feminine charm in the eyes of these Spanish men. What +religious devotion exists in these countries is found among the women, who +usually go regularly to mass and confession. + +Strictest chaperonage is maintained over young women, no girl being +permitted for a moment to be alone with a young man, a system that would +make slow headway in North America. And the women are long suffering with +their husbands, from whom they endure conduct that would break up almost +any North American home. + +The Panamanian woman has none of the boldness of the new woman of +Argentine, nor the ultra-timidity of Peruvian seclusion. She knows the +value of balconies and lace shawls and effective coiffures, and it must be +said that in spite of rigorous supervision and never-failing modesty of +demeanor, she has a charm and a "come-hither" in her eye that has won the +heart of many a North American. + +The possibilities of the Latin race are perhaps best measured by the +occasional rare characters that break through the bonds of convention and +precedent and attain an altitude of gracious nobility unsurpassed anywhere +on earth. Occasional products of missionary schools show results in +character and efficiency that indicate clearly the latent capacity for a +something in which the brusque Saxon is too often deficient. + +The "Christ of the Andes" was set up on the boundary line between +Argentine and Chile as a suggestion of the only basis of permanent peace +in the life and teachings of the Prince of Peace. This famous statue was +the result of the work of a woman, the Señora de Costa, president of the +Christian Mothers' League of Buenos Ayres. Cast of old Spanish cannon, and +installed in its lofty elevation of thirteen thousand feet in the Andes, +the monument was dedicated March 13, 1914, as much a memorial to the work +of a Latin-American woman as a testimonial to the peaceful intentions of +the two nations. + +There is a Spanish word, not exactly translatable into English, which may +be taken as the key to Latin character at its best. It is the word +"simpático," which means something more than "sympathetic." A man is +_simpático_ when he is gracious and open-hearted and likable and +considerate of other folks' feelings. There ought to be a course in +_simpático_ for every prospective missionary and business man in the +United States who has any intention of dealing with the Latin-American. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +THE CARIBBEAN WORLD + + +Readers of Robinson Crusoe associate the Caribbean Sea with piracy and +rum, but usually have few other ideas on the subject. Most people of the +United States have scarcely so much as heard that there be any Caribbean +world except that it is somewhere in the tropics. + +To be sure, the Caribbean Sea has a way of impressing itself upon those +who sail its troubled tides. Perhaps the shades of the villains who used +to cross these waters on their murderous expeditions still linger to raise +the adverse winds and toss the seasick passenger in his misery. Certain it +is that very few travelers have any affection for the seven hundred miles +of salt water between the Mosquito Coast and the islands so notorious in +the sixteenth century. + +It is with something of surprise, then, that the prowler about Panama +learns of a homogeneous population living on the chain of islands that +begins below Porto Rico and swings downward in a graceful curve to the tip +of the South American coast. These Lesser Antilles mark the eastern +boundaries of the famous, or _in_famous, Caribbean Sea. Though small in +size, their considerable numbers and large populations make them +important. If they are not so well known now, at least they have the +distinction of having been discovered by Columbus when he set out to find +a way to the East Indies and discovered the West Indies instead. + +[Illustration: COSTA RICA FARM HOME] + +The political complexion of these islands varies greatly. Government is +shared by Spain, France, England, and the United States, and the languages +spoken conform to the governing power. The purchase of the Danish West +Indies has given the United States a permanent and prominent influence in +the group. + +No account of matters Panamanian could omit reference to the people of +this West Indian world. From the beginning of Panama's history Caribbean +adventurers have crossed the sea in any craft that would float, and have +played a large part in the restless events of the Isthmus. West Indian +influence and blood were mingled with the history of the Isthmus for four +hundred years, and in these last days it has been the West Indian who +furnished the labor that dug the Panama Canal, and who still contributes +the brawn and perspiration for the work of the Canal Zone. Twenty-five +thousand of these people live on or near the Zone and are employed by its +government, and probably as many more live near by and mingle with the +native life of Panama. All through the interior there are always some West +Indians. + +Without the West Indian the digging of the Canal would not have been +impossible, but would have been much more difficult. Chinese coolies would +have cost more to import and could hardly have worked for less money. +Considering the cost of living on the Canal Zone, the West Indian has +furnished some of the cheapest labor in the world. In construction days +the nine or ten cents an hour wage was more than the black man had +received at home, but his living expenses on the Zone were very much +higher than on the Caribbean Islands. The wage scale of the West Indian on +the Canal Zone has been revised and increased several times by the +American government in an effort to keep pace with the rising cost of +living; but it must be said that the laborer's wage of about thirty +dollars a month, with from three dollars to six dollars deducted for the +rent of two rooms, does not afford a very sumptuous living for a man and +his family. The "silver" man on the Zone pays the same price for his food +and clothes as does the "gold" white man who receives twenty-five per cent +higher wages than is paid for the same work in the States, and in addition +has a furnished apartment or cottage free of rent cost. The men on the +"gold" rate complain of the high cost of living. What they would do if +reduced to one sixth of their present wages they do not stop to consider. +It is not a pleasant subject to face, but it is hoped that the wages of +the West Indian may be lifted to the point where he can at least buy food +enough to keep him in good physical condition. + +The West Indies furnishes the plantation labor of Panama and Costa Rica, +without which there would be little plantation work done. In the hot and +humid banana groves he endures the temperature and handles the huge banana +bunches as though born for the job, as perhaps he is. Out from Almirante +and Puerto Limon range the tracks of the plantation railroads through +hundreds of miles of banana forests, where the black man supplies the +labor for the largest farms in the world. Forty or fifty thousand of these +people live on and about the plantations of the Atlantic coast and without +them the largest agricultural enterprise ever carried on under one +management would collapse. + +The West Indian on the Isthmus is not the West Indian at home. He may live +and die on the mainland, but he thinks in terms of the islands from which +he came. Like the American Negro, he is of African descent, but his +African origin is so remote that no trace of it remains in his +consciousness, though it is evident in his psychology. Most of the West +Indians about the Canal Zone dream of returning to the islands again. + +These people of the Caribbean world have a decided race consciousness, and +in their thinking and living are a world unto themselves. Separate and +distinct from the Greater Antilles and the mainland, they know very little +of the continental life and customs, and any attempt to classify them with +American Negroes or Europeans raises a set of social problems difficult to +solve. + +[Illustration: BANANAS THIRTY FEET HIGH] + +To the North American the mental processes of the West Indian are a +psychological jungle in which the explorer is soon lost. Perhaps no one +has yet essayed to really understand this man, and those who have tried to +analyze him maintain that he does not understand himself. Certain it is +that he does not trouble himself with any self-analysis. He has enough +other things to occupy his attention. With the psychological background of +his remote African ancestors, his race characteristics have changed very +little since the days when his forefathers were forcibly torn from their +native land and deported into savage slavery. + +[Illustration: SAN BLAS INDIANS HAVE "POKER FACES"] + +The social sanctions of the West Indian are rigid and well established. +The list of forbidden things is long and complex, and of signs, and dreams +and portents, strange and powerful, there seems no end. Numerous negatives +appear in his social and personal creed, and he who violates these +prohibitions must be a courageous soul. To introduce any original, new +idea into this scheme of things is a difficult task, and is apt to arouse +a whole chain of reactions, complex and mysterious. This man will follow +literally any able leadership, but the leader must go in the direction of +the established currents of opinion or he will have a hard time of it. + +The West Indian has a religious capacity that impresses the visitor as a +remarkable aptitude for things sacred. Such, indeed, it is. And the +religious life of the earnest and conscientious members of this race +exhibits a fine type of devotion and sacrifice. As might be expected, +there is free expression of emotional experience, but on the whole those +who are truly religious match their songs by their deeds and their +testimonies by their lives. Practically nothing is known on the Isthmus of +anything bordering on hysteria. When it comes to familiarity with the +English Bible the average church member will put to shame his white +friend, and in interpretation of scripture some very unique and +interesting efforts are produced. + +In matters of doctrine most of these people are rigid immersionists. The +women invariably wear their hats in church, on the ground that Saint Paul +commanded such observance, but they ignore the exhortation of the same +apostle that the women keep silence in the churches. All special occasions +possess thrilling interest, and almost any West Indian will go hungry to +get good clothes. How they manage to dress as well as they do on the +incomes they receive is a mystery that has not yet been solved. + +An experienced missionary among these people says that practically every +West Indian at some time in his life is a member of some church. If this +is true, many of the West Indians in Panama are backsliders, as a majority +are not at present showing any interest in Christian observances or moral +living. Possibly many of those who are genuinely devout and consistently +Christian establish a membership in several different churches, one after +the other. Tiring of one church, discontented with the pastor, or +encountering personal difficulties with other members, it is easy and +convenient to join some other congregation, and of split-ups and +break-offs there seems no end. Nearly every church on the Isthmus has had +its deflections and divisions, and anything like the modern movement +toward unity and cooperation of the Christian program is a _terra +incognita_ to this enthusiastic individualist. + +A surprising thing is the capacity for financial self-sacrifice of the +West Indian. Out of the pennies that he receives as wages he contributes +liberally to the support of his church and for the education of his +children. Nearly all West Indian churches on and near the Canal Zone are +self-supporting, and nearly all West Indian schools are maintained from +tuition fees. If these people were to receive good wages, they would not +only wear good clothes but would contribute to community enterprises and +keep their children in school as long as possible. That the more dissolute +members of the community would spend their money for rum is no reason for +depriving the laborer of his hire. + +[Illustration: WHERE STYLES MOLEST NO MORE] + +Living without adequate means of recreation or possibilities of culture or +wide information, life is nevertheless saved from deadly monotony by the +exercise of the high gifts of controversy. When it comes to a straight, +head-on wrangle the West Indian shines in a glory all his own. Not even a +loquacious Oriental can surpass his powers of abuse and lordly contempt +for his adversary. If words were bullets, the whole population would +perish in twenty-four hours, innocent and guilty together. To the +uninitiated bystander it seems that an empire is being lost, but the +old-timers cease to heed the quarreling and go their way indifferent to +the social safety valve of these greatest natural controversialists of the +tropic world. A young woman on the train in Costa Rica left her seat to +speak to a friend and another girl slipped in next to the window. When the +visitor returned the program began. Back and forth flew claims, charges +and counter-charges as to the ownership of the seat. With indescribable +scorn the usurper said, "Do you want a seat in my lap?" which provoked +"Ah, now I see how you was raised." + +"Indeed, and you have no manners at all, it is plain to be seen." + +Back and forth the duel rages until the first claimant sought another +seat, saying, "I certainly does respect myself too highly to sit by the +likes of you." + +The combat closed thus: "When I look upon you I know what you is, for I +can read your face." + +All of which falls flat without the wholly inimitable accent of the +Jamaican dialect. + +This accent of the British subject in the West Indies is a dialect so +peculiar that it defies the most skillful impersonators. Somehow only +those to the manner born seem able to acquire or imitate the strong +combination of London cockney and African rhythm. The more intelligent and +better-educated people speak intelligibly, but it is common to hear +alleged English that is almost impossible to understand. There is not the +slightest resemblance to the traditional dialect of the Southern Negro, +and as for expressing it in cold type there is no alphabet on earth that +can represent the sounds and inflections produced. + +The West Indian in Panama has a certain economic efficiency on the level +to which he has been trained, otherwise he would not have been brought to +the Zone by tens of thousands and retained there through the years of +Canal construction on into the present period of operation and +maintenance. Under a boss this man is faithful and efficient, provided the +task assigned him is within the scope of his training and ability. And +however slow or inaccurate he may be, he can hardly help earning the wages +that he receives. And if he did not work at all, the patience with which +he endures the frequent abuse and cursings of the impatient gang bosses +ought to be worth something. Certainly, the reader of this would not take +what is handed out to the West Indian for ten times his wages. It is true +that he is not strong on independent judgment, and that when left to his +own counsel he may do some strange things and perhaps very little of +anything. But how is a man to develop judgment who has never borne +responsibility? + +Deep down in the heart of this man is slowly rising a resentment against +the economic conditions he finds on the Zone, and in many cases silent and +dangerous hate is gradually filling the hearts of the unorganized and +helpless "silver" men. Unless conditions are improved the time may come +when this resentment may flare up in a useless and hopeless protest. But +it is more likely that the wage scale will be readjusted from time to time +and the explosion forestalled. Occasionally some of these people get away +to the United States, but none of them ever return. For them the +patriarchal Canal Zone offers no attractions compared with the free +competition of the States. It is maintained by officials of the Zone that +the wage scale is as high as available funds will warrant; that if the +West Indian had any more money, it would do him no good, and that the +increases in wages already granted have fully kept pace with the rise in +the cost of living. + +In matters of personal morals the West Indian is accused of loose +matrimonial practices. A priest said to me one day that if two +commandments--the seventh and eighth--could be omitted from the Ten, the +West Indian would get along all right. This slander is not deserved; but +investigation into facts reveals that the morals of the West Indians are +but little better than those of Panama. Concubinage is widely practiced, +with a system of financial support; but no more so than everywhere else in +the tropics except on the Canal Zone, where moral conditions are +exceptionally good. The remark of the priest may have been due to the fact +that most of the West Indians are Protestants. + +Some characteristics of rare merit and interest occasionally arise among +these people. They do not sing as well as their northern cousins, but they +produce orators of no mean ability. Earnest, consistent, faithful, +affectionate, and original in expression, the best of these people afford +promise of what may be expected when better conditions bring large +opportunity. + +[Illustration: CHINESE ALWAYS START A SCHOOL] + +[Illustration: "SCHOOLDAYS"] + +Like other races not long exposed to civilization, the children of these +people show surprising precocity. They give excellent account of +themselves in primary schools, and in performances at public +entertainments they are letter-perfect. Fifty numbers on a program and +never a slip or a failure throughout, and not a complaint or criticism +except that it was a little short. One large church established a record +by producing a Christmas program containing one hundred and eight numbers. +Through the primary years these youngsters sometimes surpass their white +friends, but the economic pressure of living conditions crowds them nearly +all out of school at the end of the fourth or fifth grade. Once they get a +groundwork in the three "Rs" they are considered well educated for life. + +As may be expected, the birth rate is high, but large families are rare +because of the distressing and unnecessary high rate of infant mortality. +How could it be otherwise when a whole family lives in one room on +twenty-five dollars a month with food at New York prices? + +That the Jamaicans are a gregarious folk is to be expected. The social +instinct is always strong in any people of African descent. Canal Zone +bosses complain that their employees prefer to leave the clean and +sanitary quarters of the Zone and live in the Guachapali and San Miguel +districts of Panama and in Colon, where they are crowded together in a way +that would prove fatal to a white man. The constant company and crowded +conditions do not trouble the West Indians, whereas the rigid restrictions +of the silver quarters of the Zone he often finds objectionable. + +What the West Indian most needs is a fair chance. He is cursed and +disparaged on every hand. He is to blame for being ragged and unwashed, +but when he goes hungry and dresses up, then he is a hopeless spendthrift +and a fraudulent dude. It is useless to pay him fair wages because he +would spend the money. Unscrupulous landlords are allowed to extort +enormous rents for wretched quarters in Panama and Colon, because, if the +Jamaican did not spend his money that way, he would pay it out for +something else. He is looked down upon as not being highly educated, and +it is claimed that the more he knows the worse off he is. No matter what +happens he is to blame. If the cholera should appear in Panama, or the +Gold Hill should slide into the Canal, the West Indian would be the guilty +party. Surely, he is worth his wages merely as a target for the verbal +explosions of his boss. Some men would have difficulty in holding their +jobs were it not for the timely assistance of this "goat" of the Zone. +Living conditions in Caledonia and Guachapali would give the New York East +Side something to think about. Rooms ten or twelve feet square are rented +out to families who usually stretch a curtain across the middle, sleep +huddled together in the rear at night, and live in the front of the "flat" +the rest of the time. From some primitive prejudice comes a violent +dislike of fresh air, especially at night, when every room is as nearly as +possible hermetically sealed. In a tropical temperature no one has yet +explained how the inmates live till morning. + +Naked children swarm in the streets. At first the visitor is properly +shocked, but soon ceases to notice these ebony cherubs. In time, however, +one does get tired of it. Along the sidewalks and in the doorsteps the +evening hours are turned into neighborhood debating societies and +wrangling clubs, and between the arguments and disputes, and the always +nearby street meeting, there is never a dull moment. That is why they +prefer living there to the quiet and monotonous life in the silver town on +the Zone. + +Religious gatherings on the street are a marked feature of the night life +of this part of the city. Torchlights and crowds, vigorous singing and +enthusiastic exhortations mark the visible features of the efforts of +these earnest persuaders of their neighbors to flee from the wrath to +come. If street demonstrations were confined to religious meetings, all +might be well. While ever-present canteenas dispense cheap and deadly rum +there will always be people who will go hungry and ragged to buy +"firewater," and with one or two drinks aboard the West Indian becomes a +very talkative and quarrelsome person. Often have I seen sidewalks +spattered with blood, and a common sight is that of a couple of policemen +leading away a gory victim or culprit. + +So scanty is the food ration of these people that the general custom +prevails of eating very little during the day and then making a feast at +night of whatever food can be secured. The Methodist missionary school in +this district established a soup line at noon for the feeding of hungry +babies who came to the school without their breakfast and had nothing at +home to eat at noon. Any sort of "learning" under such circumstances was +impossible. + +Three or four things must be supplied if the West Indian is to rise above +his present level. He needs living wages, he needs intelligent and +responsible leadership; he needs a better education, and he needs a +broader social basis and a wider horizon for his circle of life. + +There are a few lawyers and doctors and teachers of this race, and there +are a number of preachers, who consider themselves to be the +intellectuals, but there is no concert of purpose or plan for progress +among these people. Each man is intent upon exalting his own personal +prominence, or furthering the interests of the little group to which he +belongs. West Indian life at present is segregated into little cliques and +rings, represented by churches, lodges, dancing clubs, and other +organizations. So far no common cause has united any of these factors in +any program of progress. So intent are they upon individual emphasis that +any thought of the social whole seems almost impossible. Several efforts +have been made to unite in a common program of service the different +churches in a given community, but so far small success has attended these +worthy plans. + +Perhaps more than almost anything else the West Indian needs racial +self-respect. He is humble enough before his boss, and if well treated is +loyal and faithful; but for his own kind he has little appreciation. "I +will never work for my own color," boasted a proud cook one day. And one +of the most difficult problems of the missionary grows out of the fact +that the West Indians generally despise each other. To arouse leadership +and stimulate ambition among a people who look down upon themselves is a +big task. The individual man will have to get his mind on something +besides his effort to exalt himself above all his fellows before any great +progress can be made. The fundamental trouble with the West Indian is that +he looks up to those whom he considers his superiors and looks down upon +everybody else. It seems difficult for him to look across or on a level, +and recognize other people as being on the same plane with himself. + +The educational equipment of these people needs to be extended beyond the +present mere elements of reading, writing, and arithmetic. Some +intellectual window into the great world out beyond the Caribbean Sea must +be provided if there is to be deliverance from the superstition and +iron-bound customs that have held them fast for ten thousand years. + +What the West Indian needs is not more vigorous swaying of congregations +nor more loudly shouting enthusiasts, but a program of Christian living +that will enlarge the boundaries of life and push back the horizons of +interest. Debating societies, reading courses, study clubs, extension +lectures, night schools, vocational training, good moving picture +programs--all of these will do much to break the spell of the past and +introduce new ideas where they will take root and bear harvest. Here is a +fertile field for a Christian settlement, but the settlement worker should +be a resident of the community. One difficulty with the mission work now +conducted is that it is done from the top down, and from the outside in. +Any attempt toward higher education will need some endowment. It is a +tragedy that these people, out of their wretched poverty, are compelled to +pay tuition fees for the meager education that their children receive. +Some of the plans now being formulated for a broader work in these +communities deserve every encouragement and support. + +It is greatly to the credit of the West Indian that he nearly always +manages in some way to send his children to school, cost what it may. +Considering his opportunities, he does well. If the American people were +suddenly asked to pay one or two dollars a month for each child sent to +school, there would be educational revolution. + +It is the intention of the Canal Zone government to house its employees on +the Zone as soon as quarters can be provided, but this will require some +time. As all "silver" employees are charged a monthly rent for these +quarters, the project is a business matter for the Zone. Twelve families +are usually quartered in one two-story house, two rooms and a porch +section to the family, with two wash rooms and sanitary quarters for the +whole house. At five dollars per month rent for each family, the house +yields an income of eight hundred and forty dollars per year. In a +building of about the same size four white families would be quartered +rent free. + +[Illustration: THREE IN A ROW] + +[Illustration: MOTHER, HOME, AND--THE SIMPLE LIFE] + +There is abundant opportunity in the Republic of Panama for the +organization of agricultural colonization schemes. Good land is plentiful. +Families could be placed on the land without much housing expense, and if +food could be supplied them for a few months, self-support would soon be +established. Some philanthropist might render valuable service and open up +new opportunities for a large number of these people by placing them out +on the land where each family could have its own house and where better +conditions prevail. A colony of one thousand souls grouped about a central +church and school and store would afford new hope and better living to +these dwellers in the crowded tenements. + +What may be the future of the West Indian on the Isthmus is not yet +clearly established, and the Canal Zone authorities have heretofore +regarded the "silver" men as more of a temporary necessity than permanent +residents. As industrial conditions on the Zone become more stable, +however, it appears that there always will be needed a large labor force +with a minimum of about twenty thousand people; and unless some new factor +appears or is imported, the West Indian is going to supply this labor +demand for years to come. This being the case, the laborer is worthy of +his hire and should be paid a fair wage for what he does. And the +missionaries and social workers who are interested in the welfare of these +people need a coordinated and unified program of religious and educational +advance. So long as the present disjointed and unconnected methods are +followed, scattering and sometimes inharmonious results will appear. + +So long as there is work for a laborer in Panama, so long the Caribbean +man will be found here in such numbers as may be needed, and so long as he +is here he at least deserves good treatment. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +THE PANAMA CANAL + + +Probably most pilgrims to Panama think of the Canal as the outstanding +feature of the American tropics, and in one way such it is. The traveler +will probably want to see the Canal first, and he will find it well worthy +of preferential position. + +The story of construction days and engineering problems has been ably told +elsewhere and does not belong here. Every intelligent traveler will secure +some good account of the work and read it as something that every man +should know. It is the romance de luxe of engineering achievement. The +author of the Arabian Nights Tales would have dug the Canal by the sweep +of a wand, or the rubbing of an old lamp, but the American method is +vastly more interesting and is much more likely to remain in working +order. Aladdin's engineering feats had a way of failing to stay put, if +the wrong man got hold of the lamp, but the present Canal shows no signs +of disappearing overnight. + +Before war conditions put a wall around everything, seeing the Canal was +one of the pleasantest and easiest of touring tasks. All was in plain +view, or could readily be found by asking, and most of the men on duty +thought it a pleasure to answer questions. Of camera fiends and sketchers +and notebook makers there were aplenty. But the war stopped all that for a +time. Anybody could look at the Canal from almost any point along its +survey, but the locks and docks were strictly private affairs. There are +statistics in abundance to be had for the asking concerning the Big Ditch. +Experts take pleasure in supplying us with entertainment by compiling and +translating figures into interesting statements. For instance, enough +excavating was done on the Canal to dig a tunnel fourteen feet in diameter +through the center of the earth, eight thousand miles of boring. It takes +a little time to comprehend the meaning of a tunnel from Valparaiso, +Chile, to Peking, China, or straight through from the north pole to the +southern tip of the world. + +Enough concrete was used to build a wall four feet thick and twenty-five +feet high clear around the State of Delaware. Probably by walking the two +hundred and sixty-six miles represented by this wall, one might understand +the amount of concrete involved in the Canal construction. + +The enormous size of the locks can only be understood by walking their +length through the underground tunnels and passageways in which is located +the marvelous machinery of their operation. To stand on the floor of a dry +lock and look up at a lock gate eighty feet high, seven feet thick and +sixty-five feet wide is an impressive experience, but to see a pair of +such gates swing open and shut at the touch of the finger is something to +be remembered. The emergency dams look like a steel girder bridge, which, +indeed, they are, and provide against accidents by as ingenious a piece of +mechanism as the entire system affords. Enormous iron chains with +hydraulic springs are stretched across the entrance to the locks to stop +any reckless ship which might otherwise strike the gates. The Gatun Dam +alone may be classed as one of the world's greatest achievements. + +The builders of the Canal may be pardoned for taking pride in the fact +that the entire construction cost, down to the present day--three years +after the opening of the Canal--is still within the original estimate of +$375,000,000, which figure included the $40,000,000 paid to the French for +the work of the earlier construction. This means that the cost of the +Canal was a little less than four dollars apiece for every inhabitant of +the United States. The national prestige alone gained by the successful +completion of the work has repaid this four-dollar investment many times +over. Before the European war $400,000,000 seemed like a good deal of +money. To-day we think of it as a very small sum. + +It is easy to find numerous compilations of figures which astonish and +perplex us, even though they do help us to understand the magnitude of the +work. And nothing is more disappointing than to try to understand the +Canal by looking at it from any point along the bank. You can't see the +Canal for the water! It is no different from a great Western irrigating +ditch and looks like any quiet river. There are no marks of effort or +strain anywhere, and when one looks about on the verdant and peaceful +landscape he half believes that the tales of the stirring times back in +construction days must have been dreams. + +[Illustration: CONSTRUCTION DAYS IN CULEBRA-GAILARD CUT] + +Culebra Cut looks like the Hudson palisades, and Gatun Lake is like any +other beautiful inland sea in a rolling country. The famous Gatun Dam is +merely a dyke at the end of the lake and the marvelous spillway is only a +picturesque waterfall in the middle of a dam. As for the locks, they are +big concrete chambers looking very much like a paved street on top and +revealing nothing of the complicated mechanism below; and the germ-proof +towns are like any other spotlessly clean villages with screened houses, +and show nothing to cause us astonishment. + +Any superficial view of the Canal is disappointing. It is like trying to +understand a deep mine by looking at the mouth of the shaft. The channel +is full of water, the machinery is out of sight, the great achievements of +sanitation have been largely removals of materials, microbes, and +conditions that have left no trace behind to tell their tale. In one way +it is a negative result. + +The idea of the Canal across the Isthmus is nearly as old as the discovery +of the Isthmus by white men, but it remained for the intrepid builder of +the Suez Canal to really undertake in earnest the project of a waterway +between the two oceans. DeLesseps was both engineer and promoter and never +really understood the size of his project. He had succeeded at Suez, but +that was a farmer's ditch beside the Culebra Cut and the Gatun Dam, and +the famous engineer was a very old man when he began on the Panama +project. The high prestige of his name brought him money on a stock +investment basis, and when unprincipled schemers got control of the +company the crash and scandal were immense. DeLesseps himself became +insane as the result of the worry and disgrace and died in a hospital. + +The French attempt began on January 1, 1880, with a great deal of oratory +and champagne, also the official blessing of the Bishop of Panama, which +seems to have been something of a Jonah on the enterprise. + +In striking contrast was the beginning of the American work when a few men +climbed out of a boat into water waist-deep and began cutting down jungle +brush. + +The actual construction and excavation work begun on the Isthmus by the +French was of a very high order, and much of it was used by the Americans. +The two causes which defeated the French were reckless financing at home +and tropical diseases on the Isthmus. So bad did the disease conditions +become that in the fall months of 1884 fifty-five thousand people died, +and in the single month of September, 1885, the total rate reached the +high-water mark of one hundred and seventy-seven per thousand of +population. The total of lives lost on the enterprise will never be known, +but is far greater than that of many wars which have received a +conspicuous notice on the historical page. The collapse of the DeLesseps +undertaking was followed by the organization of the New Canal Company, +upon which followed a chapter of bargainings and treaties and negotiations +and bickerings with the object of selling out the rights and holdings of +the company to the highest bidder. In all of these the Panama Railroad +figured very largely, and the Republic of Colombia kept a watchful eye on +the main chance for herself. + +The story of President Roosevelt's large part in the American undertaking +of the independence of Panama and the organization of the American effort +is one of the romances of American history. On November 18, 1903, +Washington recognized the new Republic of Panama, and later paid +$10,000,000 for the Canal Zone and entered into a treaty guaranteeing the +peace and perpetuity of the Isthmian Republic. Thus ended a half-century +of riot and revolution and rebellion which was stated to have included +fifty-three revolutions in fifty-seven years. Relations between the early +officials on the Canal Zone and the rulers of Panama were not ideal; some +of the Americans seemed to have had a real genius for offending the finer +sensibilities of the natives. + +The beginning of the American attempt is not a chapter of which anybody is +very proud. The effort to dig the Canal from Washington under a mass of +red tape which tied the hands of the men on the Isthmus proved an +impossible undertaking. The President succeeded in effecting a +reorganization which helped some, but not until all red tape was cut and +Army engineers were put in charge, was anything like real efficiency +obtained. Three great engineers were connected with the work--Wallace, +Stevens, and Goethals--and to each of these belongs credit for the very +high order of work done. While the man who finished the job bears the +outstanding name in connection with the Canal, without exception the +engineers who worked under the first two men speak in the highest terms of +the work that they accomplished. + +No snapshot résumé of the building days, nor tourist instantaneous +exposure of visits can reveal, nor appreciate, the big problems that +confronted the engineers. It all looks easy enough now, but it was very +different then. + +Good health on the Canal Zone seems a very simple matter now, and such it +is; but when the doctors and sanitary engineers began work it was an +exceedingly serious situation that they undertook to cure, and without +their work there could be no Canal to-day. The complete elimination of the +last case of yellow fever has made entirely harmless the mosquito carriers +where they occasionally appear on the Isthmus. The best test of the work +of the Sanitary Department is the fact that the Zone and terminal cities +have remained clean and that there is no indication of relapse. Before +work could begin, a whole system of transportation had to be organized, a +steamer line put into operation, and an immense purchasing department +gotten into working order. Before men could be brought to the Isthmus to +do the work some provision had to be made for housing and feeding, and the +question of materials, supplies, food, fuel, recreation, and education was +no small matter. + +To dig the Canal required not only engineers and officials, but an army of +common laborers, and the labor question was not easy. The Panamanian might +have dug the Canal, but he did not do it; he did not want to do it, and +the probability is that he never could have done it. Employers on the Zone +refused to hire Panamanians for Canal work. + +Chinese coolies might have been imported from Canton or Amoy, but Panama +is a long way from southern China and still further from India, and no +intelligent man ever seriously proposed importing Hindus. If enough +Panamanian Indians could have been found, they might have done the work, +but the native Indian is a very uncertain and fragmentary factor of life +on the Isthmus. + +At this juncture the West Indian filled the breach and supplied the labor +for the job. Up to forty-five thousand of them were employed at one time, +and with the ebb and flow of the human tide between the Isthmus and the +Caribbean Islands several times that number came to the Isthmus. Somebody +else _might_ have supplied the labor, but the fact is West Indian _did_ do +the work, and at least deserves proper recognition therefor. + +The problems of suitable construction machinery were in a way simple. +Given a definite task, it remained to devise mechanical means to meet the +conditions. In practice, however, the case was not so simple as this +sounds, and some very difficult knots were untangled before the work was +well under way. Some of the old French machinery was used clear through +the construction period, but the jungle was sown with scrap iron of the +old French equipment that has only recently been removed. + +The electrical and mechanical equipment for the operation of the locks is +a marvel of adaptation and invention and nothing short of a technical +description can do the subject justice. To see the locks in operation is +to wonder at the mechanical contrivances which seem almost intelligent, +and some of the design work is the result of real genius. + +Of engineering problems, proper, it is better to let the engineer speak +with intelligence, but any layman can stand on Gold Hill and by vigorous +use of the imagination see something of the tremendous work that has been +done since the first shovelful of earth was turned on that New Year's Day +in 1880. Whether the French engineers anticipated landslides at Culebra is +not clear, but the American engineers knew from the start that the porous +soil would cave in more or less at that point. What it actually did do +surpassed the expectations of those who surveyed the work. When the banks +began to cave north of Gold Hill the surrounding country got the idea and +followed suit so fast that it looked as though the ten-mile strip would +all be needed. + +[Illustration: GATUN SPILLWAY, KEY TO THE CANAL] + +I spent a day in the big cut in January, 1917, and noted the rapid crumble +of the historic bank at this troubled point. The following night the +channel filled up for a length of eight hundred feet and shipping was +suspended. Then the dredgers went at it hammer and tongs, and in three +days and nights they had cleared a channel through that enormous mass of +material and on the fourth day ships were again passing in safety. It was +a fine illustration of the way dirt was made to fly in the old days. + +Some otherwise intelligent people have utterly failed to comprehend the +size of the task involved in the mere digging of the Canal. One high +official advocated the cure of slides by digging back a mile on each side +of the bank. Verily, he knew not what he said, and a member of Congress on +visiting the Canal reported that he was still in favor of a sea-level +route. Competent engineers assured him that to construct a sea-level canal +from ocean to ocean would require at least fifty years of continuous +labor. The wisdom of Theodore Roosevelt's ideas has been forever +vindicated by experience. Some practical man has said that no man can know +how great is the task of making the earth until he tries to move a little +of it. The congressman needed a little pick-and-shovel experience. + +Administrative problems are not especially acute on the Zone, but the +completed task gives room for a world of appreciation of the general +efficiency with which the whole work was carried out, and the +smooth-running machinery of the executive to-day attests the thoroughness +with which the departmental system was organized and initiated by the men +whose names will always be associated with the work. The task of operating +the Canal to-day would not be very great, nor would it require a very +large army of employees, but without any preconceived plan various related +industries to the number of six or seven have grown up about the Canal +administration and operation, and the Canal Zone government to-day is +doing a number of things never contemplated in the original plans. The +routing of ships is directly connected with the coal supply, and a great +coaling plant stands at Cristobal. A large cold storage plant makes +possible the supplying of refrigerated goods to shipping countries. While +the trans-shipping business at Colon is yet in its infancy, the docks +there are already a very considerable factor in Canal activities. +Sanitation and public health, of course, require a trained force of +specialists. The Canal employees must eat, and the commissary hotel and +restaurant are a very important branch of the service. The quartermaster +looks after the housing problem, and where there are five thousand +Americans, most of them living with families, the educational problem +necessitates a department by itself. The Balboa Docks employ hundreds of +men at high wages. + +In connection with the food problem come the large farming operations +conducted on the Canal Zone. An army of laborers is employed, and the +proceeds of the plantations and poultry yards is sold through the +commissary's stores. + +From the beginning much attention has been paid to the social life and +recreation needs of these exiles from home. A chain of government +clubhouses runs across the Isthmus, one in each town, where reading rooms, +games, gymnasiums, refreshment counters, discussion clubs, concerts, +dances, cigar stores, and motion-picture programs are provided for young +and old. During the dry season baseball is widely indulged in and plays an +important part in the social and recreational life of the Zone. + +[Illustration: CRISTOBAL STREETS] + +Next to the "spotless town" features of the Zone the visitor is impressed +by the smooth-running system through which everything is done. There may +be officials who are grouchy and will not take time to answer questions, +but I have never met one. The routine of operation and maintenance has +succeeded the drive of construction days when Governor Goethals +established the famous open house on Sunday morning and received anybody +who had anything to say to him. The last black laborer could see the +governor if he wished, and many of them did so. The public-be-hanged +attitude of occasional small executives in the States is delightfully +absent. The machinery of administration outwardly works as smoothly as do +the great gates of the locks. On the inner circle there are, of course, +problems and sometimes personalities, but they rarely escape from the +closets where ghosts are supposed to remain. + +[Illustration: FAT CATTLE OF COCLÉ] + +When the visitor begins to look about and beyond the Canal he becomes +aware of the conquered wilderness. Where once was dense and impassable +jungle now sweep smooth and verdant hills. One-time fever swamps are now +drained meadows, and the never-failing drip from the sanitary oil barrel +induces a very high mortality among the mosquitoes. Broad acres of rich +jungle lands have been cleared and are now model farms. Over the +grassgrown hills wander thousands of fat cattle, increasing in number +every year. The jungle of the Canal Zone is a very tame and conquered +jungle. The real article lies beyond the line where there is plenty. + +It was once thought that the best thing to do with the jungle was to let +it run wild after its kind, as a barrier to invasion. A little +experimenting proved that an army could cut its way through the jungle so +fast that the brush was nothing more than a screen for the advance of the +enemy. + +If the visitor stays long enough and gets close enough, he will learn of +things which might have been done differently on a second trial, but +regulation and adjustment have pretty well cleared up the points in +question, and, taking it all through, the Canal is as satisfactory and +complete a job as the world has ever seen. + +The Americans who live on the Zone are an interesting social experiment +without knowing it. They form one of the unique communities of the world. +Somebody has said that the Zone situation is described by the word +"suburban," but that does not express it. Every man lives in a +government-furnished house, rent free. Free also is his electric light and +a ration of fuel for cooking. Ice is so cheap that it is practically free. +He buys everything that he eats and wears in the commissary's stores, +where goods are sold to him at cost. So they are--at what they cost _him_. +Prices now do not differ materially from retail figures in the States on +the same goods. If housekeeping tires, there are the commissary +restaurants, clean and wholesome, always available for good meals at +reasonable prices. Good schools are furnished free, of course, for the +children. There is a free dispensary where all minor ailments are treated +and medicine furnished free. The government hospitals are among the best +in the world, and employees' rates are less than the cost of living at +home. The Zone man is under Civil Service rules, receives a generous +vacation, with a steamer rate to New York so low that it covers little +more than his meals en route. The scale of his wages is based on an +increase of twenty per cent over the pay for the same class of service in +the United States. Cheap household service abounds and is about as +satisfactory as household service is anywhere. If he is lonesome, the +government clubhouse, with its community life, good recreation, and +well-stocked reading room, is always open to him practically without cost; +and if he gets tired of the Zone, there is always Panama and the interior +country with its never-failing places of interest and exploration. + +Here are all the advantages of the socialized state and no workingmen or +clerks in all the world are so well paid, or taken care of, as these +Americans on the Zone. It is a fine, efficient piece of provision for the +men who do the work. Therefore the Zone dweller should be a satisfied and +happy man, dreading nothing but the day when he must return to the States. + +[Illustration: ENCHANTED ISLANDS IN GATUN LAKE] + +In practice, however, the American on the Canal Zone is not so contented +as the external features of his lot would lead one to suppose. There is an +undercurrent of petty complaint, directed at everything in general, and +indicative of a state of mind as much as of actual evils existent. These +complaints are the results of too much community life without room for +individual ownership or initiative. The followers of Bellamy should come +to the Zone and stay long enough to get a few pointers. + +The trouble is that there is necessarily much of uniformity of housing, +commissary, social, and living conditions. The American people are, after +all, strong individualists, and every man likes to have something that is +distinctively his own. + +When people work all day together, play ball together till meal time, all +eat the same things at the same price from the same store, on exactly +similar tables, with identical dishes; when they go to the movies together +and walk home down the same street together and sleep in houses and beds +all alike, they sometimes develop cases of nerves. + +On the testimony of one of the efficient medical men of the Zone a lot of +nervousness disappeared when war work absorbed the attention and energies +of the patriotic Americans, who enthusiastically devoted their spare time +to various forms of win-the-war industry. + +The problem of raising children on the Zone is admittedly beset with +difficulties. Health conditions are good enough, but many people are prone +to regard life on the Zone as a general vacation from the standards and +disciplines of the homeland, and children are often allowed to do very +much as they please. Many families employ a servant, and there is no +economic need for children doing any useful act of work. An unusual degree +of irresponsibility results. "It will be time enough to correct them when +we get back to the States," is a common remark. + +Of course there are many families where the highest ideals are earnestly +maintained, and no more faithful fathers and mothers may be found anywhere +than here in this colony of voluntary exiles. But American life on the +Canal Zone is at present apt to be regarded more as a vacation experience +than as a serious attempt to face the whole problem of living. + +Moral and religious safeguards are not absent. The early plan of providing +government-paid chaplains ended with construction days, and under the +leadership of a group of farsighted laymen the Union Church of the Canal +Zone was organized in February, 1914. All Protestant denominations except +two now cooperate with this piece of ecclesiastical statesmanship. A +centralized organization maintains work in all the civilian "gold" towns +along the Canal, employing four pastors, who must be ordained men of +evangelical churches. This Union Church does not regard itself as a +denomination but as a federation for Christian service. No attempt is made +to establish a doctrinal position, and members are not asked to sever +their relations with their home churches. The excellent results attained +under this management speak volumes for the wisdom of the plan and the +earnestness and ability of the men who have fostered the enterprise from +the start. The Union Church has devoted its benevolent moneys to opening a +mission station at David in Western Panama, in cooperation with the Panama +Mission of the Methodist Episcopal Church. + +Morally, the Canal Zone is as clean as any place on earth. The improvement +of moral conditions in Colon and Panama has done much to make the lives of +Americans wholesome and to decrease the dangers to childhood that have +existed in the past. There will always be Americans on the Canal Zone, and +a few of them will exercise the great American prerogative of speaking +their minds, but most of them will be better off here than at any other +time in their lives. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +PROWLING INTO THE FUTURE + + +Many prophets have taken in hand to tell us what the Panama Canal is to +bring forth in its commercial, social, political, geographical, and +educational results for the world. Probably no world-event has ever had so +much advance advertising as this much written-up achievement. Great as is +the Canal, it came near being outshone in brilliancy by the publicity +material sent out by journalists who found the subject to be profitable +copy. + +In the main, the prophets were right. The world war postponed the arrival +of some of the promised results, but it also enlarged the importance of +the Canal and assured more extensive and far-reaching effects than could +have been prophesied before the war began. It is now certain that we are +to have a new and more closely united America than was formerly possible, +and that the drawing together of the two Americas has been greatly +accelerated by the world vindication of democracy. In this closer +brotherhood of all Americans the Canal will play a large and important +part. + +Just how far the stream of influences will flow cannot be told, but it is +within the moderate possibilities to say that every country in the world +will be affected by the changes due to the new waterway. The French +originators of the first project saw an opportunity for commercial +investment and hoped to make good dividends from the venture. They did not +much concern themselves with by-products. The Americans who planned and +pushed and persevered until the work was again begun were thinking of +commercial and naval results, evident enough, but they could not have +foreseen the far consequences to follow, nor could they have known that on +the Canal Zone five or six related industries were to spring up under +management of the Canal Commission. It is now about as difficult to +predict the world-wide effects of the Canal factor as it would have been +in 1903 to foresee the related industries of the present situation. + +Shortening of trade routes is the first and obvious consideration. +Everything else grows out of the elimination of distances by the Canal +cut-off. It requires no prophetic gift to take the figures from any good +map and ascertain that from New York to San Francisco via Magellan is +13,135 miles, whereas via Panama it is 5,262--a saving of 7,873 miles, or +a month of steady steaming. Between New York and Honolulu there is a +saving of 6,610 miles; and Yokohama is 2,768 miles nearer New York via +Panama than by the Suez route. The list of distances saved may be +indefinitely extended. + +[Illustration: PANAMA PUBLIC WATER WORKS, INTERIOR COUNTRY] + +If there were no results other than the saving of a week or a month of +steamer time, the Canal would be cheap at several times its price. But +these changes in steamer schedules and prices introduce an entirely new +set of reactions into the commercial and social world, and this is where +the interesting problems arise. Left to herself, nature tends to establish +a balance of flora or fauna in any locality. Introduce a new plant or +animal or microbe and all sorts of readjustments begin at once, and before +a new balance is established almost anything may happen. Commerce finds +its level in much the same way and by the same law. Introduce a radical +disturbance, like the Panama short-cut, and everything begins to happen. +Add the direct and indirect results of the war with its weakening of +German influence and strengthening of inter-American interests, and we may +have practically a new world before a new balance is established. + +Commercial interests naturally forge to the front in any discussion of +canal results. So ably have these matters been discussed by experts that +any repetition of figures and industries here would be beyond the scope of +this work. + +It must be understood that the world war rendered obsolete our former +ideas regarding trade between the United States and Spanish-America. +Whether the extensive German political-commercial machine that covered all +Latin-America can regain its prestige in fifty years to come remains to be +seen, but it is certain that for a generation following the defeat of +Germany by the free nations of the world North America will have a +magnificent opportunity to enter South American trade on very advantageous +terms. And the great bulk of the west-coast trade will pass through the +Canal on its way to Gulf and Atlantic ports, as well as to Europe. + +The completion of the Panama Canal may be set down as the date of the +discovery of Latin-America by the people of the United States. Previous to +that date the North Americans were aware enough of the Monroe Doctrine, +but almost unaware of the lives and interests of the nations living south +of the Rio Grande River. With the opening of the Canal the North Americans +began thinking south, and so far as the process has gone it has been very +informing. Once the war is out of the way, the process will be greatly +accelerated. With uninterrupted commercial conditions, five years of the +expanded life due to the Canal will be about equal to sending the whole +people back to school for a year. The cultural and geographical values of +this new zone of thinking have hardly been felt as yet, but now that the +attention of the world is released from the battlefields of Europe and the +enormous social and financial problems arising from the expense of making +the world decent once for all, the tide of interest is again turning +southward along the shores of our own great oceans to the mighty events +that await us there. + +Spanish-America has twelve republics and eight thousand miles of coast +line on the Pacific ocean. The United States has a Pacific Coast of about +fifteen hundred miles. The eight thousand miles marks the western +boundaries of lands enormously rich in things that the world needs, but +exceedingly poor in finished products or adequate growth. Probably no +country on earth shows a wider margin to-day between present raw resources +and possible high developments than these same twelve Spanish-speaking +countries. The only analogy that bears on the case is that of the rapid +and extensive advancement of the Pacific States after the completion of +the transcontinental railroads. There is reason to believe that a similar +record of progress awaits the west coast of South America. + +The combined foreign trade of the west-coast republics before the war +reached the very respectable total of nearly one billion of gold dollars +in a single year. There are commercial prophets who believe that within +ten years from the completion of demobilization this volume of trade may +be doubled. This means new markets, new industries, new development of +mines, markets, manufactures, and agriculture, new colonization projects +and a score of other unpredictable results. No less an authority than Mr. +John L. Barrett says, "I believe that the Panama Canal will initiate in +all South American countries a genuine movement which will have a most +important bearing on the commerce and civilization of the world." + +An immense amount of iron lies buried in the mountains of the west coast. +Not much has ever been done about it. But enormous quantities of ore have +been destroyed by the processes of war, and South American iron may come +to high values sooner than its owners have supposed. + +It is only recently that consideration has been given to the idea of +establishing in connection with the Canal a great commercial +trans-shipping point. Colon is yet a little town, mostly West Indian +to-day, but already the Cristobal docks are piled high with South American +products awaiting reshipment. The proposed establishment of a free port at +Colon may yet result in a western Hongkong where the commerce of the seven +seas comes together to be distributed to the five continents. Whatever +might have been the results had there been no war, it is now sure that +everything that happens in South America has henceforth a very definite +significance for the United States. Whether we like it or not, we are out +of our exclusive dooryard and will have to take our place on the great +national street named America and play the game with our neighbors. + +For decades past Central America has been an unknown land to the United +States. We have contentedly supposed that the only crop was that of +revolutions and the only resources a few jungle fruits. But at last we are +discovering Central America, and some of us are astonished to there find +vast areas, fertile soils, varied and valuable products, intelligent +peoples, a volume of commerce and climate fit for Eden. We knew little and +cared less about Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and +Panama; and since the bulk of trade of these lands was with Europe, they +paid little attention to us. Why should they do otherwise? + +The presence of the United States on the Isthmus of Panama introduces a +new factor into the American tropics. It looks very small and +insignificant, that little ten-mile strip with the influence in Panamanian +affairs, but how far the North American influence is going to reach out +beyond the Zone limits cannot be known. Everybody is watching the results +for revolution-proof, permanently peaceful Panama, and there are other +countries not far away where there are people who are praying for +something like it, or just-as-good, for themselves. Doubtless their +prayers will not be answered directly but the influence of this leaven may +work out into a wide circle and instigate movements that we have not +counted upon. + +[Illustration: A JUNGLE CATHEDRAL] + +But the largest factor in the new American situation grows out of the new +world-emphasis on the Golden Rule. At last the world understands as never +before how finally determinative is the moral and spiritual factor in all +human progress. We may never know just how much the world had paid to +clear away the rubbish of autocracy and found the new age on the principle +of a square deal for great and small; but the deed is done, and henceforth +the one compelling sanction in all life must be the essential principle +for which the Allies have spent their treasure and spilled their blood. +The new internationalism will underlie all further development of +relations between the two Americas, which opens a new world of social +discovery and growth as fascinating as that which Columbus found in the +physical surface of the globe. + +The greater results of the closer fellowship of North and South America +will be registered in the realms of mind and spirit. Trade balances and +stock dividends there will be, but back of and beyond these will rise the +new American spirit, uniting the finest courtesy and artistic temperament +of the Latin with the practical initiative and efficient vigor of the +blend of blood in the United States. There is no gulf, great or small, +fixed between the two races. Each has something that the other needs, and +close fellowship will result in new race sympathy and mutual advantage. + +To ignore this basis of development is to forget that cold commercialism +will in time chill the fervor of friendships and alienate the growing +sympathy of nations. If we are to have no interest in our neighbors other +than the profits we may make from their trade, we will soon cease to be +friends and become bitter rivals at the big game of getting all we can. + +It takes two to play the game of reciprocal commercial success. If we +succeed on the great international chess board, it will be not by shrewd +defeat of our friends but by the coming to maturity of a high sense of +honor and fair play on both sides. It is not one of us against the other, +but both of us together against the normal difficulties of growth and +production. + +One of the native leaders of Latin-American life has explained that South +America was unfortunate in the character of the founders of her national +institutions. Adventurers, explorers for gain, greedy conquistadores made +the beginnings here, and the moral foundations were laid by religious +leaders who traveled with pirates and plunderers and officially blessed +their every act of crime. And from the beginning until now the type of +religion that has prevailed in Latin-America has not assisted in the +building up of free institutions, nor has it produced a high morality +among the people. + +The South American struggle for self-government and free ideals has been a +long, bloody, and heroic grapple with the reactionary and despotic forces +brought over from mediæval Europe. Men like San Martin and Bolivar deserve +high honor for their work in breaking the bondage that held all life +helpless. One by one the colonies threw off their political yokes and +became republics, every one of them, in theory, modeled after the United +States. The passion of the South American patriot has been home-rule, but, +unfortunately, home-rule has not always meant self-government. That is +quite a different matter. The overthrow of European despotisms was +followed by innumerable internal revolutions. Panama had no monopoly on +internal dissensions, and makes no claim that her fifty-three revolutions +in fifty-seven years is the high-water mark of insurrections for South or +Central America. + +In short, the mere overthrow of a despotic government does not assure +stable political institutions nor efficient administration of public +affairs. Good government by popular sovereignty is something far more +fundamental than a matter of printed constitutions or shouting "Viva +independencia!" in the plazas. Without moral responsibility and free +consciences there can never be a successful democracy on earth. + +Free institutions and free consciences are winning out in South America, +but it is in spite of the established church and not because of it. It is +not politically a question of religion that we are discussing; it is a +matter of organized, crafty, and unscrupulous opposition to every movement +that makes for the development of democracy in South America. And since +the establishment of a better understanding and closer fellowship between +the two continents depends upon this very basis of free and morally +responsible social and political leaders, the question is most vital. +Everywhere there are a few intelligent, earnest men working away patiently +and steadily at the problem of making South America democratic by making +her people free to adopt with intelligence democratic institutions. One by +one the nations have declared for freedom of worship and conscience, and, +last of all, Peru, robbed and despoiled Peru of the conquest, +priest-ridden and fanatical Peru, threw off the galling yoke of spiritual +bondage and divorced church and state. It seems simple enough to read +about it here, but at every step of the way the old church left unturned +no stone of bigotry and intrigue and prejudice that could oppose the +coming of the modern age to Peru. + +The supreme tragedy of South American life has been that the light that +has been in her has been darkness. The spiritual leaders of the people +have themselves opposed all progress toward the light. Until a spiritual +leadership arises that will at least support aggressive and progressive +movements toward freedom and democracy and moral uplift, slow progress +will be made. And this matter concerns the whole American world. These are +now our next-door neighbors, and their children will yet be playing in our +yard. + +The surprising thing is that so much has already been accomplished with a +millstone tied about the neck of all progressive movements. No finer +tribute could be paid to the high ideals and large possibilities of South +American character than a recital of the results accomplished by her +intellectual and moral leaders in the face of enormous handicaps. + +The thinking minds of these southern republics are almost without a +religion to-day. Long since have they ceased to give even passive assent +to the demands of the commercial hierarchy that claims spiritual monopoly +over the souls of man. Technical outward conformity to the requirements of +the church may be a political advantage or a domestic convenience, but as +a principle of life and foundation for thought the intellectuals are +frankly agnostic. Man after man, when once confidence is gained, will +state that they do not believe in the claims of the church, and usually +have ceased to believe in anything at all--and these are the leaders of +the intellectual life of the nations with which we are to deal. And what +are they to do? No adequate substitute do they know, and until an open +Bible and a living Christ take the place of the mummery and the crucifix +we cannot denounce their course. Their intellectual nonconformity is to +their credit. + +The final problem is that of developing people fit to live with, not +mental and moral slaves under the dominance of superstition and +intolerance. Back of the cry for wider and richer trade routes is the need +of responsible men with whom we may transact business. More than shorter +shipping line, we need better shippers, north and south. Underneath vast +projects of material advancement lie all the social and industrial +problems of labor and wages and exchange and credits and fidelity to +contracts and personal honor. And above all this is the need of honesty +and efficiency and a personal faith in a living God who knows and cares +and takes account of what we do, of what we are, and is not to be bought +off by a check or an incantation. + +[Illustration: SHOE-BILLS ARE SMALL] + +What the bigger American world needs is bigger and better Americans, Latin +and Saxon. If the influences released by the Panama Canal help to produce +these citizens of the larger horizon, one of the greatest services +possible will be rendered to humanity. But the larger horizon is +conditioned upon a larger hope that flows from the mountain of the more +abundant life. And the Americans of the northland need the broader basis +and vision and character as much as their southern neighbors. + +What really has the Panama Canal to do with all this? Much every way, but +chiefly as a key for the unlocking of the long-closed doors and the +releasing of long-latent forces of international relations in trade and in +social and spiritual life. Should a great working example of educational +and social and spiritual life be established at Panama by some concerted +action of united Protestantism, the influence of the principles there +promulgated by progressive and devout men would extend over a very wide +range of Latin life. The procession that now passes through Panama will be +doubled and trebled in the coming decades, and what is planted here will +spread everywhere. "I saw it so done in Panama," may become the precedent +for almost anything new, whether good or bad. + +The influence of such institutions in the City of Panama will be more +far-reaching than if located on the Canal Zone. The Zone is wholly North +American; Panama is thoroughly Latin. The institutions of the Zone are +those of the United States and are looked on somewhat askance by Latin +visitors. It is all very great and imposing, but it is so radically +different in spirit and method, that points of close contact are hard to +establish. Panama is a different matter. Whatever is done there by +Spanish-speaking people will be visited and viewed with sympathetic +interest and appreciation. + +The heart of living faith that is to impress its throb on this blood +stream of Latin life must not be an imported made-in-the-States +institution, or it will be but an ineffectual flutter. Likewise it must be +something more comprehensive than the traditional schedule of occasional +gatherings of the faithful, important as these will be. To do this work +there needs be an interpretation of the Christian message that will relate +itself to a very wide circle of human life and interests. Through native +leadership and examples must be spoken a message that will compel +attention and challenge the minds as well as the hearts of men. A living +interpretation of a spiritual passion, a social service program with a +heart in it, an educational work that will not only teach the curriculum +but develop moral character, and intellectual propaganda of good +literature, a physical gospel of health and exercise, a recreational life +clean and wholesome, a personal moral standard of the New Testament +grade--these are what are needed in Panama and, broadly speaking, +everywhere else in Latin-America. Once established here they will be felt +over a wide reach of the southern world. + +There is a lot of cheap and easy optimism that maintains that all will yet +be well in some indefinite way. Some hopeful tourists have visited Panama +and taken the trip about South America, apparently seeing nothing but the +rainbow of promise everywhere. And these happy pilgrims have written +books, assuring us with a maximum of glittering generalities that right is +everywhere driving out wrong and that all will soon be well. Other writers +assume this attitude consciously, out of regard for the interests that pay +their expenses on the trip. Some people write in glowing terms from +motives of consideration for the feelings of their South American friends. +Would that we might tell only the bright sight of the story! It would be +far more pleasant. + +But, after all, the facts are the irreducible minimum upon which to build +all successful programs of reconstruction. Only when we reach the inner +and deeper springs of life and character can we hope to open fountains of +living waters for the desert of the human heart in bondage. Really to know +Latin-America is to believe in its high and fine possibilities. What +Latin-America needs is a fair chance. + +The end of the last great despotism of earth has left democracy a +triumphant political principle in human government. Henceforth no nation +may hope to keep step with the advance of mankind unless its political +procedures are essentially democratic. And while South America has long +had the form of democracy, it now becomes essential that her republics +develop the working reality of effective self-government. To do this two +things are indispensable. The successful democracy must be intelligent and +must find a moral foundation in the free consciences and minds of +self-disciplined citizens. Spiritual despotisms and religious +superstitions never did and never will eventuate in a capacity for +democracy. Only men who are intelligently free can exercise the functions +of free governments. + +The only working basis of democracy, in short, is that system of religious +ideals which has uniformly supported popular education, championed the +rights of the oppressed, advocated self-government, welcomed +investigation, and maintained freedom of conscience as of higher value +than iron-bound uniformity to prescribed standards. It requires but a +cursory glance at the record of history to know that no working democracy +has ever survived the opposition of an ecclesiastical hierarchy that has +remained the bitter foe of progress for a thousand years. + +There is more hope for Panama in the little Protestant chapel down by the +Malecon and the efficient and modern school maintained there by the force +of missionaries with their progressive ideals than in all the pageantry +and glitter of a system of repression and despotism that the world is +rapidly outgrowing. The religious Hun will take his place with the deposed +political despot who proposed to destroy the liberties of mankind. The +most urgent need of the mission work in Panama just now is that of trained +and efficient Latin leadership. No people can be effectively lifted from +without. + +A century ago nearly the whole of the southern world was in the throes of +political readjustment. Self-government and political freedom were the +watchwords and everywhere strong men arose and devoted their lives to the +task of breaking from the necks of the people the political yokes under +which they had staggered for two and one half centuries. + +To-day in Latin-America the second great struggle for freedom is under +way. Bound minds and consciences, superstitions and moral +despotisms--these are the stumbling-stones across the pathway of progress. +All over Latin-America men are rising and enlisting their hearts and minds +in the struggle for free consciences and independent judgment in the +things of the Spirit. Nearly all these countries achieved political +independence within a few years. When the climax came it was comparatively +sudden, and it may be that the breaking of the chains of moral and +spiritual despotisms will likewise be a shorter struggle than now seems +possible. Once again the clock is striking, and who knows but the end of +political despotism in all the earth may mark the rapid approach of +spiritual democracy and highest liberty in all America! + +Heroic has been the long struggle in Latin-America for self-government. +Splendid is the fight being made to-day for larger liberty. If +Pan-Americanism means anything at all, it means a social foundation in +honor and intelligence and brotherhood. It is time to address ourselves to +the great unfinished task begun by those intrepid pioneers. The Canal is +finished and the task of construction is done, but the end of construction +is the beginning of empire-building for the larger task yet incomplete. + + + + +Transcriber's Note: All apparent printer's errors retained. Formatting +transcribed as close as possible to original book. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Prowling about Panama, by George A. 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Miller + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Prowling about Panama + +Author: George A. Miller + +Illustrator: Alice Best + A. W. Best + +Release Date: February 9, 2012 [EBook #38815] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROWLING ABOUT PANAMA *** + + + + +Produced by Adrian Mastronardi, Alex Gam and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 414px;"> +<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="414" height="600" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h1>PROWLING ABOUT<br />PANAMA</h1> + +<p> </p> + +<p class="big">BY<br />GEORGE A. MILLER</p> + +<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Illustrated by</span><br /> +ALICE AND A. W. BEST<br /> +<span class="smcap">From Photographs by the Author</span></p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 150px;"> +<img src="images/illus-001.jpg" width="150" height="184" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h4>THE ABINGDON PRESS<br /> +NEW YORK CINCINNATI</h4> + +<p> </p> + +<p class="center">Copyright, 1919, by<br /> +GEORGE A. MILLER</p> + +<p> </p> + +<p class="center">DEDICATED<br /> +<span style="font-size:smaller">TO THE</span><br /> +YOUNG PEOPLE OF THE EPWORTH LEAGUES<br /> +<span style="font-size:smaller">OF THE</span><br /> +CALIFORNIA CONFERENCE</p> + +<hr /> + +<h2>CONTENTS</h2> + +<table class="padded-table" summary=""> + <tr> + <th align="center">CHAPTER</th> + <th align="center"> </th> + <th align="center">PAGE</th> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right"> </td> + <td class="left">Foreword</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">I.</td> + <td class="left smcap">Where the Prowling is Good</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">II.</td> + <td class="left smcap">The Trail of the Pirates</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">III.</td> + <td class="left smcap">Picturesque Panama</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">IV.</td> + <td class="left smcap">A City of Ghosts</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">V.</td> + <td class="left smcap">The Spell of the Jungle</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">VI.</td> + <td class="left smcap">Life at the Bottom</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">VII.</td> + <td class="left smcap">The Interior</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">VIII.</td> + <td class="left smcap">Economic Waste</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">IX.</td> + <td class="left smcap">Panama and Progress</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">X.</td> + <td class="left smcap">Knowing Our Neighbors</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">XI.</td> + <td class="left smcap">The Family Tree</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">XII.</td> + <td class="left smcap">Latin-American Heart</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">XIII.</td> + <td class="left smcap">The Caribbean World</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">XIV.</td> + <td class="left smcap">The Panama Canal</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="right">XV.</td> + <td class="left smcap">Prowling into the Future</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td> + </tr> +</table> + + + +<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2> + +<table class="padded-table" summary=""> + <tr> + <th align="center"> </th> + <th align="center">PAGE</th> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The Faithful Mule is the Ship of the Jungle</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The Homeward Way at Nightfall</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">An Empire in the Making</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">A Few Good Roads on the Zone</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Church at Nata, Oldest Inhabited Town in New World, Founded 1520</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_24">24</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The Jungle is the Place for Picnics</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Even Farm Cabins Are Picturesque in Costa Rica</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Ruins of Old Panama, the Most Romantic Spot in the New World</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Indian Woman at the Fountain</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Baths—Wholesale and Retail</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Convent Door</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_46">46</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Official Lottery in Bishop's House, Panama</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Ruin of Famous Flat-Arch Church</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Eighth-Grade Room, Panama</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Convent Garden</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Romantic Old Convents Survive</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_58">58</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Ruined Tower at Old Panama</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Costa Rica Trapiche, or Sugar Mill</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Papaya Trees</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Bananas and Sugar Cane</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Cacao Pods</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_70">70</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Proposed Location for Rest Cure</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Picturesque Jungle Towns</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Tortillas are Staple</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Jungle Folk</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">"The Cotter's Saturday Night"</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Church Bells of Arraijan, Cast 1722</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">First-Grade Room, Panama</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The Beautiful Savanas of Costa Rica</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Shipping Costa Rica Vegetables to Panama</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Good Pineapples Grow Here</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Dead Timber in Gatun Lake Now Covered with Orchids</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Interior Meat Market</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The Flavor of Old Spain</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Taking the Rest Cure</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The Oxen Stage of Agriculture</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Wayside Sellers of Fruit</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The House Beside the Road</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Wireless at Darien</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Farm Grist Mill, Costa Rica</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_126">126</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Happy Kindergartners, Panama</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Young Costa Rica is Enterprising</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Wooden Sugar Mill and Its Maker</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_133">133</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Public Market, David</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Indian Boy Goes to School</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_145">145</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Washday in Costa Rica</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Riverside Plantation</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Jungle Products</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_154">154</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">San Blas Indian Chief</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">No Race Suicide Here</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_162">162</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Jungle Guide</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">One Use for a Head</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_165">165</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Beggars and Cathedrals</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Far from the Madding Crowd</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Seawall Church and School, Panama</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Mandy Did Her Share</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The Canal Digger</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">The Town Pump, Interior Village</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_175">175</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Wayside Cemetery in the Jungle</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Coconuts—So Good and So High</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_180">180</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Boiling "Dulce"—Crude Sugar</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Washing by the River</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Costa Rica Farm House</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Bananas Thirty Feet High</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">San Blas Indians Have "Poker Faces"</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Where Styles Molest No More</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_201">201</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Chinese Always Start a School</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">"Schooldays"</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Three in a Row</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Mother, Home, and—the Simple Life</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Construction Days in Culebra-Gailard Cut</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Gatun Spillway, Key to the Canal</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Cristobal Streets</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_227">227</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Fat Cattle of Coclé</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Enchanted Islands in Gatun Lake</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_231">231</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Panama Public Water Works, Interior Country</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">A Jungle Cathedral</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_242">242</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="left">Shoe-bills Are Small</td> + <td class="right"><a href="#Page_248">248</a></td> + </tr> +</table> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p> + +<h2>FOREWORD</h2> + +<p>The fine art of prowling may be achieved, but is more often a gift of those to the manner born. +Professional globe-trotters are not prowlers. They are often the victims of their own sense of +superiority. Personally conducted tours are little help to real prowling, and professional guides +reduce the sight-seer to a machine for receiving "canned" information with gaping mouth, while with +his free hand he extracts tips from his reluctant pocket.</p> + +<p>Prowling is an instinct, a sixth sense of locations and values. The prowler must have intuition +and imagination and perseverance and historical perspective, but with these he must have something +else—that inner vision that finds values in everything human. The expert explorer will find +something interesting in Sahara, but almost any prowler will have a rare time in Panama.</p> + +<p>Probably no spot in the New World has served as the location of so many kinds of events and +interests as this narrow neck of land between two continents. Brief histories of it have been well +written, and the visitor should by all means read at least one of them. It remains for some seer yet +to tell worthily the story of the four centuries + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> + +that link the last discovery of the world's greatest explorer with the final achievement of the +world's most skillful builders.</p> + +<p>Panama furnishes an epitome of history. Nearly everything that has ever happened anywhere in the +world has had some counterpart or parallel in Panama, and of the coming results of the new forces +now released on the Isthmus time alone can be the measure.</p> + +<p>This book makes no claims to consistency. Where contradictory characteristics abound and motives +are much mixed, both sides may be faithfully set forth, but to reconcile them is a difficult matter. +There will be no unified and consistent life on the Isthmus until the advancing civilization now +there outgrows some of its present traits.</p> + +<p>Can one tell the truth about Panama and return to the Isthmus? That remains to be proven. Much +depends on the spirit of the prowler. As well ask whether one can tell the truth about Chicago and +be welcome to that metropolis. Probably Chicago would pay no attention to the comment, but Panama +might take enough interest to notice.</p> + +<p>This is not a guidebook. Heaven forbid! It is merely a few notes of a prowler who found Panama +interesting.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER I</h2> +<h3>WHERE THE PROWLING IS GOOD</h3> + +<p>Panama is the great American curiosity shop. The first city founded by explorers in the New +World, the oldest town in America inhabited by white men, the most conglomerate mixture of humanity +on earth are in Panama. The bloodiest tale of modern history, the most romantic story of American +exploration, the greatest engineering achievement of man all center in Panama.</p> + +<p>If there be any interest in congested and sweltering humanity, any concern for the problems of +social uplift and personal reaction, Panama is the laboratory for study. The cleanest and healthiest +towns on earth are on the Canal Zone, and the last word in shiftlessness and inefficiency is also +here. Superstition and science, rascality and rhapsody, efficiency and squalor, graft and honor, all +mixed and mingled—this is Panama. Jungle and plain, valley and coast, tropic heat and mountain +paradise, fever-swamps and ideal sanitation, engineering success and life in the primitive +open—these too are in Panama.</p> + +<p>Strange and mysterious traces are still found of the days when the gold of Peru was carried +across the Isthmus on pack trains. Later the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> + +gold-seekers of California fought their way along the route of the present Canal and found ships on +the west coast for the mines of Eldorado. If any survivors still live, they can tell stirring tales +of the days when it was well worth a life to carry gold to Aspinwall.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/illus-012.jpg" width="400" height="323" alt="The Faithful Mule Is the Ship of the Jungle" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE FAITHFUL MULE IS THE SHIP OF THE JUNGLE</span> +</div> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 196px; margin-top:15px;"> +<img src="images/illus-013.jpg" width="196" height="500" alt="The Homeward Way at Nightfall" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE HOMEWARD WAY AT NIGHTFALL</span> +</div> + +<p>It all began with Columbus himself when he sailed into Almirante Bay and thought that he had +found in Chiriqui Lagoon the long-sought passage to India. What he really found, what was to follow +his discovery, he could not have dreamed, adventurer that he was! Almirante + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> + +(Admiral), Cristobal (Christopher), and Colon (Columbus) remain to-day to remind us of the +illustrious explorer who first set foot on Panama. But Columbus gave us Panama, and never knew! It +was Balboa who first saw the waters of the wide Pacific from the summits of the Isthmian hills. It +was Pizarro who packed across the fifty miles of jungle the timbers of the ships which he put +together on the beach of the Pacific and with which he discovered Peru, after indescribable +hardships and repeated attempts to find the "hill of gold."</p> + +<p>On the Pacific side of the Isthmus was founded Old Panama, the first city of the New World, where +to-day majestic ruins stand, a fitting shrine for the reverent pilgrim. And between Old Panama and +Porto Bello stretches the famous Paved Trail of Las Cruces.</p> + +<p>Along this trail lurked the trouble-hunters and makers of the sixteenth and seventeenth +centuries. For two hundred years the tinkle of the bells of the gold-laden pack mules was never + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> + +silent. On this jungle path, when stolen gold was carried by the sackful, trouble was certain to +follow. The big trail was a pathway of blood, robbery, and intrigue. All the worst passions and +performances of depraved men turned loose and ran riot for a century and a half. These were the days +when life was raw and rough at Panama.</p> + +<p>To-day the old trail is covered with palms and decorated with orchids. Occasional stones trace +the outline of the ancient highway. Where the drunken and ribald song of the muleteer rose about the +camp-fire at night, canaries and parrakeets now chatter and sing. The soft caress of the jungle +breeze whispers no tales of the days when the trail could be traced by the bleaching bones that +lined the right-of-way. The jungle is nature's great blotter for the sins, sorrows, and sufferings +of an age now forgotten—but it all happened in Panama.</p> + +<p>Panama is not all jungle. To the westward stretch great savannas, between the mountains and the +sea; miles and miles of smooth and level country open, fair and well watered, only waiting for the +tickle of American cultivation to laugh a crop. It makes a real estate man's fingers itch; but that +is another story. Where a little cultivation has been inadvertently perpetrated on the land, tall +sugar cane, luscious fruits, and toothsome vegetables attest the quality of the soil and the +climate.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p> + +<p>Frequent rivers, numerous inlets on the coast line, occasional interesting native towns, old +churches, impossible "roads," meandering trails, scattered herds of fat cattle, a few sugar mills, +numerous trapiches (cane grinders), fenced patreros (pastures), and everywhere the mixed-blood +natives—this is Panama in the western provinces.</p> + +<p>Panama westward is not all a flat country, however. Eleven thousand feet into the sky rises the +Chiriqui volcano, and a little farther west in the same range stands Pico Blanco (White Top), at +about the same height. Thrown across the slopes of these lofty summits and half way up lies a great +and beautiful country, with a climate such as might have been coveted for the site of Eden. Cool, +comfortable, and salubrious is this garden of the gods. In all the so-called temperate zone no land +yet discovered offers three hundred and fifty days per year of comfort and health. To be sure, +vacation pilgrims from the warmer coast country sometimes make mention of cold feet upon first +reaching this Mecca in the mountains, but nobody finds fault on that account. Most of them like +it.</p> + +<p>Chiriqui is a garden spot. Wide ranges of fertile soil, gentle slopes rolling back against the +mountain ranges, good harbors along the coast, and occasional plantations with American +improvements, mark the country as the coming + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> + +granary of the Republic. Rolling slopes and blossoming fields, with a background of the +never-failing come-and-go of the lights and shades on the face of the mountains, form a picture not +to be forgotten. Always the summits and the clouds seem to be playing leapfrog in the sky, and the +whole upper world, looking down on the puny traveler, seems ever trying to say something and never +quite uttering its meaning. And he who looks and listens finds himself trying to say it for them, +and never can he find the word. Perhaps some poetic soul will yet look upon these heights and tell +us what it is they are muttering.</p> + +<p>The coast line of western Panama is a fascinating shore. Like enchanted islands rise bits of +forest out of the sea and any of them might be the castle site of the lord of the main.</p> + +<p>In and out between their wooded shores the steamer winds its way till it dodges in through some +narrow "boca" to find a tortuous channel leading to a landing place, that must always be approached +at the whim of the tide. Whether there be a thousand islands or not, no one knows; but I have stood +on the steamer deck and counted fifty in sight at a time, while other fifties rose up to meet us as +those nearby dropped astern. Here and there some lonely light blinks its vigil through the night, +and the swells of the Pacific break in fantastic sea-ghosts against the rocky cliffs.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-017.jpg" width="500" height="279" alt="An Empire in the Making" title="" /> +<span class="caption">AN EMPIRE IN THE MAKING</span> +</div> + +<p>Navigation of these waters is not a science, it is an art. The captains of these coast craft know +every tree and rock and river mouth for four hundred miles, and make their way through tortuous +channels by markings that no landsman can see. There is one grizzled navigator, said to be unable to +read or write, who knows every marking on the coast for six hundred miles, and in the long years of +service has never made a mistake or met with an accident. Possibly his success might be due to the +fact that what he does not know does not confuse him. His mental horizon may not be very distant, +but at least he escapes a lot of worry about things that he (and you and I) cannot control. When the +tides have a rise and fall of eighteen feet, and all harbors are but shallow river mouths, the +negotiation of the coast + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> + +ports becomes a matter requiring much accuracy of judgment.</p> + +<p>The old trail across the Isthmus is the Mecca of many pilgrims who by some searching find its +scattered stones amid the riotous jungle. The later trail was opened after the city of Panama was +moved to its present site. It began at Colon, followed the Chagres River to the present site of +Gamboa, and then wound its ways over the low summit of the hills down to the new Panama and +terminated at the "Nun's Beach," where now stand a Protestant church and school. Here the pack +trains were unloaded and the high tides carried the rafts and lighters out to the ships waiting in +the little harbor.</p> + +<p>The dark days of Panama were the days after the gold trade failed. Even the gold of Peru was not +inexhaustible, and the trade across the Isthmus could not stand continued centuries of robbery and +murder. It had to end some time, and end it did; and when the end came all the Isthmus lapsed into a +slough of despond and lethargy of inertia. For a century and a half Panama was as forgotten as the +Catacombs.</p> + +<p>But Panama went her way, whether anybody cared or not. The people left on the Isthmus were the +racial remnants of the mixture of mankind that had found its way back and forth for two centuries, +and they were fairly able to take care of themselves. The rich forests and fertile + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> + +soil would bear fruit and food enough to sustain life whether anyone worked or not, and the result +was not the development of a virile race of men. How could it be? Probably few spots on earth have +had less incentive to develop hardy and enterprising character than the Isthmus of Panama.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-019.jpg" width="500" height="332" alt="A Few Good Roads on the Zone" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">A FEW GOOD ROADS ON THE ZONE</span> +</div> + +<p>The prowler about Panama will find a wide variety of interests and inspirations. Whatever his +peculiar, personal fad he can find it somewhere. Then he can prowl to his heart's content.</p> + +<p>If he prefers the sea, there are fifteen hundred miles of coast line to explore with something +new to every mile. Or he can launch out a bit, and in a day's time make his way to the famous Pearl +Islands, where are life and industry so distinct that weeks mays be spent in studying the +development + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> + +of a civilization, insular and unique. The coast of Darien has boundless possibilities for the +explorer; and the San Blas Islands would keep the ethnologist busy for months. For an enchanted +inland sea the Chiriqui Lagoon is unsurpassed.</p> + +<p>If historical romance is desired, the prowling is certainly abundant; and if the prowler is a +lover of nature, wild and luxuriant, rioting in marvelous and indescribable forms of overflowing +life, he has but to equip himself for jungle travel, and he will find wonders by the mile, and +fantastic nature piled mountains high and chasms deep. If it is mountains, they are here in scenic +beauty unsurpassed. If the explorer is a student of human nature and cares to attempt the +unscrambling of this blend of blood that flows in swarthy faces, he will be busy here for a +lifetime. And if none of these will do, and the curious landsman will have nothing short of the +exploring of vast unchristened wildernesses where no human foot has ever trod, and where strange and +dangerous forms of unclassified life wander at will through the overgrown forests, he will find +it—and doubtless he will find much more of it than he wants before he gets back to +civilization.</p> + +<p>If it is promotion schemes and development projects, then here at least is a commodious place to +put them. Here, in agricultural and colonizing + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> + +schemes, somebody will yet get rich—and other somebodies poor.</p> + +<p>If the prowler's interest is primarily social, and he would browse about one of the most +interesting cities in America, let him come to Panama. Ancient Spanish streets, scrupulously +clean—can these be found anywhere else? Side by side, over and under, the sixteenth and +twentieth centuries run together.</p> + +<p>And what makes Panama to-day the crossroad of the world? For him who in the love of engineering +skill holds communion with high human achievement, and prefers to prowl around the locks and docks, +and study the marvelous successes and adaptations and devices of the latest and greatest feat of +brain and hand, this is the very center of the earth. No man with a soul for the poetry of mechanics +can stand in a control house of one of the locks and see the enormous gates swing back at the +movement of a finger without feeling that man, with all his limitations, has yet in his being some +image of the Creator. To see an ocean giant rise up slowly in the teeth of gravitation and slip +through the gates on to the higher level, is to wonder whether the portals that look so gloomy to us +may not, after all, be not exits but entrances to a new and higher level of life. What a text! The +ship does not rise by straining but by resting in a narrow place. And no ship ever yet got through +the locks without a + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> + +pilot. The whole process is as silent as the forces of eternity. There is a lot more, and it bears +no copyright. Help yourself.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-022.jpg" width="500" height="328" alt="Church at Nata, Oldest Inhabited Town in the New World, Founded 1520" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">CHURCH AT NATA, OLDEST INHABITED TOWN IN THE NEW WORLD, FOUNDED 1520</span> +</div> + +<p>And for the prowler in the region of philosophy, what a place! What changes in the geography and +commerce and industry and policies and politics of mankind must follow this last achievement on the +historical Isthmus of Panama, "quien sabe?" ("who knows?") None but the Omniscient. Trade routes and +bank exchanges, commercial dealings and national programs will all be affected by this +three-hundred-foot wide highway of water. If but some power the gift would give us to come back a +century hence and see what will be doing then!</p> + +<p>What social and moral transformations will be + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> + +wrought in the coming years by the release of spiritual forces through the new religious life and +free faith brought to Panama with the coming of the Canal? Out of the soul-bondage of a system of +superstition and ignorance will come a new human consciousness of the worthiness of life and the +high privilege of living. Whether it is to prowl or prophesy, the material is abundant, and the +pilgrim will find rare material a-plenty all about him. Panama is perplexing and peculiar, but he +who finds the key to the riddle will be kept busy.</p> + +<p>Perhaps the amateur explorer has a penchant for old churches. Here they are. Seven of them, with +a couple of first-class ruins thrown in. The rich monasteries of Peru and Mexico are missing, but +for that there is a reason. Every bit of treasure was stolen as fast as accumulated. Yes, if +unmolested in the past, Panama would be a mine for the antiquarian to-day. But any active +imagination, even on half-time shift, can find here material for romances, warranted to interest +every member of the family, at reduced prices, if paid for in advance. From the Flat-Arch Church to +the ruins of Old Panama it is good prowling all the way.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER II</h2> +<h3>THE TRAIL OF THE PIRATES</h3> + +<p>The present conglomerate of humanity living on the Isthmus of Panama is the racial remainder of +some very much mixed social history. Here were enacted some of the most stirring stories and +tempestuous times in American history. In 1453 the Eastern Roman Empire fell before the assaults of +the Turks and closed the land routes to India. Nearly forty years later Columbus set sail in his +great effort to find a westward passage for the commerce of Europe. In this he failed, but on his +fourth and final voyage discovered the Isthmus of Panama and landed on the shores of the Chiriqui +Lagoon, supposing that the beautiful inland sea must be the long-sought passage westward. Here the +town of Almirante still bears his name. At Porto Bello and Saint Christopher Bay he made brief stops +and returned to Spain having no idea of the character of the isthmus that he had discovered.</p> + +<p>On November 3, 1903, exactly four hundred years from the day that Columbus set foot on the soil +of Panama, the Republic of Panama declared its sovereign independence and began its national life as +one of the family of American nations.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 241px;"> +<img src="images/illus-025.jpg" width="241" height="500" alt="The Jungle Is the Place for Picnics" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">THE JUNGLE IS THE PLACE FOR PICNICS</span> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p> + +<p>In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the Caribbean main was overrun by as unscrupulous and +bloodthirsty a set of pirates as ever sailed any sea. Even without these rascals there would have +been trouble enough, and with them the story is sufficiently lurid for the most melodramatic +taste.</p> + +<p>One name stands out above his fellows. The intrepid navigator who first saw the waters of the +Pacific set forth at the age of twenty-three as an adventurer, and after various experiences +embarked as a stowaway for his second voyage. By personal persuasion he became the partner of his +master, and after founding a colony in Darien sent Señor Endico back to Spain in irons for +his pains.</p> + +<p>This left Balboa supreme, with the whole + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> + +Castilla de Oro (Castle of Gold) country before him for exploration. He at once sent Pizarro to +examine the interior and gathered the scattered fugitives from former expeditions. The combined +forces took the field against the Indians. When they reached the domain of Comagre, the most +powerful chief of the country, peace was made. This chief was a real aristocrat with mummied +ancestors clothed in gold and pearls, and he gave to Balboa four thousand ounces of gold, sixty +wives, and offered to show him the way to a country beyond the dim mountains where a powerful people +lived in magnificence and sailed ships of solid gold. He also entertained his distinguished visitor +with tales of a temple of gold called Dabaibe, forty leagues farther than Darien, and said that the +mother of the sun, moon, and stars lived there.</p> + +<p>Balboa's imagination was stirred by these stories and he prepared an expedition of discovery. No +temple of gold was found, but internal dissensions and Indian attacks disturbed the peace of the +colony. Reenforcements arrived, and with them the title of captain-general.</p> + +<p>Balboa now set out on what was to be the most famous event of his life. He had been promised the +sight of a great ocean to the south, after he had climbed certain mountains. Various Indian +oppositions developed, but on the 26th of September, 1513, at about ten o'clock in the morning, + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> + +Balboa and his men, from the top of a high mountain, saw for the first time the waters of the vast +Pacific. The priest of the expedition, named Andreas de Vara, chanted a <em>Te Deum</em>, with the +entire company on their knees. A cross was raised, and the names of the Spanish rulers carved on the +surrounding trees.</p> + +<p>After meeting several Indian tribes the descent was made to the shore, and Balboa waded knee deep +into the surf and, waving the banner of Spain, proclaimed that the new-found ocean and all land +bordering thereon should be the property of his sovereign.</p> + +<p>For a long time this new ocean was known as the South Sea, and Balboa at once set about exploring +the vicinity. The Pearl Islands were located, taken possession of, and named. A later expedition by +a less difficult route crossed the Isthmus of Panama and conquered the Indians on the Pearl Islands, +bringing back plentiful tribute of fine pearls from the subdued chief.</p> + +<p>The year following, in 1514, arrived the black villain of the story in the person of Pedrarias, +sent out from Spain as governor of Darien. This disturber brought with him two thousand men. Balboa +built a fleet of ships on the Atlantic side, took them to pieces, carried them on the backs of +Indians across the Isthmus, put them together again, launched them in the waters of the Pacific, and +proceeded to explore the coast eastward from + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> + +Panama. On his return from this trip Balboa was arrested by Pedrarias on a trumped-up charge of +treason, and in the forty-second year of his life was beheaded, while declaring his entire innocency +of all treachery. Balboa was a product of his age, and of faults he possessed a-plenty, but as one +of the great explorers of history his end was a sad reward for the distinguished services that he +rendered to the world.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-028.jpg" width="500" height="217" alt="Even Farm Cabins Are Picturesque in Costa Rica" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">EVEN FARM CABINS ARE PICTURESQUE IN COSTA RICA</span> +</div> + +<p>In 1515 an expedition crossed the Isthmus and camped near the hut of a poor fisherman at a point +called by the natives Panama. For this name several explanations are given, one of them being that +there were many shellfish at this place. The meaning of the name is now lost, but in 1519 the city +of Panama was founded at this point by Pedrarias. Two years later, by order of the Spanish crown, +the bishopric, government, and colonists of the Isthmus were transferred from the Atlantic side at +Darien to Old Panama.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p> + +<p>History now began in earnest by the Pacific. In 1525 a priest celebrated in the cathedral at Old +Panama solemn mass with two other men, Pizzarro and Almagro, the rite being a solemn vow to conquer +all countries lying to the south. For this purpose an expedition was soon organized and sailed away +along the west coast of South America. This expedition met with varying fortunes, but in time +discovered the long-sought Peru with its splendid temples and golden treasures.</p> + +<p>The first regular trail across the Isthmus led from Nombre de Dios to Old Panama, crossing the +Chagres River at Cruces. Later small boats sailed from Nombre de Dios to the mouth of the Chagres +and made their way up to Cruces, where their cargoes were transferred to the backs of horses for the +rest of the journey to Panama. Later Nombre de Dios was abandoned for Porto Bello, because of the +very good harbor at the latter place. The old trail was "paved" with stones for a part of the way, +and the relics of this old road may still be found in a few places amid the tangled growths of the +jungle.</p> + +<p>With the conquest of Peru and the discovery of gold in Darien, Old Panama came rapidly to its own +and soon became a city of great importance, being for the time the richest city in New Spain. All +the gold of Peru and the rich west coast was brought to Panama to be sorted + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> + +and packed across the Isthmus, thence to be sent to Spain. Porto Bello became a rich town and +maintained great annual fairs up to the time of its destruction by Morgan's pirates.</p> + +<p>The century and a half between the establishment of Old Panama as the chief city of the Isthmus +and its destruction in 1671 supplied one of the tempestuous periods of history. It was on the +Isthmus of Panama that the American slave trade began and was continued for three hundred years. The +native Indians were so destroyed by the brutality and greed of the Spanish conquerors that the +expedient of importing black men from Africa was devised in order to secure a labor supply for the +country. Here arises the historical precedent for the use of West Indian labor in the digging of the +American Canal.</p> + +<p>The best account of the sacking and destruction of Old Panama is that written by John Esquemeling +and published seven years after the event, of which he was an eyewitness, being a member of the +pirates' band. The detailed account of this event, with the general pillaging of the Isthmus by the +English buccaneers, has been narrated with much exactness and great interest.</p> + +<p>Stories of the great wealth of Old Panama in the day of its glory are not hard to find. With the +complete destruction of all this magnificence, the present city was founded with due ceremonies in +1673 and much stone was transported from the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> + +old city and built into the new. The cathedral was soon built and stands to-day as solid as when +first erected. The queen of Spain sent detailed instructions for the building of the city, and among +other things directed that a safe wall for defense should be provided. This was so well done that +some of it still stands, an interesting relic of the vigor and thoroughness of the civilization that +produced it. Many years passed in building these walls, and they were said to have cost ten millions +of dollars, most of which came from Peru. The story is told of a Spanish king, who stood one day +looking out of his palace window. When asked what he was looking for he replied, "I am looking for + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> + +those costly walls of Panama; they should be visible even from here." A little knowledge of the +business methods of those days may throw some light on the whys and wherefores of the high cost of +the old walls.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/illus-031.jpg" width="400" height="385" alt="Ruins of Old Panama. The Most Romantic Spot in the New World" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">RUINS OF OLD PANAMA. THE MOST ROMANTIC SPOT IN THE NEW WORLD</span> +</div> + +<p>Twenty-six years after the founding of the present city of Panama an effort was made to establish +an English colony in Darien, but fever and discouragement aided the Spanish in ending the +venture.</p> + +<p>The eighteenth century is a monotonous one in Panama annals, marked mainly by frequent encounters +between the Spaniards and the Indians. Several piratical expeditions ended in the scattering and +murdering of the pirates and restoration of Spanish sovereignty.</p> + +<p>When the great movement in South America for political independence swept as far north as +Colombia, and the decisive battle of Boyaca was fought in 1819, Panama was very strongly held by +Spain as a place of maintenance for her armies, and the city was at all times in a good state of +defense. In this same year, however, the first junta was formed for the purpose of bringing about +independence from Spain, and sentiment in favor of the revolution grew very rapidly. Early in 1821 +General Murgeon arrived with the promise of high reward if he could compose the difficulties in +Panama and save the Isthmus to Spain. This he saw to be impossible, and after + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> + +having appointed José de Fabrega as coloner, he left for Quito. Fabrega, being Isthmian born, +cast his lot with the revolutionists and on November 28th, 1821, a large and enthusiastic crowd +assembled with representatives from all military and ecclesiastical organizations, and Panama was +declared to be forever free from Spanish dominion. A few loyal troops, seeing their helpless +position, laid down their arms, and the change of government was effected without the shedding of a +drop of blood—something new in Panamanian affairs. Simon Bolivar sent over help for the +independents, but found the work done before his men arrived.</p> + +<p>After this political upheaval Panama slept on, and would still be dormant to-day but for the +discovery of gold in California in 1849. With a six months' overland journey between the gold-hungry +men of the Eastern States and the gold-filled mountains of the West, the Isthmus suddenly came into +prominence as an easier way of reaching California. For seven or eight years after the finding of +gold not less than forty millions of dollars of gold, twelve millions in silver, and twenty-five +thousand passengers were transported across the Isthmus annually. In 1853 the high-water mark was +reached, when sixty-six millions of dollars of gold were carried across to the Atlantic side and +shipped to New York.</p> + +<p>This sudden development of the pack train + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> + +business brought to the Isthmus a horde of Chileans, Peruvians, Indians, and mixed breeds, among +whom were the inevitable plunderers and spoilers. The trail was again marked by blood and treachery. +Many an unhappy pilgrim lost his riches, and not a few lost their lives on the way. At last the +authorities were aroused to the necessity of making safe this highway suddenly become so important +to the world.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 282px;"> +<img src="images/illus-034.jpg" width="282" height="600" alt="Indian Woman at the Fountain" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">INDIAN WOMAN AT THE FOUNTAIN</span> +</div> + +<p>The year of the first gold rush saw the organization of the Panama Railroad Company. In 1846 +three American business men organized under the present name and secured a concession from New +Granada for + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> + +forty-nine years with such conditions that no ship canal could be constructed across the Isthmus +without the consent of the railroad company. When the name of New Granada was changed to that of +Colombia, the time was extended to ninety-nine years. This concession in time came to be very +valuable, and the French Canal Company found it necessary to buy out the Panama Railroad in order to +secure control of the exclusive right of way across the Isthmus. Later, when the United States +acquired the control of the French possessions in Panama, the Panama Railroad became one of the most +valuable assets on the list. By conditions of the concession, this road was bound to pay to Colombia +the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars per year. After various transfers and deals this +still holds in the form of the obligation of the Panama Canal to pay this sum annually to the +Republic of Panama.</p> + +<p>The story of the early construction days of the Panama Railroad are as exciting as those of the +Morgan Pirates, with a far better outcome. Labor troubles were many and bitter, and it became +necessary to hold men in jail until they were willing to work. The attractions of the California +gold fields were too much for the cupidity of men who saw daily pack trains loaded with gold from +the Eldorado of the Northwest passing their wretched hovels and taunting them with + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> + +visions of easy riches. But the work proceeded, and after interminable troubles with the black swamp +between Aspinwall (Colon) and Gatun, the road was finished as far as Gatun in the year 1850. In 1855 +the line was finished to Panama and the romantic career of the most prosperous short railroad in the +world was well under way.</p> + +<p>Charges for freight and passenger travel were enormous in the early days of the road. The fare +was fifty cents per mile, with all baggage extra. Freight was carried across the Isthmus for +twenty-five cents per pound, but so terrible were the old pack-train conditions that the travelers +of that day were more than willing to pay such prices for the luxury of crossing the Isthmus by the +railroad.</p> + +<p>At last the Colombian government took up the matter and the passenger rate was reduced. Ten cents +per pound continued to be the freight charge for years. The road made vast profits, and by a +combination of rates with the steamship companies maintained a monopoly of travel. A few years after +the completion of the railroad the pack-train men and outlaws, deprived of their plunder by the +road, became very active as brigands, and on one occasion perpetrated a riot that cost sixteen +Americans their lives and brought the United States and Colombia to the verge of open rupture.</p> + +<p>As far back as 1515 a German named Schoner + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> + +drew a map of the American continents with a clear line for a canal through the Isthmus. In 1581 an +actual survey was made for a canal, but nothing was done about it. In 1620 Diego de Mercado +submitted a long report to Philip II, but the monarch turned it down, saying that since God had +joined the continents together, it would be impious to try to separate them, and a death penalty was +decreed for anyone so rash as to try to undo the works of God in this way. In 1827 an engineer was +sent by Simon Bolivar, president of the New Granada federation, and a report was made commending the +project of a combined rail and water route. In 1838 a French company aroused so much enthusiasm in +the canal project that an expert was sent by the French government to look the ground over. He +reported that a sea-level canal could be dug without going deeper than thirty-seven feet, but the +idea was again abandoned. Two American investigations were made in 1866 and 1875, and about this +time much interest was aroused in the then new Nicaragua project.</p> + +<p>The popularity of the Suez Canal, successfully completed in 1869, led directly to the DeLesseps +organization of the Panama Canal Company. Agitation began in 1875 and in the year following a right +of way was secured, but with the Panama Railroad concession standing in the way.</p> + +<p>The story of the work of the French Company, + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> + +the New Canal Company, and the final completion of the work by the United States government, is told +elsewhere.</p> + +<p>Now that the trail of the sixteenth-century pirates has become the most famous inland waterway of +the world, we can read with complacency the story of the wretched times during which the Isthmus was +the scene of constant strife. Verily, Panama was not a very good place for sightseeing in those +days. The prowlers of the infested jungles and blood-stained trails were not such as we would select +as traveling companions to-day. If any modern prowler becomes despondent and is tempted to complain +that the former days were better than these, let him read the story of Old Panama, and then consider +conditions as they are on the Isthmus and the Zone to-day, and he will find food for reflection.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER III</h2> +<h3>PICTURESQUE PANAMA</h3> + +<p>A Panamanian cart loaded with English tea biscuit, drawn by an old American army mule, driven by +a Hindoo wearing a turban, drove up in front of a Chinese shop. The Jamaican clerk, aided by the San +Blas errand boy, came out to supervise the unloading. The mule wriggled about out of position, a +Spanish policeman came along and everybody got out and "cussed" the mule.</p> + +<p>That is Panama, every day. Across the street is an Italian lace shop run by a Jew. Next door is a +printery, operated by a Costa Rican. Just beyond is a French laundry conducted by a man from +Switzerland, and on the next corner is a beautiful Chinese store where they sell everything from +Japan. Cloisonné and lacquer and curious carvings, silks, embroideries, scientific +instruments—they are all here. You can buy Canton linen, Hongkong brass, Nikko carvings, +Hindoo embroidery, German cutlery, French microscopes, Canadian flour, New York apples, and +California grapes all within a block. And the products of Central and South America are all +about.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p> + +<p>The street in front of the shops is full of Panamanians, Peruvians, Ecuadorians, Chileans, +Colombians, and San Blas Indians, besides some representatives of every country of North and South +America, Europe, Asia, and Africa. Canal Zone Americans walk past Yankee business men, and native +police crowd the mestizos off the sidewalk.</p> + +<p>Panama is a jitney town, and the honk of the never-silent horn punctuates the clang and dash of +the trolleys and automobiles down a fifteen-foot street in a mad race to see which can get through +first. Overhanging roofs nearly touch above blooming orchids and talking birds that scream across +the narrow streets. Gloomy interiors and stumbling stairways lead up to spacious apartments and +breezy balconies. Above are occasional roof-gardens. All the rooms have high ceilings, all the +streets are paved, and all the kids wear clothes—sometimes.</p> + +<p>There is no possible human shade or tint that is absent here. The Anglo-Saxons are white, more or +less. The Jamaicans are black, mostly. The Panamanian is most often a soft and pleasing brown, done +in a number of wholly unmatchable tints. And the natives from these many sunny countries round about +are of every known color-tone, from chrome yellow to Paris green. This is the human kaleidoscope of +the earth: shake it up and you will get a different result every time.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 348px;"> +<img src="images/illus-041.jpg" width="348" height="450" alt="Baths-Wholesale and Retail" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">BATHS—WHOLESALE AND RETAIL</span> +</div> + +<p>You may not like it, but you can never truthfully say that Panama is not interesting—all +the time.</p> + +<p>The streets are clean. Daily sweepers and nightly garbage men take care of that. The sidewalks +are narrow, of course. Perhaps these two-foot sidewalks account in part for the innate courtesy of +the Latin mind. One must be either polite or profane when he makes his way along these little +ledges, often two or three feet above the street. A portable stepladder would help some.</p> + +<p>Some of these houses are old, very old. A few are new; most of them have stood here one or two +hundred years. There are many three stories high, a few boast of four stories, but the most of them +have but two. Third stories are popular because of the breezes that blow and make life +comfortable.</p> + +<p>Plazas are small, but parked and well kept, and they are used as only Latin-Americans know how to +use a plaza. The little ones are garden-spot oases in the deserts of bare walls and wide + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> + +eaves. Santa Ana Plaza is the heart of the city, and there is no hour of the day or night that there +are not people there. If you really wish to see the world go by, sit on the stone bench at Santa Ana +Plaza and look about you. If you stay long enough, you may see anybody, from the latest naked brown +baby to the last chosen president of any country you may name.</p> + +<p>Sitting in the plaza is a business by itself in this country. The North American uses a park as a +short cut, cross-corners, to get somewhere. But with the tropic citizen, the plaza is an end in +itself. He is not going anywhere, he is just sitting in the plaza. He may not even be called a +bench-warmer—the bench is already warm. He is sitting in the plaza—that is all.</p> + +<div class="imgright" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/illus-044.jpg" width="180" height="500" alt="Convent Door" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">CONVENT DOOR</span> +</div> + +<p>The band-night parade in Santa Ana Plaza is an institution. Around the central garden they +saunter, to the swing of the very good music from the central pavilion. The outer walk is wide, and +so is the parade. Clockwise walks the inner circle, three abreast, all young men. In the opposite +direction saunter the young women, also in threes. 'Round and 'round they go, talking, laughing, +listening, looking, lingering, while the band plays on. It is a good band too. And not the least of +the exhibit is the clothes the women wear. In matter of graceful and apparently comfortable costumes +the Panamanian girls need apologize to none of their northern sisters. Who is to blame + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> + +the boys if they keep on walking around for the sake of seeing the seeable, especially when she may +be quite worth watching? Every added turn means one look more. It is all very dignified and proper, +but human nature is the same old composition in every land, and the blood in the heart runs red, no +matter what the tint or tan without. In a land where the customs of chaperonage are exceeding +strict, and no young woman is supposed to be left alone with any young man for the briefest moment, +it is easy to see why the band nights in the plaza are popular. Ostensibly the young women, after +the manner of their kind, have no interest in the young men, but just the same, their soft brown +eyes have the same old way of wandering at the right moment; it is the same old trick and it works +in the same old way.</p> + +<p>The cathedral plaza is rather a different matter. Here gather the elite, in numbers on concert +nights, and more or less on other fair evenings. The grown-ups sit about on the benches and the +children run and play, care-free and comfortable. Well-dressed and content, these are the best of +the old native stock that used to live "inside" the walls of Panama that the Spanish king thought he +should be able to see. There are usually a few Americans with the crowd, and it is a peaceful and +restful family scene. Were it not for the incessant clatter of + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> + +the trolleys and jitneys the place would be a good rest-cure. But as matters now stand, there is too +much pandemonium for any permanent peace.</p> + +<p>Out at the point of the seawall, near Chiriqui Prison, stands an old stone sentry box. It appears +to belong to the prison now, but there was a time when the outlook from that point on the bay of +Panama was the viewpoint of Panamanian life as it faced the Pacific and marked the place of +departure for shores unknown. It is prosaic enough now to stand beside the little old stone tower +and watch a big liner leave the canal and throw back its smoke-plume as it steams out to sea, having +left the Atlantic Ocean seven hours before. Gone with the days of the explorers and pirates are the +mystery and menace of it all. The sentry box meant something then. Its lone occupant scanned +anxiously the horizon for the sail that might mean fresh + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> + +plunders, news from the world beyond, bountiful booty or stolen treasure, or perchance a fight to +the finish with other pirates as unscrupulous as the villains on shore. Now the children gather +there at sunset to play, care-free on the high wall overlooking the Gulf of Panama.</p> + +<p>Old Spanish houses are built with the yard inside. It is delightfully intimate and cozy, but not +very democratic. Green and clean and cool are these little parked "interiors" of the better houses. +Some of the common patios are dirty and disheveled, and the worst of them are better left alone, but +the American Health Department looks after the sanitation of them all.</p> + +<p>Chino (Chinese) shops sell everything, but, aside from the fine stores on Central Avenue, are +mostly devoted to native trade. Out in the interior the Chinese storekeepers transact practically +all the business of the country. Wherever there are two or three families gathered together, there +the Chinese storekeeper is sure to appear, ready to harvest any small or large coins that may be in +circulation.</p> + +<p>There were at one time about five hundred saloons of all sorts in Panama, This number has been +greatly reduced with hope of complete extinction, owing to the exigencies of the near-by American +soldiers on the Canal Zone. The monthly payroll of the Zone is a stream of gold, and it is a case of +losing that gold or cleaning up + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> + +Panama. Military orders and voluntary boycotts made Panama a lonesome town for the latter part of +1918.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/illus-046.jpg" width="400" height="326" alt="Official Lottery in Bishop's House, Panama" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">OFFICIAL LOTTERY IN BISHOP'S HOUSE, PANAMA</span> +</div> + +<p>There is the official lottery, suspiciously located. To be sure, the bishop does not personally +supervise the drawings, and perhaps he does not get anything out of it, but no one who knows Panama +claims such to be the case. When did the hierarchy ever oppose a gambling game that promised profit +for the cause? Gaunt, hungry-looking cripples and pobres hang about the corners selling lottery +tickets. Evidently, none of the profits come to these unfortunates.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p> + +<p>Panama City has its neighborhoods like any other Old-World town. "Inside" the old wall includes +the original fortified town on the little peninsula jutting into the bay. Here live officials, +professional and business men. Beyond this lies the town that overflowed the wall and now reaches +down to the park in front of the Tivoli Hotel. This is the barrio of Santa Ana. Caledonia and +Guachapali and San Miguel lie across the railway and serve to fill in the space between the Spanish +town and the Exposition grounds. A mile and a half beyond the palaces of the exposition lies Bella +Vista, beautiful for situation and rivaling Southern California for its real estate enterprise. Over +toward the Canal is Chorilla between the Cemetery and Ancon Hill. At the end of the five-cent car +fare on the line to the savanas is the famous—or infamous—bull ring. Who said that +bullfights had been abandoned? Not much. Between bullfights and prize fights the season is not +allowed to drag, and it must be admitted that the number of American patrons of these brutalizing +contests is not to the credit of the kind.</p> + +<p>The open market where the fishermen come ashore is one of the show places of Panama. Pangas and +chingas and craft of every sort, except the modern kind, bring in on high tide cargoes of bananas, +coconuts, charcoal, camotes, rice, sugar, syrup, rum, papayas, mangoes, lonzones, + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> + +chiotes, poultry, pigs, ivory nuts and a score of fruits and vegetables unnamable by the +uninitiated. When the tide recedes the boats lie high, if not very dry, and the unloading proceeds +apace. It is an interesting and lively scene, and the bicker and barter go on by the hour.</p> + +<p>Hard by is the big native market, resort of housekeepers and servants in search of commissary +bargains. This one is fairly clean and is the morning recreation of thousands of shoppers.</p> + +<p>Panama has its theaters, of the sort to be expected. One of the movie houses compares well with +the best anywhere, and most of the others are in good condition. The national theater is a credit to +the country and forms a section of the national palace. On the Canal Zone the clubhouses, sometimes +called Y. M. C. A.'s, put on several picture shows a week in commendable effort to supply recreation +to their patrons.</p> + +<p>The architecture of the old churches is a bit disappointing to travelers who have seen the +splendid buildings of other Latin lands. The Cathedral has two modern towers, a clock in one of +them, and the twelve apostles in life size on the façade. The Jesuit Church by the Malecon is very +old and rather interesting. Recently a new concrete tower has been added, of striking appearance, +but not closely in conformity with the architecture of the church. This church contains a famous old +painting of purgatory and heaven, + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> + +and down below, the flames of the lost. It is notable that in the place of purgatory are bishops, +priests, and kings. There are ten people in heaven, and ten in purgatory, and of each ten three are +women. Query—Where did the painter think that the women belong? It is an interesting question, +especially for the women.</p> + +<p>The big Merced Church on Central Avenue has a curious and interesting little street chapel on the +corner of the sidewalk, and here are arranged curious exhibitions at Christmas and Easter. I saw +here the ancient village of Bethlehem, with the inn and manger and oxen; but there were also a +miniature lake with a steamboat, and a grocery wagon delivering goods to the ancient Bethlehemites. +The stores bore advertisements of patent breakfast foods.</p> + +<p>No place can be truly romantic until it possesses some good ruins, and Panama claims distinction +in the old Flat-Arch Church near the palace. The interior is now used as a garage, and no one but +the tourist seems to think the place of any interest. Two blocks away stands the façade of the fine +old stone church that has been a ruin now for years. The interior is now a stable, and the old walls +of the college have been used for the construction of a modern cheap tenement house. The stone front +of the old wall stands as a fine example of the architecture and building of 1751, when the church +was finished.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p> + +<p>The San Filipi Neri Church, at the corner of Avenida B and Fourth Streets, is made from stone +carried in from Old Panama. This church is said to have the most beautiful interior in the city, +but, as it is very rarely opened to the street, the visitor will have to accept the statement +without opportunity to judge for himself.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-050.jpg" width="500" height="287" alt="Ruin of Famous Flat-Arch Church" title="" +/> +<span class="caption">RUIN OF FAMOUS FLAT-ARCH CHURCH</span> +</div> + +<p>The savanas lie northeast of Panama and beyond the ruins of Old Panama. The rolling slopes of +green and the growing number of villas will make this strip of country valuable and famous before +long.</p> + +<p>Of Panama's hotels not much need to be said, except that they are good of their kind. Latin hotel +standards are different from those of North America, but good judges of hotel life have pronounced +those of Panama to be quite endurable.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p> + +<p>There are always two or three daily papers in Panama and an indefinite number of weeklies. An +immemorial custom exists by which when any citizen has anything on his mind that he feels he should +unload to the profit or otherwise of the public, a printed pronunciamento is issued and circulated +about the streets by boys, handed out freely to everybody in sight. This really effective method is +sometimes used for important matters of state.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 218px;"> +<img src="images/illus-051.jpg" width="218" height="600" alt="Eighth-Grade Room, Panama" title="" /> <span class="caption">EIGHTH-GRADE ROOM, PANAMA</span> +</div> + +<p>The educational system is modeled upon the best Latin-American standards, with primary schools of +four grades throughout the Republic. Provincial centers have schools with two, and in a few cases +four years more. The National Institute, at the foot of Ancon Hill, maintains a normal school for +men and a liceo which grants the degree of Bachelor of Arts upon the completion of about the +equivalent of the American college freshman + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> + +year. The young women are given a normal course in the Women's Normal School at the Exposition +grounds. There is no coeducation above the primary grades. The Agricultural Experimental Farm and +School, abandoned as an experiment station, is used as a reform school.</p> + +<p>Taboga Island lies off shore and furnishes a point of much interest. It is the week-end Mecca of +the Zone people and also of many of the Panamanians. There are a good American hotel, several fair +native hotels, good fishing, tramping, an interesting native village, a healthful climate, and a +fine view—and all within ten miles of Panama.</p> + +<p>If the prowler is looking for real adventure, he can seek for it on Gocos Island, three hundred +miles south of Panama. Here are said to lie hidden somewhere ten millions of dollars' worth of +treasure, stolen from Callao and other points between 1820 and 1830. Harvey Montmorency wrote it up +in a book entitled On the Track of the Treasure, and so well did he tell the story that four large +expeditions have been organized and sent to find it. One man is said to have found a little gold for +his pains, but the others went home poorer than they came. And if these are too easy destinations, +there lie the Galapagos Islands off the coast of Peru, said to contain many possibilities, of many +kinds. Peru is supposed to have the islands on the market, and anybody with the money can purchase +one, all his own.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2> + +<h3>A CITY OF GHOSTS</h3> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 209px;"> +<img src="images/illus-054.jpg" width="209" height="600" alt="Convent Garden" title="" /> +<span class="caption">CONVENT GARDEN</span> +</div> + +<p>No one has ever satisfactorily explained the existence of ghosts in an enlightened world, but I +have a theory that they survive because they render a real service. They lend interest to life and +at least keep us from forgetting the super (or sub) natural.</p> + +<p>Likewise ruins have high value as a link with the past, and with neither ruins nor ghosts life +would become a very flat affair. And if ever a spot, by history, tradition, situation, and present +condition, was marked for rendezvous purposes by all the tribe that gibber and squeak and wander at +night in the dark of the moon, that place is Old Panama.</p> + +<p>The history of Old Panama has been told, and well told, by other writers. Read it there, and read +it before you see the place. Many pilgrims go out there, poke about among the ruins for a quarter of +an hour, and exclaim, "Is this all?" Without the story the most appreciative pilgrim will miss the +flavor of the place, but without a little romantic appreciation both the story and the ruins will +fall short of revealing all that the place has to give.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p> + +<p>The old town site was a hopeless jungle until the National Institute, under the leadership of Dr. +Dexter, cleared away the brush and laid bare the traces of streets and buildings. To-day the place +is in good condition and one may wander about at will and dream to his heart's content. It is no +place for joy rides, and the roadhouse is a blot on the place, but there are people still who see +nothing but a refreshment counter and worthless stone heaps.</p> + +<div class="imgright" style="width: 279px;"> +<img src="images/illus-056.jpg" width="279" height="500" alt="Romantic Old Convents Survive" title="" /> +<span class="caption">ROMANTIC OLD CONVENTS SURVIVE</span> +</div> + +<p>One of the favorite amusements of tourists and other people used to be that of digging for +treasure at Old Panama. No one ever found anything of value, but it made a fine story to tell upon +return to the States. "When I was digging for treasure in Old Panama"—just say it and see what +a flavor it has. It is most probable that if the ruins were located in a cooler climate, there would +have been a great deal more digging. Under a tropic sun, however, it takes considerable bait to +induce anyone to indulge in such vigorous exercise.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p> + +<p>The treasure idea is easy to locate. Peruvian gold was all brought up to Panama and stored in +warehouses until it could be packed across to Porto Bello. There were endless fighting and plots and +schemes and robberies and murders connected with the gold trade. Many a man lost his gold, and many +a man his life. And, in consequence, some of the gold was also lost in the mêlée. What more natural, +then, than to look about for this lost treasure in the place where most of it was stored?</p> + +<p>Now, there may be millions of dollars' worth of old gold somewhere about Old Panama. The only +difficulty is that no one ever yet has been able to find any of it. The probability is that no gold +was ever left there long enough to be very much lost, and the men who did the fighting also took +care of the gold. But that does not prevent any one from "digging for treasure in Old Panama" if he +wants to do so.</p> + +<p>Nevertheless, there is treasure in Old Panama, and it is to be had for the digging. But the +digging will be, not amid the rocks, but into the history of the place. And the digger will find +rare nuggets for his pains. Balboa, Pizarro, Pedrarias laid out this town, and set the pace for the +wild and unprincipled years that followed. And Henry Morgan, adventurer, pirate, and general rascal, +ended the story as it was begun—in crime and blood.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p> + +<p>Accounts of the construction and character of the old city represent it to have been builded with +much magnificence. All the woods used in building were of the fine native mahoganies, and there were +hangings, tapestries, and paintings in the sumptuous houses of the men who became enormously rich +from the traffic of the times. Returning ships from Europe brought luxuries as well as necessities, +and the gold trade people maintained regular fleets of ships and put Panama in close touch with the +life of the age. There are described two large churches, a cathedral, a "hospital," over two +thousand large houses, and several very large establishments for the care of the great number of +pack animals used on the trail. Large quantities + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> + +of gold, silver, pearls, and gems of various sorts were in evidence. In the day of its glory Panama +was a veritable Arabian Nights city, with some two hundred warehouses for the storing of stolen +treasure.</p> + +<p>The story of the destruction of the old city is one of shocking cruelty and lust, and merely +furnishes the last chapter of the same tale of crime that marks the history of the Isthmus from the +finding of the Peruvian gold to the days when the murderous pillages of rival pirates finally +destroyed the commerce of the Isthmus and left Panama little more than a memory of former glories. +The burning of Old Panama marks the turning point in Isthmian history and closes forever the days of +conquest. About this time the vast supply of Peruvian gold became exhausted, and between the failure +of loot and the destruction of trade by brigandage the Isthmus fell into neglect and was nearly lost +sight of by the world for two hundred years.</p> + +<p>Anyone who knows the story of the place will find the ruins fascinating because they show a +construction of the days when men built strong walls because nothing else would stand the strain of +the lives they lived. Some of the walls stand as firm and strong to-day as they did three and a half +centuries ago, and unless removed by the hand of man they will stand here a thousand years hence. +And when a wall stands for centuries + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> + +in this tropic climate of disintegration it is a wall to remember.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 242px;"> +<img src="images/illus-058.jpg" width="242" height="600" alt="Ruined Tower at Old Panama" title="" /> +<span class="caption">RUINED TOWER AT OLD PANAMA</span> +</div> + +<p>Most conspicuous stands the old church tower, splendid and defiant amid the wreckage about its +feet. Straight and strong it lifts its lofty head above the treetops, and, viewed from any angle, is +a majestic figure. There is no construction in modern Panama to-day that may be compared to the +grand dignity of that sentinel tower. Like some old prophet, amid the ruins of a wayward people, the +tower raises its head and stands in mute but noble witness to the reality of the things that endure. +For the tower was honestly built, and therefore stands. Against its solid walls, builded from their +rock foundation straight upward, the ravages of time have made but little impress.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 203px;"> +<img src="images/illus-060.jpg" width="203" height="600" alt="Costa Rica Trapiche, or Sugar Mill" title="" /> +<span class="caption">COSTA RICA TRAPICHE, OR SUGAR MILL</span> +</div> + +<p>The tower was part of the cathedral, and the cathedral was one of three or four great +churches.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p> + +<p>Of at least two others well-preserved ruins still remain, and are well worth careful study. The +reddish-brown coloring of the old walls and the vine-covered stone help furnish endless temptations +for the artist, but no one has yet given adequate expression to the splendid possibilities of these +ruins.</p> + +<p>Still more interesting vistas open to the mind's eye of the student with a constructive +imagination. There were churches many and large and beautiful in Old Panama. And there were pirates +wild and wicked and hated in Old Panama. Who "ran the town"? The pirates or the priests? What +relations existed between the two? And if there were churches of such great beauty and strength, why +were there also the terrible pirates? What were the churches doing that they did not bring about a +better city?</p> + +<p>These are hard questions, but to anyone who knows conditions to-day, and who knows that +conditions to-day are better than they were in Old Panama, the answer is not far to seek. The hungry +and helpless peons did not give the money to build those costly churches, though they doubtless did +the hard work of construction. And if the pirates were good givers—and they doubtless were, +under promise and threat—then they also influenced the general scheme of things in Old Panama. +In short, the churches of Old Panama did not make a very good town of it.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p> + +<p>What a story Jack London could have written here! It is too bad that he did not find Old Panama +before it was too late. Not only the ruins, but the vista of royal palms along the beach, with the +little red-white-and-blue crabs scurrying about at high tide, unite to raise a sense of romance that +starts the wheels of fancy revolving in one's brain. All one needs is a "long, low, rakish black +craft in the offing,"—there it is now, the very thing, a big chinga, fifty feet long with four +sails and twenty-five men on board, luffing and tacking about into the little bay just around the +point. Pirates or fishermen—don't inquire too closely; either will do, and both are useful in +romance.</p> + +<p>In one of the churches are some old graves, where some natives have been buried, partly for +convenience and perhaps partly from sentiment. Fine old walls stand earthquake-cracked, but still +strong. Of roofs there are, of + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> + +course, none. And back of the church are still intact the foundations of a house said to have been +the house of the governor, and the vaulted arches of the old cellar storehouse are still intact. A +native lives in a shanty near by, and he greets the visitor, not with the information that might +make him useful and get him a tip, but with the vacant optimism of those who feel that somehow +something is coming to them whether they earn it or not.</p> + +<p>As for the natives, none of them know anything about the place. The few that live there are of +the sort that would camp under the nose of the sphinx and never look up into his face. But the +reader of this can well spend a half day amid the most fruitful prowling anywhere in Panama. He may +gaze at the splendid tower till the broken walls about it rise again, and the old tiled roof once +more covers the worshiping congregations within, and the drone of mass and the fragrance of incense +again ascend before the high altar. And down the old street, with its one-story houses, once more +wind the pack trains and muleteers and men and women and children. There is excitement everywhere, +and commotion and cursing, and everybody runs down to the beach. And if you will turn about and gaze +out to sea, you will see there a curious craft with freakish sails, and when it drops anchor and the +boat pulls ashore, you will see old Almagro himself step out + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> + +on the sands sword in hand, and with rough and profane commands, take charge of the unloading of his +golden cargo. There will be wild times in Old Panama to-night, for the pack trains have returned +from Porto Bello with a cargo of rum, and the sailors from Peru have been long at sea, detained by +unfavorable winds, and, like sailors of other times and climes, they are thirsty. Out from the +church door comes the tonsured priest; he shakes his head, shrugs his shoulders, and makes his way +down to where the great Almagro stands, a commanding figure amid the confusion. For the commander +has the gold, and, like all explorers of his time, he will be in need of a proper blessing by the +priest; and the padre, being human, can use a little of the gold.</p> + +<p>But while you gaze and dream, "dear reader," the vision fades and "the tumult and the shouting +dies," and there stand the ruins, and there swings the sweep of the tropic sea, and you are again in +the twentieth century, a little richer in mental imagery for your short excursion back into the +sixteenth.</p> + +<p>Which is to say that dreaming is easy at Old Panama. Try it yourself.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER V</h2> + +<h3>THE SPELL OF THE JUNGLE</h3> + +<p>What the desert is to Arizona and the ice to Alaska the jungle is to tropical America. He who has +never traveled through a tropical jungle on a trusty mule has missed something out of his life. He +should go back and begin over again.</p> + +<p>The jungle is much maligned and often misinterpreted. The jungle has a place in the agricultural +life of the tropics, but it has also a place in the æsthetic and moral life of mankind. Here at last +there is room, and the starved and stunted life may relax its struggle and strain and expand under +the luxuriance and exuberance of a world where all the forces of life overflow and run riot in a +thousand fantastic forms of energy and growth. Like the uncharted vastness of the polar sea and the +unbounded, shimmering mirage of the wide desert, here at last there is plenty and to spare. When a +man has stinted and economized all his life on a New England hillside amid stones and stumps, the +jungle takes the load off his soul and sets him free in a universe of new and untested +dimensions.</p> + +<p>The jungle is misunderstood. There are jungles unworthy of the name, but these vast Panamanian + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> + +hothouses are a different matter. They are not the bottomless morasses of deadly snakes and +poisonous vapors. Since men have learned how to live in the tropics these terrors have largely +retreated to the highly colored accounts of tropical travelers who took one look and fled—to +write a book of timely warning to the uninitiated. These jungles are not the haunts of hidden +horrors and poisoned arrows. Ferocious tree-dwellers may inhabit the unknown recesses of the upper +Amazon, but they do not live in the jungles of Central America and Panama.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 270px;"> +<img src="images/illus-064.jpg" width="270" height="550" alt="Papaya Trees" title="" /> +<span class="caption">PAPAYA TREES</span> +</div> + +<div class="imgright" style="width: 239px;"> +<img src="images/illus-066.jpg" width="239" height="550" alt="Bananas and Sugar Cane" title="" /> +<span class="caption">BANANAS AND SUGAR CANE</span> +</div> + +<p>It takes just three conditions to make a good jungle, and these three are all present in this +fascinating country. Moisture, temperature, and soil; mix them in the right proportions and you can +produce a jungle at the North Pole, but nowhere can the mixture be located except in the tropics. +When one remembers the painstaking toil expended on the rocky fields of northern New + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> + +York and then turns to a land where the problem is not to encourage but to prevent growth, one +wonders how it happened that our ancestors blundered into an environment reeking with difficulties +when they might have had all this overflow of abundance for the taking.</p> + +<p>There are several brands of jungle, to be sure, and distinct differences of kind may be located +easily. The jungle of the overflowed level river land is a very different formation from that which +climbs over the rolling hills and up the mountain slopes. But everywhere there is the same reckless +riot of power and life. Fantastic growths are here just because there is so much growing to do and +so much energy back of the roots that there are not conventional forms of life enough to go around +and life boils over in every conceivable absurdity of form and habit. This is no place for a +niggard. But it is a splendid antidote for smallness of soul and for that dried-up-ness that settles +down like a pall upon the spirits of men who never in their lives have had enough of anything or +breathed an atmosphere of abundance.</p> + +<p>It must be a petrified soul that can resist this wanton abandon of vegetable life. How a man can +spend three days in this full-blown exhibition of vital energy at work in the vegetable world and +ever be small again is more than can be readily understood.</p> + +<p>Here is a world where no one ever need cry for + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> + +more; there is too much already. After a few days of it one longs to get out in the open, to see a +barren spot somewhere just to rest the surfeited soul a bit. It's all for the asking; in fact, there +is no chance to ask; it is poured out of the horn of nature's plenty, and all the color and charm +and fantasy and music and laughter and glory of it are piled in wild profusion a hundred feet high, +and you cannot get away if you will. Nature at least has a chance to show what she can really do, +and it is yours for the looking.</p> + +<p>What makes up a jungle? Well, that's hard to say. There are mighty trees of cedar and mahogany +and a hundred lesser breeds, lifting their heads into the tropic sky. There are palms and giant +ferns of course. There are wonderful purple and magenta and crimson-topped trees, whose glaring flat +colors fairly shriek at you like the bedlam of a paint box let loose on the sky. Sturdy lignum +vitæ trees stand conscious of their high value and + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> + +rare qualities. Ferns in profusion, vast, variegated and immense, line the banks of streams and hide +in the shadows of the great trees. Orchids, of course, winding streams strewn with the flowers and +foliage of the dense mass overhead, entrancing water streets and winding Venetian tunnels through +forests so thick that the sun never penetrates the shadowed fastnesses below. There are paraqueets, +parrots, singing canaries, alligators, bananas, bamboos, singing winds, warbling bluebirds, +blackbirds that can render a tune, purples and blues and crimsons and browns, all poured out and +mixed together without stint. It is fascinating for a few hours, but after a time you get overloaded +and are ready to cry "Enough." It's great, but a little stupefying till one gets used to it.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 281px;"> +<img src="images/illus-068.jpg" width="281" height="500" alt="Cacao Pods" title="" /> +<span class="caption">CACAO PODS</span> +</div> + +<p>The jungle of the mountains is essentially different from and more interesting than that of the +level swamps. Both are largely uninhabited, for men naturally like to have a little outlook both for +their lives and about their habitations.</p> + +<p>But the growth is about equally dense, provided the soil and moisture are right for the +production of real jungle. From Puerto Limon to Almirante is about one hundred and twenty miles +overland, and there was a time when practically every mile of this distance was untouched jungle. +The United Fruit Company has conquered most of it, until there is now but a day's journey on + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> + +horseback through the connecting link between the two railroad terminal points at Estrella and the +Talamanca Valley. The one hundred miles of rails run almost entirely through the endless fields of +bananas. But once this was all primitive wilderness; that is, we think it was, but some of the +superintendents of this clearing and planting work say that they have discovered numerous evidences +that there was a time in ages past when practically all of this vast area was under some sort of +cultivation.</p> + +<p>There would be a railroad now across the gap of twenty miles but for the fact that this gap +includes a mountain range with rushing rivers and steeps, gorges and almost impenetrable forests. +Occasional travelers cross this range by the aid of sturdy mules, but there is yet nothing that +could by any strain of language be called a trail. There is simply a "blaze" through the forest and +occasional marks where some floundering traveler has preceded the venturesome explorer through the +depths of some yawning mudhole.</p> + +<p>I crossed this range on a day when the sun was + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> + +shining overhead, but only two or three times did its rays fall upon the "trail." The overhead +growth was so thick that there was nothing but dense shadow below. A hundred and fifty feet these +immense trees rose into the air, carrying upward with them festoons of hanging vines, swinging +rattan, and clinging orchids. Curious enough are some of these trees, with their winding external +buttresses and thin flanges thrown out to brace against the winds. Banyan trees reach out their long +arms and drop their fingers down into the soil and take root and continue until the tree literally +"stalks" its way across the mountain side. There are rubber trees and cedar trees and mahogany trees +and prickly poisoned trees that are the terror of the natives, and trees bearing all manner of +jungle fruits and flowers and swarming with chattering birds and creeping things. Rattan "ropes" an +inch in diameter and two hundred feet long trip the unwary traveler, and it is useless to try to +break them. They are like steel cables. Wild birds are plentiful, occasional baboons bark and bray, +and the mountain streams splash and plunge their way through the ferns and flowers. The Estrella +River forms the highway for several miles, and its rocky torrent must be forded a score of +times.</p> + +<p>He who has never tried to travel this "road" has a new experience in store. There are hillsides + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> + +that are all but perpendicular, which would not be so bad, but they are a mixture of clay and +soapstone and moisture, and it is practically impossible to stand erect without holding on to nearby +saplings. How a laden mule can navigate such a causeway of destruction is a mystery to be explained +only by people who understand mules. And I rode a mule whose mastery of the art of trail-navigation +left nothing to be learned. In the ignorance of my novitiate I alighted before the first precipitous +descent to which we came. The mule, with the conservatism born of experience, took his time to make +the descent, and I essayed to go before and show him how to do it. He watched me with intense +interest, while I gingerly approached the edge of the slippery declivity and started down. As a +descent it was a complete success. At the second step I slipped on the wet clay and went rolling and +coasting to the bottom, whither I arrived in record time, plastered from head to foot with the raw +material of which pottery is made. I struggled to my feet and looked up at the mule. He still +regarded me intently, and I think that he winked, at least his ear did. Then he deliberately put his +front feet over the edge, gathered in his hind feet, and with all fours together, sat down and +gracefully slid to the bottom of the hill. He arrived right side up at the bottom, munching a +mouthful of grass, which he seized in passing on + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> + +the way down, and turned to look at me with an expression that needed no interpreter. And I took the +hint and stayed on his back most of the day.</p> + +<p>After a solid day of this dense growth where we could not see more than a stone's throw at any +time it was with a distinct sense of relief that we caught sight of daylight at last through an +opening ahead and came upon the fringes of the Talamanca plantation.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 251px;"> +<img src="images/illus-071.jpg" width="251" height="600" alt="Proposed Location for Rest Cure" title="" /> +<span class="caption">PROPOSED LOCATION FOR REST CURE</span> +</div> + +<p>The Talamanca Valley is something quite worth while in itself. Years ago it was inhabited by +Spanish refugees who fled back from the bloody attacks of the ravenous Caribbean pirates of the +sixteenth century. Their little plantations were not large and the land was not cleared very +thoroughly, but they shifted their planting places until much of the present area was covered sooner +or later with platanas. The view of this valley from the hillside is surpassingly beautiful. Thirty +miles long, ten miles + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> + +wide, and surrounded by mountains and forests, the whole floor of the valley is one vast, waving, +level field of bananas, and there are few things better to look upon than a valley level full of +banana tops. From twenty to forty feet high they stand, and their long, shady corridors are like the +aisles of some great series of cathedral chapels, waiting for worshipers within. Through the middle +of the valley runs the stream of the upper Sexola River with its three tributaries and their bluffs. +The Changuanola Railway, which is the name under which the United Fruit Company moved its bananas +and its men in this great plantation, runs the length of the valley, and the line of rails is +punctuated by the white cabins of the black employees and the houses and offices of the plantation +superintendents and foremen.</p> + +<p>Dominating the whole valley stands old Pico Blanco, or White Top. There is no snow at the summit, +but there is nearly always a white cloud cap there, hence the name. This noble mountain is the +interest and admiration of all dwellers in the valley. Its top lists eleven thousand feet above the +sea. It is not as high as Pike's Peak nor Shasta, but it towers well up toward the level of +Fujiyama, and beside it Mount Washington looks like a pigmy and the Adirondacks are mere foothills. +Back in the cañons and forests of the mountain range live the curious Talamanca Indians, whose +tribal customs indicate a close affinity + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> + +between their ancestors and those of the famous Indians of Quirigua.</p> + +<p>The difference between the jungle and the dividend-paying plantation is one of organization, +capital, administration, and toil. Add these to the jungle and you have the plantation. Take them +away from the plantation and in a very short time the jungle is again supreme. Crowding around the +corners, peeping over the edges, and creeping ever onward, the jungle pushes its jealous way behind +the footprints of the men who essay to conquer its wild ways. But once defeated, the jungle becomes +a slave bearing costly burdens for its master—man.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2> + +<h3>LIFE AT THE BOTTOM</h3> + +<p>"Forty years ago I took a bath, and the next day I felt chilly, and then—"</p> + +<p>"Never mind forty years ago. What is the matter this morning, and why have you come to me for +medicine?" chants the seasoned employer of plantation labor.</p> + +<p>"That is what I was telling you, señor. Forty years ago I took a bath, and the next day I +felt chilly, and then I thought that I had made a mistake, and so I went—"</p> + +<p>"Now, see here. I have no interest nor curiosity about forty years ago. What is the matter with +you now?"</p> + +<p>"Be patient, señor. This is important, and I will tell you all. Forty years ago—" +and after devious dodgings the tale terminates in a case of fever or indigestion, or mayhap only +plain drunk.</p> + +<p>It is ever thus with the tropic tao, or peon, or ignorante, or whatever may be called the people +who have grown up with the soil and have risen not any above it. The petty official who hears +complaints in any tropic land listens to marvelous reminiscences through deep jungles of imaginative +memory before reaching present facts.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Twenty-five years ago I had the toothache, and then the next week I had a bad dream, and after +that I had no suerte [luck] at all, until one saint's day I drank rum and ate rice, and the rice +make me sick—" is merely the opening chapter.</p> + +<p>Every employer of tropic labor must be judge and jury for a docket of petty cases that have to be +adjusted if the wheels of industry are not to be paralyzed in their work. Newcomers at this business +of sitting in the seat of judgment hear marvelous stories of oppression and outrage, in which the +accuser is always innocent—and always alone, if possible. But experience breeds +disillusionment and skepticism deep and wide, and soon the amateur Solomon learns to distrust every +story, most of all the first one told. For, after the plaintiff has sworn that he is telling the +truth, or may all the saints strike him dead, and has unrolled his woes in orderly sequence, he +stands with critical eye, watching to see what impression his art has made upon the puzzled +personage of power.</p> + +<p>And when the adjuster of affairs scorns the tale and says, "Get out with you. I don't believe a +word of that stuff," the beggar bows and smiles a deprecating smile and begins all over again with a +revised version of the case, which bears very little resemblance to the first story, and again +stands back to observe what better success + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> + +he may hope for this time. And there appears to be no end to the ready versions and variations of +the woes of the downtrodden exponent of virtue whose humble bearing seems to exude virtue from every +protruding bare spot through his rags.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 216px;"> +<img src="images/illus-076.jpg" width="216" height="600" alt="Picturesque Jungle Towns" title="" /> +<span class="caption">PICTURESQUE JUNGLE TOWNS</span> +</div> + +<p>"Last Wednesday morning, I got up, and—would you believe it?—there was nothing in the +house. There was no yucca [counting off on his fingers], no plantanas, no huevos, no carne, no mais, +no azucar, no arroz—absolutamente nada. Yes, it was last Wednesday—no, no, señor, +I am a liar—it was last Tuesday morning. And, señor, my children were hungry, and I +remembered that there was nothing—" and so on the story goes to its climax in the claim that a +certain party, not present, owes the complainer fifty cents for real or imaginary value bestowed, +and will the owner please collect the fifty cents for the starving children?</p> + +<p>And if this tale is unsatisfactory, comes immediately + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> + +a fresh version to the effect that it is another man who owes a dollar because he tramped across +some young corn and spoiled the crop.</p> + +<p>It is this fertility of imagination that makes up for any sort of accurate information. To the +American the amazing thing about these people is that they know so little about their own very +interesting country. The American must know in order to boom his town, but the tropic native has no +idea of booming his town. There is no fun in booming, there is nothing to boom, and a boomed town +would be always stirring about or starting something, and would be a nuisance anyway.</p> + +<p>I stood in a village, quaint and curious, and wondered how old it might be. The bells hanging to +a cross beam in front of the old church bore figures on their rims—1722, they said; and they +looked it, every inch—or year.</p> + +<p>Came the young curate of the parish, a good-looking and intelligent native, who talked a little +with us pleasantly, and lured us into the old church, where he immediately improved the occasion by +getting the collection basket and holding it under our noses. "It is a special saint's day," he +explained.</p> + +<p>"How many people live here?"</p> + +<p>He could not tell.</p> + +<p>"How old is the church?" we wanted to + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> + +know, thinking to get a morsel of information for our crumb of contribution.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 182px;"> +<img src="images/illus-078.jpg" width="182" height="600" alt="Tortillas Are Staple" title="" /> +<span class="caption">TORTILLAS ARE STAPLE</span> +</div> + +<p>He did not know. The question was entirely new to him. He had been born in the town, and later +showed us with pride the house in which himself, his mother, and his grandmother had been born, but +as to the number of inhabitants or the age of the church it had never occurred to him to +inquire.</p> + +<p>But presently inspiration came to his aid. There was an ancient woman still living at more than a +hundred years; surely she would know the answer to some of these curious questions.</p> + +<p>We called on the old woman. She was nothing but bones and parchment, sitting with her chin on her +knees on a small platform of slats which she had not left for over two years. She claimed one +hundred and two years, which was undoubtedly correct, as baptismal records are usually accurately +kept. She certainly looked the part. The studiante + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> + +sat down on the "bed," placed his hand kindly on the old woman's shoulder, and told her that though +she was blind there were three strangers who had come to see her and congratulate her on her great +age. She was pleased and said so, but her mind was as feeble as her body, and there was little that +she could say. When asked as to the date of the "blessing" of the church, she said, "O yes, +certainly I can name it—it was on Saint John's day."</p> + +<p>"That's fine," enthused the curate. "Now, what year was it, grandma?"</p> + +<p>"Ah, that is another matter. I can't tell you now, but if you will come to-morrow, I may be able +to remember it then."</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 268px;"> +<img src="images/illus-079.jpg" width="268" height="600" alt="Jungle Folk" title="" /> +<span class="caption">JUNGLE FOLK</span> +</div> + +<p>We left the next morning, of course, without the date of the dedication day, but what information +was lacking on this point was amply made up in information concerning the population. We asked seven +people the question and received seven different answers, ranging from three hundred to five +thousand. We counted a hundred odd houses, indicating six or seven hundred people, + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> + +but no one there had any idea or any interest in the matter. What difference did it make anyway?</p> + +<p>The town of Nata, eighty miles west of Panama, was founded in 1520, one year after the founding +of Old Panama, and one hundred years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. Old Panama has +been a ruin for two and one half centuries, leaving Nata as the oldest inhabited town in the New +World—no small distinction.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 348px;"> +<img src="images/illus-080.jpg" width="348" height="550" alt="THE COTTER'S SATURDAY NIGHT" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"THE COTTER'S SATURDAY NIGHT"</span> +</div> + +<p>I asked the leading official if he knew how old the town was, and he said that he understood that +it was "very old." When I suggested that it was the oldest town in America he nodded politely and +talked of something else. I called on the priest, an intelligent and friendly man, who also +understood that the town "was very old," but its priority of claim to the oldest living municipal +inhabitant of the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> + +Americas had little interest for him. He talked on, complaining bitterly of the bad morals of the +people and the small financial proceeds which the parish yielded its spiritual leader.</p> + +<p>It is easy to disparage any people, especially if they speak a different language from your own. +Most of the things said against the illiterate natives of any country are true, but the trouble is +that they are only a small fraction of the truth.</p> + +<p>A large employer of native labor, who took pride in treating his men well and paying them +promptly, complained to me that he never could keep steady labor on his place for the reason that +the men earned enough in one week to keep them drunk for the next fortnight, and hence worked only +one week out of three, leaving their families to starve or shift for themselves as best they might. +And he told the truth.</p> + +<p>But he did not tell it all. This same employer distilled the rum on his own place and regarded it +as a paying business. When other employers raised the price for labor and produce he refused to do +so on the ground that the more they had the worse off they were. On the surface it might seem to be +true.</p> + +<p>But these same laborers, even saving all possible margin of wages, could not have lived in +anything like comfort on sixty-five cents per day. Most of them never see a newspaper, and + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> + +could scarcely read, and not at all understand it if they did see it. There is not an item of news, +a trace of historical knowledge or perspective, a gleam of scientific understanding, a moving +picture show, or a lecture on any subject, or a musical program, nor any one of the thousand things +that add interest and widen the horizon of life—none of these things ever enter the remotest +areas of his consciousness. He lives in the flat, narrow confines of a life so small, so cramped, so +possessed by superstition and terror and ill will that he is not many removes from the cattle with +which he works. When this man would celebrate his saint's day he gets drunk, organizes a bull fight, +and gives vent to every low impulse of his nature.</p> + +<p>Is it any wonder? The only tingle of interest that touches his soul comes from adventures in the +realm of unfaithfulness and drunkenness. How many of the rest of us would do any better if born and +bred in the mire of his social inheritance?</p> + +<p>There is such a thing as moral hookworm. Saint Paul called it by another term, but its symptoms +are unchanged. The unshod soul, shuffling through the mire of degradation, acquires from the lower +stratum of his environment the infection of a spiritual destitution that lowers moral vitality to +the minimum.</p> + +<p>How comes this benumbed conscience and depraved practice! What is the matter that the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> + +average of legitimacy for all Central America is thirty per cent of the total population, while the +seventy per cent are born of unmarried parents?</p> + +<p>It is not for lack of churches. Every town has its church, and the church is invariably the best +building in the town. It stands on the plaza, commanding, central, and usually more or less +beautiful. One can scarcely get out of sight of a church tower in any thickly settled, level +country. And the churches are large enough to contain almost the whole population of the town, at +least by taking them in several installments at mass hours.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 204px;"> +<img src="images/illus-083.jpg" width="204" height="600" alt="Church Bells of Arraijan, Cast 1722" title="" /> +<span class="caption">CHURCH BELLS OF ARRAIJAN, CAST 1722</span> +</div> + +<p>It is not for want of priests. There are priests in every town, and most of them carry out pretty +faithfully the routine of ecclesiastical observances that make up the day's program. Black gowns, +tonsured heads, and beads and rosaries are seen everywhere, and the padre is usually the most +influential man in the town.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is not for want of religion. Every house of any pretensions has its holy pictures, often its +crucifix, and usually its rosary. Women in numbers attend mass and go to confession.</p> + +<p>It is not for want of opportunity on the part of priests or church. It is not because of "church +competition." Here we have a unity complete and final.</p> + +<p>For three hundred and ninety-eight years the priests and their church have had sole, exclusive, +and continuous occupation of Nata, the oldest town in America. I was probably the first Protestant +missionary who ever walked the streets of the place. Here in the oldest town, with the longest +occupation and the undisturbed opportunity, should be found a fair chance with these people.</p> + +<p>And what has it done? The open-minded and friendly priest complained bitterly of the fact that in +his parish only five per cent of his people were born of married parents. Ninety-five per cent were +registered on his books as "Naturales." The year before he had administered over three hundred +baptisms and had celebrated only three marriages. "I can't get them to marry," he groaned. +"Practically speaking, almost no one is married."</p> + +<p>Is Nata worse than other towns? Possibly so, but it must be remembered that the "church" has had +a longer chance there than in any other city + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> + +in all America, and perhaps when the other towns have been exposed for the same length of time to +the system, they will show equally advanced results!</p> + +<p>There is this thing to be said about the characteristic attitude of the average priest toward his +people: he always despises them. In many lands I have found this to be true. Discouraged by the +failure of his system to produce spiritual life, or even good morals, he complains bitterly that the +people are indifferent, careless, negligent, immoral, unfaithful, and, not least of vices, they are +poor pay. If they are these things, no one knows it better than the man who hears their secret +confessions. And that this man should come to a chronic attitude of distrust toward the products of +his own spiritual husbandry is one of the severest indictments against the system that produces +indifference on the part of the people and cynicism in the heart of the priest.</p> + +<p>What was the church doing to remedy this situation with its deadly monotony, its superstition, +ignorance, and immorality?</p> + +<p>The church was maintaining its round of formulas, saints' days, masses, confessions, baptisms, +funerals for-what-the-traffic-would-bear. Showy processions and occasional celebrations were the +circus and movie for the people. And on the confession of the troubled priest himself, there was no +moral result. Out of the dead past stood a + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> + +mummied memory of the once living church, and its mumbled incantations had no power to make the dry +bones live.</p> + +<p>The only power that seems able to stir new life in the old mausoleum is the advent of a vigorous +Protestant work. In rage and bitterness the powers bestir themselves and begin to defame and +persecute their disturbers, and in the end, they inevitably give some attention to reviving their +own decaying program.</p> + +<p>How can a man be well when he is one hundred dollars away from a doctor? With four doctors +located among two hundred thousand people scattered over a radius of forty by a hundred miles, and +all fees exorbitantly high, what is a poor man to do when illness overtakes his household? What is +he to do? Why, nothing at all, except await the end, either of his illness or of both infirmity and +himself. What the missionary needs is no less Bibles than castor oil and quinine and iodine. I think +that I would begin with a moving-picture program and a clinic, and when a little physical health +appeared, and some sort of interest began to loosen the rusty hinges before what occupies the mental +space, I would begin to talk of something to make life worth living. It was the way of the Master to +heal and teach and arouse, and the whole program of missionary work might be founded on "I am come +that they might have life, and that they might have it more + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> + +abundantly." That is the key to the process. These people are not bad; they are crippled. They are +not vicious; they are lifeless. They are not rebels: they are very much untaught, backward +children.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-087.jpg" width="500" height="344" alt="First-Grade Room, Panama" title="" /> +<span class="caption">FIRST-GRADE ROOM, PANAMA</span> +</div> + +<p>The system of public schools is growing apace, but it has a tremendous task, small support from +the parents, and often open opposition from the priests. In one town a citizen remarked that on +examination day at the close of the term not a single pupil came to school, but that it made no +difference, as they were all promoted and would live just as long whether they were promoted or not. +(How I would have enjoyed that, as a + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span> + +boy!) In another town the supervisor had criticized unfavorably the people for certain careless +habits, whereupon the teachers took offense, all resigned and closed the schools. The secretary of +education siding with the supervisor, all schools remained closed, and the children were happy.</p> + +<p>There is one safety valve left for people in such lives, and that is the world-old prerogative of +talk. In the long evenings, by the roadsides, on the street corners, over the balconies flows an +endless stream of talk. Prattle and chatter and gossip and slander flow on and make up the only +scenarios the people know. Most of it is harmless. Some of it is aimless, and all of it is fruitless +of anything except to save the mind from utter blankness.</p> + +<p>They were chattering away in the evening, three or four women seeming unconscious of me, a +traveler stopping for the night. One subject held undivided attention for much time—What shall +we cook for breakfast? And from that it was but a step to that eternal solace of feminine +conversation—the shortcomings of men in general and husbands in particular. One of the +animated declaimers arose, struck a dramatic attitude, and said, "To expect that any man should be +of any use about the house is impossible," and the eloquent shrug of her shoulders underscored the +remark. In vain I broke in and protested that in the United States it often happened that + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> + +the men were successfully commandeered and detailed to the work of kitchen police, but the only +reply was an arched eyebrow and another shrug. "Tell that to the marines," was what she meant.</p> + +<p>There are two measures of quantity. Either it is "No hay sufficiente" ("There are not enough") or +"Hay bastante, bastante" ("Plenty, plenty"). The population of the next town is one or the other of +these measures. The distance to the river, the crops, the number of children in the family, the tale +of the years that is told—it is all one thing or the other. And the standard, in contrast with +the artificial measures of a high civilization, is at least true to life. Either there is enough or +there is not enough—that is about as close a distinction as the day's experience affords. For +that matter, all the rest of us are on one side or the other of the same cleaving line of +necessity.</p> + +<p>That everybody should blame everybody else for whatever may happen to be the matter is the most +natural thing in the world. Whom shall we blame if not some one else?</p> + +<p>It is the fault of the officials that the country is poor. It is the fault of the large landowner +that there is no development. It is the fault of the municipalities that the towns are not better +kept, it is because of the officials that justice is not better administered. It is the fault of the +Canal Zone that the good days are gone forever, + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> + +and it is the fault of the American government that there are certain restrictions on native +tendencies to move forward by the backward jerks of revolution. A Costa Rican once said to me, "This +war in Europe amounts to nothing; but if we could get up a good old-fashioned revolution, I would be +on the job to-morrow."</p> + +<p>The virtues of these people are a surprising list, considering their scant opportunities. They +are kindly in dealing with foreigners who show themselves friendly. They do not as a rule abuse +their children, which the West Indian is apt to do if he is of the baser sort. The native is +hospitable and courteous and always willing to oblige, provided he knows what to say or do. To be +sure, the inventory of his information is disappointing, even concerning such subjects as the +distance to the next town and the market value of rice, but he will tell all he knows and share what +rice he has. Traveling through the country alone, I have been shown every kindness and entertained +with the best that was to be had, and often sent on my way without being allowed to pay for what I +had received. "Do you think I would take money from a guest?" protested a hospitable host with whom +I had spent the night and who had fed my horses, the guide, and myself, and had entertained us all +evening with discussion of many matters.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2> + +<h3>THE INTERIOR</h3> + +<p>We had reached the town of Anton the day before, and I had sent the guide back with the horses +and purposed to make my way alone. The morning was fresh and balmy, as befitted the dry season, even +if a night spent on an antiquated cot in a room next to that occupied by a man with a racking cough +and a rooster with a clarion voice, were not a perfect repose. The <em>rapport</em> between the fowl +and the afflicted was complete: when one of them broke the silence, the other immediately took up +the refrain. At breakfast I suggested to the good wife of the host that I had heard that if a board +were placed above a rooster's head so that he could not stretch upward, he would not crow. She was +all solicitude at once at the suggestion that the noisy cock had disturbed my slumbers, and I had to +protest my indifference to such serenades.</p> + +<p>Down the street I found a little store where the owner had a horse or two to hire upon occasion. +Thirty minutes of bicker and I was astride a wiry little native pony to which a bridle was unknown, +and out through the stately palms and luxurious bananas I made my way to the open + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> + +country eastward. The river was thronged with horses led to water, and women busy with their +domestic laundry. It was quaint and picturesque. In some such manner might the ancient Egyptians +have gone about their morning tasks. I have seen exactly the same procedure in the Philippines and +by the rivers of southern China.</p> + +<p>A mile or two from the town the trail mounted a rolling hillock and I pinched myself to remember +that I was not in New Mexico. Straight ahead rolled the almost level llanos for miles until they +were lost in the hills by Chame, and the purples and pinks of the six-thousand-feet summits were +like a frame for a picture whose southern limits were in the glint of the blue summer sea. It was a +picture and a promise. For two hours the nervous little pony followed the trail across the smooth +plains and frequent streams. If ever a land was spread out as a challenge to the plow and seeder, +here it was.</p> + +<p>I sought a colonization site, where I had heard of a dozen plucky Americans who were undertaking +a plantation on cooperative lines. At last I found it in the midst of as fine a tract of land as +lies beneath the tropic skies. An old-fashioned farm dinner made life worth living after native +"chow" for days. Modern tractors, plows, a ton of cotton seed, and other signs of enterprise did +much to make the place seem like somewhere in the great Southwest. But the enterprising + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> + +Americans were harboring no delusions regarding the nature of their undertaking. They meant business +and had counted the cost.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<img src="images/illus-093.jpg" width="600" height="224" alt="The Beautiful Savanas of Costa Rica" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE BEAUTIFUL SAVANAS OF COSTA RICA</span> +</div> + +<p>An American on the Canal Zone invested his savings in land in the interior, and during the +vacation built a good wire fence. On his second visit the fence was totally destroyed by ax, fire, +and wire-cutters. The owner appealed to the local alcalde, a brother of the provincial governor. He +demanded redress for his wrongs. The judge heard his story, and then, striking a dramatic attitude, +smote his breast, and exclaimed, "If these my friends had not done this thing, I should have done it +myself." Which was to say, no foreigners need apply in those parts. It is probable that this outrage +could not occur under present conditions.</p> + +<p>"The Panama politician thinks that all the republic begins in Las Bovedas and ends in Las +Semanas," remarked a plantation owner of the interior country.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span></p> + +<p>Whether this is true or not, few people realize or know anything of the splendid country that +lies back of the Canal Zone and out of reach of the flitting traveler. To the average Canal Zone +employee all Panama begins at dock seven and ends in the Administration Building. And for the +tourist who comes to do the Canal in a day, of course, everything begins with the Washington Hotel +and ends with the Tivoli.</p> + +<p>But Panama is something vastly more significant than a couple of slow-service, high-priced +hotels. The Isthmian Republic is an empire in possibilities, entirely apart from the Canal Zone, +though the development of the latent riches of the country is most vitally related to the Canal +enterprise. And the rich belt of land that binds together two continents is something very much +larger than the interesting little city that bears the name of Panama.</p> + +<p>Back of the ten-mile strip controlled by the United States stretches a land abounding in natural +resources which make it potentially a factor of agricultural and economic importance. To the +uninformed citizen of the United States and other countries the Republic of Panama is a mere +shoestring tying together the two continents, lest the pair become separated and one of them lost. +We look at the Isthmus in contrast with the two vast continents that lie to the northwest and +southeast, and the connecting + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> + +link appears small. Panama suffers from comparison with its big neighbors.</p> + +<p>Compared with well-known and important insular holdings in the Caribbean group, Panama assumes +entirely different proportions. Panama is two thirds as large as Cuba and has one third of Cuba's +population. Panama is about the size of Portugal, is four times as large as Salvador, seven and one +half times as large as Jamaica, and nine times the size of Porto Rico. Panama is as large as all New +England except Maine, and nearly equals the combined area of New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and +West Virginia.</p> + +<p>There are interior areas of well-watered, rich soil that equal whole States in size and yet are +entirely unknown to many residents of the Canal Zone. The Chiriqui Province has a coast line of one +hundred and thirty-three miles and contains as much land as Delaware, Rhode Island, and Long Island +combined. The rich agricultural region in the provinces of Coclé, Veraguas, Los Santos, and +Herrera is as large as the State of Connecticut. The region east of Panama City reaching out to +Chepo is as large as Rhode Island, and in the Darien country is an area almost unknown, but +abounding in rich resources which would cover the map of New Jersey with a good margin.</p> + +<p>It is supposed that no one lives in this large territory except the Americans on the Canal + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> + +Zone and inhabitants of the two cities of Panama and Colon. This is also indicative of ignorance. +The Republic of Panama has two thirds as many people as Paraguay or Jamaica, and, as previously +stated, one third as many as Cuba, as many as Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho combined, or is about +equal to Utah, Nevada, and Arizona put together.</p> + +<p>On the basis of resources and soil and climate and accessibility to market, Panama can support a +population many times her present numbers. Her capacity for supporting population from her own +products is larger than that of most of the States of the Union, acre for acre. Panama's resources +are as good as those of Jamaica or Porto Rico or Cuba. On the basis of Jamaican population there +should be six and one half million people in Panama, and if the number of people per square mile +were equal to that of precipitous Porto Rico, we would have a population in Panama of ten and one +half million, which is more than live west of a north and south line drawn through Denver, +Colorado.</p> + +<p>That no such population lives to-day in Panama is due to political causes more than any other +factor. The population of Porto Rico has nearly doubled since American occupation exchanged the old +regime for the new. The barren deserts of the great Southwest are becoming fertile and populous +regions because the people + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span> + +who are possessing the land have a fair chance, and know that they will be assured a market for +their produce and security for their lives and property. Given political security, monetary +stability, market accessibility, and assurance of economic cooperation on the part of the +government, there are no immediate limits to the population that Panama may support in comfort.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-097.jpg" width="500" height="292" alt="Shipping Costa Rica Vegetables to Panama" title="" /> +<span class="caption">SHIPPING COSTA RICA VEGETABLES TO PANAMA</span> +</div> + +<p>Political stability for the government of Panama is assured by the relations which exist between +the United States and the Isthmian Republic, a condition which exists in no other Spanish-American +republic. The proximity of the Canal assures a world market. The climate and soil and water supply +nature has provided with lavish hand. Sanitation and hygiene have become exact sciences, and the +matter of retaining + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span> + +good health in the tropics is no longer a problem. There is still good land to be had on favorable +terms, but the supply will soon be controlled by monopolists who are seizing the present opportunity +to load up their future bank accounts, while war conditions produce a general depression of the +world's development forces.</p> + +<p>The present interior population includes three distinct classes of people. The original Indian +stock still exists, pure and often wild, in the high mountains and remote regions of the country. +These Indians are beginning to emerge from their fastnesses and get acquainted with their neighbors, +now that they are sure of police protection when they come out. But their number is small and they +are a negligible factor in the totals.</p> + +<p>The West Indians are an importation, and while they are easily adapted to the climate and form +the staple of labor supply for the Canal, they are not the Panamanians and never will be except as +they mix with the native stock and shade off the colors that exist in such confusion. The Negroes +and Panamanians are much more distinct in the interior than about the Zone with its terminal cities, +where the remnants of humanity have been stirred together for four hundred years. West Indian +populations exist in predominance only on the plantations of the United Fruit Company, where they +supply the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> + +labor for the operation of these vast enterprises.</p> + +<p>The Panamanian is the predominant man in the interior country. He is not black, nor is he +entirely white, but he has straight hair and features that indicate that he is a descendant of the +original Indian stock, mixed with the Spanish conquerors who overran the country in the sixteenth +and seventeenth centuries.</p> + +<p>Probably the Panamanian has had less opportunity for advancement than the people of any other +country in America. He has had no chance for national life or political self-expression. He has been +the victim of the most vigorous and long-continued era of piracy and plunder that the New World has +experienced. He has suffered from bad leadership when he has had any leadership at all. He has been +exploited by everybody who came to the Isthmus. From the days of Morgan down to the formation of the +present Republic, under American protection and guarantee of peace within and without, this native +has been the outcast of the world and the national goat of the American flock of nations. He has +been kept in ignorance and superstition by the exclusive control of a system of religious oppression +and subjection, and if by chance he happened to acquire anything worth getting, somebody was always +ready to take it away from him.</p> + +<p>This native supplies the labor for such enterprises + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> + +as have been launched in the fertile western regions of Panama. With anything like good treatment he +gives a return for his wages, and if he has a chance to acquire sound health, an intelligent outlook +on life, and a share in the results of his labors, he can be made over into a good citizen. He is +not a bad citizen now, but he is very much undeveloped.</p> + +<p>The products of this great interior region are many and their proceeds in the world's markets are +profitable. Present prices make large opportunities for investment, and a reorganization of +marketing facilities will mark the beginning of an era of prosperity for Panama. The list of +products now being raised in and exported from Panama is a surprisingly long one, and the total of +returns from these commodities would give a western real estate promoter material for many +prospectuses and promises.</p> + +<p>The chief products of the country at present are bananas, lumber, rice, sugar, cacao, meat, +citrus fruits, corn, coffee, and coconuts. But there are a hundred other products, many of which +indicate large returns if produced and marketed on a commercial scale. Rubber, ivory, nuts, hides, +beans, pineapples, potatoes, yams, yucca, cotton, tobacco, plantain, a long list of fruits and +vegetables of high value, and a number of minerals are but a few of the useful commodities now being +supplied to the markets of the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> + +Canal Zone and the world from the interior country of Panama. Nearly every vegetable that grows in +the temperate climate does well in Panama. Some of the native fruits, such as papayas, mangoes, and +alligator pears, are of delicious flavor and high value. The waters of Panama abound in vast +quantities of fish, and there is supply for a number of fish canneries. Live stock thrives and is +produced in considerable numbers in the provinces of Coclé and Chiriqui. The Canal Zone is +now being used as a farming enterprise and stock grazing range by the administration of the Zone +with the intention of making the Zone area self-supporting in meat and fruit and vegetables.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 282px;"> +<img src="images/illus-101.jpg" width="282" height="600" alt="Good Pineapples Grow Here" title="" /> +<span class="caption">GOOD PINEAPPLES GROW HERE</span> +</div> + +<p>With an average import trade of ten millions and an export of more than half that amount, Panama +is even to-day a factor in the world's markets. It must be said that the largest item on the import +list is that of goods shipped to the Zone, and that the chief export is bananas shipped from +Almirante, but these items indicate large possibilities in further developments of territories as +yet untouched.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p> + +<p>The interior of Panama includes three general types of country, very different in climate and +produce. The high mountains are a large area of country, much of which is fertile soil clear to the +peaks, and all of which on the northern slopes is covered with jungle and forest. These wooded +slopes are wet with abundant rainfall, and luxuriant foliage of tropical forms bewilders the +traveler with illusions of fantastic creations of nature run mad over the earth. These mountainous +parts are for the most part uninhabited, except by the more or less wild Indians, who live apart +much as they were living four hundred years ago. No white men have tried to maintain themselves in +these regions, and in some districts it is said that a white man's life is unsafe overnight. +Tropical beasts and reptiles and birds abound among the weird forms of vegetation that seem to be +perpetrating grotesque jokes on the bewildered visitor to the regions beyond the realm of civilized +habitations. There are as yet no efforts made to establish towns or plantations in this country. Yet +if cleared and cultivated, these regions are capable of supporting a population as dense as that of +Porto Rico, where the steep hills and rocky peaks are covered with a population of over three +hundred per square mile.</p> + +<p>The jungle lands of Panama are elsewhere described, and where there is a jungle there are always +rich land and abundant water, sometimes + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> + +too much water and need of drainage. The Canal Zone is mainly jungle land, and where it has been +cleared for cultivation excellent results are attained. The cost of clearing this jungle is not so +great as would appear from the fact that for bananas and many other forms of crop the trees and +brush are cut down and after a time burned, and no further effort is made to clear the land except +about four cleanings per year with a machette. Anything like plowing is un-thought of for bananas +and some other leading crops. Even sugar is often planted and left to shift for itself, under native +methods, which are subject, of course, to improvement.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 348px;"> +<img src="images/illus-103.jpg" width="348" height="550" alt="Dead Timber in Gatun Lake Now Covered With Orchids" title="" /> +<span class="caption">DEAD TIMBER IN GATUN LAKE NOW COVERED WITH ORCHIDS</span> +</div> + +<p>The third class of land in Panama is the level or rolling prairie land known as savanas or +llanos. These lands lie for the most part in the valleys back of Bocas del Toro and along the +southern, or Pacific, coast of the country. From Chame to Cape Mala a belt of level country sweeps +around + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> + +the Parita Bay. From ten to forty miles back of the coast rise the high mountains, and this fertile +strip of country averages about thirty miles in width and is over a hundred miles long. Rolling +country extends on west of this plain, but the plain itself contains enough good farming land to +feed several millions of people. It is watered and drained by frequent rivers which cut across from +the mountains to the sea every three or four miles and furnish every facility for cultivation. Most +of this level country is first-grade soil and is adapted to the growing of almost any of the +products of this tropical land. The general appearance of this open country suggests New Mexico or +Southern California much more than any land below the tropic of Cancer. Its numerous towns and +occasional good roads suggest a newly opened territory in the west, where there are abundant +opportunities for growing up with the country. The newcomer is apt to be deceived into thinking that +all things are now ready and all he has to do is to move in.</p> + +<p>In the extreme western part of Panama lies the great Chiriqui Province with its best-developed +region in the entire Republic. Here are great cattle ranches, sugar fields, rice plantings, cotton +farms, cornfields, and here are American companies working to develop modern civilized conditions. +Here is the Chiriqui Railroad between Pedrogal and Boquette, with a branch running + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> + +westward. More interest has centered in this region than in any other part of Panama, and if the +proposed railroad from Panama to David is ever built, the whole southern slope of western Panama +will suddenly appear on the map of the world's granaries.</p> + +<p>Road-building presents no unusual difficulties in this region such as confronted the Americans in +the Philippines when they built the Benguet road up from Dagupan. Rainfall is high, but the country +is comparatively level and well drained, and in many of these western provinces a graded dirt road +has kept in good condition for ten years without repairs. During the dry season it is now possible +to travel by coche over much of this country.</p> + +<p>The climate of this interior country is dryer and cooler than that of Panama, which lies in the +jungle area. In the dry season, which is also the windy season, and lasts in western Panama from +mid-December to late in April, health conditions are excellent, and with proper precautions they are +good all the year around. Needless to remark, the natives take no precautions whatever.</p> + +<p>Good drinking water can be secured by sinking properly located wells, and this water shows +freedom from minerals of a deleterious nature. There are seaports for coast vessels at almost every +river mouth, and roads lead back from these to the interior towns.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p> + +<p>There is a fascination about travel through these interiors. But the trip must be made during the +dry season. We left a large town one morning, paused on a hilltop to take a picture, which included +a troop of cavalry out on a practice march. It was late, and the three of us departed at good speed, +soon outdistancing the soldiers. Two days later a chance traveler informed us that the military men +were anxious to interview travelers who had broken the rules with a camera and then vanished from +sight. We passed the encampment on our way back, hung about town two hours, and proceeded. That +night a solitary mounted soldier paused by our camp and remarked, "I'll bet you are the fellows they +are hunting." We suggested that we were waiting to be found. Two weeks later, a secret service man +called and inquired as to our business on that trip. Which is to say that Panama's interior is a +roomy place in which a man might easily lose himself or find an empire. A good government, an +infusion of energy, and a supply of capital will make a rich land of nature's great virgin farm.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2> + +<h3>ECONOMIC WASTE</h3> + +<p>If it is true that South America is the victim of a bad start, it may also be said that Panama is +the net result of a continuous and consistent follow-up campaign of wholesale demoralization through +a long period of years.</p> + +<p>Beginnings are apt to be determinative, and when reenforced by continuous applications of similar +influences, are sure to set a stamp on a long period of civilization. Three centuries of rule or +misrule make a considerable impression on any people. There is something more than climate to be +taken into account in the search for causes of the present conditions in Panama.</p> + +<p>The entire colonial program of Spain differed radically from that of the English in Canada or the +United States in Hawaii or the Philippines. The leading motive of the conquistadores was the love of +gold. Plunder, rapine, and devastation followed in the trail of the adventurers who fought their way +across Panama and conquered Peru. Missionary zeal there was, but so mixed were the motives of these +early heralds of the cross that the occasional man of pure and peaceful methods was often supplanted +by the monk + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> + +who used all means that he might make "Christians" of men who had no alternative but to be baptized +or destroyed outright. "Better be dead than be damned," thought the energetic priests. Never was a +dastardly deed wrought by the conqueror but there was a priest at hand with heaven's blessing on the +crime. If this is doubted, read the unchallenged Prescott's Conquest of Peru.</p> + +<p>Spanish colonial policies had small regard for the rights or development of the conquered. It was +one of the viceroys of Mexico who said, "Let the people of these dominions learn, once for all, that +they were born to be silent and obey, and not to discuss nor have opinions in political +affairs."</p> + +<p>The native village of the far interior country, away from the main roads and untouched by +uplifting influences, exhibits the situation at its worst; but even so, these same villages exhibit +a better condition than do the wretched Indian huts of the high Andes farther south. The population +of these distant barrios on the Isthmus can hardly be classified on distinct lines; every symptom is +accounted for and every unfavorable trait explained by historical factors and social forces that +have combined to make remote Panama what it is to-day. There can be no radical change in these +conditions until some new program of social uplift, educational progress, and spiritual life is +introduced to cause a fresh reaction and begin a new life.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p> + +<p>The ignorant native hears an intolerable burden of superstition. His contact with the form of +church life that exists in these towns is mainly expressed in the celebration of occasional fiestas +and the payment of fees for services rendered, and supposed in some way to benefit the contributor +or his dead relatives. If "the test of a religion is its results upon a people," then the impartial +observer must draw his own conclusions.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-109.jpg" width="500" height="345" alt="Interior Meat Market" title="" /> +<span class="caption">INTERIOR MEAT MARKET</span> +</div> + +<p>That these interior towns are intensely conservative is to be expected. How could it be otherwise +than that the methods of the fathers should be good enough for the sons? If human progress is not +the result of dominant inner forces resident in human nature, but comes from the application of +external stimuli, then the Panamanian + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> + +may have some excuse for his situation, in a social history that has afforded little incentive for +exercise of enterprise or industry.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 223px;"> +<img src="images/illus-110.jpg" width="223" height="600" alt="The Flavor of Old Spain" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE FLAVOR OF OLD SPAIN</span> +</div> + +<p>If the far interior of Panama is to be judged by present industrial efficiency, the case is lost +before the trial begins. General absence of everything that marks a high grade of living emphasizes +the failure of the status quo. Incompetence, bad management, childishness cry aloud from rotting +buildings, rusting machinery, neglected plantings, impassable "roads," and impossible officials. +Streets knee-deep in mire, mud-floored houses, through which pigs wander at will, shiftlessness, +dirt, insanitation are the register of the wet season in interior Panama. The outstanding church +building is often itself dirty and disheveled. Sidewalks exist only as balconies for individual +houses, and vary in height at the caprice of the builder, making the middle of the street the only +convenient highway for the passers-by.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p> + +<p>The bulk of this out-of-the way business is handled by the ever-present Chino with his little +tienda. If there is no Chinese store in the town, it is because the town is too poor to support one. +Business involves effort and industry, both distasteful to the native, but breath-of-life to the +Chinese.</p> + +<p>Inspection of some native towns creates the impression that everybody just sits around all day. +Along the streets the people lounge the idle hours away. Hundreds of young men lie about, rocking in +chairs, lying in hammocks, hanging about corners. Women slowly move about their household duties, +but the men are experts at the rest cure, and scarcely move at all. Once a young man gets a pair of +shoes and a necktie, his industrial career abruptly terminates, and thenceforth he toils not, +neither does he spin. He has arrived and is content.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 267px;"> +<img src="images/illus-111.jpg" width="267" height="600" alt="Taking the Rest Cure" title="" /> +<span class="caption">TAKING THE REST CURE</span> +</div> + +<p>Lack of energy brings inevitable localization of all interest and action. Most of the people have +never been any distance from home and have no desire to travel. Travel means exertion of + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> + +some kind. I asked a guide to go one day further than the first-day trip for which I had hired him, +and he returned an embarrassed and deprecating smile, as if I had asked him to go to the French +front. It was too far from home.</p> + +<p>It is impossible to get information worth anything about the country. "How many people live in +this town?" brings one of two answers. Either it is, "I do not know," or it is "Bastante" +("Plenty"). "How far is it to Los Santos?" brings something like, "Señor, when the sun is +there [pointing] you set out on your journey, and when it is over there, you will arrive."</p> + +<p>We crossed a well-traveled road.</p> + +<p>"Where does this road lead?"</p> + +<p>"To the port, señor."</p> + +<p>"And where does the other end of it go?"</p> + +<p>"To San Pedro, señor."</p> + +<p>"How far is it to the port?"</p> + +<p>"The same distance as to San Pedro."</p> + +<p>"And how far is that?"</p> + +<p>"Bastante lejo, señor" ("Plenty far, sir").</p> + +<p>Cultivation of crops is unknown. When the brush and trees are cleared the stumps are left about +two feet high; it is easier to do the chopping at that point than lower down. After the fallen +growth has sufficiently dried out it is burned off and the stumpy field usually planted to corn. +This corn is allowed to shift for itself until ripe, and after the stalks have rotted awhile + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> + +the land may have an application of grass seed and be used for pasture, in hope that the stock will +wear down the stumps until it becomes at last possible to perform an athletic feat, called for want +of a more accurate term, "plowing." I saw four oxen all pulling in different directions, while a +plow occasionally disturbed the weedy surface of the ground and turned up irregular lumps of hard +soil. The proprietor looked on with pride and asked if I had ever plowed. I had. Did I plow like +that? I did not. When this plowing has been acted out, and some sort of clod-breaking has taken +place, sugar cane is planted, and the work of cultivation is ended. For a dozen years the cane will +produce annual crops of more or less value without any attention whatever other than the cutting of +the cane when ready for the mill.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<img src="images/illus-113.jpg" width="600" height="192" alt="The Oxen Stage of Agriculture" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE OXEN STAGE OF AGRICULTURE</span> +</div> + +<p>An interior road is an experience. A road is a route of travel along which various persons make +their way as best they are able, under such conditions of weather and impassability as happen to +exist. In the dry season some of these + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> + +tracks wear down to a condition in which a cart can be coaxed over the right-of-way. In wet weather +nearly all the native thoroughfares are wholly impassable except for sturdy oxen, which plow their +way through the mud and sinkholes with deliberation born of long practice.</p> + +<p>The man at the bottom of the scale is not to blame for his situation. He is the victim of a +system that has made it exceedingly unwise for him to do anything other than what he does.</p> + +<p>Poverty is the only protection of the people. For nearly two centuries pillage, plunder, piracy, +and murder were the record of the Isthmus. Every buccaneer who sailed the Spanish main seems to have +made a business of taking a chance at the Isthmus. It was open season for every kind of crook work +that the minds of men could invent. Most of this activity was confined to the trade route in the +middle of the Isthmus, but the influence and terror of this bloody age extended both ways as far as +the country was inhabited. The common people were exploited, plundered, murdered, enslaved, and +beaten at every turn.</p> + +<p>Only a fool would work when to work meant that his head was marked for immediate oppression. If +he forgot himself and got hold of anything of value, some one was ready to take it away from him +without delay; and if he objected, he lost both his property and his head.</p> + +<p>The social dregs that strayed to Panama or + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> + +stayed in Panama in those lurid days were men without character, conscience, or capacity for +industry, other than in their favorite occupation of despoiling some one else.</p> + +<p>These pirates and plunderers are gone, but they have left their tracks and traces in the +civilization of the Isthmus. The common people to-day are mild and submissive; no other type could +survive. It is possible to exist in dire poverty and pass the time without land or property, and +that is the only kind of existence that holds any promise of peace to the man at the bottom.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 357px;"> +<img src="images/illus-115.jpg" width="357" height="400" alt="Wayside Sellers of Fruit" title="" /> +<span class="caption">WAYSIDE SELLERS OF FRUIT</span> +</div> + +<p>There have been efforts on the part of the leaders of Isthmian life to inaugurate a new era and +bring about improvements. These efforts have been spasmodic and usually complicated by political +considerations. Large appropriations have been made for roads, public buildings, machinery, schools, +and mills, but while the money has been expended, it has gone like water in a sandy desert, and +graft and inefficiency have swallowed up the funds with little or no results.</p> + +<div class="imgright" style="width: 290px;"> +<img src="images/illus-116.jpg" width="290" height="500" alt="The House Beside the Road" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE HOUSE BESIDE THE ROAD</span> +</div> + +<p>It has been supposed that appropriations for bridges, public markets, or good roads would in + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> + +some way take the place of industry and thrift and bring good times. Half-finished markets rear +their ghastly skeletons in town centers. Rusting road-rollers stand idle, decaying machines lie +neglected, and half-finished public works are covered with cobwebs. Nobody notices, no one cares, +and nothing is done.</p> + +<p>A railroad was built with the evident idea that it would bring prosperity to a section of +naturally rich country, but a railroad without crops is useless, and crops without labor are +impossible, and labor without adequate returns is worth still less than it costs. The economic +structure rests on the man at the bottom, and when this human foundation is the prey and target of +every one above him the result can be nothing other than general distress and inefficiency.</p> + +<p>In some sections of the interior, as in the provinces of Coclè and Chitrè, meat +cattle of good quality are raised. Shipping facilities to the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> + +Panama market are very good. There is no regular inspection, but the cattle are uniformly healthy +and in good condition. The cattle-raising end of the trade is all right, but the market is a +different matter. The cattle buyers in Panama are organized into what is known as the meat trust, +and these buyers hold the sellers in subjection. Prices are kept down to the lowest possible basis, +and monopolistic methods so well known in North America are in full swing.</p> + +<p>Individual holders of interior ranchos have made earnest efforts to produce foodstuffs and +introduce definite reforms into the methods of farming, but such persons have usually served as +fearful examples to their neighbors. In an industrial system in which the one method of the man at +the top is to keep his eyes open and whenever he finds anyone who has by chance or industry +accumulated something, take it away from him—this does not stimulate long hours and +speeding-up on the part of the men who do the work.</p> + +<p>When the United States took over the Canal Zone and paid the purchase price to the new Republic +of Panama, a good appropriation was made to the interior provinces for the building of a system of +highways as the first step in a general improvement of the country. Most of the provinces have +little to show for this expenditure of money. In one province reports were received + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> + +that the money was being handed out in petty grafting operations and for political purposes and that +no road was being built to speak of. An American engineer was sent to investigate. He reported the +facts and was later put in charge of the "work." He reorganized the entire construction force, and +at the expense of less than twenty thousand dollars built a road which has stood without repairs for +a dozen years, and is in good condition to-day under heavy usage. But the reorganization pulled down +on the engineer's head the wrath of the entire officialism of the province, and finally the men +higher up in authority denounced the American for upsetting the smooth-working system at their +expense. He had committed the unpardonable error of using the money to get results and build the +road for which it was appropriated.</p> + +<p>This is interior Panama at its worst. There are Americans who have invested their money and their +personal supervision in the development enterprises in Chiriqui, and they are hopeful of better +things. There are officials who are genuinely anxious to see a better age begin. And the day will +come when this fair land will make men rich by the abundance of its products and the certainty of +large returns upon development work done under favorable conditions. But the conditions do not yet +exist in any stable form.</p> + +<p>All of this is Panama at its worst, and forms + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> + +but the background of contrast for the picture of the fine possibilities that lie in the soil, and +in the unreleased resources of a human stock that has never had a fair chance. Once separated from +hookworm and superstition, given an industrial education, and assured competent leadership and +certain returns for toil, and the lot of the Panamanian is no more incurable than that of any other +victims of a bad system.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2> + +<h3>PANAMA AND PROGRESS</h3> + +<p>The coat of arms of the Republic of Panama bears the inscription, "The repudiation of war and +homage to the arts which flourish in peace and labor." Under the existing treaty with the United +States the first part of this excellent motto is guaranteed. Panama is a providential Republic and +presents some of the finest possibilities of the American tropics. The educated Panamanians have not +been slow to proclaim these rich resources, but no large advance has been realized yet. The +government of Panama has been friendly to promotion plans and development projects, and has +undertaken some ambitious enterprises on its own initiative, but the results have been on the whole +disappointing.</p> + +<p>American business men who have lived in Panama feel that no permanent success can be assured to +such undertakings without the backing of the United States government. The officials of Panama +naturally do not look with enthusiasm upon this idea and prefer to keep development enterprises +within their own jurisdiction. And serious effort has certainly been made by the Panamanian +government to support some of the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> + +enterprises projected by native and foreign capitalists.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-121.jpg" width="500" height="240" alt="Wireless at Darien" title="" /> +<span class="caption">WIRELESS AT DARIEN</span> +</div> + +<p>The causes of economic backwardness and social conservatism are not difficult to locate and +describe. From the cruel savagery of Pizarro and Balboa to the model communities of the Canal Zone +is a far step. In the past seventy-five years the city of Panama has passed through a thousand years +of social evolution, and in five years after Panama became an independent and sovereign nation the +city was transformed, the government reorganized, and something like twentieth-century conditions +replaced the filth and disease and squalor of the old days.</p> + +<p>The prowler in social history will find plenty of material here. By all the precedents of +progress Panama should have been prosperous centuries ago. While other cities of coming metropolitan +centers were yet barren wastes and sleeping + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> + +wildernesses Panama was on the highway of the world. When New York and San Francisco and Chicago +were inhabited by birds and squirrels Panama was known everywhere. Panama had a century the start of +all North America and was the pawn of kings and the gateway of empire before the Pilgrims landed in +New England. If there be any advantage in an early start, Panama should have led us all in the race +for a commanding position in the New World.</p> + +<p>There is much in location. A single foot on Broadway is worth more than a farm in the desert. +Great cities have great positions on the map, and Panama began with a situation to which the world +simply had to come. A dozen different solutions of the transportation problem presented by the +Isthmian power and navigation were proposed, but it always came back to Panama. Here is the +narrowest part of the connecting link of the continents, and here is the lowest point in the +continental backbone. Without lifting her hand or voice, Panama had but to dream and wait till the +world should come and pour into her lap the commerce and progress of the modern age. To-day Panama +is on the direct line of travel between almost any two great cities at opposite ends of the earth. +Melbourne and London, New York and Buenos Ayres, Port au Spain and Honolulu—draw the lines, +and they all pass through Panama.</p> + +<p>It is an accepted axiom of unthinking people + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> + +that gold and prosperity are synonymous. If this were true, Panama should be the most prosperous and +progressive of all cities of the earth to-day. More gold has been carried through her streets, and +stored in her warehouses, and handled by her people, than in any other city of the Americas. The +Peru of the Conquest was lined and lacquered with gold. The palaces of the Incas and the Temples of +the Sun were plastered and burnished with gold; and for a century this gold was loaded into European +ships, taken to Panama and packed across the Isthmus and then reshipped to Europe to fill the +coffers of profligate kings and bolster up the fortunes of fallen states. All of it came through +Panama; and if much of it did not remain there, it was not due to conscientious scruples on the part +of the Panamanians. If a stream of gold could bring progress, Panama should have led the world for +three hundred years.</p> + +<p>Probably the modern Republic of Panama is one of the very few endowed governments in the world. +The purchase price of the Canal Zone, invested in New York real estate, yields an annual revenue +which forms a part of the government budget. The annual payment of $250,000 by the Canal Zone also +helps. Since the beginning of the French Canal enterprise a considerable part of the monthly +payrolls of the Canal builders has found its way into the till of the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span> + +merchants in Colon and Panama, and these terminal cities have largely lived on the Canal Zone trade. +Certainly, Panama has even to-day some peculiar financial advantages—and if these could bring +prosperity, Panama should be prosperous.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 289px;"> +<img src="images/illus-124.jpg" width="289" height="500" alt="Farm Grist Mill, Costa Rica" title="" /> +<span class="caption">FARM GRIST MILL, COSTA RICA</span> +</div> + +<p>When the California gold rush began in 1848 Panama awoke from her century and a half of slumber +and trouble began afresh. Again there was gold on the Isthmus, and again there was crime. Hundreds +of ships discharged their cargoes and passengers on one side of the Isthmus, and the trip across was +one not to be forgotten.</p> + +<p>Now that the world has once more had to fight out the old battle of free institutions, it is +worth while to remember that the oldest independent nation of the modern world is Panama; and that +the first of the Spanish colonies to achieve freedom from the misgovernment of the old country was +this same little nation on the Isthmus. Tired of the kind of + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span> + +supervision which she had been undergoing from Europe, in 1826 Panama revolted, set up political +housekeeping for herself, until she was later merged with the free New Granada—the modern +Colombia.</p> + +<p>If political independence has anything to do with advancement, then Panama should be very +advanced indeed, for she led all her neighbors in achieving national separateness. The independence +movement that swept over the western world a century ago affected Panama profoundly, and the microbe +of political freedom soon produced a well-developed case of revolution—and the revolution was +a success. Four score years afterward Panama again established her independence without the shedding +of a drop of blood. If a spirit of independence can make a people prosperous, then Panama and +prosperity should mean the same thing.</p> + +<p>Panama has some peculiar political advantages to-day. Where other nations maintain their +political sovereignty and internal peace at the cost of huge sums of money and by means of armies +and battleships, Panama is spared this enormous drain upon her resources and men and money, and +finds her political independence guaranteed against all the nations of the earth. Likewise she is +sure of internal peace and is the only really war-tight, revolution-proof country in Latin-America. +By the treaty entered into between + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> + +Panama and the United States, in return for the Canal Zone and other concessions, the United States +guarantees the independence of Panama and agrees to step in at any time when it may be necessary and +maintain order throughout the Isthmus. The Panamanians are not enthusiastic over this situation, and +some of the politicos inwardly resent very bitterly an arrangement which makes impossible their +chosen profession of agitators and revolutionary leaders.</p> + +<p>There are people who tell us that the basis of national progress is economic and commercial. +Given a land with all large resources, we shall perforce have a progressive people. Measured by this +standard, Panama should lead all the rest. Her thirteen hundred miles of coast bound a narrow +empire, but an empire of wonderful possibilities. Her inexhaustible soil, her frequent rivers, her +rich jungles, her broad savanas, her high mountains and dense forests, her mines and climate and +rainfall, and a world market right at her doors—all that nature could do to lay the +foundations of material wealth seems to have been done here.</p> + +<p>If so-called modern science and engineering skill can bring prosperity, then the Isthmus of +Panama includes the site of the world's last achievement in engineering, sanitation, and organized +efficiency. Health conditions on the Canal Zone are better than in many cities of the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> + +United States. General Gorgas said that there were three causes for which the Americans left Panama +in the old days: yellow fever, malaria, and cold feet, and that of the three the last caused more +desertions than the other two combined. It is worth noting that the first two mentioned have now +vanished entirely, and it but remains to find a preventive for frigid pedal extremities to make the +tropics a white man's land.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 262px;"> +<img src="images/illus-127.jpg" width="262" height="600" alt="Happy Kindergartners, Panama" title="" /> +<span class="caption">HAPPY KINDERGARTNERS, PANAMA</span> +</div> + +<p>Panama and Colon to-day are clean and healthful. Even the tropical buzzard that hovers over every +town and crossroad in this mid-America world has disappeared from these cities—starved to +death. The American Board of Health looks after the garbage cans and backyards and drains, and woe +be unto the unhappy mosquito that inadvertently wanders into this forbidden territory. The entire +country is now free from yellow fever, and while there is some malaria in the lowlands + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> + +during the wet season, health conditions are far better than might be supposed.</p> + +<p>The question of climate raises visions of burning days and sleepless nights. To people who have +never lived in the tropics any lurid tale is plausible. But these tales of torment do not come from +dwellers in the tropics, but from overheated imaginations of writers of fiction who find the tropics +a rich field, because most of their readers know nothing of the subject. There are more comfortable +days in Panama, per year, than in New York. There is rarely a night when one cannot sleep in +comfort. If there were nothing the matter but the climate, there would be no reason for shunning +Panama.</p> + +<p>By all the rules of the great game of getting rich, Panama ought to be both prosperous and +progressive. Seemingly every chance has come her way.</p> + +<p>Yet the visitor does not find Panama as a whole either rich or energetic. The terminal cities, +Panama and Colon, have lived pretty well off the proceeds of the Canal Zone, but the great interior +country is sparsely inhabited by people who are neither prosperous nor progressive. Poverty, +indolence, and dirt abound throughout the provinces. Education is attempted, and the present system, +when perfected, will afford fairly good rudimentary training, but as now conducted it is a promise +as well as a performance. With a + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> + +high illiteracy the people of Panama cannot be said to live on a lofty intellectual plane. Not one +man in a thousand makes the slightest attempt to improve the country, or takes the least interest in +what the world is doing.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 255px;"> +<img src="images/illus-129.jpg" width="255" height="600" alt="Young Costa Rica Is Enterprising" title="" /> +<span class="caption">YOUNG COSTA RICA IS ENTERPRISING</span> +</div> + +<p>In the capital city are educated and refined men, both prosperous and progressive. Their +activities are divided among business enterprises, professional callings, and political activity. +Very few of these men are interested in development projects to any extent. Agriculture as a basis +of national wealth has little place in their thinking, unless somebody else can be induced to attend +to the agriculture while they themselves take care of the wealth. Working on a farm is all right for +ignorantes and peons, but has no interest for a gentleman. The development of natural resources is +not interesting unless it affords a percentage of some sort, to be earned without effort. The +unfortunate fact is that such modern conditions as exist in Panama to-day have largely been brought +to her ready-made, + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> + +which may be why she does not take more interest in them.</p> + +<p>The question of morals and marriage laws is one which had better be let alone unless the prowler +is prepared to find some very unpleasant things. All children are baptized, and, as before +explained, the baptisms are registered and classified either as "Legítimo" or +"Natural"—the latter, of course, being illegitimate. Only thirty per cent of the births of the +Republic as a whole, are born of married parents. The reasons for this are not so simple as may at +first appear. Panama has to-day a civil marriage law, but unless a man has abundant leisure, endless +patience, and can afford to hire a lawyer or two, he had better be married somewhere else. +Evidently, influences were brought to bear upon the framers of the civil law which induced them to +overload it with requirements that make it exceedingly unpopular. No voice of protest is raised +against this scandalous moral situation on the part of the priests of the established church, who +merely shrug their shoulders and shake their heads and say, "What can you do about it?" Certainly, +they themselves do nothing at all except to ignore the situation.</p> + +<p>There have been physical factors that have militated against the progress of Panama. While the +climate is comfortable, most of the time it lacks stimulus. There is no "kick" in it.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p> + +<p>Without occasional respites in a higher altitude and cooler atmosphere, the man from the north +loses his driving power and his wife sometimes gets a case of nerves. Four hundred years of it will +take the energy out of any man; and many of the present inhabitants of interior Panama appear to +have lived here for about that length of time. For the development of high human efficiency it is +required in a climate that it be something more than comfortable. It should at times be +uncomfortable, and occasionally exasperating.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/illus-131.jpg" width="400" height="249" alt="Wooden Sugar Mill and Its Maker" title="" /> +<span class="caption">WOODEN SUGAR MILL AND ITS MAKER</span> +</div> + +<p>The workers of the Rockefeller Foundation have found eighty per cent of the people of the +provinces afflicted with hookworm. Highly commendable is the work done by these representatives of +the Institute, but so long as the common people know nothing of sanitation, clean and + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> + +pure food, present conditions will continue. And physical "hookworm" is accompanied by a similar +mental condition. There is a moral hookworm throughout the country, and life slumps down to a +hand-to-mouth drag from one day to the next. Both physical and mental conditions are better in the +cities, of course, but there is still room for a moral prophylactic.</p> + +<p>There are social forces which have largely accounted for this result. Possibly no place in the +world shows more mixed blood than Panama. Shades and colors and tints and tones there are, and +blends indescribable and also impossible to analyze or trace. The artists tell us that the +combination of the primary colors with white results in a tint, while blending a primary color with +black gives a shade. Well, most of these tones are shades, for the same scientific reason as that +mentioned by the artist. From the Caribbean world has come its contribution of the West Indian +Negroes, with consequent shady result.</p> + +<p>The social results of this mixture are various and distressing, but well understood by anyone who +has lived in the interior of Panama. Even the cities are affected in the same way. Social standing, +political availability, and personal influence are largely determined by the degree of +whiteness—or darkness—that prevails in the skin. And the general desire of the ignorant +and unmoral native of the interior to "lighten up the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span> + +breed" has led to a moral situation that bodes no good for the away-from-home white man who may be +living for a longer or shorter time in the up-country provinces.</p> + +<p>Any aggressive North American, especially if he be from the West, looks upon the splendid areas +of land, the fine rivers, the dense forests, and the other untouched resources of this rich country +with amazement, and begins to plan development projects and dream of organizing syndicates, but the +native loses no sleep over such vain imaginings. If he dreams at all, it is of his food if he be +poor, and of politics if he be rich. Development in the North American sense is a disgrace, and no +job for a gentleman. The smooth savanas may lie there untouched till kingdom come, for all he cares. +The only interest in life is political manipulation. Law and politics are the two occupations most +esteemed, and Panama is not different from other countries in the frequent association of these two +professions.</p> + +<p>Whence comes this emphasis on political activity, to the neglect of commerce and agriculture? It +comes from Europe with the early inheritance of the first settlements and rulers of this Latin +world. For them any form of physical work was dire disgrace. "These two hands have never done an +hour's work" was a boast and badge of quality. The climate of the tropics made this philosophy of +life easy to accept and follow, and what + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span> + +the leaders lived the followers did faithfully keep and perform. Of course somebody had to do a +little work and raise a few vegetables and cattle, but the game was to find the unfortunate worker +and then take away from him the product of his toil. Thus the getter lived without work and taught +the loser the uselessness of further exercise.</p> + +<p>By way of clearness these conditions are here described in their worst and final form. Bad as +they are, they are not the whole truth. It takes more than mixed blood and hookworm and snobbishness +to account for the present social conditions of Central America.</p> + +<p>If moral conditions in Panama to-day are not ideal, it is not due to any absence of church or +lack of religion. With the explorers and conquerors of the sixteenth century came the missionaries +and priests. Crosses were set up, bells were hung, masses were said, and everywhere the elaborate +ritual of the Spanish church was maintained. Whole villages were "converted," baptized, and labeled +as good Catholics in a day's time. Massive and beautiful churches were soon built in centers of +population, and every village has its church, often representing nearly as much value as half of the +houses of the town combined.</p> + +<p>From the beginning until the coming of the North American to finish the Canal the Roman Church +has had exclusive and uninterrupted occupation + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> + +of this entire territory. There has been no competition, and there have been no interferences with +her moral and spiritual leadership.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-135.jpg" width="500" height="210" alt="Public Market, David" title="" /> +<span class="caption">PUBLIC MARKET, DAVID</span> +</div> + +<p>But in spite of this situation, or perhaps because of it, moral conditions are what they are in +Panama to-day. Out of the closed Bible and the bound consciences of this system have come social +incapacity and intellectual helplessness in all the fields of human activity. Most of Latin-America +has not yet learned that the intellect, like the nation, cannot exist half slave and half free. Only +free consciences can guide free citizens to the founding of free political institutions and social +activities. A successful democracy can never be reared upon a foundation of superstition and +spiritual despotism. More than all other factors this moral blight and spiritual dry-rot is what is +the matter with Panama. The moral and spiritual climate of a people has more to do with the growth +or destruction of a spirit of progress + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span> + +than do thermometers and telephones and declarations of independence. Until the spirit of a +Panamanian becomes a free spirit and he is permitted to think and worship after the dictates of a +free conscience, Panama can never become a progressive nation.</p> + +<p>Highly favored among the nations of the earth, this little country affords a strategic +opportunity for the setting up of a national experiment in development and progress. If this +undertaking is to succeed, there must be added to the large economic, social, and strategic +resources of the country the element of a free spirit and an enlightened conscience. Out of these +will come a sense of the dignity of labor, the worth-whileness of education, and the development of +the now dormant resources of this beautiful land.</p> + +<p>The problem of progress in Panama is inevitably linked with that of Protestantism. Work was begun +by the Methodist Episcopal Church in Colon under Bishop William Taylor, and a strong West Indian +congregation was gathered. This was later turned over to the Wesleyan Methodists, who maintain +considerable work among the West Indians of the Caribbean Islands. With the purchase of the Canal +Zone by the United States, the Methodists began to plan for work in Panama and eventually +established a Spanish church and school at the head of Central Avenue, opposite the national +palace.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p> + +<p>But no serious effort was made by this denomination to meet and master the problems that arose +from exclusive Protestant occupation of the Spanish-speaking section of the field until the time of +the noted Panama Congress in February, 1916. Here met representatives of the Protestant movement in +all Latin-America, and general principles of comity and cooperation were established and adopted. +Under this working agreement, the Spanish work in the Republic of Panama was assigned to the +Methodists as a unit of responsibility. To this area Costa Rica was later added. West Indian work +was not included in this survey, and it is to be hoped that some similar representative and +authoritative body may yet undertake to bring order and comity out of the unorganized, though +friendly, confusion of West Indian denominational programs now existent.</p> + +<p>The Pan-Denominational Congress of 1916 made definite the responsibility for Spanish work in +Panama, and the denomination now in charge of this field is working on a program somewhat adequate +to the strategic importance of the very conspicuous location beside the Canal Zone. When fully +realized and in operation, this program of work will wield a wide influence in the Spanish-American +world. A large factor in this new program has been the interest and enthusiasm of the young people +of the California Conference Epworth League, who have done much + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span> + +to make possible an enlargement of the work undertaken.</p> + +<p>Too much praise cannot be given to the earnest and efficient missionaries who founded and have +maintained this mission. The Seawall Church has already sent out its influences to the ends of the +earth. The standards and results attained in Panama College, so far as that institution has been +developed, have exerted a strong influence on the educational and moral life of the city and of the +republic. The work in 1919 included a Spanish base at the Seawall location, with its church and +school, and American congregation, a West Indian school and church in Guachapali, a Spanish mission +Sunday school and evangelistic service in the school building kindly loaned by the Wesleyans, a +Spanish mission school and preaching service in Guachapali, a West Indian Sunday school and service +at Red Tank, and a Chinese mission near the market. Present plans for future expansion include, in +addition to the work now under way at David, an adequate program of interior education and +evangelization, an industrial and agricultural school, a strong institution church in Panama, an +institution of higher education, and adequate work in Colon.</p> + +<p>This mission shares with the Northern Baptist Convention and the Northern Presbyterian Church +denominational responsibility for most of Central America. The Baptists have work in + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> + +Honduras, Salvador, and the Presbyterians in Guatemala and in Colombia, further south. The +Methodists complete the chain by the occupation of Panama and Costa Rica, in which latter republic +work was begun in the latter months of 1917. Costa Rica presents an attractive field with its good +climate, fertile country, Spanish-speaking population of intelligence, and large capacity for +progress. The new mission met with success from the start and promises rapid growth.</p> + +<p>The three denominations named are working together in complete harmony and have developed a +unified program of Christian education for Central America, as the beginnings of further +coordination of effort. There is no overlapping, no competition, and, above all, no overcrowding, in +this promising but sparsely occupied field. The Protestant denominational front on this field is +well unified.</p> + +<p>There are several independent missions working in this field, some of which do not find it in +their purposes to unite in any general movement, and none of which place emphasis on education. +Chief among these is the Central America Mission which maintains workers in all the republics of +Central America who confine themselves largely to evangelistic effort.</p> + +<p>All of the Central republics have constitutional religious liberty, and the work of Protestantism +is officially welcome everywhere. Of petty persecutions + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> + +and ecclesiastical opposition there are numerous examples. The spirit of the Inquisition still +smolders beneath the surface, but the new spirit of world-democracy makes more and more grotesque +and futile the intolerance and bigotry of the Dark Ages.</p> + +<p>Protestantism in Latin-America has been in the van of every movement toward progress and has +contributed much toward the foundations of the new era. Without the Protestant movement, the present +state of advance would be impossible. To-day Protestantism is in the anomalous position of being +inadequate in equipment and man-*power to meet the situation created or to supply the demands +arising everywhere for adequate expression of free institutions. The lump is large and the leaven +has been small, but the contagion of liberty and the awakening of conscience demand an adequate +equipment and program.</p> + +<p>There is promise of a new and worthy approach in the large purposes of the great denominations to +undertake in adequate manner a program of world-reconstruction made imperative by the close of the +great war. The collapse of all but moral and spiritual forces as a guarantee of peace renders all +former alignments obsolete and forces the church to new methods and more comprehensive undertakings. +It is now resolved to go up and possess this goodly land on the mere borders of which we have +lingered for + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> + +nearly a century. The coming generation will see a reorganization and reconstruction of the +Protestant program in Latin-America, and before the end of the twentieth century this mighty +continent will have attained a noble citizenship in the neighborhood of great races.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER X</h2> + +<h3>KNOWING OUR NEIGHBORS</h3> + +<p>Whatever the cause or results, the fact stands that we are not well acquainted with our nearest +national neighbors. Like the modern city-dweller, we know least about those who live nearest. The +North American knows more about the other side of the world than he does about those who live on the +same continent with him. Neither the North American nor his southern neighbor has treated the other +fairly.</p> + +<p>Many of us have not yet discovered that there be any Latin-American. Some one lives south of the +line, of course, but that fact has made little impression on our minds. In our mental geography the +American world shades off into a hazy and troubled region southward about which we have known little +and cared less. Our geographical studies have helped us but little. It is possible to know every +physical fact about a country without knowing the hearts of the people.</p> + +<p>It is an anomaly that we know less about our Latin neighbors than we do of Europe or Asia. By +historical ties and constant reminders of commerce and immigration we are aware of our transatlantic +cousins. We have discovered the Far + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span> + +East and have some interest therein, even though it be the interest pertaining to a museum or a +menagerie. But until very recently neither immigration, commerce, nor curiosity has stirred us to +acquaintance with our continental neighbors.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 275px;"> +<img src="images/illus-143.jpg" width="275" height="600" alt="Indian Boy Goes to School" title="" /> +<span class="caption">INDIAN BOY GOES TO SCHOOL</span> +</div> + +<p>This ignorance is part of our general antebellum attitude toward all the world lying south and +east. In fact, we never bothered much with anybody outside of the United States. Over a century we +lived on, secure in the idea that we were immune from European militaristic contagion and +all-sufficient unto ourselves. The rest of the world might perchance sink into the sea, but we would +go on blissfully without it. Our "free institutions" were self-sufficient and all-inclusive. And +because we were able to compose our own troubles and keep out of other peoples' quarrels, more or +less, we assumed that we were automatically superior to the rest of the world, "of course."</p> + +<p>We of the United States have been likened + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> + +unto a householder living on a plot of ground rich enough to support his family. Resolving not to +become entangled in neighborhood alliances, he constructed a hundred-foot wall about his property +and lived securely within. The righthand neighbor might be an anarchist and the man on the left a +cannibal. If the man in the rear were a polygamist and the dweller across the street had a habit of +using firearms indiscriminately it mattered nothing to the householder—so long as the wall +held. But it came to pass that an earthquake destroyed that wall, and the said exclusive citizen +suddenly found himself out on the street with his neighbors. And behold, it mattered much what sort +of neighbors they were. There was nothing to do but get acquainted and help make the neighborhood a +decent place in which to live.</p> + +<p>Since the world war has battered down the wall with which we sought to separate ourselves from +other nations, we have nothing left but to recognize and accept our place in the national +neighborhood and do our share to make it decent.</p> + +<p>The Latin-American has been at a disadvantage in the character of the continent in which he +lives. South America is a land for promoters, organizers of industry, hardy pioneers of production, +engineers, planters, and rugged explorers of commercial frontiers. The poetic and artistic +temperament of the Latin has suffered an unfair + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> + +criticism because of the ill adaptation of his temperament to his environment. Sunny Italy and +picturesque France and vine-clad Spain were more to his tastes and abilities. That he has done as +well as he has speaks much for his adaptability to a situation better suited to a more executive +type of character. Give him a chance in his own best environment and he shows capacity of high +achievement.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 380px;"> +<img src="images/illus-145.jpg" width="380" height="500" alt="Washday in Costa Rica" title="" /> +<span class="caption">WASHDAY IN COSTA RICA</span> +</div> + +<p>Probably the two most arrogant travelers have been the Englishman and the American, but our +British cousins have assumed their superiority with silent contempt, while the newly rich America +globe-trotters have vaunted their ignorance from the piazzas of every tourist hotel and upon the +steamer + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> + +decks of every sea. It is really not strange that we failed to notice the very considerable and +important populations of countries lying at our doors.</p> + +<p>The North Americans are not travelers. Few of us do go anywhere, and fewer still know how to +travel successfully. The poorest traveler in the world is the society tourist who goes about trying +to reproduce home conditions in a foreign land. So far as possible he escapes the life and message +of the country in which he sojourns and returns with little else but tales of social functions, a la +American, and comparative accounts of expenses at tourist hotels. From the first day out he isolates +and fortifies himself against the very things that travel alone can give. He brings home a few +trinkets made to sell, some cocksure criticisms of customs, people, and missionaries, and a swelled +head. But he has been abroad—save the mark!</p> + +<p>Travel is a specific for provincialism, but it must be real travel and not imitation +home-swagger. Intelligent and sympathetic travel breaks up the hardening strata of thought, pushes +back the narrowing horizon, loosens the set fibers of the soul, and is the surest cure yet known for +mental arterial sclerosis. The right kind of travel shifts the viewpoint, readjusts life forces, and +shakes up the provincialism of the man with the "township horizon." And when the disturbed + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span> + +atoms of character reassemble it is in a different mode and with a new cycle.</p> + +<p>It is to be said that the South American has not taken much interest in us. Since he has made out +to get along without us, he cannot be very important. The Oriental has shown some desire to move +into our basement, or at least the wood-*shed or the washhouse, and we have discovered him. The +European has shown his good taste by coming over and moving right in with us, and in time we cannot +distinguish him from ourselves. But the South American has gone his way, and in the main has minded +his own affairs, and therefore cannot amount to much. If he were a social problem, we would know him +better. If he had a penchant for the police force or an itch for office among us, we would cultivate +his acquaintance, and perhaps invite him to call.</p> + +<p>During the past two decades the once despised Chinese have become popular among us. Their utter +difference from ourselves, their solid human qualities, their marvelous vitality, their commercial +solidarity, their response to the stimuli of the modern world, their astonishing versatility, their +wonderful national history—these and a hundred other things stir our imagination, and we have +rather suddenly discovered that we like the Chinese—especially at a distance.</p> + +<p>We are well aware of Japan, not so much through any perceptions of our own as through + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> + +Japan's insistence upon attention. We can on short notice make out a rather comprehensive list of +Japanese characteristics, and, in truth, we find Japan interesting. The marvelous energy of her +people, her high ambitions, her Oriental viewpoint, her great commercial and military successes, +her artistic setting, her marvelous skill of hand, and, not least, her abundant interest in our own +affairs—these and other items make it quite the thing to be interested in Japan. But who cares +anything about a lot of dirty peons? They are not in good form.</p> + +<p>But this interest in the Orient is more curiosity than it is race sympathy. There is a great gulf +fixed between the yellow man and the white, and racially that gulf can never be bridged. The +occasional marriages between the East and West need no comment; they tell their own story. Neither +China nor Japan can ever become American in any racial sense. When Chinese and Japanese come to +America for any but educational and temporary purposes, they set up Chinatown and little Japan +wherever they go. American character is a most complicated composite of many races, but from Tokyo +to Bombay there is no Oriental factor that will blend with the mixture of races that makes up +America.</p> + +<p>Our Oriental interest is confined to the races that have impressed themselves upon our +imagination. The Philippines, in spite of our national + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> + +relation to the islands, do not seem to us very real nor very important. They will soon be keeping +house for themselves, and then we shall forget them except as an interesting historical incident. +And as for India, that is British, and about all we know is that the Hindu wears a turban, maintains +a very undemocratic caste, exists in unaccountable numbers, is subject to annoying and frequent +famines, and on the whole is a rather helpless lot, except as some bearded fakir entertains +companies of badly balanced American society women with hyperbolated essence of sublimated +nonsense.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-149.jpg" width="500" height="276" alt="Riverside Plantation" title="" /> +<span class="caption">RIVERSIDE PLANTATION</span> +</div> + +<p>But the Latin-American is blood of our blood, kin of our kind, and lives on the same continental +street, which is why we are so little interested in him. He is neither quaint, curious, nor crazy. +He is not good for first-page headlines except + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> + +when he breaks out in revolution or forgets our Monroe Doctrine. There is no fixed gulf of +difference between him and us, and in the final fusing of American character he must contribute a +large part.</p> + +<p>To ignore the Latin-American is to be convicted of historical ignorance. From Dante to the great +South American leaders and scholars of to-day the Latin races have been neither sleeping nor idle. +During the last five hundred years more than one half of Western history has been made by Latin +races. It was a Latin who discovered America. Another first sailed around the globe. Latin peoples +explored, conquered, and settled both Western continents, and gave a language which has become the +permanent speech of two thirds of the Western world. To call the roll of artists, painters, +sculptors, poets, dramatists, novelists, musicians, explorers, missionaries, and scientists for the +past five centuries is to prove that a majority of the names mentioned in the world's illustrious +hall of fame are from Latin races. To mention Curé, Pasteur, and Marconi is to remind us of +the scientific progress of modern Latin minds, and to speak of France and Italy as pioneers in +democracy is to keep within the facts. It was in Italy that Browning and Tennyson and George Eliot +and a host of other writers found inspiration and material to feed the fires of genius.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span></p> + +<p>Whatever may be said of the modern degeneracy of the dominant religious system of Latin-American +countries, it is true that the sixteenth century saw in Spain one of the most virile and +comprehensive missionary movements of all history. Never before nor since have missionary efforts +been projected on so vast a scale or by so powerful procedure. Monks and priests went out and +established the cross and the confessional through the Western world and in the islands of the sea, +and, whatever else we may say, there can be no disparagement of the permanency of the results of +these conquests. The Latin world is still dominantly Roman in its religious life, and shows very +positive preferences for the religion of the conquistadores. To give a language and a religion to +two thirds of the American continents is not the work of weaklings nor of degenerates.</p> + +<p>This Latin neighbor of ours not only lives on the same street but he lives in a bigger and better +house than ours. To the "lick-all-creation" type of Fourth-of-July American this is rank heresy, but +facts have little regard for fireworks. With twenty-eight per cent of the population of the +Americas, the Latin holds sixty-five per cent of the territory and fully the same proportion of +natural resources. His soil, his rivers, his mountains, his harbors, his mines are as good as ours, +and he has more of them. In the western hemisphere + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> + +he controls the longest rivers, the highest mountains, the largest area of habitable land, the +longest sea-coast, and the entire inexhaustible fertility of the tropics. His untouched and +uncharted natural resources are beyond computation. His estate is second to none in the entire +world, and he could spare enough for the crowded millions of India or the swarming islands of Japan +and never miss it. All of this we would have discovered sooner but for the world war, which focused +all attention on the main issue and postponed the direct results of the successful completion of the +Panama Canal. With a normal supply of shipping, the west coast alone of South America would keep the +Canal busy much of the time and affect American markets profoundly.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 167px;"> +<img src="images/illus-152.jpg" width="167" height="600" alt="Jungle Products" title="" /> +<span class="caption">JUNGLE PRODUCTS</span> +</div> + +<p>In material achievements our neighbor has not been idle, though some of his attempts have +resulted in failure or + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span> + +fiasco. He has built great and beautiful cities, he has constructed long and difficult railroads +over tortuous mountain systems, he has developed huge industries and organized big commercial +enterprises. He has produced a civilization in keeping with his character, artistic, homogeneous, +progressive, and on a high intellectual plane. His libraries, theaters, and public buildings are a +credit to his taste and skill, and his churches are massive and stately as the rock-ribbed mountains +that tie together the whole system from El Paso to Patagonia.</p> + +<p>We have heard more or less of a Pan-Americanism, but we have never taken it seriously. As subject +for diplomatic papers, magazine articles, and after-dinner oratory the all-America idea has been a +refuge of word-venders. But so long as the bulk of South American trade was with Europe our brand of +fraternal talk was harmless—also helpless; and the reason for our failure to do business with +South America has not been entirely the neglect of our shippers. The larger exports of South America +have all been to Europe, and with ships loaded both ways the American exporter was hopelessly +handicapped in his effort to secure favorable freight rates. When American salesmen tried to compete +with German and French and Spanish exporters they always failed to secure freight rates that gave +them an even chance.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p> + +<p>For years American manufacturers ignored the Orient and lagged far behind European dealers in the +same class of goods, to their own large loss. The same neglect has produced the same result in South +America. Germany pursued a very different policy. Without trumpet or flag Germany sent her agents to +practically every Latin-American center and seaport, and there the unostentatious German proceeded +to control as much business as possible, and generally get hold of the situation. Often he took unto +himself a wife of the country, but never for one day did he forget that he was a representative of +the Vaterland. His house, his furniture, his methods, his ideas were one hundred per cent German. An +American ship doctor went ashore from a German liner in a small South American seaport and stumbled +upon the inevitable German man of business. He was invited home to dinner and shown through the +house with much pride by the half-German children. One after the other, furniture, books, pictures, +clothing even were exhibited and with every article was repeated the formula, "Es war in Deutschland +gemacht." It was a great game, and it was working along smoothly until things slipped in Europe, and +now the end no man can see. But there is going to be a great chance for American capital and +enterprise and business energy in the years when German energy will be needed at home.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p> + +<p>In one of the Central American republics an American, while present at a social function, +remarked casually to a friend that in his opinion the cure for the political upheavals of that +country would be in the polite but firm intervention of the United States. A German business man, +overhearing the remark, hastily interposed, "Not at all, sir; that is what Germany is in this +country for." With a concerted and well-considered policy of business extension in South American +countries Germany deserved the commercial advantages that she had gained in the twenty-five years +preceding the war period.</p> + +<p>When questioned as to the remarkable success of the German commercial propaganda, South American +leaders rarely fail to mention the fact that the German business man in Latin lands invariably speak +the language of the country. Catalogues are issued in Spanish or Portuguese, as local conditions +require. Measures, technical terms, and methods of handling goods are all adapted to local usage, +and the South American merchant is considered and consulted in all the mechanism of exchange and +handling of goods. Contrasted with North American ignorance of conditions and ignoring of language +and custom, it is not strange that Europe has controlled the trade of Latin-America.</p> + +<p>In view of all that is involved of national development, international entanglements, commercial + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span> + +expansion, and racial affinity, it would seem to be about time that we become acquainted with our +neighbors, or, rather, in our neighborhood. If we are going to live on this great American highway, +it may be well to be on good terms with the rest of the folks.</p> + +<p>Aside from commercial and linguistic considerations, there are four reasons for our ignorance of +the lands and people south of the United States.</p> + +<p>1. The American people are not well acquainted with any other people on earth. Geographical +isolation has had much to do with this, and racial self-sufficiency has had still more effect upon +our lack-of-thinking about our neighbors. Had South and Central American countries been pouring +millions of immigrants into our cities, we would know something about them, but the Latin has had no +need to immigrate, since he has more room in his own house than he could find in ours.</p> + +<p>2. American travel abroad has been practically all to Europe, with an increasing number who have +seen something of the Far East. And it is impossible to be anything but densely ignorant of any +people whose faces we have never seen, whose country we have never visited, whose history we have +ignored, and whose language we cannot understand. No real interest is possible without knowledge, +and the main trouble between the American and his neighbors is plain ignorance.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p> + +<p>3. The war with Spain in 1898 resulted in much indifferent prejudice on our part against +everything Spanish. Spain was not prepared for the blow that fell upon her, and perhaps her colonial +system deserved the destruction that was administered, but we came out of the war with a more or +less good-natured contempt for anything and everything that savored of Spain. We escaped with little +or no spirit of hatred or lust of conquest, but we marked down the Latin world at bargain +prices—and then let Europe walk away with the bargain. As a matter of fact, Spain has little +to do with the American situation. Spain herself in the past fifteen years has made rapid strides +forward, but in the average American mind anything Spanish cannot be very efficient.</p> + +<p>4. Our Monroe Doctrine has begotten a certain arrogance of attitude toward all our southern +neighbors. Our attention has been called southward only when revolution or anarchy or European +interference has compelled us to take a hand for our own ultimate self-protection. It is only when +our neighbors have failed to keep the peace and have threatened to carry their quarrels into our +yard, or have been in danger of being beaten up by European military police, that we have taken the +trouble to notice them. From this situation it was inevitable that an attitude of patronage should +arise, and patronage is not a basis of national cooperation or mutual understanding.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2> + +<h3>THE FAMILY TREE</h3> + +<p>When came this Latin-American? Is he a mystery, a complex, or a racial conundrum defying analysis +and baffling understanding? So many people have said. Others have reported a something impossible to +name or describe about this man from the southlands—all of which is nonsense. There are few +human mysteries when once we have the key. Any people may be understood if we know their racial +origin, social history, and reaction-power. Such knowledge usually explains these so-called race +peculiarities.</p> + +<p>As North Americans we are ourselves the present product of social forces that have driven us for +centuries past. With a northern European race origin we have been mixed in many molds and infused +with many tinctures till we emerge a new blend of blood. This new and vigorous stock shows a +reaction-power that has made much of educational, scientific, and material opportunities, but, after +all, these traits themselves are largely the result of the social stimuli of the past five hundred +years. Had our ancestors in the sixteenth century removed to Spain, we should all now be Spanish +dons.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p> + +<p>If we could know the social, religious, intellectual, domestic, industrial, and political +environment of a people, we could account for ninety per cent of race characteristics. And this +social history measures, not only potent forces and compelling sanctions, but itself in turn +registers reactive power and character values.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 310px;"> +<img src="images/illus-159.jpg" width="310" height="450" alt="San Blas Indian Chief" title="" /> +<span class="caption">SAN BLAS INDIAN CHIEF</span> +</div> + +<p>The Latin-American has no cause to apologize nor explain when we inquire into his racial +antecedents. Out of the remote ages of antiquity a branch of the human family moved westward, and on +the Italian peninsula developed a civilization and founded a city that in time dominated the world. +The lust of conquest and the intoxication of power debauched the rulers of Rome, but the rising +Christian Church took over the scepter, and for fifteen hundred years Rome dominated the +civilization of the world. Fundamentally, there was no difference between the blood of southern and +western Europe, and but for the corrupt and demoralizing influence of the papacy and its trailing +blight upon the human spirit Rome might still have been the dominant power of European civilization. +The abuses that compelled the Reformation + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> + +also vitiated the Latin spirit. The wakening life of the sixteenth century shifted the center +westward but the blight of papal despotism kept the Latin races from their full share in the +developments and democracy of the modern age. And now that the Teutonic peoples of the north have +become the victims of the most deadly despotism that the world has yet produced, it is possible that +the center and motive of progressive thought in continental Europe may again swing to the southern +peoples.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 192px;"> +<img src="images/illus-160.jpg" width="192" height="600" alt="No Race Suicide Here" title="" /> +<span class="caption">NO RACE SUICIDE HERE</span> +</div> + +<p>No one can trace the splendid march of the Latin races through the conquests and explorations and +discoveries of the later fifteenth and sixteenth centuries and then read the record of achievements +down to the present time and still maintain that there is anything decadent about the Latin races. +Had the Roman yoke been broken from the Latin neck as it was from the Teuton, we should have had a +very different + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> + +tale to tell, and the dominant civilization of the twentieth century might have been Latin instead +of Saxon.</p> + +<p>A closer examination of the social factors that have dominated the Latin-American world and +produced the present composite result on the western hemisphere reveals three decisive factors that +have in combination produced our neighbors.</p> + +<p>All Latin-America reflects a European background. Nearly all relations of life are defined in +European terms. Out of the more or less subconscious inheritance and ideals of European origin arise +the sanctions of social relations. Ideals of politics, business, education, home life, social +customs, and religion all come from this fountain of associations. The church in South America is +the church in southern Europe. The collegio is not the North American college, but the European +school which grants a Bachelor of Arts degree at what corresponds to the end of the freshman year in +an American college. South American "republics" have their "prime ministers," and the electorate is +on the European basis. The presidents of some of these republics exercise more arbitrary power than +the king of England or the entire executive of the United States. They are European "presidents." +Revolution is not the incurable habit of the "people" but the profession of a few adventurers who +oppress and afflict the long-suffering and usually silent + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> + +populace. This is not saying that revolution is a characteristic of European political procedure, +but that the forms of representative government imposed upon the ideals of dictatorship and monarchy +produced the curious mixture of revolutionary political progress known as a South or Central +American "republic." South American democracy is a hybrid product of European ideals and American +forms of government. Naturally enough, it is neither one thing nor the other, and will not be +anything very different until new forces are brought to bear upon the political life of the Latin +people.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 273px;"> +<img src="images/illus-162.jpg" width="273" height="500" alt="Jungle Guide" title="" /> +<span class="caption">JUNGLE GUIDE</span> +</div> + +<p>A second factor in the making of the Latin-American is his isolation for three hundred years from +the currents of Western economic and political life. Practically all our North American stock of +ideas and social sanctions has been developed since the Pilgrims landed in New England. The great +basic impulse that sent men and women westward in search of religious liberty has persisted and +widened and developed a homogeneous system of political ideal that has become the unquestioned + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> + +background of our whole political system. From free consciences have come free institutions, free +schools, free votes, and as long as it lasted, free land, unrestricted economic opportunity, and a +welcome to the world. Upon this foundation have been reared American independence, modern democracy, +higher education, the feminist movement, scientific advance, and American Protestantism.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 227px;"> +<img src="images/illus-163.jpg" width="227" height="600" alt="One Use for a Head" title="" /> +<span class="caption">ONE USE FOR A HEAD</span> +</div> + +<p>Certain influences from this stream have affected Latin-American life. The nomenclature of South +American politics is that of the United States, and many constitutions contain provision for every +modern practice. But these model constitutions are like a beautiful and costly piano imported into a +home where no one knows how to use it. It takes a democratic spirit to get democracy out of a +democratic constitution. The best piano yields only discord, and the most advanced constitution does +not prevent revolution if there be no musicians or statesmen to play and administer. People + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> + +living beside the stream of democratic progress have caught the names and forms drifting on the +current, but only those people have advanced with the current who have not been tied to the shore by +moral and intellectual despotism.</p> + +<p>The influence of geographical nearness is slight beside that of historical background and social +relations. Mexico is much closer to Spain than to the United States. After twenty years of +successful administration of the Philippines on the most colossal scale of national benevolence that +the world has ever seen, nearly all the Filipinos who had reached maturity in 1898 are still Spanish +at heart and out of sympathy with American ideals and administration. If the United States can hold +the islands until every person who was ten years old or over in 1898 is thoroughly dead and safely +buried, there will be a chance for some form of democracy, but the old-time leaders will retain so +long as they live the ideals derived from three hundred years of Spanish administration.</p> + +<p>If there are in the mountains of the South isolated neighborhoods that have been passed by in the +current of modern American progress, and are to-day practically ignorant of all that makes up +American life, even though surrounded on all sides by the march of a virile and restless race, what +must be the results of the isolation from this stream of North American development, of the whole +Latin-American race, while maintaining + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> + +close and vital connections with European standards and ideals?</p> + +<p>But Latin Americanism can never be explained merely by its European background and its isolation +from the progress of North America. The keynote to the present product in Latin lands is to be found +in that system of religious despotism that has checked the free growth of every people whose life it +has dominated.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 193px;"> +<img src="images/illus-165.jpg" width="193" height="600" alt="Beggars and Cathedrals" title="" /> +<span class="caption">BEGGARS AND CATHEDRALS</span> +</div> + +<p>Jesuitism is what is the matter with the civilization southward. We have had Romanism and +Jesuitism in the United States, but people who have never seen any form of these forces except that +which has developed in the free air of North America have much to learn. Romanism checked and +balanced by a virile Protestantism and a democratic political life is an altogether different + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span> + +institution from Romanism dominant, degenerate, and intolerant. The latter becomes the religion of +the bound Bible, the chained spirit, and the crippled conscience. It is the center of spiritual +infection and the microbe of moral weakness. No land has ever advanced under its leadership. Like a +blight on the human spirit, it has cast its spell of ignorance and superstition over the millions of +men and women who have had no other ethical code or spiritual leadership.</p> + +<p>It has been claimed that the rigors of New England winters had something to do with the sturdy +New England conscience. But the Pilgrims brought their consciences with them, and the climate came +near exterminating the colony. If the Pilgrims had landed in Cuba and the Spanish in Boston, +civilization might be very different to-day. If rigorous climates produce vigorous men, how is it +that some of the most terrible of men sailed the Caribbean sea and devastated the whole mid-American +world, while the northern coasts of the Atlantic never saw a pirate's sail? The tropical zephyrs of +the Bay of Panama never softened the tempers or dispositions of the bloodthirsty men who came near +exterminating whole populations and left a trail of blood and terror behind them. And these same +unconscionable scoundrels used to attend mass and plant wooden crosses wherever they went.</p> + +<p>The effort to account for South American civilization + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> + +by climate falls to pieces before the splendid and bracing altitudes of the Andes, the ideal +conditions of Argentine, Uruguay, and Chile, and the delightful regions of the higher elevations of +Central America. There is nothing inherently demoralizing in the climate of lands inhabited by the +Latin peoples in America, but there is something distinctly vitiating in the moral miasma breathed +by these peoples for three hundred years. If cold climates produced inflexible consciences, the +Eskimos ought to be the most conscientious people on earth. But the moral climate of Jesuitism has +produced a uniform effect everywhere that it has supplied the soil for soul-growth.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/illus-167.jpg" width="400" height="390" alt="Far from the Madding Crowd" title="" /> +<span class="caption">FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD</span> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is impossible to grow liberty of life, apart from its natural soil and necessary nourishment. +If we are to have free institutions, we must first have free men. We cannot have a stream of water +without a flowing fountain, nor ripe fruit without a living tree. Political liberty is impossible +without moral freedom, and it is idle to expect independence of political action without the +established right to think for oneself. When consciences are forced into fixed and prescribed molds +it is useless to ask that men turn about and practice the principles of a free democracy. Majority +rule is meaningless where the confessional dominates the consciences of men. If we apply these +factors in the social history and life of the Latin-American to the traits of his development most +subject to criticism, we find much illumination. Out of all the discussion three items emerge, each +significant and each closely related to the factors just mentioned.</p> + +<p>The Latin mind is given to an idealism that reaches out for large things but often stops short of +large actual realization. Out of this tendency grow weak initiative and superficial standards. As +evidence of this characteristic may be cited the tendency in education to stress the superficial and +showy features of the curriculum, leaving in the background the foundations and essentials of the +intellectual life. Anything that makes a good + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span> + +appearance is given place over the less spectacular realities. In architecture, a florid +ornamentation is achieved, even at the expense of good plaster and proper surface stone, later with +the resultant unsightliness.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-169.jpg" width="500" height="261" alt="Seawall Church and School, Panama" title="" /> +<span class="caption">SEAWALL CHURCH AND SCHOOL, PANAMA</span> +</div> + +<p>Deductive processes of thought are much in evidence. In outlining a plan of provincial +government, or a system of national education, the paper plans will include every needed feature of +a complete and theoretical system, without much regard for the local needs and actual conditions +under which the full scheme is to be realized, which in all probability it will never be. To have +projected and announced a grand undertaking in any department of human life is as important as to +have accomplished something. It is the grand-piano constitution and the one-finger administration. +It is not hard to find automobile undertakings and wheelbarrow accomplishments.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p> + +<p>Now, all this is not cause for railing accusation but for thoughtful analysis. And the dominant +cause is not far to seek. Where effort to translate ideals into realities is met by a barrier of +official indifference, it is not strange if men give their time to dreaming rather than actualizing +their visions. Where belief and conduct are prescribed and commercialism dominates the moral lives +of men, it is easy to see that initiative is crippled at its source. Where a people is divested of +responsibility for the final outcome and taught to pay the price and "believe or be damned," it is a +rash spirit that will try to do more than dream dreams and write books and project utopias. Without +the incentive of encouragement to produce practical results, no real efficiency has ever appeared +among any people. There are accusations of moral duplicity among Latin-American peoples. More +serious and fundamental than impotent idealism, this defect registers itself in perversion of public +trust, in the degradation of public office to the uses of private gain, in deception, graft, and +greed. Promises are easy, but performances are delayed until the would-be enterprising citizen gives +up in despair.</p> + +<p>In regard to this two things are to be said. In the first place, our own records as a people will +not bear any too close inspection. Aside from race riots and labor disturbances, our Civil War +furnishes our only revolution, except the one + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> + +that produced the original United States. But when it comes to political prostitution of public +office and the invention of grafting schemes, large and small, our own history does not give us much +ground for boasting. And many a "revolution" has caused less bloodshed than a North American labor +row.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 227px;"> +<img src="images/illus-171a.jpg" width="227" height="300" alt="Mandy Did Her Share" title="" /> +<span class="caption">MANDY DID HER SHARE</span> +</div> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 253px;"> +<img src="images/illus-171b.jpg" width="253" height="300" alt="The Canal Digger" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE CANAL DIGGER</span> +</div> + +<p>Further, so far as there is a difference between the conduct of the North and South, the +explanation is not far to seek. Once admit the validity of the principle that it is right to do +wrong for a good end, and a whole stream of moral duplicity is turned loose in public and private +life. Jesuitism will account for almost any moral lapse in a land where all thinking has come under +the spell of a creed in which the end justifies the means.</p> + +<p>Let this principle be ever so carefully guarded and proscribed, so long as human nature remains +what it is, where personal interests are at stake the individual is going to be his own final judge +of the value of the end for which the means are devised. And on the basis of every man adapting +means to his own ends we have moral chaos.</p> + +<p>Much has been said of the personal immorality + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span> + +of many people of these southern lands. That the Latin-American is in any whit behind his northern +neighbor in the integrity of his personal and domestic life remains to be proven. That his +deflections from the straight and narrow path are much less concealed and by him are regarded as of +small account is to be conceded. Here, again, the cause is not far to seek. With a sacerdotal +example loose and irresponsible, it would be strange indeed if the men of South America showed a +higher personal chastity than their spiritual leaders and moral guides.</p> + +<p>The third accusation brought against our neighbors is that of political undemocracy. Government +by revolution is said to be the rule, and an election in which the "outs" win a victory over the +"ins" is practically unknown. Victorious majorities are governed in size only by the discretion of +the dominant power, and the Latin mind seems a stranger to the fundamental principle of accepting a +majority decision as binding until the next election.</p> + +<p>To accept gracefully a majority decision against himself or his party is an art slowly acquired +by any politician. On the playgrounds we see this trait; in amateur clubs and literary societies we +find it; in the arena of political strife it does its worst and results in a state of affairs in +which revolution becomes the general substitute for elections.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p> + +<p>I stood one day on the campus of a Christian college in a Latin republic. The young men were +playing baseball, and they were playing it well. I discovered that baseball was a regular part of +their curriculum, that they were required to play so many games per week, and that they received +credit for the games, provided they were played according to rules. When I inquired as to the reason +for this I was informed by the efficient director of the school that baseball was in his opinion one +of the most important subjects in the course. "There are two things that we can teach through +baseball better than any other way. One is team work—a fellow can't play the game alone; and +the other is the art of accepting defeat gracefully. Half of the boys must be defeated every day, +which is an invaluable drill for them."</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 223px;"> +<img src="images/illus-173.jpg" width="223" height="600" alt="The Town Pump, Interior Village" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE TOWN PUMP, INTERIOR VILLAGE</span> +</div> + +<p>Even as we discussed the matter, a tall fellow got into a dispute with the umpire, and after a +dramatic flourish swung his arms in the air and shouted, "No juego mas" ("I will play no more").</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p> + +<p>"There—do you hear that?" remarked the director. "That is what we are trying to cure."</p> + +<p>As far as my observation has gone, nobody except the educational missionary is trying very hard +to cure this most unfortunate trait in an otherwise very fine character.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-174.jpg" width="500" height="241" alt="Wayside Cemetery in the Jungle" title="" /> +<span class="caption">WAYSIDE CEMETERY IN THE JUNGLE</span> +</div> + +<p>Here, again, it is not difficult to trace this stream to its sources. We understand much better +since 1914 whence came this political peculiarity. The ideals of European politics have been +transferred across the Atlantic and their fruits on foreign soil have not been tempered by the vigor +of free institutions grown strong in the processes of centuries. If Central-American republics are +only constitutional monarchies in which the monarch governs the constitution, there is very good +reason for the anomaly. If it is true that there is not a single republic on American + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span> + +soil south of "the line," then it is to be said that there never can be such a republic until +Latin-America ceases to think in terms of European history and Jesuitism is broken from its hold on +the moral consciousness of the men who make and unmake republics in the Latin world. Successful +republics have been developed in that turbulent but onmoving stream of Western and modern ideals +that has found its most complete expression in the United States, but which has also tinctured the +thinking and influenced the political processes of practically every country on earth except +Prussia. We ourselves are not perfect yet, and it behooves us to withhold the stones from our +neighbors until we can show a clean record. We will have some distance to go before democracy is a +finished product, and it will be a good plan to take the neighbors along with us.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2> + +<h3>LATIN-AMERICAN HEART</h3> + +<p>Much misunderstanding has been due to faulty methods of approach to our southern neighbor. +Political diplomacy, commercial competition, and military displays will never get to the core of +this international apple. The Latin-American is a man of heart, and until we recognize this fact we +shall fail to understand him. Sympathy and courtesy will avail more than battleships and boycotts. +This man is a born diplomat and has high intellectual development, but the deep and dominant motives +of his life are his friendships and affections.</p> + +<p>If we know the ruling motives of men and races, we may avoid nearly all the misunderstandings and +incriminating accusations that arise when we occupy different points of view, but matters look very +different when we get at them from the viewpoint of the other man.</p> + +<p>Seeming contradictions dissolve and weaknesses appear as unsuccessful aspirations. Our complaints +of low initiative become more reserved when we remember that spiritual slavery is a certain antidote +for the pioneering spirit. The presence of a high though fruitless idealism amid + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span> + +insurmountable difficulties attests a virile and buoyant spirit, captive and caged. Where toil has +been treated with contempt for ages nothing short of economic helplessness can follow.</p> + +<p>As for financial faithlessness, who shall throw the first stone? If once we begin to justify the +means by the end, commercial life is going to suffer. If we begin to complain about the insecurity +of political institutions, we need to remember that democracy is one of the first and finest fruits +of a free mind and heart. And we have not yet ourselves arrived sufficiently to do any boasting.</p> + +<p>To know our Latin-Americans as personal friends is to attain a new viewpoint on the whole +Pan-American problem. We may not blind our eyes to their defects more than to our own—there +are plenty of both; but understanding brings explanation of many things, and if we know all and +understand fully, we may come to a different verdict. The southern man far surpasses us in certain +traits of which we have taken small account and in which we are racially deficient. When given free +opportunity, satisfactory response appears to the stimuli of democracy and initiative.</p> + +<p>To know personally the Spanish-American is to become aware of his keen intuitions, his high +personal charm, his strong sympathies, his constructive imagination, and his hearty idealism; and +whatever else he may be, he is loyal to his + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span> + +friends and their interests. He may not be so intent on doing something, but he has time for social +graces and arts, and possesses an innate refinement and grace of character that we take pride in +having neglected.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 321px;"> +<img src="images/illus-178.jpg" width="321" height="500" alt="Coconuts-So Good and So High" title="" /> +<span class="caption">COCONUTS—SO GOOD AND SO HIGH</span> +</div> + +<p>The Latin at his best is the racial goal of South America. Who cares to be judged by the social +leavings of his own country? The South American best is intelligent, refined, and faithful to +trusts. His mental processes are touched with a constructive imagination that finds high expression +in his abundant art and literature. With a nervous, artistic, and sensitive temperament, he responds +quickly to friendly approaches + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span> + +and stands ready to do his full share in social obligations.</p> + +<p>That peons and ignorantes are not thus described is only to say that the tramps and social +unacceptables of any country are not to be classed with the intellectuals and social leaders.</p> + +<p>The personal equation is apt to be decisive in South America. Commercial travelers learn this to +their profit or loss, as they adopt or disdain the ruling motives of the men with whom they deal. It +may do very well in some cities of the United States for the breezy commercial traveler to display +his samples, deliver his oration, and give the merchant three minutes to take or leave the best +goods on earth. Such methods in Spanish countries means no business at all. Selling goods in South +America is a social function in which are involved members of the family and, incidentally, some +very pleasant hours. Any sort of make-believe is useless. Unless a man really likes the people he +had better abandon any plans to do business with them. He may get on in Chicago, but in Bogota he +will be very lonesome.</p> + +<p>When a man sells goods on talk he may dispose of inferior qualities occasionally, and trust that +he can talk enough faster next time to make up for his loss of standing; but when goods are sold on +friendship a single mistake in quality means ruptured relations and the end of commercial +confidence. And where friendship furnishes the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span> + +basis of business the buyer will protect the seller in return for uniform good treatment on his +part. Like all other racial customs, when once it is understood the system is not so unreasonable as +at first appears.</p> + +<p>An Englishman traveling in South America told me that on one occasion he sold a large bill of +goods on credit to a man who proved to be a rascal. As the time for the return of the salesman and +the payment for the goods drew near the buyer tried to sell out his entire stock at half price, with +the intention of leaving the country with the money. But all the other merchants were friends of the +salesman and refused to take advantage of the situation, to the loss of their friend. They preferred +to lose their own profits.</p> + +<p>Business in Latin-America is a personal matter. If a deal goes wrong, somebody is responsible. +North American business has a large impersonal element, and the man who makes a bad bargain usually +feels that he had himself largely to blame. The joke is on him, and he will exercise more shrewdness +next time. But the southern merchant views the case differently, and it behooves the salesman to +handle only goods that will move to the profit of the buyer.</p> + +<p>When once this basis of friendly confidence is well set up it is easy to consummate large +transactions with very little preliminary investigation. The capitalist is more interested in +knowing what + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span> + +his trusted friend thinks than in getting data upon which to base his own conclusions.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/illus-181.jpg" width="400" height="260" alt="Boiling 'Dulce'-Crude Sugar" title="" /> +<span class="caption">BOILING "DULCE"—CRUDE SUGAR</span> +</div> + +<p>National ambassadors and Christian missionaries soon learn what the business man found out long +ago: that there is only one road to successful relations with these people and that is the way of +the heart. Neither minister nor missionary nor merchant can succeed unless he genuinely likes the +people with whom he is dealing. Any missionary who is afflicted with a sense of superiority had +better look up the sailing dates of any steamer line connecting with the United States.</p> + +<p>In meeting strangers the right kind of a letter of introduction has high value. Let the letter be +from a personal friend, and the homes and hearts are opened in a way that surprises the more coldly + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span> + +formal man from the north. It is a cheering and heartening experience to present a good letter to a +fine family and be received with a cordiality and genuine hospitality that leaves no doubt as to the +honest motives of the hosts.</p> + +<p>But how are we to find the road to the heart of any people unless we can speak to them in their +own tongue in which they were born? The interpreter does very well for trivial and formal matters, +but who wants to use an interpreter in his own family? Here is where the "United Stateser" gets into +trouble. As a linguist he does not shine; in fact, he is barely visible in a good light. He +considers it beneath him to take the trouble to learn anyone's language. Why should he? He can speak +English already. If anyone has anything to say to him, let him say it in English; and if he cannot +speak English, then surely he can have nothing worth saying. It is a ready formula, but it fails to +reach the hearts of men who do not happen to have been born in the United States.</p> + +<p>The Latin is a better linguist than his neighbor to the north. Nearly all the better class people +speak some English, though they are very modest about the matter. Practically all of them speak two +or more languages. But even if they do surpass us in speech and can use some English, we are not +excused from acquiring a working knowledge of the language of the people with + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span> + +whom we are to deal. The increasing development of Spanish teaching in North American schools is one +of the most helpful signs of the times.</p> + +<p>Nowhere does the innate courtesy of the Latin-American shine more than in his bearing toward the +novice who tries to learn his language. We of the United States are wont to laugh at the linguistic +struggles of the stranger within our gates, but not so with the South American. He is a gentleman, +and will take immense pains to assist anyone who makes an effort to talk to him. He seems to regard +it as a compliment that anyone should try to use his language. Any faltering effort will receive +immediate encouragement.</p> + +<p>A volume could be written about the comical blunders of North American tyros in language +learning. A hundred or two garbled words, vigorous guessing and violent arm action make up the +linguistic equipment of some would-be "interpreters." Mixed English, Spanish, jerks, and profanity +will do wonders where there is nothing else, but as substitutes for language they are far from +ideal. Classic is the story of one of these interpreters who struggled in vain to deliver the +meaning of his friend to a native, and at last gave up in disgust, regretting that he "ever learned +the blamed language anyway."</p> + +<p>Spanish is possibly as easy to learn as any language other than that of one's native land. Aside + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span> + +from its complicated verb and annoying gender, it has few difficulties that need cause acute +distress. But the score of "easy methods" without teachers are to be avoided. There is no easy way +to learn a language. It takes work, hard work, and a lot of it to learn a second language. But it +can be done, and to acquire a new medium of expression, even in middle life, is an experience not to +be taken lightly. It is above all things interesting. It comes at last to this: the only way to +speak, write, or read Spanish effectively is to learn it. Short cuts bring short results.</p> + +<p>And the only road to a worthwhile understanding of the Latin-American is that of a sympathetic +personal acquaintance and genuine friendship. It is a matter of heart more than of head, and unless +the North American has a heart himself he had better acquire one or abandon his efforts to deal with +the Latin-American.</p> + +<p>To the traveler from the Orient Latin-America is easy to know. There is much in Spanish +ceremonial, love of life and color and rhythm, the innate chivalry and politeness, so often absent +from the direct processes of the North American, to suggest the peculiar charm of the Orient at its +best. The ornateness of architecture appears in the East and West in nearly equal measure. When it +comes to elaborate speeches and flattering expressions, not even the honorifics of ceremonial Japan +have much advantage over the gracious + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span> + +and complimentary extravagances of the Spanish-American.</p> + +<p>It was at a school entertainment that the director, who spoke excellent Spanish, was unavoidably +absent, and the writer was pressed into service at the last moment to explain some stereopticon +views and make a few announcements. The language was that of a tyro and must have afforded material +for much amusement to the cultured parents of the school children. But no one laughed, and as a +reporter for a Spanish paper chanced to be on hand, the morning edition stated that the +entertainment was a high success and that the views were described in the choicest of classic +Spanish while the announcements were delivered with a diction of the purest and highest type. It was +the conventional manner of describing any public event.</p> + +<p>This temperament leads to oratory as rivers run to the sea. Given a few ideas for a start, and +any educated Latin will deliver an extempore oration that suggests weeks of careful preparation. +Rounded periods and classic expression mark every polished phrase.</p> + +<p>Probably the most perplexing and annoying thing about the North American in the eyes of his +southern neighbor is our incessant hurry and rush. We may be millionaires in money but we are +hopelessly bankrupt in time. And the South American is both millionaire and philanthropist + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span> + +in time. He always has a surplus and is willing to use it—and his friend's too. Some of our +hurrying about is regarded as a great joke. Clayton Sedgwick Cooper quotes a Bengalese of Calcutta +as regarding a certain Englishman as "one of the uncomfortable works of God." Such are we of the +United States in the eyes of our southern friends.</p> + +<p>The formalities of social life are of vast importance to the Panamanian, and they are also +important to the North American who wishes to transact any sort of business with officials and +educated men of any class. Dress suits and high hats are not to be despised if one is to get on in +the capital city. Neither are business and politics to be separated if any business is to be +done.</p> + +<p>During 1918 the death of President Valdez within a month of the constitutional date of the +national election created a situation in which the election board was controlled by one political +party and the police department by the other, spelling inevitable trouble. Military authorities on +the Canal Zone took a hand and sent over a troop of cavalry to police the city during the election +week. At sight of the soldiers panic possessed many women and children, who had been told that the +Americans, if they came, would shoot down all persons on the street without warning. A few hours +convinced the populace of the error of this widely circulated report, and the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span> + +election passed peacefully, the party in office winning.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 229px;"> +<img src="images/illus-187.jpg" width="229" height="600" alt="Washing by the River" title="" /> +<span class="caption">WASHING BY THE RIVER</span> +</div> + +<p>Panamanian officials are uniformly courteous, kindly, and will go to any reasonable length to +grant any proper request, especially if it comes from a friend. I have called on various men in high +authority many times on diverse matters and have never failed to be received cordially and given the +best of personal treatment. It has occasionally happened, however, that after leaving the official I +tried to recall just what he had stated or agreed to do, and had difficulty in finding anything +definite.</p> + +<p>Perhaps Latin character reaches its highest level in family life. The women of the Latin race are +noted for natural grace and comeliness, and in their own homes they give themselves to their +husbands and children with a devotion to which some of the club women of northern lands are +strangers, as well + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span> + +as their families. Motherhood is a high calling before which all else must give way. The open life +of the northern family, with its easy conventions and free hospitality, is largely unknown, but a +close and intimate family life is built up essentially stronger in some features than anything found +further north. The Spanish home is a very select and secluded affair, into the charmed circle of +which only the most intimate friends may enter.</p> + +<p>This wife and mother usually knows nothing of her husband's affairs, and has little freedom of +the streets or public places. There is none of that comradeship in business interests often found in +the States between husband and wife.</p> + +<p>The señoritas, or young women, of these homes are decidedly feminine. They make much of +cosmetics, but they do at least spare us the assorted colors of the hair dyer's art. And they do not +make a holy show of themselves on the street, with loud manners and conspicuous costumes, as if to +attract attention of all passers-by. It must be said that some of the better class young women of +these countries are "stunning lookers," and are always attractive and well bred, but with limited +educational advantages they are apt to be shallow conversationalists. Many of the men prefer them +that way. For a woman to know too much about business and politics detracts from her distinctly +feminine charm in the eyes of these + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span> + +Spanish men. What religious devotion exists in these countries is found among the women, who usually +go regularly to mass and confession.</p> + +<p>Strictest chaperonage is maintained over young women, no girl being permitted for a moment to be +alone with a young man, a system that would make slow headway in North America. And the women are +long suffering with their husbands, from whom they endure conduct that would break up almost any +North American home.</p> + +<p>The Panamanian woman has none of the boldness of the new woman of Argentine, nor the +ultra-timidity of Peruvian seclusion. She knows the value of balconies and lace shawls and effective +coiffures, and it must be said that in spite of rigorous supervision and never-failing modesty of +demeanor, she has a charm and a "come-hither" in her eye that has won the heart of many a North +American.</p> + +<p>The possibilities of the Latin race are perhaps best measured by the occasional rare characters +that break through the bonds of convention and precedent and attain an altitude of gracious nobility +unsurpassed anywhere on earth. Occasional products of missionary schools show results in character +and efficiency that indicate clearly the latent capacity for a something in which the brusque Saxon +is too often deficient.</p> + +<p>The "Christ of the Andes" was set up on the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span> + +boundary line between Argentine and Chile as a suggestion of the only basis of permanent peace in +the life and teachings of the Prince of Peace. This famous statue was the result of the work of a +woman, the Señora de Costa, president of the Christian Mothers' League of Buenos Ayres. Cast +of old Spanish cannon, and installed in its lofty elevation of thirteen thousand feet in the Andes, +the monument was dedicated March 13, 1914, as much a memorial to the work of a Latin-American woman +as a testimonial to the peaceful intentions of the two nations.</p> + +<p>There is a Spanish word, not exactly translatable into English, which may be taken as the key to +Latin character at its best. It is the word "simpático," which means something more than +"sympathetic." A man is <em>simpático</em> when he is gracious and open-hearted and likable +and considerate of other folks' feelings. There ought to be a course in <em>simpático</em> +for every prospective missionary and business man in the United States who has any intention of +dealing with the Latin-American.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2> + +<h3>THE CARIBBEAN WORLD</h3> + +<p>Readers of Robinson Crusoe associate the Caribbean Sea with piracy and rum, but usually have few +other ideas on the subject. Most people of the United States have scarcely so much as heard that +there be any Caribbean world except that it is somewhere in the tropics.</p> + +<p>To be sure, the Caribbean Sea has a way of impressing itself upon those who sail its troubled +tides. Perhaps the shades of the villains who used to cross these waters on their murderous +expeditions still linger to raise the adverse winds and toss the seasick passenger in his misery. +Certain it is that very few travelers have any affection for the seven hundred miles of salt water +between the Mosquito Coast and the islands so notorious in the sixteenth century.</p> + +<p>It is with something of surprise, then, that the prowler about Panama learns of a homogeneous +population living on the chain of islands that begins below Porto Rico and swings downward in a +graceful curve to the tip of the South American coast. These Lesser Antilles mark the eastern +boundaries of the famous, or <em>in</em>famous, Caribbean Sea. Though small in size, their +considerable + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span> + +numbers and large populations make them important. If they are not so well known now, at least they +have the distinction of having been discovered by Columbus when he set out to find a way to the East +Indies and discovered the West Indies instead.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-192.jpg" width="500" height="204" alt="Costa Rica Farm Home" title="" /> +<span class="caption">COSTA RICA FARM HOME</span> +</div> + +<p>The political complexion of these islands varies greatly. Government is shared by Spain, France, +England, and the United States, and the languages spoken conform to the governing power. The +purchase of the Danish West Indies has given the United States a permanent and prominent influence +in the group.</p> + +<p>No account of matters Panamanian could omit reference to the people of this West Indian world. +From the beginning of Panama's history Caribbean adventurers have crossed the sea in any craft that +would float, and have played a large part in the restless events of the Isthmus. West Indian +influence and blood were mingled with the history of the Isthmus for four hundred + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span> + +years, and in these last days it has been the West Indian who furnished the labor that dug the +Panama Canal, and who still contributes the brawn and perspiration for the work of the Canal Zone. +Twenty-five thousand of these people live on or near the Zone and are employed by its government, +and probably as many more live near by and mingle with the native life of Panama. All through the +interior there are always some West Indians.</p> + +<p>Without the West Indian the digging of the Canal would not have been impossible, but would have +been much more difficult. Chinese coolies would have cost more to import and could hardly have +worked for less money. Considering the cost of living on the Canal Zone, the West Indian has +furnished some of the cheapest labor in the world. In construction days the nine or ten cents an +hour wage was more than the black man had received at home, but his living expenses on the Zone were +very much higher than on the Caribbean Islands. The wage scale of the West Indian on the Canal Zone +has been revised and increased several times by the American government in an effort to keep pace +with the rising cost of living; but it must be said that the laborer's wage of about thirty dollars +a month, with from three dollars to six dollars deducted for the rent of two rooms, does not afford +a very sumptuous living for a man and his family. The "silver" + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span> + +man on the Zone pays the same price for his food and clothes as does the "gold" white man who +receives twenty-five per cent higher wages than is paid for the same work in the States, and in +addition has a furnished apartment or cottage free of rent cost. The men on the "gold" rate complain +of the high cost of living. What they would do if reduced to one sixth of their present wages they +do not stop to consider. It is not a pleasant subject to face, but it is hoped that the wages of the +West Indian may be lifted to the point where he can at least buy food enough to keep him in good +physical condition.</p> + +<p>The West Indies furnishes the plantation labor of Panama and Costa Rica, without which there +would be little plantation work done. In the hot and humid banana groves he endures the temperature +and handles the huge banana bunches as though born for the job, as perhaps he is. Out from Almirante +and Puerto Limon range the tracks of the plantation railroads through hundreds of miles of banana +forests, where the black man supplies the labor for the largest farms in the world. Forty or fifty +thousand of these people live on and about the plantations of the Atlantic coast and without them +the largest agricultural enterprise ever carried on under one management would collapse.</p> + +<p>The West Indian on the Isthmus is not the West Indian at home. He may live and die on + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span> + +the mainland, but he thinks in terms of the islands from which he came. Like the American Negro, he +is of African descent, but his African origin is so remote that no trace of it remains in his +consciousness, though it is evident in his psychology. Most of the West Indians about the Canal Zone +dream of returning to the islands again.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 350px;"> +<img src="images/illus-195.jpg" width="350" height="450" alt="Bananas Thirty Feet High" title="" /> +<span class="caption">BANANAS THIRTY FEET HIGH</span> +</div> + +<p>These people of the Caribbean world have a decided race consciousness, and in their thinking and +living are a world unto themselves. Separate and distinct from the Greater Antilles and the +mainland, they know very little of the continental life and customs, and any attempt to classify +them with American Negroes or Europeans raises a set of social problems difficult to solve.</p> + +<p>To the North American + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span> + +the mental processes of the West Indian are a psychological jungle in which the explorer is soon +lost. Perhaps no one has yet essayed to really understand this man, and those who have tried to +analyze him maintain that he does not understand himself. Certain it is that he does not trouble +himself with any self-analysis. He has enough other things to occupy his attention. With the +psychological background of his remote African ancestors, his race characteristics have changed very +little since the days when his forefathers were forcibly torn from their native land and deported +into savage slavery.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/illus-196.jpg" width="300" height="500" alt="San Blas Indians Have 'Poker Faces'" title="" /> +<span class="caption">SAN BLAS INDIANS HAVE "POKER FACES"</span> +</div> + +<p>The social sanctions of the West Indian are rigid and well established. The list of forbidden +things is long and complex, and of signs, and dreams and portents, strange and powerful, there seems +no end. Numerous negatives appear in his social and personal creed, and he who violates these +prohibitions must be a courageous soul. To introduce any original, new idea into this scheme of +things is a difficult task, and is apt to arouse a whole chain of reactions, complex and mysterious. +This man will follow literally any able + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> + +leadership, but the leader must go in the direction of the established currents of opinion or he +will have a hard time of it.</p> + +<p>The West Indian has a religious capacity that impresses the visitor as a remarkable aptitude for +things sacred. Such, indeed, it is. And the religious life of the earnest and conscientious members +of this race exhibits a fine type of devotion and sacrifice. As might be expected, there is free +expression of emotional experience, but on the whole those who are truly religious match their songs +by their deeds and their testimonies by their lives. Practically nothing is known on the Isthmus of +anything bordering on hysteria. When it comes to familiarity with the English Bible the average +church member will put to shame his white friend, and in interpretation of scripture some very +unique and interesting efforts are produced.</p> + +<p>In matters of doctrine most of these people are rigid immersionists. The women invariably wear +their hats in church, on the ground that Saint Paul commanded such observance, but they ignore the +exhortation of the same apostle that the women keep silence in the churches. All special occasions +possess thrilling interest, and almost any West Indian will go hungry to get good clothes. How they +manage to dress as well as they do on the incomes they receive is a mystery that has not yet been +solved.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span></p> + +<p>An experienced missionary among these people says that practically every West Indian at some time +in his life is a member of some church. If this is true, many of the West Indians in Panama are +backsliders, as a majority are not at present showing any interest in Christian observances or moral +living. Possibly many of those who are genuinely devout and consistently Christian establish a +membership in several different churches, one after the other. Tiring of one church, discontented +with the pastor, or encountering personal difficulties with other members, it is easy and convenient +to join some other congregation, and of split-ups and break-offs there seems no end. Nearly every +church on the Isthmus has had its deflections and divisions, and anything like the modern movement +toward unity and cooperation of the Christian program is a <em>terra incognita</em> to this +enthusiastic individualist.</p> + +<p>A surprising thing is the capacity for financial self-sacrifice of the West Indian. Out of the +pennies that he receives as wages he contributes liberally to the support of his church and for the +education of his children. Nearly all West Indian churches on and near the Canal Zone are +self-supporting, and nearly all West Indian schools are maintained from tuition fees. If these +people were to receive good wages, they would not only wear good clothes but would contribute to +community enterprises and keep their + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span> + +children in school as long as possible. That the more dissolute members of the community would spend +their money for rum is no reason for depriving the laborer of his hire.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 220px;"> +<img src="images/illus-199.jpg" width="220" height="600" alt="Where Styles Molest No More" title="" /> +<span class="caption">WHERE STYLES MOLEST NO MORE</span> +</div> + +<p>Living without adequate means of recreation or possibilities of culture or wide information, life +is nevertheless saved from deadly monotony by the exercise of the high gifts of controversy. When it +comes to a straight, head-on wrangle the West Indian shines in a glory all his own. Not even a +loquacious Oriental can surpass his powers of abuse and lordly contempt for his adversary. If words +were bullets, the whole population would perish in twenty-four hours, innocent and guilty together. +To the uninitiated bystander it seems that an empire is being lost, but the old-timers cease to heed +the quarreling and go their way indifferent to the social safety valve of these + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> + +greatest natural controversialists of the tropic world. A young woman on the train in Costa Rica +left her seat to speak to a friend and another girl slipped in next to the window. When the visitor +returned the program began. Back and forth flew claims, charges and counter-charges as to the +ownership of the seat. With indescribable scorn the usurper said, "Do you want a seat in my lap?" +which provoked "Ah, now I see how you was raised."</p> + +<p>"Indeed, and you have no manners at all, it is plain to be seen."</p> + +<p>Back and forth the duel rages until the first claimant sought another seat, saying, "I certainly +does respect myself too highly to sit by the likes of you."</p> + +<p>The combat closed thus: "When I look upon you I know what you is, for I can read your face."</p> + +<p>All of which falls flat without the wholly inimitable accent of the Jamaican dialect.</p> + +<p>This accent of the British subject in the West Indies is a dialect so peculiar that it defies the +most skillful impersonators. Somehow only those to the manner born seem able to acquire or imitate +the strong combination of London cockney and African rhythm. The more intelligent and +better-educated people speak intelligibly, but it is common to hear alleged English that is almost +impossible to understand. There is not the slightest resemblance to the traditional dialect of + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span> + +the Southern Negro, and as for expressing it in cold type there is no alphabet on earth that can +represent the sounds and inflections produced.</p> + +<p>The West Indian in Panama has a certain economic efficiency on the level to which he has been +trained, otherwise he would not have been brought to the Zone by tens of thousands and retained +there through the years of Canal construction on into the present period of operation and +maintenance. Under a boss this man is faithful and efficient, provided the task assigned him is +within the scope of his training and ability. And however slow or inaccurate he may be, he can +hardly help earning the wages that he receives. And if he did not work at all, the patience with +which he endures the frequent abuse and cursings of the impatient gang bosses ought to be worth +something. Certainly, the reader of this would not take what is handed out to the West Indian for +ten times his wages. It is true that he is not strong on independent judgment, and that when left to +his own counsel he may do some strange things and perhaps very little of anything. But how is a man +to develop judgment who has never borne responsibility?</p> + +<p>Deep down in the heart of this man is slowly rising a resentment against the economic conditions +he finds on the Zone, and in many cases silent and dangerous hate is gradually filling the hearts of +the unorganized and helpless "silver" + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span> + +men. Unless conditions are improved the time may come when this resentment may flare up in a useless +and hopeless protest. But it is more likely that the wage scale will be readjusted from time to time +and the explosion forestalled. Occasionally some of these people get away to the United States, but +none of them ever return. For them the patriarchal Canal Zone offers no attractions compared with +the free competition of the States. It is maintained by officials of the Zone that the wage scale is +as high as available funds will warrant; that if the West Indian had any more money, it would do him +no good, and that the increases in wages already granted have fully kept pace with the rise in the +cost of living.</p> + +<p>In matters of personal morals the West Indian is accused of loose matrimonial practices. A priest +said to me one day that if two commandments—the seventh and eighth—could be omitted from +the Ten, the West Indian would get along all right. This slander is not deserved; but investigation +into facts reveals that the morals of the West Indians are but little better than those of Panama. +Concubinage is widely practiced, with a system of financial support; but no more so than everywhere +else in the tropics except on the Canal Zone, where moral conditions are exceptionally good. The +remark of the priest may have been due to the fact that most of the West Indians are +Protestants.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></p> + +<p>Some characteristics of rare merit and interest occasionally arise among these people. They do +not sing as well as their northern cousins, but they produce orators of no mean ability. Earnest, +consistent, faithful, affectionate, and original in expression, the best of these people afford +promise of what may be expected when better conditions bring large opportunity.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 252px;"> +<img src="images/illus-203a.jpg" width="252" height="500" alt="Chinese Always Start a School" title="" /> +<span class="caption">CHINESE ALWAYS START A SCHOOL</span> +</div> + +<div class="imgright" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/illus-203b.jpg" width="300" height="269" alt="'SCHOOLDAYS'" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"SCHOOLDAYS"</span> +</div> + +<p>Like other races not long exposed to civilization, the children of these people show surprising +precocity. They give excellent account of themselves in primary schools, and in performances at +public entertainments they are letter-perfect. Fifty numbers on a program and never a slip or a +failure throughout, and not a complaint or criticism except that it was a little short. One large +church established a record by producing a Christmas program containing one hundred and eight +numbers. Through the primary years these youngsters sometimes surpass their white + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span> + +friends, but the economic pressure of living conditions crowds them nearly all out of school at the +end of the fourth or fifth grade. Once they get a groundwork in the three "Rs" they are considered +well educated for life.</p> + +<p>As may be expected, the birth rate is high, but large families are rare because of the +distressing and unnecessary high rate of infant mortality. How could it be otherwise when a whole +family lives in one room on twenty-five dollars a month with food at New York prices?</p> + +<p>That the Jamaicans are a gregarious folk is to be expected. The social instinct is always strong +in any people of African descent. Canal Zone bosses complain that their employees prefer to leave +the clean and sanitary quarters of the Zone and live in the Guachapali and San Miguel districts of +Panama and in Colon, where they are crowded together in a way that would prove fatal to a white man. +The constant company and crowded conditions do not trouble the West Indians, whereas the rigid +restrictions of the silver quarters of the Zone he often finds objectionable.</p> + +<p>What the West Indian most needs is a fair chance. He is cursed and disparaged on every hand. He +is to blame for being ragged and unwashed, but when he goes hungry and dresses up, then he is a +hopeless spendthrift and a fraudulent dude. It is useless to pay him fair wages because he would +spend the money. Unscrupulous landlords + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> + +are allowed to extort enormous rents for wretched quarters in Panama and Colon, because, if the +Jamaican did not spend his money that way, he would pay it out for something else. He is looked down +upon as not being highly educated, and it is claimed that the more he knows the worse off he is. No +matter what happens he is to blame. If the cholera should appear in Panama, or the Gold Hill should +slide into the Canal, the West Indian would be the guilty party. Surely, he is worth his wages +merely as a target for the verbal explosions of his boss. Some men would have difficulty in holding +their jobs were it not for the timely assistance of this "goat" of the Zone. Living conditions in +Caledonia and Guachapali would give the New York East Side something to think about. Rooms ten or +twelve feet square are rented out to families who usually stretch a curtain across the middle, sleep +huddled together in the rear at night, and live in the front of the "flat" the rest of the time. +From some primitive prejudice comes a violent dislike of fresh air, especially at night, when every +room is as nearly as possible hermetically sealed. In a tropical temperature no one has yet +explained how the inmates live till morning.</p> + +<p>Naked children swarm in the streets. At first the visitor is properly shocked, but soon ceases to +notice these ebony cherubs. In time, however, one does get tired of it. Along the sidewalks and + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span> + +in the doorsteps the evening hours are turned into neighborhood debating societies and wrangling +clubs, and between the arguments and disputes, and the always nearby street meeting, there is never +a dull moment. That is why they prefer living there to the quiet and monotonous life in the silver +town on the Zone.</p> + +<p>Religious gatherings on the street are a marked feature of the night life of this part of the +city. Torchlights and crowds, vigorous singing and enthusiastic exhortations mark the visible +features of the efforts of these earnest persuaders of their neighbors to flee from the wrath to +come. If street demonstrations were confined to religious meetings, all might be well. While +ever-present canteenas dispense cheap and deadly rum there will always be people who will go hungry +and ragged to buy "firewater," and with one or two drinks aboard the West Indian becomes a very +talkative and quarrelsome person. Often have I seen sidewalks spattered with blood, and a common +sight is that of a couple of policemen leading away a gory victim or culprit.</p> + +<p>So scanty is the food ration of these people that the general custom prevails of eating very +little during the day and then making a feast at night of whatever food can be secured. The +Methodist missionary school in this district established a soup line at noon for the feeding of +hungry babies who came to the school without their breakfast + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span> + +and had nothing at home to eat at noon. Any sort of "learning" under such circumstances was +impossible.</p> + +<p>Three or four things must be supplied if the West Indian is to rise above his present level. He +needs living wages, he needs intelligent and responsible leadership; he needs a better education, +and he needs a broader social basis and a wider horizon for his circle of life.</p> + +<p>There are a few lawyers and doctors and teachers of this race, and there are a number of +preachers, who consider themselves to be the intellectuals, but there is no concert of purpose or +plan for progress among these people. Each man is intent upon exalting his own personal prominence, +or furthering the interests of the little group to which he belongs. West Indian life at present is +segregated into little cliques and rings, represented by churches, lodges, dancing clubs, and other +organizations. So far no common cause has united any of these factors in any program of progress. So +intent are they upon individual emphasis that any thought of the social whole seems almost +impossible. Several efforts have been made to unite in a common program of service the different +churches in a given community, but so far small success has attended these worthy plans.</p> + +<p>Perhaps more than almost anything else the West Indian needs racial self-respect. He is + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span> + +humble enough before his boss, and if well treated is loyal and faithful; but for his own kind he +has little appreciation. "I will never work for my own color," boasted a proud cook one day. And one +of the most difficult problems of the missionary grows out of the fact that the West Indians +generally despise each other. To arouse leadership and stimulate ambition among a people who look +down upon themselves is a big task. The individual man will have to get his mind on something +besides his effort to exalt himself above all his fellows before any great progress can be made. The +fundamental trouble with the West Indian is that he looks up to those whom he considers his +superiors and looks down upon everybody else. It seems difficult for him to look across or on a +level, and recognize other people as being on the same plane with himself.</p> + +<p>The educational equipment of these people needs to be extended beyond the present mere elements +of reading, writing, and arithmetic. Some intellectual window into the great world out beyond the +Caribbean Sea must be provided if there is to be deliverance from the superstition and iron-bound +customs that have held them fast for ten thousand years.</p> + +<p>What the West Indian needs is not more vigorous swaying of congregations nor more loudly shouting +enthusiasts, but a program of Christian living that will enlarge the boundaries + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span> + +of life and push back the horizons of interest. Debating societies, reading courses, study clubs, +extension lectures, night schools, vocational training, good moving picture programs—all of +these will do much to break the spell of the past and introduce new ideas where they will take root +and bear harvest. Here is a fertile field for a Christian settlement, but the settlement worker +should be a resident of the community. One difficulty with the mission work now conducted is that it +is done from the top down, and from the outside in. Any attempt toward higher education will need +some endowment. It is a tragedy that these people, out of their wretched poverty, are compelled to +pay tuition fees for the meager education that their children receive. Some of the plans now being +formulated for a broader work in these communities deserve every encouragement and support.</p> + +<p>It is greatly to the credit of the West Indian that he nearly always manages in some way to send +his children to school, cost what it may. Considering his opportunities, he does well. If the +American people were suddenly asked to pay one or two dollars a month for each child sent to school, +there would be educational revolution.</p> + +<p>It is the intention of the Canal Zone government to house its employees on the Zone as soon as +quarters can be provided, but this will require some time. As all "silver" employees are charged + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span> + +a monthly rent for these quarters, the project is a business matter for the Zone. Twelve families +are usually quartered in one two-story house, two rooms and a porch section to the family, with two +wash rooms and sanitary quarters for the whole house. At five dollars per month rent for each +family, the house yields an income of eight hundred and forty dollars per year. In a building of +about the same size four white families would be quartered rent free.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 214px;"> +<img src="images/illus-210a.jpg" width="214" height="251" alt="Three in a Row" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THREE IN A ROW</span> +</div> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 214px;"> +<img src="images/illus-210b.jpg" width="214" height="400" alt="Mother, Home, And-The Simple Life" title="" /> +<span class="caption">MOTHER, HOME, AND—THE SIMPLE LIFE</span> +</div> + +<p>There is abundant opportunity in the Republic of Panama for the organization of agricultural +colonization schemes. Good land is plentiful. Families could be placed on the land without much +housing expense, and if food could be supplied them for a few months, self-support would soon be +established. Some philanthropist might render valuable service and open up new opportunities for a +large number of these people by placing them out on the land where each family could + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span> + +have its own house and where better conditions prevail. A colony of one thousand souls grouped about +a central church and school and store would afford new hope and better living to these dwellers in +the crowded tenements.</p> + +<p>What may be the future of the West Indian on the Isthmus is not yet clearly established, and the +Canal Zone authorities have heretofore regarded the "silver" men as more of a temporary necessity +than permanent residents. As industrial conditions on the Zone become more stable, however, it +appears that there always will be needed a large labor force with a minimum of about twenty thousand +people; and unless some new factor appears or is imported, the West Indian is going to supply this +labor demand for years to come. This being the case, the laborer is worthy of his hire and should be +paid a fair wage for what he does. And the missionaries and social workers who are interested in the +welfare of these people need a coordinated and unified program of religious and educational advance. +So long as the present disjointed and unconnected methods are followed, scattering and sometimes +inharmonious results will appear.</p> + +<p>So long as there is work for a laborer in Panama, so long the Caribbean man will be found here in +such numbers as may be needed, and so long as he is here he at least deserves good treatment.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2> + +<h3>THE PANAMA CANAL</h3> + +<p>Probably most pilgrims to Panama think of the Canal as the outstanding feature of the American +tropics, and in one way such it is. The traveler will probably want to see the Canal first, and he +will find it well worthy of preferential position.</p> + +<p>The story of construction days and engineering problems has been ably told elsewhere and does not +belong here. Every intelligent traveler will secure some good account of the work and read it as +something that every man should know. It is the romance de luxe of engineering achievement. The +author of the Arabian Nights Tales would have dug the Canal by the sweep of a wand, or the rubbing +of an old lamp, but the American method is vastly more interesting and is much more likely to remain +in working order. Aladdin's engineering feats had a way of failing to stay put, if the wrong man got +hold of the lamp, but the present Canal shows no signs of disappearing overnight.</p> + +<p>Before war conditions put a wall around everything, seeing the Canal was one of the pleasantest +and easiest of touring tasks. All was in + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span> + +plain view, or could readily be found by asking, and most of the men on duty thought it a pleasure +to answer questions. Of camera fiends and sketchers and notebook makers there were aplenty. But the +war stopped all that for a time. Anybody could look at the Canal from almost any point along its +survey, but the locks and docks were strictly private affairs. There are statistics in abundance to +be had for the asking concerning the Big Ditch. Experts take pleasure in supplying us with +entertainment by compiling and translating figures into interesting statements. For instance, enough +excavating was done on the Canal to dig a tunnel fourteen feet in diameter through the center of the +earth, eight thousand miles of boring. It takes a little time to comprehend the meaning of a tunnel +from Valparaiso, Chile, to Peking, China, or straight through from the north pole to the southern +tip of the world.</p> + +<p>Enough concrete was used to build a wall four feet thick and twenty-five feet high clear around +the State of Delaware. Probably by walking the two hundred and sixty-six miles represented by this +wall, one might understand the amount of concrete involved in the Canal construction.</p> + +<p>The enormous size of the locks can only be understood by walking their length through the +underground tunnels and passageways in which + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span> + +is located the marvelous machinery of their operation. To stand on the floor of a dry lock and look +up at a lock gate eighty feet high, seven feet thick and sixty-five feet wide is an impressive +experience, but to see a pair of such gates swing open and shut at the touch of the finger is +something to be remembered. The emergency dams look like a steel girder bridge, which, indeed, they +are, and provide against accidents by as ingenious a piece of mechanism as the entire system +affords. Enormous iron chains with hydraulic springs are stretched across the entrance to the locks +to stop any reckless ship which might otherwise strike the gates. The Gatun Dam alone may be classed +as one of the world's greatest achievements.</p> + +<p>The builders of the Canal may be pardoned for taking pride in the fact that the entire +construction cost, down to the present day—three years after the opening of the Canal—is +still within the original estimate of $375,000,000, which figure included the $40,000,000 paid to +the French for the work of the earlier construction. This means that the cost of the Canal was a +little less than four dollars apiece for every inhabitant of the United States. The national +prestige alone gained by the successful completion of the work has repaid this four-dollar +investment many times over. Before the European war $400,000,000 seemed like a good deal of money. +To-day we think of it as a very small sum.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is easy to find numerous compilations of figures which astonish and perplex us, even though +they do help us to understand the magnitude of the work. And nothing is more disappointing than to +try to understand the Canal by looking at it from any point along the bank. You can't see the Canal +for the water! It is no different from a great Western irrigating ditch and looks like any quiet +river. There are no marks of effort or strain anywhere, and when one looks about on the verdant and +peaceful landscape he half believes that the tales of the stirring times back in construction days +must have been dreams.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/illus-215.jpg" width="400" height="250" alt="Construction Days in Culebra-Gailard Cut" title="" /> +<span class="caption">CONSTRUCTION DAYS IN CULEBRA-GAILARD CUT</span> +</div> + +<p>Culebra Cut looks like the Hudson palisades, and Gatun Lake is like any other beautiful inland +sea in a rolling country. The famous Gatun Dam is merely a dyke at the end of the lake and + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span> + +the marvelous spillway is only a picturesque waterfall in the middle of a dam. As for the locks, +they are big concrete chambers looking very much like a paved street on top and revealing nothing of +the complicated mechanism below; and the germ-proof towns are like any other spotlessly clean +villages with screened houses, and show nothing to cause us astonishment.</p> + +<p>Any superficial view of the Canal is disappointing. It is like trying to understand a deep mine +by looking at the mouth of the shaft. The channel is full of water, the machinery is out of sight, +the great achievements of sanitation have been largely removals of materials, microbes, and +conditions that have left no trace behind to tell their tale. In one way it is a negative +result.</p> + +<p>The idea of the Canal across the Isthmus is nearly as old as the discovery of the Isthmus by +white men, but it remained for the intrepid builder of the Suez Canal to really undertake in earnest +the project of a waterway between the two oceans. DeLesseps was both engineer and promoter and never +really understood the size of his project. He had succeeded at Suez, but that was a farmer's ditch +beside the Culebra Cut and the Gatun Dam, and the famous engineer was a very old man when he began +on the Panama project. The high prestige of his name brought him money on a stock investment basis, +and when unprincipled schemers got control of the company + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span> + +the crash and scandal were immense. DeLesseps himself became insane as the result of the worry and +disgrace and died in a hospital.</p> + +<p>The French attempt began on January 1, 1880, with a great deal of oratory and champagne, also the +official blessing of the Bishop of Panama, which seems to have been something of a Jonah on the +enterprise.</p> + +<p>In striking contrast was the beginning of the American work when a few men climbed out of a boat +into water waist-deep and began cutting down jungle brush.</p> + +<p>The actual construction and excavation work begun on the Isthmus by the French was of a very high +order, and much of it was used by the Americans. The two causes which defeated the French were +reckless financing at home and tropical diseases on the Isthmus. So bad did the disease conditions +become that in the fall months of 1884 fifty-five thousand people died, and in the single month of +September, 1885, the total rate reached the high-water mark of one hundred and seventy-seven per +thousand of population. The total of lives lost on the enterprise will never be known, but is far +greater than that of many wars which have received a conspicuous notice on the historical page. The +collapse of the DeLesseps undertaking was followed by the organization of the New Canal Company, +upon which followed a chapter of bargainings and treaties + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span> + +and negotiations and bickerings with the object of selling out the rights and holdings of the +company to the highest bidder. In all of these the Panama Railroad figured very largely, and the +Republic of Colombia kept a watchful eye on the main chance for herself.</p> + +<p>The story of President Roosevelt's large part in the American undertaking of the independence of +Panama and the organization of the American effort is one of the romances of American history. On +November 18, 1903, Washington recognized the new Republic of Panama, and later paid $10,000,000 for +the Canal Zone and entered into a treaty guaranteeing the peace and perpetuity of the Isthmian +Republic. Thus ended a half-century of riot and revolution and rebellion which was stated to have +included fifty-three revolutions in fifty-seven years. Relations between the early officials on the +Canal Zone and the rulers of Panama were not ideal; some of the Americans seemed to have had a real +genius for offending the finer sensibilities of the natives.</p> + +<p>The beginning of the American attempt is not a chapter of which anybody is very proud. The effort +to dig the Canal from Washington under a mass of red tape which tied the hands of the men on the +Isthmus proved an impossible undertaking. The President succeeded in effecting a reorganization +which helped some, but not until all red tape was cut and Army engineers were put + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span> + +in charge, was anything like real efficiency obtained. Three great engineers were connected with the +work—Wallace, Stevens, and Goethals—and to each of these belongs credit for the very +high order of work done. While the man who finished the job bears the outstanding name in connection +with the Canal, without exception the engineers who worked under the first two men speak in the +highest terms of the work that they accomplished.</p> + +<p>No snapshot résumé of the building days, nor tourist instantaneous exposure of +visits can reveal, nor appreciate, the big problems that confronted the engineers. It all looks easy +enough now, but it was very different then.</p> + +<p>Good health on the Canal Zone seems a very simple matter now, and such it is; but when the +doctors and sanitary engineers began work it was an exceedingly serious situation that they +undertook to cure, and without their work there could be no Canal to-day. The complete elimination +of the last case of yellow fever has made entirely harmless the mosquito carriers where they +occasionally appear on the Isthmus. The best test of the work of the Sanitary Department is the fact +that the Zone and terminal cities have remained clean and that there is no indication of relapse. +Before work could begin, a whole system of transportation had to be organized, a steamer line put +into operation, and an immense purchasing department + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> + +gotten into working order. Before men could be brought to the Isthmus to do the work some provision +had to be made for housing and feeding, and the question of materials, supplies, food, fuel, +recreation, and education was no small matter.</p> + +<p>To dig the Canal required not only engineers and officials, but an army of common laborers, and +the labor question was not easy. The Panamanian might have dug the Canal, but he did not do it; he +did not want to do it, and the probability is that he never could have done it. Employers on the +Zone refused to hire Panamanians for Canal work.</p> + +<p>Chinese coolies might have been imported from Canton or Amoy, but Panama is a long way from +southern China and still further from India, and no intelligent man ever seriously proposed +importing Hindus. If enough Panamanian Indians could have been found, they might have done the work, +but the native Indian is a very uncertain and fragmentary factor of life on the Isthmus.</p> + +<p>At this juncture the West Indian filled the breach and supplied the labor for the job. Up to +forty-five thousand of them were employed at one time, and with the ebb and flow of the human tide +between the Isthmus and the Caribbean Islands several times that number came to the Isthmus. +Somebody else <em>might</em> have supplied + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span> + +the labor, but the fact is West Indian <i>did</i> do the work, and at least deserves proper +recognition therefor.</p> + +<p>The problems of suitable construction machinery were in a way simple. Given a definite task, it +remained to devise mechanical means to meet the conditions. In practice, however, the case was not +so simple as this sounds, and some very difficult knots were untangled before the work was well +under way. Some of the old French machinery was used clear through the construction period, but the +jungle was sown with scrap iron of the old French equipment that has only recently been removed.</p> + +<p>The electrical and mechanical equipment for the operation of the locks is a marvel of adaptation +and invention and nothing short of a technical description can do the subject justice. To see the +locks in operation is to wonder at the mechanical contrivances which seem almost intelligent, and +some of the design work is the result of real genius.</p> + +<p>Of engineering problems, proper, it is better to let the engineer speak with intelligence, but +any layman can stand on Gold Hill and by vigorous use of the imagination see something of the +tremendous work that has been done since the first shovelful of earth was turned on that New Year's +Day in 1880. Whether the French engineers anticipated landslides at Culebra is not + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span> + +clear, but the American engineers knew from the start that the porous soil would cave in more or +less at that point. What it actually did do surpassed the expectations of those who surveyed the +work. When the banks began to cave north of Gold Hill the surrounding country got the idea and +followed suit so fast that it looked as though the ten-mile strip would all be needed.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-222.jpg" width="500" height="298" alt="Gatun Spillway, Key to the Canal" title="" /> +<span class="caption">GATUN SPILLWAY, KEY TO THE CANAL</span> +</div> + +<p>I spent a day in the big cut in January, 1917, and noted the rapid crumble of the historic bank +at this troubled point. The following night the channel filled up for a length of eight hundred feet +and shipping was suspended. Then the dredgers went at it hammer and tongs, and in three days and +nights they had cleared a channel through that enormous mass of material and on the fourth day ships +were again passing in safety.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p> + +<p>It was a fine illustration of the way dirt was made to fly in the old days.</p> + +<p>Some otherwise intelligent people have utterly failed to comprehend the size of the task involved +in the mere digging of the Canal. One high official advocated the cure of slides by digging back a +mile on each side of the bank. Verily, he knew not what he said, and a member of Congress on +visiting the Canal reported that he was still in favor of a sea-level route. Competent engineers +assured him that to construct a sea-level canal from ocean to ocean would require at least fifty +years of continuous labor. The wisdom of Theodore Roosevelt's ideas has been forever vindicated by +experience. Some practical man has said that no man can know how great is the task of making the +earth until he tries to move a little of it. The congressman needed a little pick-and-shovel +experience.</p> + +<p>Administrative problems are not especially acute on the Zone, but the completed task gives room +for a world of appreciation of the general efficiency with which the whole work was carried out, and +the smooth-running machinery of the executive to-day attests the thoroughness with which the +departmental system was organized and initiated by the men whose names will always be associated +with the work. The task of operating the Canal to-day would not be very great, nor would it require +a very large army of employees, + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span> + +but without any preconceived plan various related industries to the number of six or seven have +grown up about the Canal administration and operation, and the Canal Zone government to-day is doing +a number of things never contemplated in the original plans. The routing of ships is directly +connected with the coal supply, and a great coaling plant stands at Cristobal. A large cold storage +plant makes possible the supplying of refrigerated goods to shipping countries. While the +trans-shipping business at Colon is yet in its infancy, the docks there are already a very +considerable factor in Canal activities. Sanitation and public health, of course, require a trained +force of specialists. The Canal employees must eat, and the commissary hotel and restaurant are a +very important branch of the service. The quartermaster looks after the housing problem, and where +there are five thousand Americans, most of them living with families, the educational problem +necessitates a department by itself. The Balboa Docks employ hundreds of men at high wages.</p> + +<p>In connection with the food problem come the large farming operations conducted on the Canal +Zone. An army of laborers is employed, and the proceeds of the plantations and poultry yards is sold +through the commissary's stores.</p> + +<p>From the beginning much attention has been paid to the social life and recreation needs of these + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span> + +exiles from home. A chain of government clubhouses runs across the Isthmus, one in each town, where +reading rooms, games, gymnasiums, refreshment counters, discussion clubs, concerts, dances, cigar +stores, and motion-picture programs are provided for young and old. During the dry season baseball +is widely indulged in and plays an important part in the social and recreational life of the +Zone.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 365px;"> +<img src="images/illus-225.jpg" width="365" height="400" alt="Cristobal Streets" title="" /> +<span class="caption">CRISTOBAL STREETS</span> +</div> + +<p>Next to the "spotless town" features of the Zone the visitor is impressed by the smooth-running +system through which everything is done. There may be officials who are grouchy and will not take +time to answer questions, but I have never met one. The routine of operation and maintenance has +succeeded the drive of construction days when Governor Goethals established the famous open house on +Sunday morning and received anybody + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> + +who had anything to say to him. The last black laborer could see the governor if he wished, and many +of them did so. The public-be-hanged attitude of occasional small executives in the States is +delightfully absent. The machinery of administration outwardly works as smoothly as do the great +gates of the locks. On the inner circle there are, of course, problems and sometimes personalities, +but they rarely escape from the closets where ghosts are supposed to remain.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-226.jpg" width="500" height="280" alt="Fat Cattle of Cocle" title="" /> +<span class="caption">FAT CATTLE OF COCLÉ</span> +</div> + +<p>When the visitor begins to look about and beyond the Canal he becomes aware of the conquered +wilderness. Where once was dense and impassable jungle now sweep smooth and verdant hills. One-time +fever swamps are now drained meadows, and the never-failing drip from the sanitary oil barrel +induces a very high mortality among the mosquitoes. Broad acres of rich + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span> + +jungle lands have been cleared and are now model farms. Over the grassgrown hills wander thousands +of fat cattle, increasing in number every year. The jungle of the Canal Zone is a very tame and +conquered jungle. The real article lies beyond the line where there is plenty.</p> + +<p>It was once thought that the best thing to do with the jungle was to let it run wild after its +kind, as a barrier to invasion. A little experimenting proved that an army could cut its way through +the jungle so fast that the brush was nothing more than a screen for the advance of the enemy.</p> + +<p>If the visitor stays long enough and gets close enough, he will learn of things which might have +been done differently on a second trial, but regulation and adjustment have pretty well cleared up +the points in question, and, taking it all through, the Canal is as satisfactory and complete a job +as the world has ever seen.</p> + +<p>The Americans who live on the Zone are an interesting social experiment without knowing it. They +form one of the unique communities of the world. Somebody has said that the Zone situation is +described by the word "suburban," but that does not express it. Every man lives in a +government-furnished house, rent free. Free also is his electric light and a ration of fuel for +cooking. Ice is so cheap that it is practically free. He buys everything that he eats and wears in +the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span> + +commissary's stores, where goods are sold to him at cost. So they are—at what they cost +<em>him</em>. Prices now do not differ materially from retail figures in the States on the same +goods. If housekeeping tires, there are the commissary restaurants, clean and wholesome, always +available for good meals at reasonable prices. Good schools are furnished free, of course, for the +children. There is a free dispensary where all minor ailments are treated and medicine furnished +free. The government hospitals are among the best in the world, and employees' rates are less than +the cost of living at home. The Zone man is under Civil Service rules, receives a generous vacation, +with a steamer rate to New York so low that it covers little more than his meals en route. The scale +of his wages is based on an increase of twenty per cent over the pay for the same class of service +in the United States. Cheap household service abounds and is about as satisfactory as household +service is anywhere. If he is lonesome, the government clubhouse, with its community life, good +recreation, and well-stocked reading room, is always open to him practically without cost; and if he +gets tired of the Zone, there is always Panama and the interior country with its never-failing +places of interest and exploration.</p> + +<p>Here are all the advantages of the socialized state and no workingmen or clerks in all the world +are so well paid, or taken care of, as these + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span> + +Americans on the Zone. It is a fine, efficient piece of provision for the men who do the work. +Therefore the Zone dweller should be a satisfied and happy man, dreading nothing but the day when he +must return to the States.</p> + +<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/illus-229.jpg" width="500" height="232" alt="Enchanted Islands in Gatun Lake" title="" /> +<span class="caption">ENCHANTED ISLANDS IN GATUN LAKE</span> +</div> + +<p>In practice, however, the American on the Canal Zone is not so contented as the external features +of his lot would lead one to suppose. There is an undercurrent of petty complaint, directed at +everything in general, and indicative of a state of mind as much as of actual evils existent. These +complaints are the results of too much community life without room for individual ownership or +initiative. The followers of Bellamy should come to the Zone and stay long enough to get a few +pointers.</p> + +<p>The trouble is that there is necessarily much of uniformity of housing, commissary, social, and +living conditions. The American people are, after all, strong individualists, and every man + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span> + +likes to have something that is distinctively his own.</p> + +<p>When people work all day together, play ball together till meal time, all eat the same things at +the same price from the same store, on exactly similar tables, with identical dishes; when they go +to the movies together and walk home down the same street together and sleep in houses and beds all +alike, they sometimes develop cases of nerves.</p> + +<p>On the testimony of one of the efficient medical men of the Zone a lot of nervousness disappeared +when war work absorbed the attention and energies of the patriotic Americans, who enthusiastically +devoted their spare time to various forms of win-the-war industry.</p> + +<p>The problem of raising children on the Zone is admittedly beset with difficulties. Health +conditions are good enough, but many people are prone to regard life on the Zone as a general +vacation from the standards and disciplines of the homeland, and children are often allowed to do +very much as they please. Many families employ a servant, and there is no economic need for children +doing any useful act of work. An unusual degree of irresponsibility results. "It will be time enough +to correct them when we get back to the States," is a common remark.</p> + +<p>Of course there are many families where the highest ideals are earnestly maintained, and no more +faithful fathers and mothers may be found + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span> + +anywhere than here in this colony of voluntary exiles. But American life on the Canal Zone is at +present apt to be regarded more as a vacation experience than as a serious attempt to face the whole +problem of living.</p> + +<p>Moral and religious safeguards are not absent. The early plan of providing government-paid +chaplains ended with construction days, and under the leadership of a group of farsighted laymen the +Union Church of the Canal Zone was organized in February, 1914. All Protestant denominations except +two now cooperate with this piece of ecclesiastical statesmanship. A centralized organization +maintains work in all the civilian "gold" towns along the Canal, employing four pastors, who must be +ordained men of evangelical churches. This Union Church does not regard itself as a denomination but +as a federation for Christian service. No attempt is made to establish a doctrinal position, and +members are not asked to sever their relations with their home churches. The excellent results +attained under this management speak volumes for the wisdom of the plan and the earnestness and +ability of the men who have fostered the enterprise from the start. The Union Church has devoted its +benevolent moneys to opening a mission station at David in Western Panama, in cooperation with the +Panama Mission of the Methodist Episcopal Church.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p> + +<p>Morally, the Canal Zone is as clean as any place on earth. The improvement of moral conditions in +Colon and Panama has done much to make the lives of Americans wholesome and to decrease the dangers +to childhood that have existed in the past. There will always be Americans on the Canal Zone, and a +few of them will exercise the great American prerogative of speaking their minds, but most of them +will be better off here than at any other time in their lives.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p> + +<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2> + +<h3>PROWLING INTO THE FUTURE</h3> + +<p>Many prophets have taken in hand to tell us what the Panama Canal is to bring forth in its +commercial, social, political, geographical, and educational results for the world. Probably no +world-event has ever had so much advance advertising as this much written-up achievement. Great as +is the Canal, it came near being out-*shone in brilliancy by the publicity material sent out by +journalists who found the subject to be profitable copy.</p> + +<p>In the main, the prophets were right. The world war postponed the arrival of some of the promised +results, but it also enlarged the importance of the Canal and assured more extensive and +far-reaching effects than could have been prophesied before the war began. It is now certain that we +are to have a new and more closely united America than was formerly possible, and that the drawing +together of the two Americas has been greatly accelerated by the world vindication of democracy. In +this closer brotherhood of all Americans the Canal will play a large and important part.</p> + +<p>Just how far the stream of influences will flow + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> + +cannot be told, but it is within the moderate possibilities to say that every country in the world +will be affected by the changes due to the new water-*way. The French originators of the first +project saw an opportunity for commercial investment and hoped to make good dividends from the +venture. They did not much concern themselves with by-products. The Americans who planned and pushed +and persevered until the work was again begun were thinking of commercial and naval results, evident +enough, but they could not have foreseen the far consequences to follow, nor could they have known +that on the Canal Zone five or six related industries were to spring up under management of the +Canal Commission. It is now about as difficult to predict the world-wide effects of the Canal factor +as it would have been in 1903 to foresee the related industries of the present situation.</p> + +<p>Shortening of trade routes is the first and obvious consideration. Everything else grows out of +the elimination of distances by the Canal cut-off. It requires no prophetic gift to take the figures +from any good map and ascertain that from New York to San Francisco via Magellan is 13,135 miles, +whereas via Panama it is 5,262—a saving of 7,873 miles, or a month of steady steaming. Between +New York and Honolulu there is a saving of 6,610 miles; and Yokohama is 2,768 miles nearer New York +via Panama than by the Suez + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> + +route. The list of distances saved may be indefinitely extended.</p> + +<div class="imgright" style="width: 223px;"> +<img src="images/illus-235.jpg" width="223" height="500" alt="Panama Public Water Works, Interior Country" title="" /> +<span class="caption">PANAMA PUBLIC WATER WORKS, INTERIOR COUNTRY</span> +</div> + +<p>If there were no results other than the saving of a week or a month of steamer time, the Canal +would be cheap at several times its price. But these changes in steamer schedules and prices +introduce an entirely new set of reactions into the commercial and social world, and this is where +the interesting problems arise. Left to herself, nature tends to establish a balance of flora or +fauna in any locality. Introduce a new plant or animal or microbe and all sorts of readjustments +begin at once, and before a new balance is established almost anything may happen. Commerce finds +its level in much the same way and by the same law. Introduce a radical disturbance, like the Panama +short-cut, and everything begins to happen. Add the direct and indirect results of the war with its +weakening of German influence and strengthening of + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> + +inter-American interests, and we may have practically a new world before a new balance is +established.</p> + +<p>Commercial interests naturally forge to the front in any discussion of canal results. So ably +have these matters been discussed by experts that any repetition of figures and industries here +would be beyond the scope of this work.</p> + +<p>It must be understood that the world war rendered obsolete our former ideas regarding trade +between the United States and Spanish-America. Whether the extensive German political-commercial +machine that covered all Latin-America can regain its prestige in fifty years to come remains to be +seen, but it is certain that for a generation following the defeat of Germany by the free nations of +the world North America will have a magnificent opportunity to enter South American trade on very +advantageous terms. And the great bulk of the west-coast trade will pass through the Canal on its +way to Gulf and Atlantic ports, as well as to Europe.</p> + +<p>The completion of the Panama Canal may be set down as the date of the discovery of Latin-America +by the people of the United States. Previous to that date the North Americans were aware enough of +the Monroe Doctrine, but almost unaware of the lives and interests of the nations living south of +the Rio Grande River. With the opening of the Canal the North Americans + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> + +began thinking south, and so far as the process has gone it has been very informing. Once the war is +out of the way, the process will be greatly accelerated. With uninterrupted commercial conditions, +five years of the expanded life due to the Canal will be about equal to sending the whole people +back to school for a year. The cultural and geographical values of this new zone of thinking have +hardly been felt as yet, but now that the attention of the world is released from the battlefields +of Europe and the enormous social and financial problems arising from the expense of making the +world decent once for all, the tide of interest is again turning southward along the shores of our +own great oceans to the mighty events that await us there.</p> + +<p>Spanish-America has twelve republics and eight thousand miles of coast line on the Pacific ocean. +The United States has a Pacific Coast of about fifteen hundred miles. The eight thousand miles marks +the western boundaries of lands enormously rich in things that the world needs, but exceedingly poor +in finished products or adequate growth. Probably no country on earth shows a wider margin to-day +between present raw resources and possible high developments than these same twelve Spanish-speaking +countries. The only analogy that bears on the case is that of the rapid and extensive advancement of +the Pacific States after the completion of the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span> + +transcontinental railroads. There is reason to believe that a similar record of progress awaits the +west coast of South America.</p> + +<p>The combined foreign trade of the west-coast republics before the war reached the very +respectable total of nearly one billion of gold dollars in a single year. There are commercial +prophets who believe that within ten years from the completion of demobilization this volume of +trade may be doubled. This means new markets, new industries, new development of mines, markets, +manufactures, and agriculture, new colonization projects and a score of other unpredictable results. +No less an authority than Mr. John L. Barrett says, "I believe that the Panama Canal will initiate +in all South American countries a genuine movement which will have a most important bearing on the +commerce and civilization of the world."</p> + +<p>An immense amount of iron lies buried in the mountains of the west coast. Not much has ever been +done about it. But enormous quantities of ore have been destroyed by the processes of war, and South +American iron may come to high values sooner than its owners have supposed.</p> + +<p>It is only recently that consideration has been given to the idea of establishing in connection +with the Canal a great commercial trans-shipping point. Colon is yet a little town, mostly West +Indian to-day, but already the Cristobal + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> + +docks are piled high with South American products awaiting reshipment. The proposed establishment of +a free port at Colon may yet result in a western Hongkong where the commerce of the seven seas comes +together to be distributed to the five continents. Whatever might have been the results had there +been no war, it is now sure that everything that happens in South America has henceforth a very +definite significance for the United States. Whether we like it or not, we are out of our exclusive +dooryard and will have to take our place on the great national street named America and play the +game with our neighbors.</p> + +<p>For decades past Central America has been an unknown land to the United States. We have +contentedly supposed that the only crop was that of revolutions and the only resources a few jungle +fruits. But at last we are discovering Central America, and some of us are astonished to there find +vast areas, fertile soils, varied and valuable products, intelligent peoples, a volume of commerce +and climate fit for Eden. We knew little and cared less about Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras, +Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama; and since the bulk of trade of these lands was with Europe, they +paid little attention to us. Why should they do otherwise?</p> + +<p>The presence of the United States on the Isthmus of Panama introduces a new factor into the +American tropics. It looks very small and + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> + +insignificant, that little ten-mile strip with the influence in Panamanian affairs, but how far the +North American influence is going to reach out beyond the Zone limits cannot be known. Everybody is +watching the results for revolution-proof, permanently peaceful Panama, and there are other +countries not far away where there are people who are praying for something like it, or +just-as-good, for themselves. Doubtless their prayers will not be answered directly but the +influence of this leaven may work out into a wide circle and instigate movements that we have not +counted upon.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 276px;"> +<img src="images/illus-240.jpg" width="276" height="450" alt="A Jungle Cathedral" title="" /> +<span class="caption">A JUNGLE CATHEDRAL</span> +</div> + +<p>But the largest factor in the new American situation grows out of the new world-emphasis on the +Golden Rule. At last the world understands as never before how finally determinative is the moral +and spiritual factor in all human progress. We may never know just how much the world had paid to +clear away the rubbish of autocracy and found the new age on the principle + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> + +of a square deal for great and small; but the deed is done, and henceforth the one compelling +sanction in all life must be the essential principle for which the Allies have spent their treasure +and spilled their blood. The new internationalism will underlie all further development of relations +between the two Americas, which opens a new world of social discovery and growth as fascinating as +that which Columbus found in the physical surface of the globe.</p> + +<p>The greater results of the closer fellowship of North and South America will be registered in the +realms of mind and spirit. Trade balances and stock dividends there will be, but back of and beyond +these will rise the new American spirit, uniting the finest courtesy and artistic temperament of the +Latin with the practical initiative and efficient vigor of the blend of blood in the United States. +There is no gulf, great or small, fixed between the two races. Each has something that the other +needs, and close fellowship will result in new race sympathy and mutual advantage.</p> + +<p>To ignore this basis of development is to forget that cold commercialism will in time chill the +fervor of friendships and alienate the growing sympathy of nations. If we are to have no interest in +our neighbors other than the profits we may make from their trade, we will soon cease to be friends +and become bitter rivals at the big game of getting all we can.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span></p> + +<p>It takes two to play the game of reciprocal commercial success. If we succeed on the great +international chess board, it will be not by shrewd defeat of our friends but by the coming to +maturity of a high sense of honor and fair play on both sides. It is not one of us against the +other, but both of us together against the normal difficulties of growth and production.</p> + +<p>One of the native leaders of Latin-American life has explained that South America was unfortunate +in the character of the founders of her national institutions. Adventurers, explorers for gain, +greedy conquistadores made the beginnings here, and the moral foundations were laid by religious +leaders who traveled with pirates and plunderers and officially blessed their every act of crime. +And from the beginning until now the type of religion that has prevailed in Latin-America has not +assisted in the building up of free institutions, nor has it produced a high morality among the +people.</p> + +<p>The South American struggle for self-government and free ideals has been a long, bloody, and +heroic grapple with the reactionary and despotic forces brought over from mediæval Europe. Men +like San Martin and Bolivar deserve high honor for their work in breaking the bondage that held all +life helpless. One by one the colonies threw off their political yokes and became republics, every +one of them, in theory, modeled after + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span> + +the United States. The passion of the South American patriot has been home-rule, but, unfortunately, +home-rule has not always meant self-government. That is quite a different matter. The overthrow of +European despotisms was followed by innumerable internal revolutions. Panama had no monopoly on +internal dissensions, and makes no claim that her fifty-three revolutions in fifty-seven years is +the high-water mark of insurrections for South or Central America.</p> + +<p>In short, the mere overthrow of a despotic government does not assure stable political +institutions nor efficient administration of public affairs. Good government by popular sovereignty +is something far more fundamental than a matter of printed constitutions or shouting "Viva +independencia!" in the plazas. Without moral responsibility and free consciences there can never be +a successful democracy on earth.</p> + +<p>Free institutions and free consciences are winning out in South America, but it is in spite of +the established church and not because of it. It is not politically a question of religion that we +are discussing; it is a matter of organized, crafty, and unscrupulous opposition to every movement +that makes for the development of democracy in South America. And since the establishment of a +better understanding and closer fellowship between the two continents depends upon this very basis +of free and morally responsible social and + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> + +political leaders, the question is most vital. Everywhere there are a few intelligent, earnest men +working away patiently and steadily at the problem of making South America democratic by making her +people free to adopt with intelligence democratic institutions. One by one the nations have declared +for freedom of worship and conscience, and, last of all, Peru, robbed and despoiled Peru of the +conquest, priest-ridden and fanatical Peru, threw off the galling yoke of spiritual bondage and +divorced church and state. It seems simple enough to read about it here, but at every step of the +way the old church left unturned no stone of bigotry and intrigue and prejudice that could oppose +the coming of the modern age to Peru.</p> + +<p>The supreme tragedy of South American life has been that the light that has been in her has been +darkness. The spiritual leaders of the people have themselves opposed all progress toward the light. +Until a spiritual leadership arises that will at least support aggressive and progressive movements +toward freedom and democracy and moral uplift, slow progress will be made. And this matter concerns +the whole American world. These are now our next-door neighbors, and their children will yet be +playing in our yard.</p> + +<p>The surprising thing is that so much has already been accomplished with a millstone tied + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span> + +about the neck of all progressive movements. No finer tribute could be paid to the high ideals and +large possibilities of South American character than a recital of the results accomplished by her +intellectual and moral leaders in the face of enormous handicaps.</p> + +<p>The thinking minds of these southern republics are almost without a religion to-day. Long since +have they ceased to give even passive assent to the demands of the commercial hierarchy that claims +spiritual monopoly over the souls of man. Technical outward conformity to the requirements of the +church may be a political advantage or a domestic convenience, but as a principle of life and +foundation for thought the intellectuals are frankly agnostic. Man after man, when once confidence +is gained, will state that they do not believe in the claims of the church, and usually have ceased +to believe in anything at all—and these are the leaders of the intellectual life of the +nations with which we are to deal. And what are they to do? No adequate substitute do they know, and +until an open Bible and a living Christ take the place of the mummery and the crucifix we cannot +denounce their course. Their intellectual nonconformity is to their credit.</p> + +<p>The final problem is that of developing people fit to live with, not mental and moral slaves +under the dominance of superstition and intolerance. Back of the cry for wider and richer trade +routes + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> + +is the need of responsible men with whom we may transact business. More than shorter shipping line, +we need better shippers, north and south. Underneath vast projects of material advancement lie all +the social and industrial problems of labor and wages and exchange and credits and fidelity to +contracts and personal honor. And above all this is the need of honesty and efficiency and a +personal faith in a living God who knows and cares and takes account of what we do, of what we are, +and is not to be bought off by a check or an incantation.</p> + +<div class="imgleft" style="width: 223px;"> +<img src="images/illus-246.jpg" width="223" height="600" alt="Shoe-Bills Are Small" title="" /> +<span class="caption">SHOE-BILLS ARE SMALL</span> +</div> + +<p>What the bigger American +world needs is bigger +and better Americans, +Latin and Saxon. If the +influences released by the +Panama Canal help to produce +these citizens of the +larger horizon, one of the greatest services possible +will be rendered to humanity. But the larger +horizon is conditioned upon a larger hope that +flows from the mountain of the more abundant +life. And the Americans of the northland need + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> + +the broader basis and vision and character as +much as their southern neighbors.</p> + +<p>What really has the Panama Canal to do with +all this? Much every way, but chiefly as a key for +the unlocking of the long-closed doors and the +releasing of long-latent forces of international relations +in trade and in social and spiritual life. +Should a great working example of educational +and social and spiritual life be established at +Panama by some concerted action of united +Protestantism, the influence of the principles +there promulgated by progressive and devout +men would extend over a very wide range of +Latin life. The procession that now passes +through Panama will be doubled and trebled in +the coming decades, and what is planted here will +spread everywhere. "I saw it so done in Panama," +may become the precedent for almost +anything new, whether good or bad.</p> + +<p>The influence of such institutions in the City of +Panama will be more far-reaching than if located +on the Canal Zone. The Zone is wholly North +American; Panama is thoroughly Latin. The +institutions of the Zone are those of the United +States and are looked on somewhat askance by +Latin visitors. It is all very great and imposing, +but it is so radically different in spirit and +method, that points of close contact are hard to +establish. Panama is a different matter. Whatever +is done there by Spanish-speaking people + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span> + +will be visited and viewed with sympathetic interest +and appreciation.</p> + +<p>The heart of living faith that is to impress its +throb on this blood stream of Latin life must not +be an imported made-in-the-States institution, or +it will be but an ineffectual flutter. Likewise it +must be something more comprehensive than the +traditional schedule of occasional gatherings of +the faithful, important as these will be. To do +this work there needs be an interpretation of the +Christian message that will relate itself to a +very wide circle of human life and interests. +Through native leadership and examples must be +spoken a message that will compel attention and +challenge the minds as well as the hearts of men. +A living interpretation of a spiritual passion, a +social service program with a heart in it, an educational +work that will not only teach the curriculum +but develop moral character, and intellectual +propaganda of good literature, a physical +gospel of health and exercise, a recreational life +clean and wholesome, a personal moral standard +of the New Testament grade—these are what are +needed in Panama and, broadly speaking, everywhere +else in Latin-America. Once established +here they will be felt over a wide reach of the +southern world.</p> + +<p>There is a lot of cheap and easy optimism that +maintains that all will yet be well in some indefinite +way. Some hopeful tourists have visited + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> + +Panama and taken the trip about South America, +apparently seeing nothing but the rainbow of +promise everywhere. And these happy pilgrims +have written books, assuring us with a maximum +of glittering generalities that right is everywhere +driving out wrong and that all will soon be well. +Other writers assume this attitude consciously, +out of regard for the interests that pay their expenses +on the trip. Some people write in glowing +terms from motives of consideration for the feelings +of their South American friends. Would +that we might tell only the bright sight of the +story! It would be far more pleasant.</p> + +<p>But, after all, the facts are the irreducible +minimum upon which to build all successful programs +of reconstruction. Only when we reach +the inner and deeper springs of life and character +can we hope to open fountains of living waters for +the desert of the human heart in bondage. +Really to know Latin-America is to believe in +its high and fine possibilities. What Latin-America +needs is a fair chance.</p> + +<p>The end of the last great despotism of earth +has left democracy a triumphant political principle +in human government. Henceforth no nation +may hope to keep step with the advance of +mankind unless its political procedures are essentially +democratic. And while South America +has long had the form of democracy, it now becomes +essential that her republics develop the + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span> + +working reality of effective self-government. To +do this two things are indispensable. The successful +democracy must be intelligent and must +find a moral foundation in the free consciences +and minds of self-disciplined citizens. Spiritual +despotisms and religious superstitions never did +and never will eventuate in a capacity for democracy. +Only men who are intelligently free can +exercise the functions of free governments.</p> + +<p>The only working basis of democracy, in short, +is that system of religious ideals which has uniformly +supported popular education, championed +the rights of the oppressed, advocated +self-government, welcomed investigation, and +maintained freedom of conscience as of higher +value than iron-bound uniformity to prescribed +standards. It requires but a cursory glance at +the record of history to know that no working democracy +has ever survived the opposition of an +ecclesiastical hierarchy that has remained the +bitter foe of progress for a thousand years.</p> + +<p>There is more hope for Panama in the little +Protestant chapel down by the Malecon and the +efficient and modern school maintained there by +the force of missionaries with their progressive +ideals than in all the pageantry and glitter of a +system of repression and despotism that the world +is rapidly outgrowing. The religious Hun will +take his place with the deposed political despot +who proposed to destroy the liberties of mankind. + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span> + +The most urgent need of the mission work +in Panama just now is that of trained and efficient +Latin leadership. No people can be effectively +lifted from without.</p> + +<p>A century ago nearly the whole of the southern +world was in the throes of political readjustment. +Self-government and political freedom were the +watchwords and everywhere strong men arose +and devoted their lives to the task of breaking +from the necks of the people the political yokes +under which they had staggered for two and one +half centuries.</p> + +<p>To-day in Latin-America the second great +struggle for freedom is under way. Bound +minds and consciences, superstitions and moral +despotisms—these are the stumbling-stones +across the pathway of progress. All over Latin-America +men are rising and enlisting their hearts +and minds in the struggle for free consciences and +independent judgment in the things of the Spirit. +Nearly all these countries achieved political independence +within a few years. When the climax +came it was comparatively sudden, and it may be +that the breaking of the chains of moral and spiritual +despotisms will likewise be a shorter struggle +than now seems possible. Once again the +clock is striking, and who knows but the end of +political despotism in all the earth may mark the +rapid approach of spiritual democracy and highest +liberty in all America!</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span></p> + +<p>Heroic has been the long struggle in Latin-America +for self-government. Splendid is the +fight being made to-day for larger liberty. If +Pan-Americanism means anything at all, it +means a social foundation in honor and intelligence +and brotherhood. It is time to address ourselves +to the great unfinished task begun by those +intrepid pioneers. The Canal is finished and the +task of construction is done, but the end of construction +is the beginning of empire-building for +the larger task yet incomplete.</p> + +<hr style="width:10%" /> + +<p>Transcriber's Note: All apparent printer's errors retained.</p> + +<p>Transcriber's Note: Some image placement justification is slightly different compared to the book due to HTML formatting constraints. Images have been placed as close to their original locations as possible.</p> + + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Prowling about Panama, by George A. 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Miller + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Prowling about Panama + +Author: George A. Miller + +Illustrator: Alice Best + A. W. Best + +Release Date: February 9, 2012 [EBook #38815] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROWLING ABOUT PANAMA *** + + + + +Produced by Adrian Mastronardi, Alex Gam and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + +PROWLING ABOUT +PANAMA + +BY + +GEORGE A. MILLER + +ILLUSTRATED BY +ALICE AND A. W. BEST +FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE AUTHOR + +[Illustration] + +THE ABINGDON PRESS +NEW YORK CINCINNATI + + +Copyright, 1919, by +GEORGE A. MILLER + + +DEDICATED +TO THE +YOUNG PEOPLE OF THE EPWORTH LEAGUES +OF THE +CALIFORNIA CONFERENCE + + + + +CONTENTS + + +CHAPTER PAGE + + FOREWORD 11 + +I. WHERE THE PROWLING IS GOOD 13 + +II. THE TRAIL OF THE PIRATES 26 + +III. PICTURESQUE PANAMA 41 + +IV. A CITY OF GHOSTS 55 + +V. THE SPELL OF THE JUNGLE 65 + +VI. LIFE AT THE BOTTOM 76 + +VII. THE INTERIOR 93 + +VIII. ECONOMIC WASTE 109 + +IX. PANAMA AND PROGRESS 122 + +X. KNOWING OUR NEIGHBORS 144 + +XI. THE FAMILY TREE 160 + +XII. LATIN-AMERICAN HEART 178 + +XIII. THE CARIBBEAN WORLD 193 + +XIV. THE PANAMA CANAL 214 + +XV. PROWLING INTO THE FUTURE 235 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + + PAGE + +The Faithful Mule is the Ship of the Jungle 14 + +The Homeward Way at Nightfall 15 + +An Empire in the Making 19 + +A Few Good Roads on the Zone 21 + +Church at Nata, Oldest Inhabited Town in New World, + Founded 1520 24 + +The Jungle is the Place for Picnics 27 + +Even Farm Cabins Are Picturesque in Costa Rica 30 + +Ruins of Old Panama, the Most Romantic Spot in the New + World 33 + +Indian Woman at the Fountain 36 + +Baths--Wholesale and Retail 43 + +Convent Door 46 + +Official Lottery in Bishop's House, Panama 48 + +Ruin of Famous Flat-Arch Church 52 + +Eighth-Grade Room, Panama 53 + +Convent Garden 56 + +Romantic Old Convents Survive 58 + +Ruined Tower at Old Panama 60 + +Costa Rica Trapiche, or Sugar Mill 62 + +Papaya Trees 66 + +Bananas and Sugar Cane 68 + +Cacao Pods 70 + +Proposed Location for Rest Cure 73 + +Picturesque Jungle Towns 78 + +Tortillas are Staple 80 + +Jungle Folk 81 + +"The Cotter's Saturday Night" 82 + +Church Bells of Arraijan, Cast 1722 85 + +First-Grade Room, Panama 89 + +The Beautiful Savanas of Costa Rica 95 + +Shipping Costa Rica Vegetables to Panama 99 + +Good Pineapples Grow Here 103 + +Dead Timber in Gatun Lake Now Covered with Orchids 105 + +Interior Meat Market 111 + +The Flavor of Old Spain 112 + +Taking the Rest Cure 113 + +The Oxen Stage of Agriculture 115 + +Wayside Sellers of Fruit 117 + +The House Beside the Road 118 + +Wireless at Darien 123 + +Farm Grist Mill, Costa Rica 126 + +Happy Kindergartners, Panama 129 + +Young Costa Rica is Enterprising 131 + +Wooden Sugar Mill and Its Maker 133 + +Public Market, David 137 + +Indian Boy Goes to School 145 + +Washday in Costa Rica 147 + +Riverside Plantation 151 + +Jungle Products 154 + +San Blas Indian Chief 161 + +No Race Suicide Here 162 + +Jungle Guide 164 + +One Use for a Head 165 + +Beggars and Cathedrals 167 + +Far from the Madding Crowd 169 + +Seawall Church and School, Panama 171 + +Mandy Did Her Share 173 + +The Canal Digger 173 + +The Town Pump, Interior Village 175 + +Wayside Cemetery in the Jungle 176 + +Coconuts--So Good and So High 180 + +Boiling "Dulce"--Crude Sugar 183 + +Washing by the River 189 + +Costa Rica Farm House 194 + +Bananas Thirty Feet High 197 + +San Blas Indians Have "Poker Faces" 198 + +Where Styles Molest No More 201 + +Chinese Always Start a School 205 + +"Schooldays" 205 + +Three in a Row 212 + +Mother, Home, and--the Simple Life 212 + +Construction Days in Culebra-Gailard Cut 217 + +Gatun Spillway, Key to the Canal 224 + +Cristobal Streets 227 + +Fat Cattle of Cocle 228 + +Enchanted Islands in Gatun Lake 231 + +Panama Public Water Works, Interior Country 237 + +A Jungle Cathedral 242 + +Shoe-bills Are Small 248 + + + + +FOREWORD + + +The fine art of prowling may be achieved, but is more often a gift of +those to the manner born. Professional globe-trotters are not prowlers. +They are often the victims of their own sense of superiority. Personally +conducted tours are little help to real prowling, and professional guides +reduce the sight-seer to a machine for receiving "canned" information with +gaping mouth, while with his free hand he extracts tips from his reluctant +pocket. + +Prowling is an instinct, a sixth sense of locations and values. The +prowler must have intuition and imagination and perseverance and +historical perspective, but with these he must have something else--that +inner vision that finds values in everything human. The expert explorer +will find something interesting in Sahara, but almost any prowler will +have a rare time in Panama. + +Probably no spot in the New World has served as the location of so many +kinds of events and interests as this narrow neck of land between two +continents. Brief histories of it have been well written, and the visitor +should by all means read at least one of them. It remains for some seer +yet to tell worthily the story of the four centuries that link the last +discovery of the world's greatest explorer with the final achievement of +the world's most skillful builders. + +Panama furnishes an epitome of history. Nearly everything that has ever +happened anywhere in the world has had some counterpart or parallel in +Panama, and of the coming results of the new forces now released on the +Isthmus time alone can be the measure. + +This book makes no claims to consistency. Where contradictory +characteristics abound and motives are much mixed, both sides may be +faithfully set forth, but to reconcile them is a difficult matter. There +will be no unified and consistent life on the Isthmus until the advancing +civilization now there outgrows some of its present traits. + +Can one tell the truth about Panama and return to the Isthmus? That +remains to be proven. Much depends on the spirit of the prowler. As well +ask whether one can tell the truth about Chicago and be welcome to that +metropolis. Probably Chicago would pay no attention to the comment, but +Panama might take enough interest to notice. + +This is not a guidebook. Heaven forbid! It is merely a few notes of a +prowler who found Panama interesting. + + + + +CHAPTER I + +WHERE THE PROWLING IS GOOD + + +Panama is the great American curiosity shop. The first city founded by +explorers in the New World, the oldest town in America inhabited by white +men, the most conglomerate mixture of humanity on earth are in Panama. The +bloodiest tale of modern history, the most romantic story of American +exploration, the greatest engineering achievement of man all center in +Panama. + +If there be any interest in congested and sweltering humanity, any concern +for the problems of social uplift and personal reaction, Panama is the +laboratory for study. The cleanest and healthiest towns on earth are on +the Canal Zone, and the last word in shiftlessness and inefficiency is +also here. Superstition and science, rascality and rhapsody, efficiency +and squalor, graft and honor, all mixed and mingled--this is Panama. +Jungle and plain, valley and coast, tropic heat and mountain paradise, +fever-swamps and ideal sanitation, engineering success and life in the +primitive open--these too are in Panama. + +Strange and mysterious traces are still found of the days when the gold of +Peru was carried across the Isthmus on pack trains. Later the gold-seekers +of California fought their way along the route of the present Canal and +found ships on the west coast for the mines of Eldorado. If any survivors +still live, they can tell stirring tales of the days when it was well +worth a life to carry gold to Aspinwall. + +[Illustration: THE FAITHFUL MULE IS THE SHIP OF THE JUNGLE] + +It all began with Columbus himself when he sailed into Almirante Bay and +thought that he had found in Chiriqui Lagoon the long-sought passage to +India. What he really found, what was to follow his discovery, he could +not have dreamed, adventurer that he was! Almirante (Admiral), Cristobal +(Christopher), and Colon (Columbus) remain to-day to remind us of the +illustrious explorer who first set foot on Panama. But Columbus gave us +Panama, and never knew! It was Balboa who first saw the waters of the wide +Pacific from the summits of the Isthmian hills. It was Pizarro who packed +across the fifty miles of jungle the timbers of the ships which he put +together on the beach of the Pacific and with which he discovered Peru, +after indescribable hardships and repeated attempts to find the "hill of +gold." + +[Illustration: THE HOMEWARD WAY AT NIGHTFALL] + +On the Pacific side of the Isthmus was founded Old Panama, the first city +of the New World, where to-day majestic ruins stand, a fitting shrine for +the reverent pilgrim. And between Old Panama and Porto Bello stretches the +famous Paved Trail of Las Cruces. + +Along this trail lurked the trouble-hunters and makers of the sixteenth +and seventeenth centuries. For two hundred years the tinkle of the bells +of the gold-laden pack mules was never silent. On this jungle path, when +stolen gold was carried by the sackful, trouble was certain to follow. The +big trail was a pathway of blood, robbery, and intrigue. All the worst +passions and performances of depraved men turned loose and ran riot for a +century and a half. These were the days when life was raw and rough at +Panama. + +To-day the old trail is covered with palms and decorated with orchids. +Occasional stones trace the outline of the ancient highway. Where the +drunken and ribald song of the muleteer rose about the camp-fire at night, +canaries and parrakeets now chatter and sing. The soft caress of the +jungle breeze whispers no tales of the days when the trail could be traced +by the bleaching bones that lined the right-of-way. The jungle is nature's +great blotter for the sins, sorrows, and sufferings of an age now +forgotten--but it all happened in Panama. + +Panama is not all jungle. To the westward stretch great savannas, between +the mountains and the sea; miles and miles of smooth and level country +open, fair and well watered, only waiting for the tickle of American +cultivation to laugh a crop. It makes a real estate man's fingers itch; +but that is another story. Where a little cultivation has been +inadvertently perpetrated on the land, tall sugar cane, luscious fruits, +and toothsome vegetables attest the quality of the soil and the climate. + +Frequent rivers, numerous inlets on the coast line, occasional interesting +native towns, old churches, impossible "roads," meandering trails, +scattered herds of fat cattle, a few sugar mills, numerous trapiches (cane +grinders), fenced patreros (pastures), and everywhere the mixed-blood +natives--this is Panama in the western provinces. + +Panama westward is not all a flat country, however. Eleven thousand feet +into the sky rises the Chiriqui volcano, and a little farther west in the +same range stands Pico Blanco (White Top), at about the same height. +Thrown across the slopes of these lofty summits and half way up lies a +great and beautiful country, with a climate such as might have been +coveted for the site of Eden. Cool, comfortable, and salubrious is this +garden of the gods. In all the so-called temperate zone no land yet +discovered offers three hundred and fifty days per year of comfort and +health. To be sure, vacation pilgrims from the warmer coast country +sometimes make mention of cold feet upon first reaching this Mecca in the +mountains, but nobody finds fault on that account. Most of them like it. + +Chiriqui is a garden spot. Wide ranges of fertile soil, gentle slopes +rolling back against the mountain ranges, good harbors along the coast, +and occasional plantations with American improvements, mark the country as +the coming granary of the Republic. Rolling slopes and blossoming fields, +with a background of the never-failing come-and-go of the lights and +shades on the face of the mountains, form a picture not to be forgotten. +Always the summits and the clouds seem to be playing leapfrog in the sky, +and the whole upper world, looking down on the puny traveler, seems ever +trying to say something and never quite uttering its meaning. And he who +looks and listens finds himself trying to say it for them, and never can +he find the word. Perhaps some poetic soul will yet look upon these +heights and tell us what it is they are muttering. + +The coast line of western Panama is a fascinating shore. Like enchanted +islands rise bits of forest out of the sea and any of them might be the +castle site of the lord of the main. + +In and out between their wooded shores the steamer winds its way till it +dodges in through some narrow "boca" to find a tortuous channel leading to +a landing place, that must always be approached at the whim of the tide. +Whether there be a thousand islands or not, no one knows; but I have stood +on the steamer deck and counted fifty in sight at a time, while other +fifties rose up to meet us as those nearby dropped astern. Here and there +some lonely light blinks its vigil through the night, and the swells of +the Pacific break in fantastic sea-ghosts against the rocky cliffs. + +[Illustration: AN EMPIRE IN THE MAKING] + +Navigation of these waters is not a science, it is an art. The captains of +these coast craft know every tree and rock and river mouth for four +hundred miles, and make their way through tortuous channels by markings +that no landsman can see. There is one grizzled navigator, said to be +unable to read or write, who knows every marking on the coast for six +hundred miles, and in the long years of service has never made a mistake +or met with an accident. Possibly his success might be due to the fact +that what he does not know does not confuse him. His mental horizon may +not be very distant, but at least he escapes a lot of worry about things +that he (and you and I) cannot control. When the tides have a rise and +fall of eighteen feet, and all harbors are but shallow river mouths, the +negotiation of the coast ports becomes a matter requiring much accuracy of +judgment. + +The old trail across the Isthmus is the Mecca of many pilgrims who by some +searching find its scattered stones amid the riotous jungle. The later +trail was opened after the city of Panama was moved to its present site. +It began at Colon, followed the Chagres River to the present site of +Gamboa, and then wound its ways over the low summit of the hills down to +the new Panama and terminated at the "Nun's Beach," where now stand a +Protestant church and school. Here the pack trains were unloaded and the +high tides carried the rafts and lighters out to the ships waiting in the +little harbor. + +The dark days of Panama were the days after the gold trade failed. Even +the gold of Peru was not inexhaustible, and the trade across the Isthmus +could not stand continued centuries of robbery and murder. It had to end +some time, and end it did; and when the end came all the Isthmus lapsed +into a slough of despond and lethargy of inertia. For a century and a half +Panama was as forgotten as the Catacombs. + +But Panama went her way, whether anybody cared or not. The people left on +the Isthmus were the racial remnants of the mixture of mankind that had +found its way back and forth for two centuries, and they were fairly able +to take care of themselves. The rich forests and fertile soil would bear +fruit and food enough to sustain life whether anyone worked or not, and +the result was not the development of a virile race of men. How could it +be? Probably few spots on earth have had less incentive to develop hardy +and enterprising character than the Isthmus of Panama. + +[Illustration: A FEW GOOD ROADS ON THE ZONE] + +The prowler about Panama will find a wide variety of interests and +inspirations. Whatever his peculiar, personal fad he can find it +somewhere. Then he can prowl to his heart's content. + +If he prefers the sea, there are fifteen hundred miles of coast line to +explore with something new to every mile. Or he can launch out a bit, and +in a day's time make his way to the famous Pearl Islands, where are life +and industry so distinct that weeks mays be spent in studying the +development of a civilization, insular and unique. The coast of Darien has +boundless possibilities for the explorer; and the San Blas Islands would +keep the ethnologist busy for months. For an enchanted inland sea the +Chiriqui Lagoon is unsurpassed. + +If historical romance is desired, the prowling is certainly abundant; and +if the prowler is a lover of nature, wild and luxuriant, rioting in +marvelous and indescribable forms of overflowing life, he has but to equip +himself for jungle travel, and he will find wonders by the mile, and +fantastic nature piled mountains high and chasms deep. If it is mountains, +they are here in scenic beauty unsurpassed. If the explorer is a student +of human nature and cares to attempt the unscrambling of this blend of +blood that flows in swarthy faces, he will be busy here for a lifetime. +And if none of these will do, and the curious landsman will have nothing +short of the exploring of vast unchristened wildernesses where no human +foot has ever trod, and where strange and dangerous forms of unclassified +life wander at will through the overgrown forests, he will find it--and +doubtless he will find much more of it than he wants before he gets back +to civilization. + +If it is promotion schemes and development projects, then here at least is +a commodious place to put them. Here, in agricultural and colonizing +schemes, somebody will yet get rich--and other somebodies poor. + +If the prowler's interest is primarily social, and he would browse about +one of the most interesting cities in America, let him come to Panama. +Ancient Spanish streets, scrupulously clean--can these be found anywhere +else? Side by side, over and under, the sixteenth and twentieth centuries +run together. + +And what makes Panama to-day the crossroad of the world? For him who in +the love of engineering skill holds communion with high human achievement, +and prefers to prowl around the locks and docks, and study the marvelous +successes and adaptations and devices of the latest and greatest feat of +brain and hand, this is the very center of the earth. No man with a soul +for the poetry of mechanics can stand in a control house of one of the +locks and see the enormous gates swing back at the movement of a finger +without feeling that man, with all his limitations, has yet in his being +some image of the Creator. To see an ocean giant rise up slowly in the +teeth of gravitation and slip through the gates on to the higher level, is +to wonder whether the portals that look so gloomy to us may not, after +all, be not exits but entrances to a new and higher level of life. What a +text! The ship does not rise by straining but by resting in a narrow +place. And no ship ever yet got through the locks without a pilot. The +whole process is as silent as the forces of eternity. There is a lot more, +and it bears no copyright. Help yourself. + +[Illustration: CHURCH AT NATA, OLDEST INHABITED TOWN IN THE NEW WORLD, +FOUNDED 1520] + +And for the prowler in the region of philosophy, what a place! What +changes in the geography and commerce and industry and policies and +politics of mankind must follow this last achievement on the historical +Isthmus of Panama, "quien sabe?" ("who knows?") None but the Omniscient. +Trade routes and bank exchanges, commercial dealings and national programs +will all be affected by this three-hundred-foot wide highway of water. If +but some power the gift would give us to come back a century hence and see +what will be doing then! + +What social and moral transformations will be wrought in the coming years +by the release of spiritual forces through the new religious life and free +faith brought to Panama with the coming of the Canal? Out of the +soul-bondage of a system of superstition and ignorance will come a new +human consciousness of the worthiness of life and the high privilege of +living. Whether it is to prowl or prophesy, the material is abundant, and +the pilgrim will find rare material a-plenty all about him. Panama is +perplexing and peculiar, but he who finds the key to the riddle will be +kept busy. + +Perhaps the amateur explorer has a penchant for old churches. Here they +are. Seven of them, with a couple of first-class ruins thrown in. The rich +monasteries of Peru and Mexico are missing, but for that there is a +reason. Every bit of treasure was stolen as fast as accumulated. Yes, if +unmolested in the past, Panama would be a mine for the antiquarian to-day. +But any active imagination, even on half-time shift, can find here +material for romances, warranted to interest every member of the family, +at reduced prices, if paid for in advance. From the Flat-Arch Church to +the ruins of Old Panama it is good prowling all the way. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE TRAIL OF THE PIRATES + + +The present conglomerate of humanity living on the Isthmus of Panama is +the racial remainder of some very much mixed social history. Here were +enacted some of the most stirring stories and tempestuous times in +American history. In 1453 the Eastern Roman Empire fell before the +assaults of the Turks and closed the land routes to India. Nearly forty +years later Columbus set sail in his great effort to find a westward +passage for the commerce of Europe. In this he failed, but on his fourth +and final voyage discovered the Isthmus of Panama and landed on the shores +of the Chiriqui Lagoon, supposing that the beautiful inland sea must be +the long-sought passage westward. Here the town of Almirante still bears +his name. At Porto Bello and Saint Christopher Bay he made brief stops and +returned to Spain having no idea of the character of the isthmus that he +had discovered. + +On November 3, 1903, exactly four hundred years from the day that Columbus +set foot on the soil of Panama, the Republic of Panama declared its +sovereign independence and began its national life as one of the family of +American nations. + +In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the Caribbean main was overrun +by as unscrupulous and bloodthirsty a set of pirates as ever sailed any +sea. Even without these rascals there would have been trouble enough, and +with them the story is sufficiently lurid for the most melodramatic taste. + +[Illustration: THE JUNGLE IS THE PLACE FOR PICNICS] + +One name stands out above his fellows. The intrepid navigator who first +saw the waters of the Pacific set forth at the age of twenty-three as an +adventurer, and after various experiences embarked as a stowaway for his +second voyage. By personal persuasion he became the partner of his master, +and after founding a colony in Darien sent Senor Endico back to Spain in +irons for his pains. + +This left Balboa supreme, with the whole Castilla de Oro (Castle of Gold) +country before him for exploration. He at once sent Pizarro to examine the +interior and gathered the scattered fugitives from former expeditions. The +combined forces took the field against the Indians. When they reached the +domain of Comagre, the most powerful chief of the country, peace was made. +This chief was a real aristocrat with mummied ancestors clothed in gold +and pearls, and he gave to Balboa four thousand ounces of gold, sixty +wives, and offered to show him the way to a country beyond the dim +mountains where a powerful people lived in magnificence and sailed ships +of solid gold. He also entertained his distinguished visitor with tales of +a temple of gold called Dabaibe, forty leagues farther than Darien, and +said that the mother of the sun, moon, and stars lived there. + +Balboa's imagination was stirred by these stories and he prepared an +expedition of discovery. No temple of gold was found, but internal +dissensions and Indian attacks disturbed the peace of the colony. +Reenforcements arrived, and with them the title of captain-general. + +Balboa now set out on what was to be the most famous event of his life. He +had been promised the sight of a great ocean to the south, after he had +climbed certain mountains. Various Indian oppositions developed, but on +the 26th of September, 1513, at about ten o'clock in the morning, Balboa +and his men, from the top of a high mountain, saw for the first time the +waters of the vast Pacific. The priest of the expedition, named Andreas de +Vara, chanted a _Te Deum_, with the entire company on their knees. A cross +was raised, and the names of the Spanish rulers carved on the surrounding +trees. + +After meeting several Indian tribes the descent was made to the shore, and +Balboa waded knee deep into the surf and, waving the banner of Spain, +proclaimed that the new-found ocean and all land bordering thereon should +be the property of his sovereign. + +For a long time this new ocean was known as the South Sea, and Balboa at +once set about exploring the vicinity. The Pearl Islands were located, +taken possession of, and named. A later expedition by a less difficult +route crossed the Isthmus of Panama and conquered the Indians on the Pearl +Islands, bringing back plentiful tribute of fine pearls from the subdued +chief. + +The year following, in 1514, arrived the black villain of the story in the +person of Pedrarias, sent out from Spain as governor of Darien. This +disturber brought with him two thousand men. Balboa built a fleet of ships +on the Atlantic side, took them to pieces, carried them on the backs of +Indians across the Isthmus, put them together again, launched them in the +waters of the Pacific, and proceeded to explore the coast eastward from +Panama. On his return from this trip Balboa was arrested by Pedrarias on a +trumped-up charge of treason, and in the forty-second year of his life was +beheaded, while declaring his entire innocency of all treachery. Balboa +was a product of his age, and of faults he possessed a-plenty, but as one +of the great explorers of history his end was a sad reward for the +distinguished services that he rendered to the world. + +[Illustration: EVEN FARM CABINS ARE PICTURESQUE IN COSTA RICA] + +In 1515 an expedition crossed the Isthmus and camped near the hut of a +poor fisherman at a point called by the natives Panama. For this name +several explanations are given, one of them being that there were many +shellfish at this place. The meaning of the name is now lost, but in 1519 +the city of Panama was founded at this point by Pedrarias. Two years +later, by order of the Spanish crown, the bishopric, government, and +colonists of the Isthmus were transferred from the Atlantic side at Darien +to Old Panama. + +History now began in earnest by the Pacific. In 1525 a priest celebrated +in the cathedral at Old Panama solemn mass with two other men, Pizzarro +and Almagro, the rite being a solemn vow to conquer all countries lying to +the south. For this purpose an expedition was soon organized and sailed +away along the west coast of South America. This expedition met with +varying fortunes, but in time discovered the long-sought Peru with its +splendid temples and golden treasures. + +The first regular trail across the Isthmus led from Nombre de Dios to Old +Panama, crossing the Chagres River at Cruces. Later small boats sailed +from Nombre de Dios to the mouth of the Chagres and made their way up to +Cruces, where their cargoes were transferred to the backs of horses for +the rest of the journey to Panama. Later Nombre de Dios was abandoned for +Porto Bello, because of the very good harbor at the latter place. The old +trail was "paved" with stones for a part of the way, and the relics of +this old road may still be found in a few places amid the tangled growths +of the jungle. + +With the conquest of Peru and the discovery of gold in Darien, Old Panama +came rapidly to its own and soon became a city of great importance, being +for the time the richest city in New Spain. All the gold of Peru and the +rich west coast was brought to Panama to be sorted and packed across the +Isthmus, thence to be sent to Spain. Porto Bello became a rich town and +maintained great annual fairs up to the time of its destruction by +Morgan's pirates. + +The century and a half between the establishment of Old Panama as the +chief city of the Isthmus and its destruction in 1671 supplied one of the +tempestuous periods of history. It was on the Isthmus of Panama that the +American slave trade began and was continued for three hundred years. The +native Indians were so destroyed by the brutality and greed of the Spanish +conquerors that the expedient of importing black men from Africa was +devised in order to secure a labor supply for the country. Here arises the +historical precedent for the use of West Indian labor in the digging of +the American Canal. + +The best account of the sacking and destruction of Old Panama is that +written by John Esquemeling and published seven years after the event, of +which he was an eyewitness, being a member of the pirates' band. The +detailed account of this event, with the general pillaging of the Isthmus +by the English buccaneers, has been narrated with much exactness and great +interest. + +[Illustration: RUINS OF OLD PANAMA. THE MOST ROMANTIC SPOT IN THE NEW +WORLD] + +Stories of the great wealth of Old Panama in the day of its glory are not +hard to find. With the complete destruction of all this magnificence, the +present city was founded with due ceremonies in 1673 and much stone was +transported from the old city and built into the new. The cathedral was +soon built and stands to-day as solid as when first erected. The queen of +Spain sent detailed instructions for the building of the city, and among +other things directed that a safe wall for defense should be provided. +This was so well done that some of it still stands, an interesting relic +of the vigor and thoroughness of the civilization that produced it. Many +years passed in building these walls, and they were said to have cost ten +millions of dollars, most of which came from Peru. The story is told of a +Spanish king, who stood one day looking out of his palace window. When +asked what he was looking for he replied, "I am looking for those costly +walls of Panama; they should be visible even from here." A little +knowledge of the business methods of those days may throw some light on +the whys and wherefores of the high cost of the old walls. + +Twenty-six years after the founding of the present city of Panama an +effort was made to establish an English colony in Darien, but fever and +discouragement aided the Spanish in ending the venture. + +The eighteenth century is a monotonous one in Panama annals, marked mainly +by frequent encounters between the Spaniards and the Indians. Several +piratical expeditions ended in the scattering and murdering of the pirates +and restoration of Spanish sovereignty. + +When the great movement in South America for political independence swept +as far north as Colombia, and the decisive battle of Boyaca was fought in +1819, Panama was very strongly held by Spain as a place of maintenance for +her armies, and the city was at all times in a good state of defense. In +this same year, however, the first junta was formed for the purpose of +bringing about independence from Spain, and sentiment in favor of the +revolution grew very rapidly. Early in 1821 General Murgeon arrived with +the promise of high reward if he could compose the difficulties in Panama +and save the Isthmus to Spain. This he saw to be impossible, and after +having appointed Jose de Fabrega as coloner, he left for Quito. Fabrega, +being Isthmian born, cast his lot with the revolutionists and on November +28th, 1821, a large and enthusiastic crowd assembled with representatives +from all military and ecclesiastical organizations, and Panama was +declared to be forever free from Spanish dominion. A few loyal troops, +seeing their helpless position, laid down their arms, and the change of +government was effected without the shedding of a drop of blood--something +new in Panamanian affairs. Simon Bolivar sent over help for the +independents, but found the work done before his men arrived. + +After this political upheaval Panama slept on, and would still be dormant +to-day but for the discovery of gold in California in 1849. With a six +months' overland journey between the gold-hungry men of the Eastern States +and the gold-filled mountains of the West, the Isthmus suddenly came into +prominence as an easier way of reaching California. For seven or eight +years after the finding of gold not less than forty millions of dollars of +gold, twelve millions in silver, and twenty-five thousand passengers were +transported across the Isthmus annually. In 1853 the high-water mark was +reached, when sixty-six millions of dollars of gold were carried across to +the Atlantic side and shipped to New York. + +This sudden development of the pack train business brought to the Isthmus +a horde of Chileans, Peruvians, Indians, and mixed breeds, among whom were +the inevitable plunderers and spoilers. The trail was again marked by +blood and treachery. Many an unhappy pilgrim lost his riches, and not a +few lost their lives on the way. At last the authorities were aroused to +the necessity of making safe this highway suddenly become so important to +the world. + +[Illustration: INDIAN WOMAN AT THE FOUNTAIN] + +The year of the first gold rush saw the organization of the Panama +Railroad Company. In 1846 three American business men organized under the +present name and secured a concession from New Granada for forty-nine +years with such conditions that no ship canal could be constructed across +the Isthmus without the consent of the railroad company. When the name of +New Granada was changed to that of Colombia, the time was extended to +ninety-nine years. This concession in time came to be very valuable, and +the French Canal Company found it necessary to buy out the Panama Railroad +in order to secure control of the exclusive right of way across the +Isthmus. Later, when the United States acquired the control of the French +possessions in Panama, the Panama Railroad became one of the most valuable +assets on the list. By conditions of the concession, this road was bound +to pay to Colombia the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars per +year. After various transfers and deals this still holds in the form of +the obligation of the Panama Canal to pay this sum annually to the +Republic of Panama. + +The story of the early construction days of the Panama Railroad are as +exciting as those of the Morgan Pirates, with a far better outcome. Labor +troubles were many and bitter, and it became necessary to hold men in jail +until they were willing to work. The attractions of the California gold +fields were too much for the cupidity of men who saw daily pack trains +loaded with gold from the Eldorado of the Northwest passing their wretched +hovels and taunting them with visions of easy riches. But the work +proceeded, and after interminable troubles with the black swamp between +Aspinwall (Colon) and Gatun, the road was finished as far as Gatun in the +year 1850. In 1855 the line was finished to Panama and the romantic career +of the most prosperous short railroad in the world was well under way. + +Charges for freight and passenger travel were enormous in the early days +of the road. The fare was fifty cents per mile, with all baggage extra. +Freight was carried across the Isthmus for twenty-five cents per pound, +but so terrible were the old pack-train conditions that the travelers of +that day were more than willing to pay such prices for the luxury of +crossing the Isthmus by the railroad. + +At last the Colombian government took up the matter and the passenger rate +was reduced. Ten cents per pound continued to be the freight charge for +years. The road made vast profits, and by a combination of rates with the +steamship companies maintained a monopoly of travel. A few years after the +completion of the railroad the pack-train men and outlaws, deprived of +their plunder by the road, became very active as brigands, and on one +occasion perpetrated a riot that cost sixteen Americans their lives and +brought the United States and Colombia to the verge of open rupture. + +As far back as 1515 a German named Schoner drew a map of the American +continents with a clear line for a canal through the Isthmus. In 1581 an +actual survey was made for a canal, but nothing was done about it. In 1620 +Diego de Mercado submitted a long report to Philip II, but the monarch +turned it down, saying that since God had joined the continents together, +it would be impious to try to separate them, and a death penalty was +decreed for anyone so rash as to try to undo the works of God in this way. +In 1827 an engineer was sent by Simon Bolivar, president of the New +Granada federation, and a report was made commending the project of a +combined rail and water route. In 1838 a French company aroused so much +enthusiasm in the canal project that an expert was sent by the French +government to look the ground over. He reported that a sea-level canal +could be dug without going deeper than thirty-seven feet, but the idea was +again abandoned. Two American investigations were made in 1866 and 1875, +and about this time much interest was aroused in the then new Nicaragua +project. + +The popularity of the Suez Canal, successfully completed in 1869, led +directly to the DeLesseps organization of the Panama Canal Company. +Agitation began in 1875 and in the year following a right of way was +secured, but with the Panama Railroad concession standing in the way. + +The story of the work of the French Company, the New Canal Company, and +the final completion of the work by the United States government, is told +elsewhere. + +Now that the trail of the sixteenth-century pirates has become the most +famous inland waterway of the world, we can read with complacency the +story of the wretched times during which the Isthmus was the scene of +constant strife. Verily, Panama was not a very good place for sightseeing +in those days. The prowlers of the infested jungles and blood-stained +trails were not such as we would select as traveling companions to-day. If +any modern prowler becomes despondent and is tempted to complain that the +former days were better than these, let him read the story of Old Panama, +and then consider conditions as they are on the Isthmus and the Zone +to-day, and he will find food for reflection. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +PICTURESQUE PANAMA + + +A Panamanian cart loaded with English tea biscuit, drawn by an old +American army mule, driven by a Hindoo wearing a turban, drove up in front +of a Chinese shop. The Jamaican clerk, aided by the San Blas errand boy, +came out to supervise the unloading. The mule wriggled about out of +position, a Spanish policeman came along and everybody got out and +"cussed" the mule. + +That is Panama, every day. Across the street is an Italian lace shop run +by a Jew. Next door is a printery, operated by a Costa Rican. Just beyond +is a French laundry conducted by a man from Switzerland, and on the next +corner is a beautiful Chinese store where they sell everything from Japan. +Cloisonne and lacquer and curious carvings, silks, embroideries, +scientific instruments--they are all here. You can buy Canton linen, +Hongkong brass, Nikko carvings, Hindoo embroidery, German cutlery, French +microscopes, Canadian flour, New York apples, and California grapes all +within a block. And the products of Central and South America are all +about. + +The street in front of the shops is full of Panamanians, Peruvians, +Ecuadorians, Chileans, Colombians, and San Blas Indians, besides some +representatives of every country of North and South America, Europe, Asia, +and Africa. Canal Zone Americans walk past Yankee business men, and native +police crowd the mestizos off the sidewalk. + +Panama is a jitney town, and the honk of the never-silent horn punctuates +the clang and dash of the trolleys and automobiles down a fifteen-foot +street in a mad race to see which can get through first. Overhanging roofs +nearly touch above blooming orchids and talking birds that scream across +the narrow streets. Gloomy interiors and stumbling stairways lead up to +spacious apartments and breezy balconies. Above are occasional +roof-gardens. All the rooms have high ceilings, all the streets are paved, +and all the kids wear clothes--sometimes. + +There is no possible human shade or tint that is absent here. The +Anglo-Saxons are white, more or less. The Jamaicans are black, mostly. The +Panamanian is most often a soft and pleasing brown, done in a number of +wholly unmatchable tints. And the natives from these many sunny countries +round about are of every known color-tone, from chrome yellow to Paris +green. This is the human kaleidoscope of the earth: shake it up and you +will get a different result every time. + +You may not like it, but you can never truthfully say that Panama is not +interesting--all the time. + +The streets are clean. Daily sweepers and nightly garbage men take care of +that. The sidewalks are narrow, of course. Perhaps these two-foot +sidewalks account in part for the innate courtesy of the Latin mind. One +must be either polite or profane when he makes his way along these little +ledges, often two or three feet above the street. A portable stepladder +would help some. + +[Illustration: BATHS--WHOLESALE AND RETAIL] + +Some of these houses are old, very old. A few are new; most of them have +stood here one or two hundred years. There are many three stories high, a +few boast of four stories, but the most of them have but two. Third +stories are popular because of the breezes that blow and make life +comfortable. + +Plazas are small, but parked and well kept, and they are used as only +Latin-Americans know how to use a plaza. The little ones are garden-spot +oases in the deserts of bare walls and wide eaves. Santa Ana Plaza is the +heart of the city, and there is no hour of the day or night that there are +not people there. If you really wish to see the world go by, sit on the +stone bench at Santa Ana Plaza and look about you. If you stay long +enough, you may see anybody, from the latest naked brown baby to the last +chosen president of any country you may name. + +Sitting in the plaza is a business by itself in this country. The North +American uses a park as a short cut, cross-corners, to get somewhere. But +with the tropic citizen, the plaza is an end in itself. He is not going +anywhere, he is just sitting in the plaza. He may not even be called a +bench-warmer--the bench is already warm. He is sitting in the plaza--that +is all. + +The band-night parade in Santa Ana Plaza is an institution. Around the +central garden they saunter, to the swing of the very good music from the +central pavilion. The outer walk is wide, and so is the parade. Clockwise +walks the inner circle, three abreast, all young men. In the opposite +direction saunter the young women, also in threes. 'Round and 'round they +go, talking, laughing, listening, looking, lingering, while the band plays +on. It is a good band too. And not the least of the exhibit is the clothes +the women wear. In matter of graceful and apparently comfortable costumes +the Panamanian girls need apologize to none of their northern sisters. Who +is to blame the boys if they keep on walking around for the sake of seeing +the seeable, especially when she may be quite worth watching? Every added +turn means one look more. It is all very dignified and proper, but human +nature is the same old composition in every land, and the blood in the +heart runs red, no matter what the tint or tan without. In a land where +the customs of chaperonage are exceeding strict, and no young woman is +supposed to be left alone with any young man for the briefest moment, it +is easy to see why the band nights in the plaza are popular. Ostensibly +the young women, after the manner of their kind, have no interest in the +young men, but just the same, their soft brown eyes have the same old way +of wandering at the right moment; it is the same old trick and it works in +the same old way. + +The cathedral plaza is rather a different matter. Here gather the elite, +in numbers on concert nights, and more or less on other fair evenings. The +grown-ups sit about on the benches and the children run and play, +care-free and comfortable. Well-dressed and content, these are the best of +the old native stock that used to live "inside" the walls of Panama that +the Spanish king thought he should be able to see. There are usually a few +Americans with the crowd, and it is a peaceful and restful family scene. +Were it not for the incessant clatter of the trolleys and jitneys the +place would be a good rest-cure. But as matters now stand, there is too +much pandemonium for any permanent peace. + +[Illustration: CONVENT DOOR] + +Out at the point of the seawall, near Chiriqui Prison, stands an old stone +sentry box. It appears to belong to the prison now, but there was a time +when the outlook from that point on the bay of Panama was the viewpoint of +Panamanian life as it faced the Pacific and marked the place of departure +for shores unknown. It is prosaic enough now to stand beside the little +old stone tower and watch a big liner leave the canal and throw back its +smoke-plume as it steams out to sea, having left the Atlantic Ocean seven +hours before. Gone with the days of the explorers and pirates are the +mystery and menace of it all. The sentry box meant something then. Its +lone occupant scanned anxiously the horizon for the sail that might mean +fresh plunders, news from the world beyond, bountiful booty or stolen +treasure, or perchance a fight to the finish with other pirates as +unscrupulous as the villains on shore. Now the children gather there at +sunset to play, care-free on the high wall overlooking the Gulf of Panama. + +Old Spanish houses are built with the yard inside. It is delightfully +intimate and cozy, but not very democratic. Green and clean and cool are +these little parked "interiors" of the better houses. Some of the common +patios are dirty and disheveled, and the worst of them are better left +alone, but the American Health Department looks after the sanitation of +them all. + +Chino (Chinese) shops sell everything, but, aside from the fine stores on +Central Avenue, are mostly devoted to native trade. Out in the interior +the Chinese storekeepers transact practically all the business of the +country. Wherever there are two or three families gathered together, there +the Chinese storekeeper is sure to appear, ready to harvest any small or +large coins that may be in circulation. + +There were at one time about five hundred saloons of all sorts in Panama, +This number has been greatly reduced with hope of complete extinction, +owing to the exigencies of the near-by American soldiers on the Canal +Zone. The monthly payroll of the Zone is a stream of gold, and it is a +case of losing that gold or cleaning up Panama. Military orders and +voluntary boycotts made Panama a lonesome town for the latter part of +1918. + +[Illustration: OFFICIAL LOTTERY IN BISHOP'S HOUSE, PANAMA] + +There is the official lottery, suspiciously located. To be sure, the +bishop does not personally supervise the drawings, and perhaps he does not +get anything out of it, but no one who knows Panama claims such to be the +case. When did the hierarchy ever oppose a gambling game that promised +profit for the cause? Gaunt, hungry-looking cripples and pobres hang about +the corners selling lottery tickets. Evidently, none of the profits come +to these unfortunates. + +Panama City has its neighborhoods like any other Old-World town. "Inside" +the old wall includes the original fortified town on the little peninsula +jutting into the bay. Here live officials, professional and business men. +Beyond this lies the town that overflowed the wall and now reaches down to +the park in front of the Tivoli Hotel. This is the barrio of Santa Ana. +Caledonia and Guachapali and San Miguel lie across the railway and serve +to fill in the space between the Spanish town and the Exposition grounds. +A mile and a half beyond the palaces of the exposition lies Bella Vista, +beautiful for situation and rivaling Southern California for its real +estate enterprise. Over toward the Canal is Chorilla between the Cemetery +and Ancon Hill. At the end of the five-cent car fare on the line to the +savanas is the famous--or infamous--bull ring. Who said that bullfights +had been abandoned? Not much. Between bullfights and prize fights the +season is not allowed to drag, and it must be admitted that the number of +American patrons of these brutalizing contests is not to the credit of the +kind. + +The open market where the fishermen come ashore is one of the show places +of Panama. Pangas and chingas and craft of every sort, except the modern +kind, bring in on high tide cargoes of bananas, coconuts, charcoal, +camotes, rice, sugar, syrup, rum, papayas, mangoes, lonzones, chiotes, +poultry, pigs, ivory nuts and a score of fruits and vegetables unnamable +by the uninitiated. When the tide recedes the boats lie high, if not very +dry, and the unloading proceeds apace. It is an interesting and lively +scene, and the bicker and barter go on by the hour. + +Hard by is the big native market, resort of housekeepers and servants in +search of commissary bargains. This one is fairly clean and is the morning +recreation of thousands of shoppers. + +Panama has its theaters, of the sort to be expected. One of the movie +houses compares well with the best anywhere, and most of the others are in +good condition. The national theater is a credit to the country and forms +a section of the national palace. On the Canal Zone the clubhouses, +sometimes called Y. M. C. A.'s, put on several picture shows a week in +commendable effort to supply recreation to their patrons. + +The architecture of the old churches is a bit disappointing to travelers +who have seen the splendid buildings of other Latin lands. The Cathedral +has two modern towers, a clock in one of them, and the twelve apostles in +life size on the facade. The Jesuit Church by the Malecon is very old and +rather interesting. Recently a new concrete tower has been added, of +striking appearance, but not closely in conformity with the architecture +of the church. This church contains a famous old painting of purgatory and +heaven, and down below, the flames of the lost. It is notable that in the +place of purgatory are bishops, priests, and kings. There are ten people +in heaven, and ten in purgatory, and of each ten three are women. +Query--Where did the painter think that the women belong? It is an +interesting question, especially for the women. + +The big Merced Church on Central Avenue has a curious and interesting +little street chapel on the corner of the sidewalk, and here are arranged +curious exhibitions at Christmas and Easter. I saw here the ancient +village of Bethlehem, with the inn and manger and oxen; but there were +also a miniature lake with a steamboat, and a grocery wagon delivering +goods to the ancient Bethlehemites. The stores bore advertisements of +patent breakfast foods. + +No place can be truly romantic until it possesses some good ruins, and +Panama claims distinction in the old Flat-Arch Church near the palace. The +interior is now used as a garage, and no one but the tourist seems to +think the place of any interest. Two blocks away stands the facade of the +fine old stone church that has been a ruin now for years. The interior is +now a stable, and the old walls of the college have been used for the +construction of a modern cheap tenement house. The stone front of the old +wall stands as a fine example of the architecture and building of 1751, +when the church was finished. + +The San Filipi Neri Church, at the corner of Avenida B and Fourth Streets, +is made from stone carried in from Old Panama. This church is said to have +the most beautiful interior in the city, but, as it is very rarely opened +to the street, the visitor will have to accept the statement without +opportunity to judge for himself. + +[Illustration: RUIN OF FAMOUS FLAT-ARCH CHURCH] + +The savanas lie northeast of Panama and beyond the ruins of Old Panama. +The rolling slopes of green and the growing number of villas will make +this strip of country valuable and famous before long. + +Of Panama's hotels not much need to be said, except that they are good of +their kind. Latin hotel standards are different from those of North +America, but good judges of hotel life have pronounced those of Panama to +be quite endurable. + +There are always two or three daily papers in Panama and an indefinite +number of weeklies. An immemorial custom exists by which when any citizen +has anything on his mind that he feels he should unload to the profit or +otherwise of the public, a printed pronunciamento is issued and circulated +about the streets by boys, handed out freely to everybody in sight. This +really effective method is sometimes used for important matters of state. + +[Illustration: EIGHTH-GRADE ROOM, PANAMA] + +The educational system is modeled upon the best Latin-American standards, +with primary schools of four grades throughout the Republic. Provincial +centers have schools with two, and in a few cases four years more. The +National Institute, at the foot of Ancon Hill, maintains a normal school +for men and a liceo which grants the degree of Bachelor of Arts upon the +completion of about the equivalent of the American college freshman year. +The young women are given a normal course in the Women's Normal School at +the Exposition grounds. There is no coeducation above the primary grades. +The Agricultural Experimental Farm and School, abandoned as an experiment +station, is used as a reform school. + +Taboga Island lies off shore and furnishes a point of much interest. It is +the week-end Mecca of the Zone people and also of many of the Panamanians. +There are a good American hotel, several fair native hotels, good fishing, +tramping, an interesting native village, a healthful climate, and a fine +view--and all within ten miles of Panama. + +If the prowler is looking for real adventure, he can seek for it on Gocos +Island, three hundred miles south of Panama. Here are said to lie hidden +somewhere ten millions of dollars' worth of treasure, stolen from Callao +and other points between 1820 and 1830. Harvey Montmorency wrote it up in +a book entitled On the Track of the Treasure, and so well did he tell the +story that four large expeditions have been organized and sent to find it. +One man is said to have found a little gold for his pains, but the others +went home poorer than they came. And if these are too easy destinations, +there lie the Galapagos Islands off the coast of Peru, said to contain +many possibilities, of many kinds. Peru is supposed to have the islands on +the market, and anybody with the money can purchase one, all his own. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +A CITY OF GHOSTS + + +No one has ever satisfactorily explained the existence of ghosts in an +enlightened world, but I have a theory that they survive because they +render a real service. They lend interest to life and at least keep us +from forgetting the super (or sub) natural. + +Likewise ruins have high value as a link with the past, and with neither +ruins nor ghosts life would become a very flat affair. And if ever a spot, +by history, tradition, situation, and present condition, was marked for +rendezvous purposes by all the tribe that gibber and squeak and wander at +night in the dark of the moon, that place is Old Panama. + +The history of Old Panama has been told, and well told, by other writers. +Read it there, and read it before you see the place. Many pilgrims go out +there, poke about among the ruins for a quarter of an hour, and exclaim, +"Is this all?" Without the story the most appreciative pilgrim will miss +the flavor of the place, but without a little romantic appreciation both +the story and the ruins will fall short of revealing all that the place +has to give. + +The old town site was a hopeless jungle until the National Institute, +under the leadership of Dr. Dexter, cleared away the brush and laid bare +the traces of streets and buildings. To-day the place is in good condition +and one may wander about at will and dream to his heart's content. It is +no place for joy rides, and the roadhouse is a blot on the place, but +there are people still who see nothing but a refreshment counter and +worthless stone heaps. + +[Illustration: CONVENT GARDEN] + +One of the favorite amusements of tourists and other people used to be +that of digging for treasure at Old Panama. No one ever found anything of +value, but it made a fine story to tell upon return to the States. "When I +was digging for treasure in Old Panama"--just say it and see what a flavor +it has. It is most probable that if the ruins were located in a cooler +climate, there would have been a great deal more digging. Under a tropic +sun, however, it takes considerable bait to induce anyone to indulge in +such vigorous exercise. + +The treasure idea is easy to locate. Peruvian gold was all brought up to +Panama and stored in warehouses until it could be packed across to Porto +Bello. There were endless fighting and plots and schemes and robberies and +murders connected with the gold trade. Many a man lost his gold, and many +a man his life. And, in consequence, some of the gold was also lost in the +melee. What more natural, then, than to look about for this lost treasure +in the place where most of it was stored? + +Now, there may be millions of dollars' worth of old gold somewhere about +Old Panama. The only difficulty is that no one ever yet has been able to +find any of it. The probability is that no gold was ever left there long +enough to be very much lost, and the men who did the fighting also took +care of the gold. But that does not prevent any one from "digging for +treasure in Old Panama" if he wants to do so. + +Nevertheless, there is treasure in Old Panama, and it is to be had for the +digging. But the digging will be, not amid the rocks, but into the history +of the place. And the digger will find rare nuggets for his pains. Balboa, +Pizarro, Pedrarias laid out this town, and set the pace for the wild and +unprincipled years that followed. And Henry Morgan, adventurer, pirate, +and general rascal, ended the story as it was begun--in crime and blood. + +[Illustration: ROMANTIC OLD CONVENTS SURVIVE] + +Accounts of the construction and character of the old city represent it to +have been builded with much magnificence. All the woods used in building +were of the fine native mahoganies, and there were hangings, tapestries, +and paintings in the sumptuous houses of the men who became enormously +rich from the traffic of the times. Returning ships from Europe brought +luxuries as well as necessities, and the gold trade people maintained +regular fleets of ships and put Panama in close touch with the life of the +age. There are described two large churches, a cathedral, a "hospital," +over two thousand large houses, and several very large establishments for +the care of the great number of pack animals used on the trail. Large +quantities of gold, silver, pearls, and gems of various sorts were in +evidence. In the day of its glory Panama was a veritable Arabian Nights +city, with some two hundred warehouses for the storing of stolen treasure. + +The story of the destruction of the old city is one of shocking cruelty +and lust, and merely furnishes the last chapter of the same tale of crime +that marks the history of the Isthmus from the finding of the Peruvian +gold to the days when the murderous pillages of rival pirates finally +destroyed the commerce of the Isthmus and left Panama little more than a +memory of former glories. The burning of Old Panama marks the turning +point in Isthmian history and closes forever the days of conquest. About +this time the vast supply of Peruvian gold became exhausted, and between +the failure of loot and the destruction of trade by brigandage the Isthmus +fell into neglect and was nearly lost sight of by the world for two +hundred years. + +Anyone who knows the story of the place will find the ruins fascinating +because they show a construction of the days when men built strong walls +because nothing else would stand the strain of the lives they lived. Some +of the walls stand as firm and strong to-day as they did three and a half +centuries ago, and unless removed by the hand of man they will stand here +a thousand years hence. And when a wall stands for centuries in this +tropic climate of disintegration it is a wall to remember. + +[Illustration: RUINED TOWER AT OLD PANAMA] + +Most conspicuous stands the old church tower, splendid and defiant amid +the wreckage about its feet. Straight and strong it lifts its lofty head +above the treetops, and, viewed from any angle, is a majestic figure. +There is no construction in modern Panama to-day that may be compared to +the grand dignity of that sentinel tower. Like some old prophet, amid the +ruins of a wayward people, the tower raises its head and stands in mute +but noble witness to the reality of the things that endure. For the tower +was honestly built, and therefore stands. Against its solid walls, builded +from their rock foundation straight upward, the ravages of time have made +but little impress. + +The tower was part of the cathedral, and the cathedral was one of three or +four great churches. Of at least two others well-preserved ruins still +remain, and are well worth careful study. The reddish-brown coloring of +the old walls and the vine-covered stone help furnish endless temptations +for the artist, but no one has yet given adequate expression to the +splendid possibilities of these ruins. + +Still more interesting vistas open to the mind's eye of the student with a +constructive imagination. There were churches many and large and beautiful +in Old Panama. And there were pirates wild and wicked and hated in Old +Panama. Who "ran the town"? The pirates or the priests? What relations +existed between the two? And if there were churches of such great beauty +and strength, why were there also the terrible pirates? What were the +churches doing that they did not bring about a better city? + +These are hard questions, but to anyone who knows conditions to-day, and +who knows that conditions to-day are better than they were in Old Panama, +the answer is not far to seek. The hungry and helpless peons did not give +the money to build those costly churches, though they doubtless did the +hard work of construction. And if the pirates were good givers--and they +doubtless were, under promise and threat--then they also influenced the +general scheme of things in Old Panama. In short, the churches of Old +Panama did not make a very good town of it. + +What a story Jack London could have written here! It is too bad that he +did not find Old Panama before it was too late. Not only the ruins, but +the vista of royal palms along the beach, with the little +red-white-and-blue crabs scurrying about at high tide, unite to raise a +sense of romance that starts the wheels of fancy revolving in one's brain. +All one needs is a "long, low, rakish black craft in the offing,"--there +it is now, the very thing, a big chinga, fifty feet long with four sails +and twenty-five men on board, luffing and tacking about into the little +bay just around the point. Pirates or fishermen--don't inquire too +closely; either will do, and both are useful in romance. + +[Illustration: COSTA RICA TRAPICHE, OR SUGAR MILL] + +In one of the churches are some old graves, where some natives have been +buried, partly for convenience and perhaps partly from sentiment. Fine old +walls stand earthquake-cracked, but still strong. Of roofs there are, of +course, none. And back of the church are still intact the foundations of a +house said to have been the house of the governor, and the vaulted arches +of the old cellar storehouse are still intact. A native lives in a shanty +near by, and he greets the visitor, not with the information that might +make him useful and get him a tip, but with the vacant optimism of those +who feel that somehow something is coming to them whether they earn it or +not. + +As for the natives, none of them know anything about the place. The few +that live there are of the sort that would camp under the nose of the +sphinx and never look up into his face. But the reader of this can well +spend a half day amid the most fruitful prowling anywhere in Panama. He +may gaze at the splendid tower till the broken walls about it rise again, +and the old tiled roof once more covers the worshiping congregations +within, and the drone of mass and the fragrance of incense again ascend +before the high altar. And down the old street, with its one-story houses, +once more wind the pack trains and muleteers and men and women and +children. There is excitement everywhere, and commotion and cursing, and +everybody runs down to the beach. And if you will turn about and gaze out +to sea, you will see there a curious craft with freakish sails, and when +it drops anchor and the boat pulls ashore, you will see old Almagro +himself step out on the sands sword in hand, and with rough and profane +commands, take charge of the unloading of his golden cargo. There will be +wild times in Old Panama to-night, for the pack trains have returned from +Porto Bello with a cargo of rum, and the sailors from Peru have been long +at sea, detained by unfavorable winds, and, like sailors of other times +and climes, they are thirsty. Out from the church door comes the tonsured +priest; he shakes his head, shrugs his shoulders, and makes his way down +to where the great Almagro stands, a commanding figure amid the confusion. +For the commander has the gold, and, like all explorers of his time, he +will be in need of a proper blessing by the priest; and the padre, being +human, can use a little of the gold. + +But while you gaze and dream, "dear reader," the vision fades and "the +tumult and the shouting dies," and there stand the ruins, and there swings +the sweep of the tropic sea, and you are again in the twentieth century, a +little richer in mental imagery for your short excursion back into the +sixteenth. + +Which is to say that dreaming is easy at Old Panama. Try it yourself. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE SPELL OF THE JUNGLE + + +What the desert is to Arizona and the ice to Alaska the jungle is to +tropical America. He who has never traveled through a tropical jungle on a +trusty mule has missed something out of his life. He should go back and +begin over again. + +The jungle is much maligned and often misinterpreted. The jungle has a +place in the agricultural life of the tropics, but it has also a place in +the aesthetic and moral life of mankind. Here at last there is room, and +the starved and stunted life may relax its struggle and strain and expand +under the luxuriance and exuberance of a world where all the forces of +life overflow and run riot in a thousand fantastic forms of energy and +growth. Like the uncharted vastness of the polar sea and the unbounded, +shimmering mirage of the wide desert, here at last there is plenty and to +spare. When a man has stinted and economized all his life on a New England +hillside amid stones and stumps, the jungle takes the load off his soul +and sets him free in a universe of new and untested dimensions. + +The jungle is misunderstood. There are jungles unworthy of the name, but +these vast Panamanian hothouses are a different matter. They are not the +bottomless morasses of deadly snakes and poisonous vapors. Since men have +learned how to live in the tropics these terrors have largely retreated to +the highly colored accounts of tropical travelers who took one look and +fled--to write a book of timely warning to the uninitiated. These jungles +are not the haunts of hidden horrors and poisoned arrows. Ferocious +tree-dwellers may inhabit the unknown recesses of the upper Amazon, but +they do not live in the jungles of Central America and Panama. + +[Illustration: PAPAYA TREES] + +It takes just three conditions to make a good jungle, and these three are +all present in this fascinating country. Moisture, temperature, and soil; +mix them in the right proportions and you can produce a jungle at the +North Pole, but nowhere can the mixture be located except in the tropics. +When one remembers the painstaking toil expended on the rocky fields of +northern New York and then turns to a land where the problem is not to +encourage but to prevent growth, one wonders how it happened that our +ancestors blundered into an environment reeking with difficulties when +they might have had all this overflow of abundance for the taking. + +There are several brands of jungle, to be sure, and distinct differences +of kind may be located easily. The jungle of the overflowed level river +land is a very different formation from that which climbs over the rolling +hills and up the mountain slopes. But everywhere there is the same +reckless riot of power and life. Fantastic growths are here just because +there is so much growing to do and so much energy back of the roots that +there are not conventional forms of life enough to go around and life +boils over in every conceivable absurdity of form and habit. This is no +place for a niggard. But it is a splendid antidote for smallness of soul +and for that dried-up-ness that settles down like a pall upon the spirits +of men who never in their lives have had enough of anything or breathed an +atmosphere of abundance. + +It must be a petrified soul that can resist this wanton abandon of +vegetable life. How a man can spend three days in this full-blown +exhibition of vital energy at work in the vegetable world and ever be +small again is more than can be readily understood. + +Here is a world where no one ever need cry for more; there is too much +already. After a few days of it one longs to get out in the open, to see a +barren spot somewhere just to rest the surfeited soul a bit. It's all for +the asking; in fact, there is no chance to ask; it is poured out of the +horn of nature's plenty, and all the color and charm and fantasy and music +and laughter and glory of it are piled in wild profusion a hundred feet +high, and you cannot get away if you will. Nature at least has a chance to +show what she can really do, and it is yours for the looking. + +[Illustration: BANANAS AND SUGAR CANE] + +What makes up a jungle? Well, that's hard to say. There are mighty trees +of cedar and mahogany and a hundred lesser breeds, lifting their heads +into the tropic sky. There are palms and giant ferns of course. There are +wonderful purple and magenta and crimson-topped trees, whose glaring flat +colors fairly shriek at you like the bedlam of a paint box let loose on +the sky. Sturdy lignum vitae trees stand conscious of their high value and +rare qualities. Ferns in profusion, vast, variegated and immense, line the +banks of streams and hide in the shadows of the great trees. Orchids, of +course, winding streams strewn with the flowers and foliage of the dense +mass overhead, entrancing water streets and winding Venetian tunnels +through forests so thick that the sun never penetrates the shadowed +fastnesses below. There are paraqueets, parrots, singing canaries, +alligators, bananas, bamboos, singing winds, warbling bluebirds, +blackbirds that can render a tune, purples and blues and crimsons and +browns, all poured out and mixed together without stint. It is fascinating +for a few hours, but after a time you get overloaded and are ready to cry +"Enough." It's great, but a little stupefying till one gets used to it. + +The jungle of the mountains is essentially different from and more +interesting than that of the level swamps. Both are largely uninhabited, +for men naturally like to have a little outlook both for their lives and +about their habitations. + +But the growth is about equally dense, provided the soil and moisture are +right for the production of real jungle. From Puerto Limon to Almirante is +about one hundred and twenty miles overland, and there was a time when +practically every mile of this distance was untouched jungle. The United +Fruit Company has conquered most of it, until there is now but a day's +journey on horseback through the connecting link between the two railroad +terminal points at Estrella and the Talamanca Valley. The one hundred +miles of rails run almost entirely through the endless fields of bananas. +But once this was all primitive wilderness; that is, we think it was, but +some of the superintendents of this clearing and planting work say that +they have discovered numerous evidences that there was a time in ages past +when practically all of this vast area was under some sort of cultivation. + +[Illustration: CACAO PODS] + +There would be a railroad now across the gap of twenty miles but for the +fact that this gap includes a mountain range with rushing rivers and +steeps, gorges and almost impenetrable forests. Occasional travelers cross +this range by the aid of sturdy mules, but there is yet nothing that could +by any strain of language be called a trail. There is simply a "blaze" +through the forest and occasional marks where some floundering traveler +has preceded the venturesome explorer through the depths of some yawning +mudhole. + +I crossed this range on a day when the sun was shining overhead, but only +two or three times did its rays fall upon the "trail." The overhead growth +was so thick that there was nothing but dense shadow below. A hundred and +fifty feet these immense trees rose into the air, carrying upward with +them festoons of hanging vines, swinging rattan, and clinging orchids. +Curious enough are some of these trees, with their winding external +buttresses and thin flanges thrown out to brace against the winds. Banyan +trees reach out their long arms and drop their fingers down into the soil +and take root and continue until the tree literally "stalks" its way +across the mountain side. There are rubber trees and cedar trees and +mahogany trees and prickly poisoned trees that are the terror of the +natives, and trees bearing all manner of jungle fruits and flowers and +swarming with chattering birds and creeping things. Rattan "ropes" an inch +in diameter and two hundred feet long trip the unwary traveler, and it is +useless to try to break them. They are like steel cables. Wild birds are +plentiful, occasional baboons bark and bray, and the mountain streams +splash and plunge their way through the ferns and flowers. The Estrella +River forms the highway for several miles, and its rocky torrent must be +forded a score of times. + +He who has never tried to travel this "road" has a new experience in +store. There are hillsides that are all but perpendicular, which would not +be so bad, but they are a mixture of clay and soapstone and moisture, and +it is practically impossible to stand erect without holding on to nearby +saplings. How a laden mule can navigate such a causeway of destruction is +a mystery to be explained only by people who understand mules. And I rode +a mule whose mastery of the art of trail-navigation left nothing to be +learned. In the ignorance of my novitiate I alighted before the first +precipitous descent to which we came. The mule, with the conservatism born +of experience, took his time to make the descent, and I essayed to go +before and show him how to do it. He watched me with intense interest, +while I gingerly approached the edge of the slippery declivity and started +down. As a descent it was a complete success. At the second step I slipped +on the wet clay and went rolling and coasting to the bottom, whither I +arrived in record time, plastered from head to foot with the raw material +of which pottery is made. I struggled to my feet and looked up at the +mule. He still regarded me intently, and I think that he winked, at least +his ear did. Then he deliberately put his front feet over the edge, +gathered in his hind feet, and with all fours together, sat down and +gracefully slid to the bottom of the hill. He arrived right side up at the +bottom, munching a mouthful of grass, which he seized in passing on the +way down, and turned to look at me with an expression that needed no +interpreter. And I took the hint and stayed on his back most of the day. + +After a solid day of this dense growth where we could not see more than a +stone's throw at any time it was with a distinct sense of relief that we +caught sight of daylight at last through an opening ahead and came upon +the fringes of the Talamanca plantation. + +[Illustration: PROPOSED LOCATION FOR REST CURE] + +The Talamanca Valley is something quite worth while in itself. Years ago +it was inhabited by Spanish refugees who fled back from the bloody attacks +of the ravenous Caribbean pirates of the sixteenth century. Their little +plantations were not large and the land was not cleared very thoroughly, +but they shifted their planting places until much of the present area was +covered sooner or later with platanas. The view of this valley from the +hillside is surpassingly beautiful. Thirty miles long, ten miles wide, and +surrounded by mountains and forests, the whole floor of the valley is one +vast, waving, level field of bananas, and there are few things better to +look upon than a valley level full of banana tops. From twenty to forty +feet high they stand, and their long, shady corridors are like the aisles +of some great series of cathedral chapels, waiting for worshipers within. +Through the middle of the valley runs the stream of the upper Sexola River +with its three tributaries and their bluffs. The Changuanola Railway, +which is the name under which the United Fruit Company moved its bananas +and its men in this great plantation, runs the length of the valley, and +the line of rails is punctuated by the white cabins of the black employees +and the houses and offices of the plantation superintendents and foremen. + +Dominating the whole valley stands old Pico Blanco, or White Top. There is +no snow at the summit, but there is nearly always a white cloud cap there, +hence the name. This noble mountain is the interest and admiration of all +dwellers in the valley. Its top lists eleven thousand feet above the sea. +It is not as high as Pike's Peak nor Shasta, but it towers well up toward +the level of Fujiyama, and beside it Mount Washington looks like a pigmy +and the Adirondacks are mere foothills. Back in the canyons and forests of +the mountain range live the curious Talamanca Indians, whose tribal +customs indicate a close affinity between their ancestors and those of the +famous Indians of Quirigua. + +The difference between the jungle and the dividend-paying plantation is +one of organization, capital, administration, and toil. Add these to the +jungle and you have the plantation. Take them away from the plantation and +in a very short time the jungle is again supreme. Crowding around the +corners, peeping over the edges, and creeping ever onward, the jungle +pushes its jealous way behind the footprints of the men who essay to +conquer its wild ways. But once defeated, the jungle becomes a slave +bearing costly burdens for its master--man. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +LIFE AT THE BOTTOM + + +"Forty years ago I took a bath, and the next day I felt chilly, and +then--" + +"Never mind forty years ago. What is the matter this morning, and why have +you come to me for medicine?" chants the seasoned employer of plantation +labor. + +"That is what I was telling you, senor. Forty years ago I took a bath, and +the next day I felt chilly, and then I thought that I had made a mistake, +and so I went--" + +"Now, see here. I have no interest nor curiosity about forty years ago. +What is the matter with you now?" + +"Be patient, senor. This is important, and I will tell you all. Forty +years ago--" and after devious dodgings the tale terminates in a case of +fever or indigestion, or mayhap only plain drunk. + +It is ever thus with the tropic tao, or peon, or ignorante, or whatever +may be called the people who have grown up with the soil and have risen +not any above it. The petty official who hears complaints in any tropic +land listens to marvelous reminiscences through deep jungles of +imaginative memory before reaching present facts. + +"Twenty-five years ago I had the toothache, and then the next week I had a +bad dream, and after that I had no suerte [luck] at all, until one saint's +day I drank rum and ate rice, and the rice make me sick--" is merely the +opening chapter. + +Every employer of tropic labor must be judge and jury for a docket of +petty cases that have to be adjusted if the wheels of industry are not to +be paralyzed in their work. Newcomers at this business of sitting in the +seat of judgment hear marvelous stories of oppression and outrage, in +which the accuser is always innocent--and always alone, if possible. But +experience breeds disillusionment and skepticism deep and wide, and soon +the amateur Solomon learns to distrust every story, most of all the first +one told. For, after the plaintiff has sworn that he is telling the truth, +or may all the saints strike him dead, and has unrolled his woes in +orderly sequence, he stands with critical eye, watching to see what +impression his art has made upon the puzzled personage of power. + +And when the adjuster of affairs scorns the tale and says, "Get out with +you. I don't believe a word of that stuff," the beggar bows and smiles a +deprecating smile and begins all over again with a revised version of the +case, which bears very little resemblance to the first story, and again +stands back to observe what better success he may hope for this time. And +there appears to be no end to the ready versions and variations of the +woes of the downtrodden exponent of virtue whose humble bearing seems to +exude virtue from every protruding bare spot through his rags. "Last +Wednesday morning, I got up, and--would you believe it?--there was nothing +in the house. There was no yucca [counting off on his fingers], +no plantanas, no huevos, no carne, no mais, no azucar, no +arroz--absolutamente nada. Yes, it was last Wednesday--no, no, senor, I am +a liar--it was last Tuesday morning. And, senor, my children were hungry, +and I remembered that there was nothing--" and so on the story goes to its +climax in the claim that a certain party, not present, owes the complainer +fifty cents for real or imaginary value bestowed, and will the owner +please collect the fifty cents for the starving children? + +[Illustration: PICTURESQUE JUNGLE TOWNS] + +And if this tale is unsatisfactory, comes immediately a fresh version to +the effect that it is another man who owes a dollar because he tramped +across some young corn and spoiled the crop. + +It is this fertility of imagination that makes up for any sort of accurate +information. To the American the amazing thing about these people is that +they know so little about their own very interesting country. The American +must know in order to boom his town, but the tropic native has no idea of +booming his town. There is no fun in booming, there is nothing to boom, +and a boomed town would be always stirring about or starting something, +and would be a nuisance anyway. + +I stood in a village, quaint and curious, and wondered how old it might +be. The bells hanging to a cross beam in front of the old church bore +figures on their rims--1722, they said; and they looked it, every inch--or +year. + +Came the young curate of the parish, a good-looking and intelligent +native, who talked a little with us pleasantly, and lured us into the old +church, where he immediately improved the occasion by getting the +collection basket and holding it under our noses. "It is a special saint's +day," he explained. + +"How many people live here?" + +He could not tell. + +"How old is the church?" we wanted to know, thinking to get a morsel of +information for our crumb of contribution. + +He did not know. The question was entirely new to him. He had been born in +the town, and later showed us with pride the house in which himself, his +mother, and his grandmother had been born, but as to the number of +inhabitants or the age of the church it had never occurred to him to +inquire. + +But presently inspiration came to his aid. There was an ancient woman +still living at more than a hundred years; surely she would know the +answer to some of these curious questions. + +[Illustration: TORTILLAS ARE STAPLE] + +We called on the old woman. She was nothing but bones and parchment, +sitting with her chin on her knees on a small platform of slats which she +had not left for over two years. She claimed one hundred and two years, +which was undoubtedly correct, as baptismal records are usually accurately +kept. She certainly looked the part. The studiante sat down on the "bed," +placed his hand kindly on the old woman's shoulder, and told her that +though she was blind there were three strangers who had come to see her +and congratulate her on her great age. She was pleased and said so, but +her mind was as feeble as her body, and there was little that she could +say. When asked as to the date of the "blessing" of the church, she said, +"O yes, certainly I can name it--it was on Saint John's day." + +"That's fine," enthused the curate. "Now, what year was it, grandma?" + +"Ah, that is another matter. I can't tell you now, but if you will come +to-morrow, I may be able to remember it then." + +[Illustration: JUNGLE FOLK] + +We left the next morning, of course, without the date of the dedication +day, but what information was lacking on this point was amply made up in +information concerning the population. We asked seven people the question +and received seven different answers, ranging from three hundred to five +thousand. We counted a hundred odd houses, indicating six or seven hundred +people, but no one there had any idea or any interest in the matter. What +difference did it make anyway? + +The town of Nata, eighty miles west of Panama, was founded in 1520, one +year after the founding of Old Panama, and one hundred years before the +Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. Old Panama has been a ruin for two and +one half centuries, leaving Nata as the oldest inhabited town in the New +World--no small distinction. + +[Illustration: "THE COTTER'S SATURDAY NIGHT"] + +I asked the leading official if he knew how old the town was, and he said +that he understood that it was "very old." When I suggested that it was +the oldest town in America he nodded politely and talked of something +else. I called on the priest, an intelligent and friendly man, who also +understood that the town "was very old," but its priority of claim to the +oldest living municipal inhabitant of the Americas had little interest for +him. He talked on, complaining bitterly of the bad morals of the people +and the small financial proceeds which the parish yielded its spiritual +leader. + +It is easy to disparage any people, especially if they speak a different +language from your own. Most of the things said against the illiterate +natives of any country are true, but the trouble is that they are only a +small fraction of the truth. + +A large employer of native labor, who took pride in treating his men well +and paying them promptly, complained to me that he never could keep steady +labor on his place for the reason that the men earned enough in one week +to keep them drunk for the next fortnight, and hence worked only one week +out of three, leaving their families to starve or shift for themselves as +best they might. And he told the truth. + +But he did not tell it all. This same employer distilled the rum on his +own place and regarded it as a paying business. When other employers +raised the price for labor and produce he refused to do so on the ground +that the more they had the worse off they were. On the surface it might +seem to be true. + +But these same laborers, even saving all possible margin of wages, could +not have lived in anything like comfort on sixty-five cents per day. Most +of them never see a newspaper, and could scarcely read, and not at all +understand it if they did see it. There is not an item of news, a trace of +historical knowledge or perspective, a gleam of scientific understanding, +a moving picture show, or a lecture on any subject, or a musical program, +nor any one of the thousand things that add interest and widen the horizon +of life--none of these things ever enter the remotest areas of his +consciousness. He lives in the flat, narrow confines of a life so small, +so cramped, so possessed by superstition and terror and ill will that he +is not many removes from the cattle with which he works. When this man +would celebrate his saint's day he gets drunk, organizes a bull fight, and +gives vent to every low impulse of his nature. + +Is it any wonder? The only tingle of interest that touches his soul comes +from adventures in the realm of unfaithfulness and drunkenness. How many +of the rest of us would do any better if born and bred in the mire of his +social inheritance? + +There is such a thing as moral hookworm. Saint Paul called it by another +term, but its symptoms are unchanged. The unshod soul, shuffling through +the mire of degradation, acquires from the lower stratum of his +environment the infection of a spiritual destitution that lowers moral +vitality to the minimum. + +How comes this benumbed conscience and depraved practice! What is the +matter that the average of legitimacy for all Central America is thirty +per cent of the total population, while the seventy per cent are born of +unmarried parents? + +It is not for lack of churches. Every town has its church, and the church +is invariably the best building in the town. It stands on the plaza, +commanding, central, and usually more or less beautiful. One can scarcely +get out of sight of a church tower in any thickly settled, level country. +And the churches are large enough to contain almost the whole population +of the town, at least by taking them in several installments at mass +hours. + +[Illustration: CHURCH BELLS OF ARRAIJAN, CAST 1722] + +It is not for want of priests. There are priests in every town, and most +of them carry out pretty faithfully the routine of ecclesiastical +observances that make up the day's program. Black gowns, tonsured heads, +and beads and rosaries are seen everywhere, and the padre is usually the +most influential man in the town. + +It is not for want of religion. Every house of any pretensions has its +holy pictures, often its crucifix, and usually its rosary. Women in +numbers attend mass and go to confession. + +It is not for want of opportunity on the part of priests or church. It is +not because of "church competition." Here we have a unity complete and +final. + +For three hundred and ninety-eight years the priests and their church have +had sole, exclusive, and continuous occupation of Nata, the oldest town in +America. I was probably the first Protestant missionary who ever walked +the streets of the place. Here in the oldest town, with the longest +occupation and the undisturbed opportunity, should be found a fair chance +with these people. + +And what has it done? The open-minded and friendly priest complained +bitterly of the fact that in his parish only five per cent of his people +were born of married parents. Ninety-five per cent were registered on his +books as "Naturales." The year before he had administered over three +hundred baptisms and had celebrated only three marriages. "I can't get +them to marry," he groaned. "Practically speaking, almost no one is +married." + +Is Nata worse than other towns? Possibly so, but it must be remembered +that the "church" has had a longer chance there than in any other city in +all America, and perhaps when the other towns have been exposed for the +same length of time to the system, they will show equally advanced +results! + +There is this thing to be said about the characteristic attitude of the +average priest toward his people: he always despises them. In many lands I +have found this to be true. Discouraged by the failure of his system to +produce spiritual life, or even good morals, he complains bitterly that +the people are indifferent, careless, negligent, immoral, unfaithful, and, +not least of vices, they are poor pay. If they are these things, no one +knows it better than the man who hears their secret confessions. And that +this man should come to a chronic attitude of distrust toward the products +of his own spiritual husbandry is one of the severest indictments against +the system that produces indifference on the part of the people and +cynicism in the heart of the priest. + +What was the church doing to remedy this situation with its deadly +monotony, its superstition, ignorance, and immorality? + +The church was maintaining its round of formulas, saints' days, masses, +confessions, baptisms, funerals for-what-the-traffic-would-bear. Showy +processions and occasional celebrations were the circus and movie for the +people. And on the confession of the troubled priest himself, there was no +moral result. Out of the dead past stood a mummied memory of the once +living church, and its mumbled incantations had no power to make the dry +bones live. + +The only power that seems able to stir new life in the old mausoleum is +the advent of a vigorous Protestant work. In rage and bitterness the +powers bestir themselves and begin to defame and persecute their +disturbers, and in the end, they inevitably give some attention to +reviving their own decaying program. + +How can a man be well when he is one hundred dollars away from a doctor? +With four doctors located among two hundred thousand people scattered over +a radius of forty by a hundred miles, and all fees exorbitantly high, what +is a poor man to do when illness overtakes his household? What is he to +do? Why, nothing at all, except await the end, either of his illness or of +both infirmity and himself. What the missionary needs is no less Bibles +than castor oil and quinine and iodine. I think that I would begin with a +moving-picture program and a clinic, and when a little physical health +appeared, and some sort of interest began to loosen the rusty hinges +before what occupies the mental space, I would begin to talk of something +to make life worth living. It was the way of the Master to heal and teach +and arouse, and the whole program of missionary work might be founded on +"I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more +abundantly." That is the key to the process. These people are not bad; +they are crippled. They are not vicious; they are lifeless. They are not +rebels: they are very much untaught, backward children. + +[Illustration: FIRST-GRADE ROOM, PANAMA] + +The system of public schools is growing apace, but it has a tremendous +task, small support from the parents, and often open opposition from the +priests. In one town a citizen remarked that on examination day at the +close of the term not a single pupil came to school, but that it made no +difference, as they were all promoted and would live just as long whether +they were promoted or not. (How I would have enjoyed that, as a boy!) In +another town the supervisor had criticized unfavorably the people for +certain careless habits, whereupon the teachers took offense, all resigned +and closed the schools. The secretary of education siding with the +supervisor, all schools remained closed, and the children were happy. + +There is one safety valve left for people in such lives, and that is the +world-old prerogative of talk. In the long evenings, by the roadsides, on +the street corners, over the balconies flows an endless stream of talk. +Prattle and chatter and gossip and slander flow on and make up the only +scenarios the people know. Most of it is harmless. Some of it is aimless, +and all of it is fruitless of anything except to save the mind from utter +blankness. + +They were chattering away in the evening, three or four women seeming +unconscious of me, a traveler stopping for the night. One subject held +undivided attention for much time--What shall we cook for breakfast? And +from that it was but a step to that eternal solace of feminine +conversation--the shortcomings of men in general and husbands in +particular. One of the animated declaimers arose, struck a dramatic +attitude, and said, "To expect that any man should be of any use about the +house is impossible," and the eloquent shrug of her shoulders underscored +the remark. In vain I broke in and protested that in the United States it +often happened that the men were successfully commandeered and detailed to +the work of kitchen police, but the only reply was an arched eyebrow and +another shrug. "Tell that to the marines," was what she meant. + +There are two measures of quantity. Either it is "No hay sufficiente" +("There are not enough") or "Hay bastante, bastante" ("Plenty, plenty"). +The population of the next town is one or the other of these measures. The +distance to the river, the crops, the number of children in the family, +the tale of the years that is told--it is all one thing or the other. And +the standard, in contrast with the artificial measures of a high +civilization, is at least true to life. Either there is enough or there is +not enough--that is about as close a distinction as the day's experience +affords. For that matter, all the rest of us are on one side or the other +of the same cleaving line of necessity. + +That everybody should blame everybody else for whatever may happen to be +the matter is the most natural thing in the world. Whom shall we blame if +not some one else? + +It is the fault of the officials that the country is poor. It is the fault +of the large landowner that there is no development. It is the fault of +the municipalities that the towns are not better kept, it is because of +the officials that justice is not better administered. It is the fault of +the Canal Zone that the good days are gone forever, and it is the fault of +the American government that there are certain restrictions on native +tendencies to move forward by the backward jerks of revolution. A Costa +Rican once said to me, "This war in Europe amounts to nothing; but if we +could get up a good old-fashioned revolution, I would be on the job +to-morrow." + +The virtues of these people are a surprising list, considering their scant +opportunities. They are kindly in dealing with foreigners who show +themselves friendly. They do not as a rule abuse their children, which the +West Indian is apt to do if he is of the baser sort. The native is +hospitable and courteous and always willing to oblige, provided he knows +what to say or do. To be sure, the inventory of his information is +disappointing, even concerning such subjects as the distance to the next +town and the market value of rice, but he will tell all he knows and share +what rice he has. Traveling through the country alone, I have been shown +every kindness and entertained with the best that was to be had, and often +sent on my way without being allowed to pay for what I had received. "Do +you think I would take money from a guest?" protested a hospitable host +with whom I had spent the night and who had fed my horses, the guide, and +myself, and had entertained us all evening with discussion of many +matters. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +THE INTERIOR + + +We had reached the town of Anton the day before, and I had sent the guide +back with the horses and purposed to make my way alone. The morning was +fresh and balmy, as befitted the dry season, even if a night spent on an +antiquated cot in a room next to that occupied by a man with a racking +cough and a rooster with a clarion voice, were not a perfect repose. The +_rapport_ between the fowl and the afflicted was complete: when one of +them broke the silence, the other immediately took up the refrain. At +breakfast I suggested to the good wife of the host that I had heard that +if a board were placed above a rooster's head so that he could not stretch +upward, he would not crow. She was all solicitude at once at the +suggestion that the noisy cock had disturbed my slumbers, and I had to +protest my indifference to such serenades. + +Down the street I found a little store where the owner had a horse or two +to hire upon occasion. Thirty minutes of bicker and I was astride a wiry +little native pony to which a bridle was unknown, and out through the +stately palms and luxurious bananas I made my way to the open country +eastward. The river was thronged with horses led to water, and women busy +with their domestic laundry. It was quaint and picturesque. In some such +manner might the ancient Egyptians have gone about their morning tasks. I +have seen exactly the same procedure in the Philippines and by the rivers +of southern China. + +A mile or two from the town the trail mounted a rolling hillock and I +pinched myself to remember that I was not in New Mexico. Straight ahead +rolled the almost level llanos for miles until they were lost in the hills +by Chame, and the purples and pinks of the six-thousand-feet summits were +like a frame for a picture whose southern limits were in the glint of the +blue summer sea. It was a picture and a promise. For two hours the nervous +little pony followed the trail across the smooth plains and frequent +streams. If ever a land was spread out as a challenge to the plow and +seeder, here it was. + +I sought a colonization site, where I had heard of a dozen plucky +Americans who were undertaking a plantation on cooperative lines. At last +I found it in the midst of as fine a tract of land as lies beneath the +tropic skies. An old-fashioned farm dinner made life worth living after +native "chow" for days. Modern tractors, plows, a ton of cotton seed, and +other signs of enterprise did much to make the place seem like somewhere +in the great Southwest. But the enterprising Americans were harboring no +delusions regarding the nature of their undertaking. They meant business +and had counted the cost. + +[Illustration: THE BEAUTIFUL SAVANAS OF COSTA RICA] + +An American on the Canal Zone invested his savings in land in the +interior, and during the vacation built a good wire fence. On his second +visit the fence was totally destroyed by ax, fire, and wire-cutters. The +owner appealed to the local alcalde, a brother of the provincial governor. +He demanded redress for his wrongs. The judge heard his story, and then, +striking a dramatic attitude, smote his breast, and exclaimed, "If these +my friends had not done this thing, I should have done it myself." Which +was to say, no foreigners need apply in those parts. It is probable that +this outrage could not occur under present conditions. + +"The Panama politician thinks that all the republic begins in Las Bovedas +and ends in Las Semanas," remarked a plantation owner of the interior +country. + +Whether this is true or not, few people realize or know anything of the +splendid country that lies back of the Canal Zone and out of reach of the +flitting traveler. To the average Canal Zone employee all Panama begins at +dock seven and ends in the Administration Building. And for the tourist +who comes to do the Canal in a day, of course, everything begins with the +Washington Hotel and ends with the Tivoli. + +But Panama is something vastly more significant than a couple of +slow-service, high-priced hotels. The Isthmian Republic is an empire in +possibilities, entirely apart from the Canal Zone, though the development +of the latent riches of the country is most vitally related to the Canal +enterprise. And the rich belt of land that binds together two continents +is something very much larger than the interesting little city that bears +the name of Panama. + +Back of the ten-mile strip controlled by the United States stretches a +land abounding in natural resources which make it potentially a factor of +agricultural and economic importance. To the uninformed citizen of the +United States and other countries the Republic of Panama is a mere +shoestring tying together the two continents, lest the pair become +separated and one of them lost. We look at the Isthmus in contrast with +the two vast continents that lie to the northwest and southeast, and the +connecting link appears small. Panama suffers from comparison with its big +neighbors. + +Compared with well-known and important insular holdings in the Caribbean +group, Panama assumes entirely different proportions. Panama is two thirds +as large as Cuba and has one third of Cuba's population. Panama is about +the size of Portugal, is four times as large as Salvador, seven and one +half times as large as Jamaica, and nine times the size of Porto Rico. +Panama is as large as all New England except Maine, and nearly equals the +combined area of New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and West Virginia. + +There are interior areas of well-watered, rich soil that equal whole +States in size and yet are entirely unknown to many residents of the Canal +Zone. The Chiriqui Province has a coast line of one hundred and +thirty-three miles and contains as much land as Delaware, Rhode Island, +and Long Island combined. The rich agricultural region in the provinces of +Cocle, Veraguas, Los Santos, and Herrera is as large as the State of +Connecticut. The region east of Panama City reaching out to Chepo is as +large as Rhode Island, and in the Darien country is an area almost +unknown, but abounding in rich resources which would cover the map of New +Jersey with a good margin. + +It is supposed that no one lives in this large territory except the +Americans on the Canal Zone and inhabitants of the two cities of Panama +and Colon. This is also indicative of ignorance. The Republic of Panama +has two thirds as many people as Paraguay or Jamaica, and, as previously +stated, one third as many as Cuba, as many as Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho +combined, or is about equal to Utah, Nevada, and Arizona put together. + +On the basis of resources and soil and climate and accessibility to +market, Panama can support a population many times her present numbers. +Her capacity for supporting population from her own products is larger +than that of most of the States of the Union, acre for acre. Panama's +resources are as good as those of Jamaica or Porto Rico or Cuba. On the +basis of Jamaican population there should be six and one half million +people in Panama, and if the number of people per square mile were equal +to that of precipitous Porto Rico, we would have a population in Panama of +ten and one half million, which is more than live west of a north and +south line drawn through Denver, Colorado. + +That no such population lives to-day in Panama is due to political causes +more than any other factor. The population of Porto Rico has nearly +doubled since American occupation exchanged the old regime for the new. +The barren deserts of the great Southwest are becoming fertile and +populous regions because the people who are possessing the land have a +fair chance, and know that they will be assured a market for their produce +and security for their lives and property. Given political security, +monetary stability, market accessibility, and assurance of economic +cooperation on the part of the government, there are no immediate limits +to the population that Panama may support in comfort. + +[Illustration: SHIPPING COSTA RICA VEGETABLES TO PANAMA] + +Political stability for the government of Panama is assured by the +relations which exist between the United States and the Isthmian Republic, +a condition which exists in no other Spanish-American republic. The +proximity of the Canal assures a world market. The climate and soil and +water supply nature has provided with lavish hand. Sanitation and hygiene +have become exact sciences, and the matter of retaining good health in the +tropics is no longer a problem. There is still good land to be had on +favorable terms, but the supply will soon be controlled by monopolists who +are seizing the present opportunity to load up their future bank accounts, +while war conditions produce a general depression of the world's +development forces. + +The present interior population includes three distinct classes of people. +The original Indian stock still exists, pure and often wild, in the high +mountains and remote regions of the country. These Indians are beginning +to emerge from their fastnesses and get acquainted with their neighbors, +now that they are sure of police protection when they come out. But their +number is small and they are a negligible factor in the totals. + +The West Indians are an importation, and while they are easily adapted to +the climate and form the staple of labor supply for the Canal, they are +not the Panamanians and never will be except as they mix with the native +stock and shade off the colors that exist in such confusion. The Negroes +and Panamanians are much more distinct in the interior than about the Zone +with its terminal cities, where the remnants of humanity have been stirred +together for four hundred years. West Indian populations exist in +predominance only on the plantations of the United Fruit Company, where +they supply the labor for the operation of these vast enterprises. + +The Panamanian is the predominant man in the interior country. He is not +black, nor is he entirely white, but he has straight hair and features +that indicate that he is a descendant of the original Indian stock, mixed +with the Spanish conquerors who overran the country in the sixteenth and +seventeenth centuries. + +Probably the Panamanian has had less opportunity for advancement than the +people of any other country in America. He has had no chance for national +life or political self-expression. He has been the victim of the most +vigorous and long-continued era of piracy and plunder that the New World +has experienced. He has suffered from bad leadership when he has had any +leadership at all. He has been exploited by everybody who came to the +Isthmus. From the days of Morgan down to the formation of the present +Republic, under American protection and guarantee of peace within and +without, this native has been the outcast of the world and the national +goat of the American flock of nations. He has been kept in ignorance and +superstition by the exclusive control of a system of religious oppression +and subjection, and if by chance he happened to acquire anything worth +getting, somebody was always ready to take it away from him. + +This native supplies the labor for such enterprises as have been launched +in the fertile western regions of Panama. With anything like good +treatment he gives a return for his wages, and if he has a chance to +acquire sound health, an intelligent outlook on life, and a share in the +results of his labors, he can be made over into a good citizen. He is not +a bad citizen now, but he is very much undeveloped. + +The products of this great interior region are many and their proceeds in +the world's markets are profitable. Present prices make large +opportunities for investment, and a reorganization of marketing facilities +will mark the beginning of an era of prosperity for Panama. The list of +products now being raised in and exported from Panama is a surprisingly +long one, and the total of returns from these commodities would give a +western real estate promoter material for many prospectuses and promises. + +The chief products of the country at present are bananas, lumber, rice, +sugar, cacao, meat, citrus fruits, corn, coffee, and coconuts. But there +are a hundred other products, many of which indicate large returns if +produced and marketed on a commercial scale. Rubber, ivory, nuts, hides, +beans, pineapples, potatoes, yams, yucca, cotton, tobacco, plantain, a +long list of fruits and vegetables of high value, and a number of minerals +are but a few of the useful commodities now being supplied to the markets +of the Canal Zone and the world from the interior country of Panama. +Nearly every vegetable that grows in the temperate climate does well in +Panama. Some of the native fruits, such as papayas, mangoes, and alligator +pears, are of delicious flavor and high value. The waters of Panama abound +in vast quantities of fish, and there is supply for a number of fish +canneries. Live stock thrives and is produced in considerable numbers in +the provinces of Cocle and Chiriqui. The Canal Zone is now being used as a +farming enterprise and stock grazing range by the administration of the +Zone with the intention of making the Zone area self-supporting in meat +and fruit and vegetables. + +[Illustration: GOOD PINEAPPLES GROW HERE] + +With an average import trade of ten millions and an export of more than +half that amount, Panama is even to-day a factor in the world's markets. +It must be said that the largest item on the import list is that of goods +shipped to the Zone, and that the chief export is bananas shipped from +Almirante, but these items indicate large possibilities in further +developments of territories as yet untouched. + +The interior of Panama includes three general types of country, very +different in climate and produce. The high mountains are a large area of +country, much of which is fertile soil clear to the peaks, and all of +which on the northern slopes is covered with jungle and forest. These +wooded slopes are wet with abundant rainfall, and luxuriant foliage of +tropical forms bewilders the traveler with illusions of fantastic +creations of nature run mad over the earth. These mountainous parts are +for the most part uninhabited, except by the more or less wild Indians, +who live apart much as they were living four hundred years ago. No white +men have tried to maintain themselves in these regions, and in some +districts it is said that a white man's life is unsafe overnight. Tropical +beasts and reptiles and birds abound among the weird forms of vegetation +that seem to be perpetrating grotesque jokes on the bewildered visitor to +the regions beyond the realm of civilized habitations. There are as yet no +efforts made to establish towns or plantations in this country. Yet if +cleared and cultivated, these regions are capable of supporting a +population as dense as that of Porto Rico, where the steep hills and rocky +peaks are covered with a population of over three hundred per square mile. + +The jungle lands of Panama are elsewhere described, and where there is a +jungle there are always rich land and abundant water, sometimes too much +water and need of drainage. The Canal Zone is mainly jungle land, and +where it has been cleared for cultivation excellent results are attained. +The cost of clearing this jungle is not so great as would appear from the +fact that for bananas and many other forms of crop the trees and brush are +cut down and after a time burned, and no further effort is made to clear +the land except about four cleanings per year with a machette. Anything +like plowing is un-thought of for bananas and some other leading crops. +Even sugar is often planted and left to shift for itself, under native +methods, which are subject, of course, to improvement. + +[Illustration: DEAD TIMBER IN GATUN LAKE NOW COVERED WITH ORCHIDS] + +The third class of land in Panama is the level or rolling prairie land +known as savanas or llanos. These lands lie for the most part in the +valleys back of Bocas del Toro and along the southern, or Pacific, coast +of the country. From Chame to Cape Mala a belt of level country sweeps +around the Parita Bay. From ten to forty miles back of the coast rise the +high mountains, and this fertile strip of country averages about thirty +miles in width and is over a hundred miles long. Rolling country extends +on west of this plain, but the plain itself contains enough good farming +land to feed several millions of people. It is watered and drained by +frequent rivers which cut across from the mountains to the sea every three +or four miles and furnish every facility for cultivation. Most of this +level country is first-grade soil and is adapted to the growing of almost +any of the products of this tropical land. The general appearance of this +open country suggests New Mexico or Southern California much more than any +land below the tropic of Cancer. Its numerous towns and occasional good +roads suggest a newly opened territory in the west, where there are +abundant opportunities for growing up with the country. The newcomer is +apt to be deceived into thinking that all things are now ready and all he +has to do is to move in. + +In the extreme western part of Panama lies the great Chiriqui Province +with its best-developed region in the entire Republic. Here are great +cattle ranches, sugar fields, rice plantings, cotton farms, cornfields, +and here are American companies working to develop modern civilized +conditions. Here is the Chiriqui Railroad between Pedrogal and Boquette, +with a branch running westward. More interest has centered in this region +than in any other part of Panama, and if the proposed railroad from Panama +to David is ever built, the whole southern slope of western Panama will +suddenly appear on the map of the world's granaries. + +Road-building presents no unusual difficulties in this region such as +confronted the Americans in the Philippines when they built the Benguet +road up from Dagupan. Rainfall is high, but the country is comparatively +level and well drained, and in many of these western provinces a graded +dirt road has kept in good condition for ten years without repairs. During +the dry season it is now possible to travel by coche over much of this +country. + +The climate of this interior country is dryer and cooler than that of +Panama, which lies in the jungle area. In the dry season, which is also +the windy season, and lasts in western Panama from mid-December to late in +April, health conditions are excellent, and with proper precautions they +are good all the year around. Needless to remark, the natives take no +precautions whatever. + +Good drinking water can be secured by sinking properly located wells, and +this water shows freedom from minerals of a deleterious nature. There are +seaports for coast vessels at almost every river mouth, and roads lead +back from these to the interior towns. + +There is a fascination about travel through these interiors. But the trip +must be made during the dry season. We left a large town one morning, +paused on a hilltop to take a picture, which included a troop of cavalry +out on a practice march. It was late, and the three of us departed at good +speed, soon outdistancing the soldiers. Two days later a chance traveler +informed us that the military men were anxious to interview travelers who +had broken the rules with a camera and then vanished from sight. We passed +the encampment on our way back, hung about town two hours, and proceeded. +That night a solitary mounted soldier paused by our camp and remarked, +"I'll bet you are the fellows they are hunting." We suggested that we were +waiting to be found. Two weeks later, a secret service man called and +inquired as to our business on that trip. Which is to say that Panama's +interior is a roomy place in which a man might easily lose himself or find +an empire. A good government, an infusion of energy, and a supply of +capital will make a rich land of nature's great virgin farm. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +ECONOMIC WASTE + + +If it is true that South America is the victim of a bad start, it may also +be said that Panama is the net result of a continuous and consistent +follow-up campaign of wholesale demoralization through a long period of +years. + +Beginnings are apt to be determinative, and when reenforced by continuous +applications of similar influences, are sure to set a stamp on a long +period of civilization. Three centuries of rule or misrule make a +considerable impression on any people. There is something more than +climate to be taken into account in the search for causes of the present +conditions in Panama. + +The entire colonial program of Spain differed radically from that of the +English in Canada or the United States in Hawaii or the Philippines. The +leading motive of the conquistadores was the love of gold. Plunder, +rapine, and devastation followed in the trail of the adventurers who +fought their way across Panama and conquered Peru. Missionary zeal there +was, but so mixed were the motives of these early heralds of the cross +that the occasional man of pure and peaceful methods was often supplanted +by the monk who used all means that he might make "Christians" of men who +had no alternative but to be baptized or destroyed outright. "Better be +dead than be damned," thought the energetic priests. Never was a dastardly +deed wrought by the conqueror but there was a priest at hand with heaven's +blessing on the crime. If this is doubted, read the unchallenged +Prescott's Conquest of Peru. + +Spanish colonial policies had small regard for the rights or development +of the conquered. It was one of the viceroys of Mexico who said, "Let the +people of these dominions learn, once for all, that they were born to be +silent and obey, and not to discuss nor have opinions in political +affairs." + +The native village of the far interior country, away from the main roads +and untouched by uplifting influences, exhibits the situation at its +worst; but even so, these same villages exhibit a better condition than do +the wretched Indian huts of the high Andes farther south. The population +of these distant barrios on the Isthmus can hardly be classified on +distinct lines; every symptom is accounted for and every unfavorable trait +explained by historical factors and social forces that have combined to +make remote Panama what it is to-day. There can be no radical change in +these conditions until some new program of social uplift, educational +progress, and spiritual life is introduced to cause a fresh reaction and +begin a new life. + +The ignorant native hears an intolerable burden of superstition. His +contact with the form of church life that exists in these towns is mainly +expressed in the celebration of occasional fiestas and the payment of fees +for services rendered, and supposed in some way to benefit the contributor +or his dead relatives. If "the test of a religion is its results upon a +people," then the impartial observer must draw his own conclusions. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR MEAT MARKET] + +That these interior towns are intensely conservative is to be expected. +How could it be otherwise than that the methods of the fathers should be +good enough for the sons? If human progress is not the result of dominant +inner forces resident in human nature, but comes from the application of +external stimuli, then the Panamanian may have some excuse for his +situation, in a social history that has afforded little incentive for +exercise of enterprise or industry. + +[Illustration: THE FLAVOR OF OLD SPAIN] + +If the far interior of Panama is to be judged by present industrial +efficiency, the case is lost before the trial begins. General absence of +everything that marks a high grade of living emphasizes the failure of the +status quo. Incompetence, bad management, childishness cry aloud from +rotting buildings, rusting machinery, neglected plantings, impassable +"roads," and impossible officials. Streets knee-deep in mire, mud-floored +houses, through which pigs wander at will, shiftlessness, dirt, +insanitation are the register of the wet season in interior Panama. The +outstanding church building is often itself dirty and disheveled. +Sidewalks exist only as balconies for individual houses, and vary in +height at the caprice of the builder, making the middle of the street the +only convenient highway for the passers-by. + +The bulk of this out-of-the way business is handled by the ever-present +Chino with his little tienda. If there is no Chinese store in the town, it +is because the town is too poor to support one. Business involves effort +and industry, both distasteful to the native, but breath-of-life to the +Chinese. + +Inspection of some native towns creates the impression that everybody just +sits around all day. Along the streets the people lounge the idle hours +away. Hundreds of young men lie about, rocking in chairs, lying in +hammocks, hanging about corners. Women slowly move about their household +duties, but the men are experts at the rest cure, and scarcely move at +all. Once a young man gets a pair of shoes and a necktie, his industrial +career abruptly terminates, and thenceforth he toils not, neither does he +spin. He has arrived and is content. + +[Illustration: TAKING THE REST CURE] + +Lack of energy brings inevitable localization of all interest and action. +Most of the people have never been any distance from home and have no +desire to travel. Travel means exertion of some kind. I asked a guide to +go one day further than the first-day trip for which I had hired him, and +he returned an embarrassed and deprecating smile, as if I had asked him to +go to the French front. It was too far from home. + +It is impossible to get information worth anything about the country. "How +many people live in this town?" brings one of two answers. Either it is, +"I do not know," or it is "Bastante" ("Plenty"). "How far is it to Los +Santos?" brings something like, "Senor, when the sun is there [pointing] +you set out on your journey, and when it is over there, you will arrive." + +We crossed a well-traveled road. + +"Where does this road lead?" + +"To the port, senor." + +"And where does the other end of it go?" + +"To San Pedro, senor." + +"How far is it to the port?" + +"The same distance as to San Pedro." + +"And how far is that?" + +"Bastante lejo, senor" ("Plenty far, sir"). + +Cultivation of crops is unknown. When the brush and trees are cleared the +stumps are left about two feet high; it is easier to do the chopping at +that point than lower down. After the fallen growth has sufficiently dried +out it is burned off and the stumpy field usually planted to corn. This +corn is allowed to shift for itself until ripe, and after the stalks have +rotted awhile the land may have an application of grass seed and be used +for pasture, in hope that the stock will wear down the stumps until it +becomes at last possible to perform an athletic feat, called for want of a +more accurate term, "plowing." I saw four oxen all pulling in different +directions, while a plow occasionally disturbed the weedy surface of the +ground and turned up irregular lumps of hard soil. The proprietor looked +on with pride and asked if I had ever plowed. I had. Did I plow like that? +I did not. When this plowing has been acted out, and some sort of +clod-breaking has taken place, sugar cane is planted, and the work of +cultivation is ended. For a dozen years the cane will produce annual crops +of more or less value without any attention whatever other than the +cutting of the cane when ready for the mill. + +[Illustration: THE OXEN STAGE OF AGRICULTURE] + +An interior road is an experience. A road is a route of travel along which +various persons make their way as best they are able, under such +conditions of weather and impassability as happen to exist. In the dry +season some of these tracks wear down to a condition in which a cart can +be coaxed over the right-of-way. In wet weather nearly all the native +thoroughfares are wholly impassable except for sturdy oxen, which plow +their way through the mud and sinkholes with deliberation born of long +practice. + +The man at the bottom of the scale is not to blame for his situation. He +is the victim of a system that has made it exceedingly unwise for him to +do anything other than what he does. + +Poverty is the only protection of the people. For nearly two centuries +pillage, plunder, piracy, and murder were the record of the Isthmus. Every +buccaneer who sailed the Spanish main seems to have made a business of +taking a chance at the Isthmus. It was open season for every kind of crook +work that the minds of men could invent. Most of this activity was +confined to the trade route in the middle of the Isthmus, but the +influence and terror of this bloody age extended both ways as far as the +country was inhabited. The common people were exploited, plundered, +murdered, enslaved, and beaten at every turn. + +Only a fool would work when to work meant that his head was marked for +immediate oppression. If he forgot himself and got hold of anything of +value, some one was ready to take it away from him without delay; and if +he objected, he lost both his property and his head. + +The social dregs that strayed to Panama or stayed in Panama in those lurid +days were men without character, conscience, or capacity for industry, +other than in their favorite occupation of despoiling some one else. + +These pirates and plunderers are gone, but they have left their tracks and +traces in the civilization of the Isthmus. The common people to-day are +mild and submissive; no other type could survive. It is possible to exist +in dire poverty and pass the time without land or property, and that is +the only kind of existence that holds any promise of peace to the man at +the bottom. + +[Illustration: WAYSIDE SELLERS OF FRUIT] + +There have been efforts on the part of the leaders of Isthmian life to +inaugurate a new era and bring about improvements. These efforts have been +spasmodic and usually complicated by political considerations. Large +appropriations have been made for roads, public buildings, machinery, +schools, and mills, but while the money has been expended, it has gone +like water in a sandy desert, and graft and inefficiency have swallowed up +the funds with little or no results. + +It has been supposed that appropriations for bridges, public markets, or +good roads would in some way take the place of industry and thrift and +bring good times. Half-finished markets rear their ghastly skeletons in +town centers. Rusting road-rollers stand idle, decaying machines lie +neglected, and half-finished public works are covered with cobwebs. Nobody +notices, no one cares, and nothing is done. + +[Illustration: THE HOUSE BESIDE THE ROAD] + +A railroad was built with the evident idea that it would bring prosperity +to a section of naturally rich country, but a railroad without crops is +useless, and crops without labor are impossible, and labor without +adequate returns is worth still less than it costs. The economic structure +rests on the man at the bottom, and when this human foundation is the prey +and target of every one above him the result can be nothing other than +general distress and inefficiency. + +In some sections of the interior, as in the provinces of Cocle and Chitre, +meat cattle of good quality are raised. Shipping facilities to the Panama +market are very good. There is no regular inspection, but the cattle are +uniformly healthy and in good condition. The cattle-raising end of the +trade is all right, but the market is a different matter. The cattle +buyers in Panama are organized into what is known as the meat trust, and +these buyers hold the sellers in subjection. Prices are kept down to the +lowest possible basis, and monopolistic methods so well known in North +America are in full swing. + +Individual holders of interior ranchos have made earnest efforts to +produce foodstuffs and introduce definite reforms into the methods of +farming, but such persons have usually served as fearful examples to their +neighbors. In an industrial system in which the one method of the man at +the top is to keep his eyes open and whenever he finds anyone who has by +chance or industry accumulated something, take it away from him--this does +not stimulate long hours and speeding-up on the part of the men who do the +work. + +When the United States took over the Canal Zone and paid the purchase +price to the new Republic of Panama, a good appropriation was made to the +interior provinces for the building of a system of highways as the first +step in a general improvement of the country. Most of the provinces have +little to show for this expenditure of money. In one province reports were +received that the money was being handed out in petty grafting operations +and for political purposes and that no road was being built to speak of. +An American engineer was sent to investigate. He reported the facts and +was later put in charge of the "work." He reorganized the entire +construction force, and at the expense of less than twenty thousand +dollars built a road which has stood without repairs for a dozen years, +and is in good condition to-day under heavy usage. But the reorganization +pulled down on the engineer's head the wrath of the entire officialism of +the province, and finally the men higher up in authority denounced the +American for upsetting the smooth-working system at their expense. He had +committed the unpardonable error of using the money to get results and +build the road for which it was appropriated. + +This is interior Panama at its worst. There are Americans who have +invested their money and their personal supervision in the development +enterprises in Chiriqui, and they are hopeful of better things. There are +officials who are genuinely anxious to see a better age begin. And the day +will come when this fair land will make men rich by the abundance of its +products and the certainty of large returns upon development work done +under favorable conditions. But the conditions do not yet exist in any +stable form. + +All of this is Panama at its worst, and forms but the background of +contrast for the picture of the fine possibilities that lie in the soil, +and in the unreleased resources of a human stock that has never had a fair +chance. Once separated from hookworm and superstition, given an industrial +education, and assured competent leadership and certain returns for toil, +and the lot of the Panamanian is no more incurable than that of any other +victims of a bad system. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +PANAMA AND PROGRESS + + +The coat of arms of the Republic of Panama bears the inscription, "The +repudiation of war and homage to the arts which flourish in peace and +labor." Under the existing treaty with the United States the first part of +this excellent motto is guaranteed. Panama is a providential Republic and +presents some of the finest possibilities of the American tropics. The +educated Panamanians have not been slow to proclaim these rich resources, +but no large advance has been realized yet. The government of Panama has +been friendly to promotion plans and development projects, and has +undertaken some ambitious enterprises on its own initiative, but the +results have been on the whole disappointing. + +American business men who have lived in Panama feel that no permanent +success can be assured to such undertakings without the backing of the +United States government. The officials of Panama naturally do not look +with enthusiasm upon this idea and prefer to keep development enterprises +within their own jurisdiction. And serious effort has certainly been made +by the Panamanian government to support some of the enterprises projected +by native and foreign capitalists. + +[Illustration: WIRELESS AT DARIEN] + +The causes of economic backwardness and social conservatism are not +difficult to locate and describe. From the cruel savagery of Pizarro and +Balboa to the model communities of the Canal Zone is a far step. In the +past seventy-five years the city of Panama has passed through a thousand +years of social evolution, and in five years after Panama became an +independent and sovereign nation the city was transformed, the government +reorganized, and something like twentieth-century conditions replaced the +filth and disease and squalor of the old days. + +The prowler in social history will find plenty of material here. By all +the precedents of progress Panama should have been prosperous centuries +ago. While other cities of coming metropolitan centers were yet barren +wastes and sleeping wildernesses Panama was on the highway of the world. +When New York and San Francisco and Chicago were inhabited by birds and +squirrels Panama was known everywhere. Panama had a century the start of +all North America and was the pawn of kings and the gateway of empire +before the Pilgrims landed in New England. If there be any advantage in an +early start, Panama should have led us all in the race for a commanding +position in the New World. + +There is much in location. A single foot on Broadway is worth more than a +farm in the desert. Great cities have great positions on the map, and +Panama began with a situation to which the world simply had to come. A +dozen different solutions of the transportation problem presented by the +Isthmian power and navigation were proposed, but it always came back to +Panama. Here is the narrowest part of the connecting link of the +continents, and here is the lowest point in the continental backbone. +Without lifting her hand or voice, Panama had but to dream and wait till +the world should come and pour into her lap the commerce and progress of +the modern age. To-day Panama is on the direct line of travel between +almost any two great cities at opposite ends of the earth. Melbourne and +London, New York and Buenos Ayres, Port au Spain and Honolulu--draw the +lines, and they all pass through Panama. + +It is an accepted axiom of unthinking people that gold and prosperity are +synonymous. If this were true, Panama should be the most prosperous and +progressive of all cities of the earth to-day. More gold has been carried +through her streets, and stored in her warehouses, and handled by her +people, than in any other city of the Americas. The Peru of the Conquest +was lined and lacquered with gold. The palaces of the Incas and the +Temples of the Sun were plastered and burnished with gold; and for a +century this gold was loaded into European ships, taken to Panama and +packed across the Isthmus and then reshipped to Europe to fill the coffers +of profligate kings and bolster up the fortunes of fallen states. All of +it came through Panama; and if much of it did not remain there, it was not +due to conscientious scruples on the part of the Panamanians. If a stream +of gold could bring progress, Panama should have led the world for three +hundred years. + +Probably the modern Republic of Panama is one of the very few endowed +governments in the world. The purchase price of the Canal Zone, invested +in New York real estate, yields an annual revenue which forms a part of +the government budget. The annual payment of $250,000 by the Canal Zone +also helps. Since the beginning of the French Canal enterprise a +considerable part of the monthly payrolls of the Canal builders has found +its way into the till of the merchants in Colon and Panama, and these +terminal cities have largely lived on the Canal Zone trade. Certainly, +Panama has even to-day some peculiar financial advantages--and if these +could bring prosperity, Panama should be prosperous. + +[Illustration: FARM GRIST MILL, COSTA RICA] + +When the California gold rush began in 1848 Panama awoke from her century +and a half of slumber and trouble began afresh. Again there was gold on +the Isthmus, and again there was crime. Hundreds of ships discharged their +cargoes and passengers on one side of the Isthmus, and the trip across was +one not to be forgotten. + +Now that the world has once more had to fight out the old battle of free +institutions, it is worth while to remember that the oldest independent +nation of the modern world is Panama; and that the first of the Spanish +colonies to achieve freedom from the misgovernment of the old country was +this same little nation on the Isthmus. Tired of the kind of supervision +which she had been undergoing from Europe, in 1826 Panama revolted, set up +political housekeeping for herself, until she was later merged with the +free New Granada--the modern Colombia. + +If political independence has anything to do with advancement, then Panama +should be very advanced indeed, for she led all her neighbors in achieving +national separateness. The independence movement that swept over the +western world a century ago affected Panama profoundly, and the microbe of +political freedom soon produced a well-developed case of revolution--and +the revolution was a success. Four score years afterward Panama again +established her independence without the shedding of a drop of blood. If a +spirit of independence can make a people prosperous, then Panama and +prosperity should mean the same thing. + +Panama has some peculiar political advantages to-day. Where other nations +maintain their political sovereignty and internal peace at the cost of +huge sums of money and by means of armies and battleships, Panama is +spared this enormous drain upon her resources and men and money, and finds +her political independence guaranteed against all the nations of the +earth. Likewise she is sure of internal peace and is the only really +war-tight, revolution-proof country in Latin-America. By the treaty +entered into between Panama and the United States, in return for the Canal +Zone and other concessions, the United States guarantees the independence +of Panama and agrees to step in at any time when it may be necessary and +maintain order throughout the Isthmus. The Panamanians are not +enthusiastic over this situation, and some of the politicos inwardly +resent very bitterly an arrangement which makes impossible their chosen +profession of agitators and revolutionary leaders. + +There are people who tell us that the basis of national progress is +economic and commercial. Given a land with all large resources, we shall +perforce have a progressive people. Measured by this standard, Panama +should lead all the rest. Her thirteen hundred miles of coast bound a +narrow empire, but an empire of wonderful possibilities. Her inexhaustible +soil, her frequent rivers, her rich jungles, her broad savanas, her high +mountains and dense forests, her mines and climate and rainfall, and a +world market right at her doors--all that nature could do to lay the +foundations of material wealth seems to have been done here. + +If so-called modern science and engineering skill can bring prosperity, +then the Isthmus of Panama includes the site of the world's last +achievement in engineering, sanitation, and organized efficiency. Health +conditions on the Canal Zone are better than in many cities of the United +States. General Gorgas said that there were three causes for which the +Americans left Panama in the old days: yellow fever, malaria, and cold +feet, and that of the three the last caused more desertions than the other +two combined. It is worth noting that the first two mentioned have now +vanished entirely, and it but remains to find a preventive for frigid +pedal extremities to make the tropics a white man's land. + +[Illustration: HAPPY KINDERGARTNERS, PANAMA] + +Panama and Colon to-day are clean and healthful. Even the tropical buzzard +that hovers over every town and crossroad in this mid-America world has +disappeared from these cities--starved to death. The American Board of +Health looks after the garbage cans and backyards and drains, and woe be +unto the unhappy mosquito that inadvertently wanders into this forbidden +territory. The entire country is now free from yellow fever, and while +there is some malaria in the lowlands during the wet season, health +conditions are far better than might be supposed. + +The question of climate raises visions of burning days and sleepless +nights. To people who have never lived in the tropics any lurid tale is +plausible. But these tales of torment do not come from dwellers in the +tropics, but from overheated imaginations of writers of fiction who find +the tropics a rich field, because most of their readers know nothing of +the subject. There are more comfortable days in Panama, per year, than in +New York. There is rarely a night when one cannot sleep in comfort. If +there were nothing the matter but the climate, there would be no reason +for shunning Panama. + +By all the rules of the great game of getting rich, Panama ought to be +both prosperous and progressive. Seemingly every chance has come her way. + +Yet the visitor does not find Panama as a whole either rich or energetic. +The terminal cities, Panama and Colon, have lived pretty well off the +proceeds of the Canal Zone, but the great interior country is sparsely +inhabited by people who are neither prosperous nor progressive. Poverty, +indolence, and dirt abound throughout the provinces. Education is +attempted, and the present system, when perfected, will afford fairly good +rudimentary training, but as now conducted it is a promise as well as a +performance. With a high illiteracy the people of Panama cannot be said to +live on a lofty intellectual plane. Not one man in a thousand makes the +slightest attempt to improve the country, or takes the least interest in +what the world is doing. + +[Illustration: YOUNG COSTA RICA IS ENTERPRISING] + +In the capital city are educated and refined men, both prosperous and +progressive. Their activities are divided among business enterprises, +professional callings, and political activity. Very few of these men are +interested in development projects to any extent. Agriculture as a basis +of national wealth has little place in their thinking, unless somebody +else can be induced to attend to the agriculture while they themselves +take care of the wealth. Working on a farm is all right for ignorantes and +peons, but has no interest for a gentleman. The development of natural +resources is not interesting unless it affords a percentage of some sort, +to be earned without effort. The unfortunate fact is that such modern +conditions as exist in Panama to-day have largely been brought to her +ready-made, which may be why she does not take more interest in them. + +The question of morals and marriage laws is one which had better be let +alone unless the prowler is prepared to find some very unpleasant things. +All children are baptized, and, as before explained, the baptisms are +registered and classified either as "Legitimo" or "Natural"--the latter, +of course, being illegitimate. Only thirty per cent of the births of the +Republic as a whole, are born of married parents. The reasons for this are +not so simple as may at first appear. Panama has to-day a civil marriage +law, but unless a man has abundant leisure, endless patience, and can +afford to hire a lawyer or two, he had better be married somewhere else. +Evidently, influences were brought to bear upon the framers of the civil +law which induced them to overload it with requirements that make it +exceedingly unpopular. No voice of protest is raised against this +scandalous moral situation on the part of the priests of the established +church, who merely shrug their shoulders and shake their heads and say, +"What can you do about it?" Certainly, they themselves do nothing at all +except to ignore the situation. + +There have been physical factors that have militated against the progress +of Panama. While the climate is comfortable, most of the time it lacks +stimulus. There is no "kick" in it. Without occasional respites in a +higher altitude and cooler atmosphere, the man from the north loses his +driving power and his wife sometimes gets a case of nerves. Four hundred +years of it will take the energy out of any man; and many of the present +inhabitants of interior Panama appear to have lived here for about that +length of time. For the development of high human efficiency it is +required in a climate that it be something more than comfortable. It +should at times be uncomfortable, and occasionally exasperating. + +[Illustration: WOODEN SUGAR MILL AND ITS MAKER] + +The workers of the Rockefeller Foundation have found eighty per cent of +the people of the provinces afflicted with hookworm. Highly commendable is +the work done by these representatives of the Institute, but so long as +the common people know nothing of sanitation, clean and pure food, present +conditions will continue. And physical "hookworm" is accompanied by a +similar mental condition. There is a moral hookworm throughout the +country, and life slumps down to a hand-to-mouth drag from one day to the +next. Both physical and mental conditions are better in the cities, of +course, but there is still room for a moral prophylactic. + +There are social forces which have largely accounted for this result. +Possibly no place in the world shows more mixed blood than Panama. Shades +and colors and tints and tones there are, and blends indescribable and +also impossible to analyze or trace. The artists tell us that the +combination of the primary colors with white results in a tint, while +blending a primary color with black gives a shade. Well, most of these +tones are shades, for the same scientific reason as that mentioned by the +artist. From the Caribbean world has come its contribution of the West +Indian Negroes, with consequent shady result. + +The social results of this mixture are various and distressing, but well +understood by anyone who has lived in the interior of Panama. Even the +cities are affected in the same way. Social standing, political +availability, and personal influence are largely determined by the degree +of whiteness--or darkness--that prevails in the skin. And the general +desire of the ignorant and unmoral native of the interior to "lighten up +the breed" has led to a moral situation that bodes no good for the +away-from-home white man who may be living for a longer or shorter time in +the up-country provinces. + +Any aggressive North American, especially if he be from the West, looks +upon the splendid areas of land, the fine rivers, the dense forests, and +the other untouched resources of this rich country with amazement, and +begins to plan development projects and dream of organizing syndicates, +but the native loses no sleep over such vain imaginings. If he dreams at +all, it is of his food if he be poor, and of politics if he be rich. +Development in the North American sense is a disgrace, and no job for a +gentleman. The smooth savanas may lie there untouched till kingdom come, +for all he cares. The only interest in life is political manipulation. Law +and politics are the two occupations most esteemed, and Panama is not +different from other countries in the frequent association of these two +professions. + +Whence comes this emphasis on political activity, to the neglect of +commerce and agriculture? It comes from Europe with the early inheritance +of the first settlements and rulers of this Latin world. For them any form +of physical work was dire disgrace. "These two hands have never done an +hour's work" was a boast and badge of quality. The climate of the tropics +made this philosophy of life easy to accept and follow, and what the +leaders lived the followers did faithfully keep and perform. Of course +somebody had to do a little work and raise a few vegetables and cattle, +but the game was to find the unfortunate worker and then take away from +him the product of his toil. Thus the getter lived without work and taught +the loser the uselessness of further exercise. + +By way of clearness these conditions are here described in their worst and +final form. Bad as they are, they are not the whole truth. It takes more +than mixed blood and hookworm and snobbishness to account for the present +social conditions of Central America. + +If moral conditions in Panama to-day are not ideal, it is not due to any +absence of church or lack of religion. With the explorers and conquerors +of the sixteenth century came the missionaries and priests. Crosses were +set up, bells were hung, masses were said, and everywhere the elaborate +ritual of the Spanish church was maintained. Whole villages were +"converted," baptized, and labeled as good Catholics in a day's time. +Massive and beautiful churches were soon built in centers of population, +and every village has its church, often representing nearly as much value +as half of the houses of the town combined. + +From the beginning until the coming of the North American to finish the +Canal the Roman Church has had exclusive and uninterrupted occupation of +this entire territory. There has been no competition, and there have been +no interferences with her moral and spiritual leadership. + +[Illustration: PUBLIC MARKET, DAVID] + +But in spite of this situation, or perhaps because of it, moral conditions +are what they are in Panama to-day. Out of the closed Bible and the bound +consciences of this system have come social incapacity and intellectual +helplessness in all the fields of human activity. Most of Latin-America +has not yet learned that the intellect, like the nation, cannot exist half +slave and half free. Only free consciences can guide free citizens to the +founding of free political institutions and social activities. A +successful democracy can never be reared upon a foundation of superstition +and spiritual despotism. More than all other factors this moral blight and +spiritual dry-rot is what is the matter with Panama. The moral and +spiritual climate of a people has more to do with the growth or +destruction of a spirit of progress than do thermometers and telephones +and declarations of independence. Until the spirit of a Panamanian becomes +a free spirit and he is permitted to think and worship after the dictates +of a free conscience, Panama can never become a progressive nation. + +Highly favored among the nations of the earth, this little country affords +a strategic opportunity for the setting up of a national experiment in +development and progress. If this undertaking is to succeed, there must be +added to the large economic, social, and strategic resources of the +country the element of a free spirit and an enlightened conscience. Out of +these will come a sense of the dignity of labor, the worth-whileness of +education, and the development of the now dormant resources of this +beautiful land. + +The problem of progress in Panama is inevitably linked with that of +Protestantism. Work was begun by the Methodist Episcopal Church in Colon +under Bishop William Taylor, and a strong West Indian congregation was +gathered. This was later turned over to the Wesleyan Methodists, who +maintain considerable work among the West Indians of the Caribbean +Islands. With the purchase of the Canal Zone by the United States, the +Methodists began to plan for work in Panama and eventually established a +Spanish church and school at the head of Central Avenue, opposite the +national palace. But no serious effort was made by this denomination to +meet and master the problems that arose from exclusive Protestant +occupation of the Spanish-speaking section of the field until the time of +the noted Panama Congress in February, 1916. Here met representatives of +the Protestant movement in all Latin-America, and general principles of +comity and cooperation were established and adopted. Under this working +agreement, the Spanish work in the Republic of Panama was assigned to the +Methodists as a unit of responsibility. To this area Costa Rica was later +added. West Indian work was not included in this survey, and it is to be +hoped that some similar representative and authoritative body may yet +undertake to bring order and comity out of the unorganized, though +friendly, confusion of West Indian denominational programs now existent. + +The Pan-Denominational Congress of 1916 made definite the responsibility +for Spanish work in Panama, and the denomination now in charge of this +field is working on a program somewhat adequate to the strategic +importance of the very conspicuous location beside the Canal Zone. When +fully realized and in operation, this program of work will wield a wide +influence in the Spanish-American world. A large factor in this new +program has been the interest and enthusiasm of the young people of the +California Conference Epworth League, who have done much to make possible +an enlargement of the work undertaken. + +Too much praise cannot be given to the earnest and efficient missionaries +who founded and have maintained this mission. The Seawall Church has +already sent out its influences to the ends of the earth. The standards +and results attained in Panama College, so far as that institution has +been developed, have exerted a strong influence on the educational and +moral life of the city and of the republic. The work in 1919 included a +Spanish base at the Seawall location, with its church and school, and +American congregation, a West Indian school and church in Guachapali, a +Spanish mission Sunday school and evangelistic service in the school +building kindly loaned by the Wesleyans, a Spanish mission school and +preaching service in Guachapali, a West Indian Sunday school and service +at Red Tank, and a Chinese mission near the market. Present plans for +future expansion include, in addition to the work now under way at David, +an adequate program of interior education and evangelization, an +industrial and agricultural school, a strong institution church in Panama, +an institution of higher education, and adequate work in Colon. + +This mission shares with the Northern Baptist Convention and the Northern +Presbyterian Church denominational responsibility for most of Central +America. The Baptists have work in Honduras, Salvador, and the +Presbyterians in Guatemala and in Colombia, further south. The Methodists +complete the chain by the occupation of Panama and Costa Rica, in which +latter republic work was begun in the latter months of 1917. Costa Rica +presents an attractive field with its good climate, fertile country, +Spanish-speaking population of intelligence, and large capacity for +progress. The new mission met with success from the start and promises +rapid growth. + +The three denominations named are working together in complete harmony and +have developed a unified program of Christian education for Central +America, as the beginnings of further coordination of effort. There is no +overlapping, no competition, and, above all, no overcrowding, in this +promising but sparsely occupied field. The Protestant denominational front +on this field is well unified. + +There are several independent missions working in this field, some of +which do not find it in their purposes to unite in any general movement, +and none of which place emphasis on education. Chief among these is the +Central America Mission which maintains workers in all the republics of +Central America who confine themselves largely to evangelistic effort. + +All of the Central republics have constitutional religious liberty, and +the work of Protestantism is officially welcome everywhere. Of petty +persecutions and ecclesiastical opposition there are numerous examples. +The spirit of the Inquisition still smolders beneath the surface, but the +new spirit of world-democracy makes more and more grotesque and futile the +intolerance and bigotry of the Dark Ages. + +Protestantism in Latin-America has been in the van of every movement +toward progress and has contributed much toward the foundations of the new +era. Without the Protestant movement, the present state of advance would +be impossible. To-day Protestantism is in the anomalous position of being +inadequate in equipment and manpower to meet the situation created or to +supply the demands arising everywhere for adequate expression of free +institutions. The lump is large and the leaven has been small, but the +contagion of liberty and the awakening of conscience demand an adequate +equipment and program. + +There is promise of a new and worthy approach in the large purposes of the +great denominations to undertake in adequate manner a program of +world-reconstruction made imperative by the close of the great war. The +collapse of all but moral and spiritual forces as a guarantee of peace +renders all former alignments obsolete and forces the church to new +methods and more comprehensive undertakings. It is now resolved to go up +and possess this goodly land on the mere borders of which we have lingered +for nearly a century. The coming generation will see a reorganization and +reconstruction of the Protestant program in Latin-America, and before the +end of the twentieth century this mighty continent will have attained a +noble citizenship in the neighborhood of great races. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +KNOWING OUR NEIGHBORS + + +Whatever the cause or results, the fact stands that we are not well +acquainted with our nearest national neighbors. Like the modern +city-dweller, we know least about those who live nearest. The North +American knows more about the other side of the world than he does about +those who live on the same continent with him. Neither the North American +nor his southern neighbor has treated the other fairly. + +Many of us have not yet discovered that there be any Latin-American. Some +one lives south of the line, of course, but that fact has made little +impression on our minds. In our mental geography the American world shades +off into a hazy and troubled region southward about which we have known +little and cared less. Our geographical studies have helped us but little. +It is possible to know every physical fact about a country without knowing +the hearts of the people. + +It is an anomaly that we know less about our Latin neighbors than we do of +Europe or Asia. By historical ties and constant reminders of commerce and +immigration we are aware of our transatlantic cousins. We have discovered +the Far East and have some interest therein, even though it be the +interest pertaining to a museum or a menagerie. But until very recently +neither immigration, commerce, nor curiosity has stirred us to +acquaintance with our continental neighbors. + +[Illustration: INDIAN BOY GOES TO SCHOOL] + +This ignorance is part of our general antebellum attitude toward all the +world lying south and east. In fact, we never bothered much with anybody +outside of the United States. Over a century we lived on, secure in the +idea that we were immune from European militaristic contagion and +all-sufficient unto ourselves. The rest of the world might perchance sink +into the sea, but we would go on blissfully without it. Our "free +institutions" were self-sufficient and all-inclusive. And because we were +able to compose our own troubles and keep out of other peoples' quarrels, +more or less, we assumed that we were automatically superior to the rest +of the world, "of course." + +We of the United States have been likened unto a householder living on a +plot of ground rich enough to support his family. Resolving not to become +entangled in neighborhood alliances, he constructed a hundred-foot wall +about his property and lived securely within. The right-hand neighbor +might be an anarchist and the man on the left a cannibal. If the man in +the rear were a polygamist and the dweller across the street had a habit +of using firearms indiscriminately it mattered nothing to the +householder--so long as the wall held. But it came to pass that an +earthquake destroyed that wall, and the said exclusive citizen suddenly +found himself out on the street with his neighbors. And behold, it +mattered much what sort of neighbors they were. There was nothing to do +but get acquainted and help make the neighborhood a decent place in which +to live. + +Since the world war has battered down the wall with which we sought to +separate ourselves from other nations, we have nothing left but to +recognize and accept our place in the national neighborhood and do our +share to make it decent. + +The Latin-American has been at a disadvantage in the character of the +continent in which he lives. South America is a land for promoters, +organizers of industry, hardy pioneers of production, engineers, planters, +and rugged explorers of commercial frontiers. The poetic and artistic +temperament of the Latin has suffered an unfair criticism because of the +ill adaptation of his temperament to his environment. Sunny Italy and +picturesque France and vine-clad Spain were more to his tastes and +abilities. That he has done as well as he has speaks much for his +adaptability to a situation better suited to a more executive type of +character. Give him a chance in his own best environment and he shows +capacity of high achievement. + +[Illustration: WASHDAY IN COSTA RICA] + +Probably the two most arrogant travelers have been the Englishman and the +American, but our British cousins have assumed their superiority with +silent contempt, while the newly rich America globe-trotters have vaunted +their ignorance from the piazzas of every tourist hotel and upon the +steamer decks of every sea. It is really not strange that we failed to +notice the very considerable and important populations of countries lying +at our doors. + +The North Americans are not travelers. Few of us do go anywhere, and fewer +still know how to travel successfully. The poorest traveler in the world +is the society tourist who goes about trying to reproduce home conditions +in a foreign land. So far as possible he escapes the life and message of +the country in which he sojourns and returns with little else but tales of +social functions, a la American, and comparative accounts of expenses at +tourist hotels. From the first day out he isolates and fortifies himself +against the very things that travel alone can give. He brings home a few +trinkets made to sell, some cocksure criticisms of customs, people, and +missionaries, and a swelled head. But he has been abroad--save the mark! + +Travel is a specific for provincialism, but it must be real travel and not +imitation home-swagger. Intelligent and sympathetic travel breaks up the +hardening strata of thought, pushes back the narrowing horizon, loosens +the set fibers of the soul, and is the surest cure yet known for mental +arterial sclerosis. The right kind of travel shifts the viewpoint, +readjusts life forces, and shakes up the provincialism of the man with the +"township horizon." And when the disturbed atoms of character reassemble +it is in a different mode and with a new cycle. + +It is to be said that the South American has not taken much interest in +us. Since he has made out to get along without us, he cannot be very +important. The Oriental has shown some desire to move into our basement, +or at least the woodshed or the washhouse, and we have discovered him. The +European has shown his good taste by coming over and moving right in with +us, and in time we cannot distinguish him from ourselves. But the South +American has gone his way, and in the main has minded his own affairs, and +therefore cannot amount to much. If he were a social problem, we would +know him better. If he had a penchant for the police force or an itch for +office among us, we would cultivate his acquaintance, and perhaps invite +him to call. + +During the past two decades the once despised Chinese have become popular +among us. Their utter difference from ourselves, their solid human +qualities, their marvelous vitality, their commercial solidarity, their +response to the stimuli of the modern world, their astonishing +versatility, their wonderful national history--these and a hundred other +things stir our imagination, and we have rather suddenly discovered that +we like the Chinese--especially at a distance. + +We are well aware of Japan, not so much through any perceptions of our own +as through Japan's insistence upon attention. We can on short notice make +out a rather comprehensive list of Japanese characteristics, and, in +truth, we find Japan interesting. The marvelous energy of her people, her +high ambitions, her Oriental viewpoint, her great commercial and military +successes, her artistic setting, her marvelous skill of hand, and, not +least, her abundant interest in our own affairs--these and other items +make it quite the thing to be interested in Japan. But who cares anything +about a lot of dirty peons? They are not in good form. + +But this interest in the Orient is more curiosity than it is race +sympathy. There is a great gulf fixed between the yellow man and the +white, and racially that gulf can never be bridged. The occasional +marriages between the East and West need no comment; they tell their own +story. Neither China nor Japan can ever become American in any racial +sense. When Chinese and Japanese come to America for any but educational +and temporary purposes, they set up Chinatown and little Japan wherever +they go. American character is a most complicated composite of many races, +but from Tokyo to Bombay there is no Oriental factor that will blend with +the mixture of races that makes up America. + +Our Oriental interest is confined to the races that have impressed +themselves upon our imagination. The Philippines, in spite of our national +relation to the islands, do not seem to us very real nor very important. +They will soon be keeping house for themselves, and then we shall forget +them except as an interesting historical incident. And as for India, that +is British, and about all we know is that the Hindu wears a turban, +maintains a very undemocratic caste, exists in unaccountable numbers, is +subject to annoying and frequent famines, and on the whole is a rather +helpless lot, except as some bearded fakir entertains companies of badly +balanced American society women with hyperbolated essence of sublimated +nonsense. + +[Illustration: RIVERSIDE PLANTATION] + +But the Latin-American is blood of our blood, kin of our kind, and lives +on the same continental street, which is why we are so little interested +in him. He is neither quaint, curious, nor crazy. He is not good for +first-page headlines except when he breaks out in revolution or forgets +our Monroe Doctrine. There is no fixed gulf of difference between him and +us, and in the final fusing of American character he must contribute a +large part. + +To ignore the Latin-American is to be convicted of historical ignorance. +From Dante to the great South American leaders and scholars of to-day the +Latin races have been neither sleeping nor idle. During the last five +hundred years more than one half of Western history has been made by Latin +races. It was a Latin who discovered America. Another first sailed around +the globe. Latin peoples explored, conquered, and settled both Western +continents, and gave a language which has become the permanent speech of +two thirds of the Western world. To call the roll of artists, painters, +sculptors, poets, dramatists, novelists, musicians, explorers, +missionaries, and scientists for the past five centuries is to prove that +a majority of the names mentioned in the world's illustrious hall of fame +are from Latin races. To mention Cure, Pasteur, and Marconi is to remind +us of the scientific progress of modern Latin minds, and to speak of +France and Italy as pioneers in democracy is to keep within the facts. It +was in Italy that Browning and Tennyson and George Eliot and a host of +other writers found inspiration and material to feed the fires of genius. + +Whatever may be said of the modern degeneracy of the dominant religious +system of Latin-American countries, it is true that the sixteenth century +saw in Spain one of the most virile and comprehensive missionary movements +of all history. Never before nor since have missionary efforts been +projected on so vast a scale or by so powerful procedure. Monks and +priests went out and established the cross and the confessional through +the Western world and in the islands of the sea, and, whatever else we may +say, there can be no disparagement of the permanency of the results of +these conquests. The Latin world is still dominantly Roman in its +religious life, and shows very positive preferences for the religion of +the conquistadores. To give a language and a religion to two thirds of the +American continents is not the work of weaklings nor of degenerates. + +This Latin neighbor of ours not only lives on the same street but he lives +in a bigger and better house than ours. To the "lick-all-creation" type of +Fourth-of-July American this is rank heresy, but facts have little regard +for fireworks. With twenty-eight per cent of the population of the +Americas, the Latin holds sixty-five per cent of the territory and fully +the same proportion of natural resources. His soil, his rivers, his +mountains, his harbors, his mines are as good as ours, and he has more of +them. In the western hemisphere he controls the longest rivers, the +highest mountains, the largest area of habitable land, the longest +seacoast, and the entire inexhaustible fertility of the tropics. His +untouched and uncharted natural resources are beyond computation. His +estate is second to none in the entire world, and he could spare enough +for the crowded millions of India or the swarming islands of Japan and +never miss it. All of this we would have discovered sooner but for the +world war, which focused all attention on the main issue and postponed the +direct results of the successful completion of the Panama Canal. With a +normal supply of shipping, the west coast alone of South America would +keep the Canal busy much of the time and affect American markets +profoundly. + +[Illustration: JUNGLE PRODUCTS] + +In material achievements our neighbor has not been idle, though some of +his attempts have resulted in failure or fiasco. He has built great and +beautiful cities, he has constructed long and difficult railroads over +tortuous mountain systems, he has developed huge industries and organized +big commercial enterprises. He has produced a civilization in keeping with +his character, artistic, homogeneous, progressive, and on a high +intellectual plane. His libraries, theaters, and public buildings are a +credit to his taste and skill, and his churches are massive and stately as +the rock-ribbed mountains that tie together the whole system from El Paso +to Patagonia. + +We have heard more or less of a Pan-Americanism, but we have never taken +it seriously. As subject for diplomatic papers, magazine articles, and +after-dinner oratory the all-America idea has been a refuge of +word-venders. But so long as the bulk of South American trade was with +Europe our brand of fraternal talk was harmless--also helpless; and the +reason for our failure to do business with South America has not been +entirely the neglect of our shippers. The larger exports of South America +have all been to Europe, and with ships loaded both ways the American +exporter was hopelessly handicapped in his effort to secure favorable +freight rates. When American salesmen tried to compete with German and +French and Spanish exporters they always failed to secure freight rates +that gave them an even chance. + +For years American manufacturers ignored the Orient and lagged far behind +European dealers in the same class of goods, to their own large loss. The +same neglect has produced the same result in South America. Germany +pursued a very different policy. Without trumpet or flag Germany sent her +agents to practically every Latin-American center and seaport, and there +the unostentatious German proceeded to control as much business as +possible, and generally get hold of the situation. Often he took unto +himself a wife of the country, but never for one day did he forget that he +was a representative of the Vaterland. His house, his furniture, his +methods, his ideas were one hundred per cent German. An American ship +doctor went ashore from a German liner in a small South American seaport +and stumbled upon the inevitable German man of business. He was invited +home to dinner and shown through the house with much pride by the +half-German children. One after the other, furniture, books, pictures, +clothing even were exhibited and with every article was repeated the +formula, "Es war in Deutschland gemacht." It was a great game, and it was +working along smoothly until things slipped in Europe, and now the end no +man can see. But there is going to be a great chance for American capital +and enterprise and business energy in the years when German energy will be +needed at home. + +In one of the Central American republics an American, while present at a +social function, remarked casually to a friend that in his opinion the +cure for the political upheavals of that country would be in the polite +but firm intervention of the United States. A German business man, +overhearing the remark, hastily interposed, "Not at all, sir; that is what +Germany is in this country for." With a concerted and well-considered +policy of business extension in South American countries Germany deserved +the commercial advantages that she had gained in the twenty-five years +preceding the war period. + +When questioned as to the remarkable success of the German commercial +propaganda, South American leaders rarely fail to mention the fact that +the German business man in Latin lands invariably speak the language of +the country. Catalogues are issued in Spanish or Portuguese, as local +conditions require. Measures, technical terms, and methods of handling +goods are all adapted to local usage, and the South American merchant is +considered and consulted in all the mechanism of exchange and handling of +goods. Contrasted with North American ignorance of conditions and ignoring +of language and custom, it is not strange that Europe has controlled the +trade of Latin-America. + +In view of all that is involved of national development, international +entanglements, commercial expansion, and racial affinity, it would seem to +be about time that we become acquainted with our neighbors, or, rather, in +our neighborhood. If we are going to live on this great American highway, +it may be well to be on good terms with the rest of the folks. + +Aside from commercial and linguistic considerations, there are four +reasons for our ignorance of the lands and people south of the United +States. + +1. The American people are not well acquainted with any other people on +earth. Geographical isolation has had much to do with this, and racial +self-sufficiency has had still more effect upon our lack-of-thinking about +our neighbors. Had South and Central American countries been pouring +millions of immigrants into our cities, we would know something about +them, but the Latin has had no need to immigrate, since he has more room +in his own house than he could find in ours. + +2. American travel abroad has been practically all to Europe, with an +increasing number who have seen something of the Far East. And it is +impossible to be anything but densely ignorant of any people whose faces +we have never seen, whose country we have never visited, whose history we +have ignored, and whose language we cannot understand. No real interest is +possible without knowledge, and the main trouble between the American and +his neighbors is plain ignorance. + +3. The war with Spain in 1898 resulted in much indifferent prejudice on +our part against everything Spanish. Spain was not prepared for the blow +that fell upon her, and perhaps her colonial system deserved the +destruction that was administered, but we came out of the war with a more +or less good-natured contempt for anything and everything that savored of +Spain. We escaped with little or no spirit of hatred or lust of conquest, +but we marked down the Latin world at bargain prices--and then let Europe +walk away with the bargain. As a matter of fact, Spain has little to do +with the American situation. Spain herself in the past fifteen years has +made rapid strides forward, but in the average American mind anything +Spanish cannot be very efficient. + +4. Our Monroe Doctrine has begotten a certain arrogance of attitude toward +all our southern neighbors. Our attention has been called southward only +when revolution or anarchy or European interference has compelled us to +take a hand for our own ultimate self-protection. It is only when our +neighbors have failed to keep the peace and have threatened to carry their +quarrels into our yard, or have been in danger of being beaten up by +European military police, that we have taken the trouble to notice them. +From this situation it was inevitable that an attitude of patronage should +arise, and patronage is not a basis of national cooperation or mutual +understanding. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +THE FAMILY TREE + + +When came this Latin-American? Is he a mystery, a complex, or a racial +conundrum defying analysis and baffling understanding? So many people have +said. Others have reported a something impossible to name or describe +about this man from the southlands--all of which is nonsense. There are +few human mysteries when once we have the key. Any people may be +understood if we know their racial origin, social history, and +reaction-power. Such knowledge usually explains these so-called race +peculiarities. + +As North Americans we are ourselves the present product of social forces +that have driven us for centuries past. With a northern European race +origin we have been mixed in many molds and infused with many tinctures +till we emerge a new blend of blood. This new and vigorous stock shows a +reaction-power that has made much of educational, scientific, and material +opportunities, but, after all, these traits themselves are largely the +result of the social stimuli of the past five hundred years. Had our +ancestors in the sixteenth century removed to Spain, we should all now be +Spanish dons. + +If we could know the social, religious, intellectual, domestic, +industrial, and political environment of a people, we could account for +ninety per cent of race characteristics. And this social history measures, +not only potent forces and compelling sanctions, but itself in turn +registers reactive power and character values. + +[Illustration: SAN BLAS INDIAN CHIEF] + +The Latin-American has no cause to apologize nor explain when we inquire +into his racial antecedents. Out of the remote ages of antiquity a branch +of the human family moved westward, and on the Italian peninsula developed +a civilization and founded a city that in time dominated the world. The +lust of conquest and the intoxication of power debauched the rulers of +Rome, but the rising Christian Church took over the scepter, and for +fifteen hundred years Rome dominated the civilization of the world. +Fundamentally, there was no difference between the blood of southern and +western Europe, and but for the corrupt and demoralizing influence of the +papacy and its trailing blight upon the human spirit Rome might still have +been the dominant power of European civilization. The abuses that +compelled the Reformation also vitiated the Latin spirit. The wakening +life of the sixteenth century shifted the center westward but the blight +of papal despotism kept the Latin races from their full share in the +developments and democracy of the modern age. And now that the Teutonic +peoples of the north have become the victims of the most deadly despotism +that the world has yet produced, it is possible that the center and motive +of progressive thought in continental Europe may again swing to the +southern peoples. + +[Illustration: NO RACE SUICIDE HERE] + +No one can trace the splendid march of the Latin races through the +conquests and explorations and discoveries of the later fifteenth and +sixteenth centuries and then read the record of achievements down to the +present time and still maintain that there is anything decadent about the +Latin races. Had the Roman yoke been broken from the Latin neck as it was +from the Teuton, we should have had a very different tale to tell, and the +dominant civilization of the twentieth century might have been Latin +instead of Saxon. + +A closer examination of the social factors that have dominated the +Latin-American world and produced the present composite result on the +western hemisphere reveals three decisive factors that have in combination +produced our neighbors. + +All Latin-America reflects a European background. Nearly all relations of +life are defined in European terms. Out of the more or less subconscious +inheritance and ideals of European origin arise the sanctions of social +relations. Ideals of politics, business, education, home life, social +customs, and religion all come from this fountain of associations. The +church in South America is the church in southern Europe. The collegio is +not the North American college, but the European school which grants a +Bachelor of Arts degree at what corresponds to the end of the freshman +year in an American college. South American "republics" have their "prime +ministers," and the electorate is on the European basis. The presidents of +some of these republics exercise more arbitrary power than the king of +England or the entire executive of the United States. They are European +"presidents." Revolution is not the incurable habit of the "people" but +the profession of a few adventurers who oppress and afflict the +long-suffering and usually silent populace. This is not saying that +revolution is a characteristic of European political procedure, but that +the forms of representative government imposed upon the ideals of +dictatorship and monarchy produced the curious mixture of revolutionary +political progress known as a South or Central American "republic." South +American democracy is a hybrid product of European ideals and American +forms of government. Naturally enough, it is neither one thing nor the +other, and will not be anything very different until new forces are +brought to bear upon the political life of the Latin people. + +[Illustration: JUNGLE GUIDE] + +A second factor in the making of the Latin-American is his isolation for +three hundred years from the currents of Western economic and political +life. Practically all our North American stock of ideas and social +sanctions has been developed since the Pilgrims landed in New England. The +great basic impulse that sent men and women westward in search of +religious liberty has persisted and widened and developed a homogeneous +system of political ideal that has become the unquestioned background of +our whole political system. From free consciences have come free +institutions, free schools, free votes, and as long as it lasted, free +land, unrestricted economic opportunity, and a welcome to the world. Upon +this foundation have been reared American independence, modern democracy, +higher education, the feminist movement, scientific advance, and American +Protestantism. + +[Illustration: ONE USE FOR A HEAD] + +Certain influences from this stream have affected Latin-American life. The +nomenclature of South American politics is that of the United States, and +many constitutions contain provision for every modern practice. But these +model constitutions are like a beautiful and costly piano imported into a +home where no one knows how to use it. It takes a democratic spirit to get +democracy out of a democratic constitution. The best piano yields only +discord, and the most advanced constitution does not prevent revolution if +there be no musicians or statesmen to play and administer. People living +beside the stream of democratic progress have caught the names and forms +drifting on the current, but only those people have advanced with the +current who have not been tied to the shore by moral and intellectual +despotism. + +The influence of geographical nearness is slight beside that of historical +background and social relations. Mexico is much closer to Spain than to +the United States. After twenty years of successful administration of the +Philippines on the most colossal scale of national benevolence that the +world has ever seen, nearly all the Filipinos who had reached maturity in +1898 are still Spanish at heart and out of sympathy with American ideals +and administration. If the United States can hold the islands until every +person who was ten years old or over in 1898 is thoroughly dead and safely +buried, there will be a chance for some form of democracy, but the +old-time leaders will retain so long as they live the ideals derived from +three hundred years of Spanish administration. + +If there are in the mountains of the South isolated neighborhoods that +have been passed by in the current of modern American progress, and are +to-day practically ignorant of all that makes up American life, even +though surrounded on all sides by the march of a virile and restless race, +what must be the results of the isolation from this stream of North +American development, of the whole Latin-American race, while maintaining +close and vital connections with European standards and ideals? + +But Latin Americanism can never be explained merely by its European +background and its isolation from the progress of North America. The +keynote to the present product in Latin lands is to be found in that +system of religious despotism that has checked the free growth of every +people whose life it has dominated. + +[Illustration: BEGGARS AND CATHEDRALS] + +Jesuitism is what is the matter with the civilization southward. We have +had Romanism and Jesuitism in the United States, but people who have never +seen any form of these forces except that which has developed in the free +air of North America have much to learn. Romanism checked and balanced by +a virile Protestantism and a democratic political life is an altogether +different institution from Romanism dominant, degenerate, and intolerant. +The latter becomes the religion of the bound Bible, the chained spirit, +and the crippled conscience. It is the center of spiritual infection and +the microbe of moral weakness. No land has ever advanced under its +leadership. Like a blight on the human spirit, it has cast its spell of +ignorance and superstition over the millions of men and women who have had +no other ethical code or spiritual leadership. + +It has been claimed that the rigors of New England winters had something +to do with the sturdy New England conscience. But the Pilgrims brought +their consciences with them, and the climate came near exterminating the +colony. If the Pilgrims had landed in Cuba and the Spanish in Boston, +civilization might be very different to-day. If rigorous climates produce +vigorous men, how is it that some of the most terrible of men sailed the +Caribbean sea and devastated the whole mid-American world, while the +northern coasts of the Atlantic never saw a pirate's sail? The tropical +zephyrs of the Bay of Panama never softened the tempers or dispositions of +the bloodthirsty men who came near exterminating whole populations and +left a trail of blood and terror behind them. And these same +unconscionable scoundrels used to attend mass and plant wooden crosses +wherever they went. + +The effort to account for South American civilization by climate falls to +pieces before the splendid and bracing altitudes of the Andes, the ideal +conditions of Argentine, Uruguay, and Chile, and the delightful regions of +the higher elevations of Central America. There is nothing inherently +demoralizing in the climate of lands inhabited by the Latin peoples in +America, but there is something distinctly vitiating in the moral miasma +breathed by these peoples for three hundred years. If cold climates +produced inflexible consciences, the Eskimos ought to be the most +conscientious people on earth. But the moral climate of Jesuitism has +produced a uniform effect everywhere that it has supplied the soil for +soul-growth. + +[Illustration: FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD] + +It is impossible to grow liberty of life, apart from its natural soil and +necessary nourishment. If we are to have free institutions, we must first +have free men. We cannot have a stream of water without a flowing +fountain, nor ripe fruit without a living tree. Political liberty is +impossible without moral freedom, and it is idle to expect independence of +political action without the established right to think for oneself. When +consciences are forced into fixed and prescribed molds it is useless to +ask that men turn about and practice the principles of a free democracy. +Majority rule is meaningless where the confessional dominates the +consciences of men. If we apply these factors in the social history and +life of the Latin-American to the traits of his development most subject +to criticism, we find much illumination. Out of all the discussion three +items emerge, each significant and each closely related to the factors +just mentioned. + +The Latin mind is given to an idealism that reaches out for large things +but often stops short of large actual realization. Out of this tendency +grow weak initiative and superficial standards. As evidence of this +characteristic may be cited the tendency in education to stress the +superficial and showy features of the curriculum, leaving in the +background the foundations and essentials of the intellectual life. +Anything that makes a good appearance is given place over the less +spectacular realities. In architecture, a florid ornamentation is +achieved, even at the expense of good plaster and proper surface stone, +later with the resultant unsightliness. + +[Illustration: SEAWALL CHURCH AND SCHOOL, PANAMA] + +Deductive processes of thought are much in evidence. In outlining a plan +of provincial government, or a system of national education, the paper +plans will include every needed feature of a complete and theoretical +system, without much regard for the local needs and actual conditions +under which the full scheme is to be realized, which in all probability it +will never be. To have projected and announced a grand undertaking in any +department of human life is as important as to have accomplished +something. It is the grand-piano constitution and the one-finger +administration. It is not hard to find automobile undertakings and +wheelbarrow accomplishments. + +Now, all this is not cause for railing accusation but for thoughtful +analysis. And the dominant cause is not far to seek. Where effort to +translate ideals into realities is met by a barrier of official +indifference, it is not strange if men give their time to dreaming rather +than actualizing their visions. Where belief and conduct are prescribed +and commercialism dominates the moral lives of men, it is easy to see that +initiative is crippled at its source. Where a people is divested of +responsibility for the final outcome and taught to pay the price and +"believe or be damned," it is a rash spirit that will try to do more than +dream dreams and write books and project utopias. Without the incentive of +encouragement to produce practical results, no real efficiency has ever +appeared among any people. There are accusations of moral duplicity among +Latin-American peoples. More serious and fundamental than impotent +idealism, this defect registers itself in perversion of public trust, in +the degradation of public office to the uses of private gain, in +deception, graft, and greed. Promises are easy, but performances are +delayed until the would-be enterprising citizen gives up in despair. + +In regard to this two things are to be said. In the first place, our own +records as a people will not bear any too close inspection. Aside from +race riots and labor disturbances, our Civil War furnishes our only +revolution, except the one that produced the original United States. But +when it comes to political prostitution of public office and the invention +of grafting schemes, large and small, our own history does not give us +much ground for boasting. And many a "revolution" has caused less +bloodshed than a North American labor row. + +[Illustration: MANDY DID HER SHARE] + +Further, so far as there is a difference between the conduct of the North +and South, the explanation is not far to seek. Once admit the validity of +the principle that it is right to do wrong for a good end, and a whole +stream of moral duplicity is turned loose in public and private life. +Jesuitism will account for almost any moral lapse in a land where all +thinking has come under the spell of a creed in which the end justifies +the means. + +[Illustration: THE CANAL DIGGER] + +Let this principle be ever so carefully guarded and proscribed, so long as +human nature remains what it is, where personal interests are at stake the +individual is going to be his own final judge of the value of the end for +which the means are devised. And on the basis of every man adapting means +to his own ends we have moral chaos. + +Much has been said of the personal immorality of many people of these +southern lands. That the Latin-American is in any whit behind his northern +neighbor in the integrity of his personal and domestic life remains to be +proven. That his deflections from the straight and narrow path are much +less concealed and by him are regarded as of small account is to be +conceded. Here, again, the cause is not far to seek. With a sacerdotal +example loose and irresponsible, it would be strange indeed if the men of +South America showed a higher personal chastity than their spiritual +leaders and moral guides. + +The third accusation brought against our neighbors is that of political +undemocracy. Government by revolution is said to be the rule, and an +election in which the "outs" win a victory over the "ins" is practically +unknown. Victorious majorities are governed in size only by the discretion +of the dominant power, and the Latin mind seems a stranger to the +fundamental principle of accepting a majority decision as binding until +the next election. + +To accept gracefully a majority decision against himself or his party is +an art slowly acquired by any politician. On the playgrounds we see this +trait; in amateur clubs and literary societies we find it; in the arena of +political strife it does its worst and results in a state of affairs in +which revolution becomes the general substitute for elections. + +I stood one day on the campus of a Christian college in a Latin republic. +The young men were playing baseball, and they were playing it well. I +discovered that baseball was a regular part of their curriculum, that they +were required to play so many games per week, and that they received +credit for the games, provided they were played according to rules. When I +inquired as to the reason for this I was informed by the efficient +director of the school that baseball was in his opinion one of the most +important subjects in the course. "There are two things that we can teach +through baseball better than any other way. One is team work--a fellow +can't play the game alone; and the other is the art of accepting defeat +gracefully. Half of the boys must be defeated every day, which is an +invaluable drill for them." + +[Illustration: THE TOWN PUMP, INTERIOR VILLAGE] + +Even as we discussed the matter, a tall fellow got into a dispute with the +umpire, and after a dramatic flourish swung his arms in the air and +shouted, "No juego mas" ("I will play no more"). + +"There--do you hear that?" remarked the director. "That is what we are +trying to cure." + +As far as my observation has gone, nobody except the educational +missionary is trying very hard to cure this most unfortunate trait in an +otherwise very fine character. + +[Illustration: WAYSIDE CEMETERY IN THE JUNGLE] + +Here, again, it is not difficult to trace this stream to its sources. We +understand much better since 1914 whence came this political peculiarity. +The ideals of European politics have been transferred across the Atlantic +and their fruits on foreign soil have not been tempered by the vigor of +free institutions grown strong in the processes of centuries. If +Central-American republics are only constitutional monarchies in which the +monarch governs the constitution, there is very good reason for the +anomaly. If it is true that there is not a single republic on American +soil south of "the line," then it is to be said that there never can be +such a republic until Latin-America ceases to think in terms of European +history and Jesuitism is broken from its hold on the moral consciousness +of the men who make and unmake republics in the Latin world. Successful +republics have been developed in that turbulent but onmoving stream of +Western and modern ideals that has found its most complete expression in +the United States, but which has also tinctured the thinking and +influenced the political processes of practically every country on earth +except Prussia. We ourselves are not perfect yet, and it behooves us to +withhold the stones from our neighbors until we can show a clean record. +We will have some distance to go before democracy is a finished product, +and it will be a good plan to take the neighbors along with us. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +LATIN-AMERICAN HEART + + +Much misunderstanding has been due to faulty methods of approach to our +southern neighbor. Political diplomacy, commercial competition, and +military displays will never get to the core of this international apple. +The Latin-American is a man of heart, and until we recognize this fact we +shall fail to understand him. Sympathy and courtesy will avail more than +battleships and boycotts. This man is a born diplomat and has high +intellectual development, but the deep and dominant motives of his life +are his friendships and affections. + +If we know the ruling motives of men and races, we may avoid nearly all +the misunderstandings and incriminating accusations that arise when we +occupy different points of view, but matters look very different when we +get at them from the viewpoint of the other man. + +Seeming contradictions dissolve and weaknesses appear as unsuccessful +aspirations. Our complaints of low initiative become more reserved when we +remember that spiritual slavery is a certain antidote for the pioneering +spirit. The presence of a high though fruitless idealism amid +insurmountable difficulties attests a virile and buoyant spirit, captive +and caged. Where toil has been treated with contempt for ages nothing +short of economic helplessness can follow. + +As for financial faithlessness, who shall throw the first stone? If once +we begin to justify the means by the end, commercial life is going to +suffer. If we begin to complain about the insecurity of political +institutions, we need to remember that democracy is one of the first and +finest fruits of a free mind and heart. And we have not yet ourselves +arrived sufficiently to do any boasting. + +To know our Latin-Americans as personal friends is to attain a new +viewpoint on the whole Pan-American problem. We may not blind our eyes to +their defects more than to our own--there are plenty of both; but +understanding brings explanation of many things, and if we know all and +understand fully, we may come to a different verdict. The southern man far +surpasses us in certain traits of which we have taken small account and in +which we are racially deficient. When given free opportunity, satisfactory +response appears to the stimuli of democracy and initiative. + +To know personally the Spanish-American is to become aware of his keen +intuitions, his high personal charm, his strong sympathies, his +constructive imagination, and his hearty idealism; and whatever else he +may be, he is loyal to his friends and their interests. He may not be so +intent on doing something, but he has time for social graces and arts, and +possesses an innate refinement and grace of character that we take pride +in having neglected. + +[Illustration: COCONUTS--SO GOOD AND SO HIGH] + +The Latin at his best is the racial goal of South America. Who cares to be +judged by the social leavings of his own country? The South American best +is intelligent, refined, and faithful to trusts. His mental processes are +touched with a constructive imagination that finds high expression in his +abundant art and literature. With a nervous, artistic, and sensitive +temperament, he responds quickly to friendly approaches and stands ready +to do his full share in social obligations. + +That peons and ignorantes are not thus described is only to say that the +tramps and social unacceptables of any country are not to be classed with +the intellectuals and social leaders. + +The personal equation is apt to be decisive in South America. Commercial +travelers learn this to their profit or loss, as they adopt or disdain the +ruling motives of the men with whom they deal. It may do very well in some +cities of the United States for the breezy commercial traveler to display +his samples, deliver his oration, and give the merchant three minutes to +take or leave the best goods on earth. Such methods in Spanish countries +means no business at all. Selling goods in South America is a social +function in which are involved members of the family and, incidentally, +some very pleasant hours. Any sort of make-believe is useless. Unless a +man really likes the people he had better abandon any plans to do business +with them. He may get on in Chicago, but in Bogota he will be very +lonesome. + +When a man sells goods on talk he may dispose of inferior qualities +occasionally, and trust that he can talk enough faster next time to make +up for his loss of standing; but when goods are sold on friendship a +single mistake in quality means ruptured relations and the end of +commercial confidence. And where friendship furnishes the basis of +business the buyer will protect the seller in return for uniform good +treatment on his part. Like all other racial customs, when once it is +understood the system is not so unreasonable as at first appears. + +An Englishman traveling in South America told me that on one occasion he +sold a large bill of goods on credit to a man who proved to be a rascal. +As the time for the return of the salesman and the payment for the goods +drew near the buyer tried to sell out his entire stock at half price, with +the intention of leaving the country with the money. But all the other +merchants were friends of the salesman and refused to take advantage of +the situation, to the loss of their friend. They preferred to lose their +own profits. + +Business in Latin-America is a personal matter. If a deal goes wrong, +somebody is responsible. North American business has a large impersonal +element, and the man who makes a bad bargain usually feels that he had +himself largely to blame. The joke is on him, and he will exercise more +shrewdness next time. But the southern merchant views the case +differently, and it behooves the salesman to handle only goods that will +move to the profit of the buyer. + +When once this basis of friendly confidence is well set up it is easy to +consummate large transactions with very little preliminary investigation. +The capitalist is more interested in knowing what his trusted friend +thinks than in getting data upon which to base his own conclusions. + +[Illustration: BOILING "DULCE"--CRUDE SUGAR] + +National ambassadors and Christian missionaries soon learn what the +business man found out long ago: that there is only one road to successful +relations with these people and that is the way of the heart. Neither +minister nor missionary nor merchant can succeed unless he genuinely likes +the people with whom he is dealing. Any missionary who is afflicted with a +sense of superiority had better look up the sailing dates of any steamer +line connecting with the United States. + +In meeting strangers the right kind of a letter of introduction has high +value. Let the letter be from a personal friend, and the homes and hearts +are opened in a way that surprises the more coldly formal man from the +north. It is a cheering and heartening experience to present a good letter +to a fine family and be received with a cordiality and genuine hospitality +that leaves no doubt as to the honest motives of the hosts. + +But how are we to find the road to the heart of any people unless we can +speak to them in their own tongue in which they were born? The interpreter +does very well for trivial and formal matters, but who wants to use an +interpreter in his own family? Here is where the "United Stateser" gets +into trouble. As a linguist he does not shine; in fact, he is barely +visible in a good light. He considers it beneath him to take the trouble +to learn anyone's language. Why should he? He can speak English already. +If anyone has anything to say to him, let him say it in English; and if he +cannot speak English, then surely he can have nothing worth saying. It is +a ready formula, but it fails to reach the hearts of men who do not happen +to have been born in the United States. + +The Latin is a better linguist than his neighbor to the north. Nearly all +the better class people speak some English, though they are very modest +about the matter. Practically all of them speak two or more languages. But +even if they do surpass us in speech and can use some English, we are not +excused from acquiring a working knowledge of the language of the people +with whom we are to deal. The increasing development of Spanish teaching +in North American schools is one of the most helpful signs of the times. + +Nowhere does the innate courtesy of the Latin-American shine more than in +his bearing toward the novice who tries to learn his language. We of the +United States are wont to laugh at the linguistic struggles of the +stranger within our gates, but not so with the South American. He is a +gentleman, and will take immense pains to assist anyone who makes an +effort to talk to him. He seems to regard it as a compliment that anyone +should try to use his language. Any faltering effort will receive +immediate encouragement. + +A volume could be written about the comical blunders of North American +tyros in language learning. A hundred or two garbled words, vigorous +guessing and violent arm action make up the linguistic equipment of some +would-be "interpreters." Mixed English, Spanish, jerks, and profanity will +do wonders where there is nothing else, but as substitutes for language +they are far from ideal. Classic is the story of one of these interpreters +who struggled in vain to deliver the meaning of his friend to a native, +and at last gave up in disgust, regretting that he "ever learned the +blamed language anyway." + +Spanish is possibly as easy to learn as any language other than that of +one's native land. Aside from its complicated verb and annoying gender, it +has few difficulties that need cause acute distress. But the score of +"easy methods" without teachers are to be avoided. There is no easy way to +learn a language. It takes work, hard work, and a lot of it to learn a +second language. But it can be done, and to acquire a new medium of +expression, even in middle life, is an experience not to be taken lightly. +It is above all things interesting. It comes at last to this: the only way +to speak, write, or read Spanish effectively is to learn it. Short cuts +bring short results. + +And the only road to a worthwhile understanding of the Latin-American is +that of a sympathetic personal acquaintance and genuine friendship. It is +a matter of heart more than of head, and unless the North American has a +heart himself he had better acquire one or abandon his efforts to deal +with the Latin-American. + +To the traveler from the Orient Latin-America is easy to know. There is +much in Spanish ceremonial, love of life and color and rhythm, the innate +chivalry and politeness, so often absent from the direct processes of the +North American, to suggest the peculiar charm of the Orient at its best. +The ornateness of architecture appears in the East and West in nearly +equal measure. When it comes to elaborate speeches and flattering +expressions, not even the honorifics of ceremonial Japan have much +advantage over the gracious and complimentary extravagances of the +Spanish-American. + +It was at a school entertainment that the director, who spoke excellent +Spanish, was unavoidably absent, and the writer was pressed into service +at the last moment to explain some stereopticon views and make a few +announcements. The language was that of a tyro and must have afforded +material for much amusement to the cultured parents of the school +children. But no one laughed, and as a reporter for a Spanish paper +chanced to be on hand, the morning edition stated that the entertainment +was a high success and that the views were described in the choicest of +classic Spanish while the announcements were delivered with a diction of +the purest and highest type. It was the conventional manner of describing +any public event. + +This temperament leads to oratory as rivers run to the sea. Given a few +ideas for a start, and any educated Latin will deliver an extempore +oration that suggests weeks of careful preparation. Rounded periods and +classic expression mark every polished phrase. + +Probably the most perplexing and annoying thing about the North American +in the eyes of his southern neighbor is our incessant hurry and rush. We +may be millionaires in money but we are hopelessly bankrupt in time. And +the South American is both millionaire and philanthropist in time. He +always has a surplus and is willing to use it--and his friend's too. Some +of our hurrying about is regarded as a great joke. Clayton Sedgwick Cooper +quotes a Bengalese of Calcutta as regarding a certain Englishman as "one +of the uncomfortable works of God." Such are we of the United States in +the eyes of our southern friends. + +The formalities of social life are of vast importance to the Panamanian, +and they are also important to the North American who wishes to transact +any sort of business with officials and educated men of any class. Dress +suits and high hats are not to be despised if one is to get on in the +capital city. Neither are business and politics to be separated if any +business is to be done. + +During 1918 the death of President Valdez within a month of the +constitutional date of the national election created a situation in which +the election board was controlled by one political party and the police +department by the other, spelling inevitable trouble. Military authorities +on the Canal Zone took a hand and sent over a troop of cavalry to police +the city during the election week. At sight of the soldiers panic +possessed many women and children, who had been told that the Americans, +if they came, would shoot down all persons on the street without warning. +A few hours convinced the populace of the error of this widely circulated +report, and the election passed peacefully, the party in office winning. + +Panamanian officials are uniformly courteous, kindly, and will go to any +reasonable length to grant any proper request, especially if it comes from +a friend. I have called on various men in high authority many times on +diverse matters and have never failed to be received cordially and given +the best of personal treatment. It has occasionally happened, however, +that after leaving the official I tried to recall just what he had stated +or agreed to do, and had difficulty in finding anything definite. + +[Illustration: WASHING BY THE RIVER] + +Perhaps Latin character reaches its highest level in family life. The +women of the Latin race are noted for natural grace and comeliness, and in +their own homes they give themselves to their husbands and children with a +devotion to which some of the club women of northern lands are strangers, +as well as their families. Motherhood is a high calling before which all +else must give way. The open life of the northern family, with its easy +conventions and free hospitality, is largely unknown, but a close and +intimate family life is built up essentially stronger in some features +than anything found further north. The Spanish home is a very select and +secluded affair, into the charmed circle of which only the most intimate +friends may enter. + +This wife and mother usually knows nothing of her husband's affairs, and +has little freedom of the streets or public places. There is none of that +comradeship in business interests often found in the States between +husband and wife. + +The senoritas, or young women, of these homes are decidedly feminine. They +make much of cosmetics, but they do at least spare us the assorted colors +of the hair dyer's art. And they do not make a holy show of themselves on +the street, with loud manners and conspicuous costumes, as if to attract +attention of all passers-by. It must be said that some of the better class +young women of these countries are "stunning lookers," and are always +attractive and well bred, but with limited educational advantages they are +apt to be shallow conversationalists. Many of the men prefer them that +way. For a woman to know too much about business and politics detracts +from her distinctly feminine charm in the eyes of these Spanish men. What +religious devotion exists in these countries is found among the women, who +usually go regularly to mass and confession. + +Strictest chaperonage is maintained over young women, no girl being +permitted for a moment to be alone with a young man, a system that would +make slow headway in North America. And the women are long suffering with +their husbands, from whom they endure conduct that would break up almost +any North American home. + +The Panamanian woman has none of the boldness of the new woman of +Argentine, nor the ultra-timidity of Peruvian seclusion. She knows the +value of balconies and lace shawls and effective coiffures, and it must be +said that in spite of rigorous supervision and never-failing modesty of +demeanor, she has a charm and a "come-hither" in her eye that has won the +heart of many a North American. + +The possibilities of the Latin race are perhaps best measured by the +occasional rare characters that break through the bonds of convention and +precedent and attain an altitude of gracious nobility unsurpassed anywhere +on earth. Occasional products of missionary schools show results in +character and efficiency that indicate clearly the latent capacity for a +something in which the brusque Saxon is too often deficient. + +The "Christ of the Andes" was set up on the boundary line between +Argentine and Chile as a suggestion of the only basis of permanent peace +in the life and teachings of the Prince of Peace. This famous statue was +the result of the work of a woman, the Senora de Costa, president of the +Christian Mothers' League of Buenos Ayres. Cast of old Spanish cannon, and +installed in its lofty elevation of thirteen thousand feet in the Andes, +the monument was dedicated March 13, 1914, as much a memorial to the work +of a Latin-American woman as a testimonial to the peaceful intentions of +the two nations. + +There is a Spanish word, not exactly translatable into English, which may +be taken as the key to Latin character at its best. It is the word +"simpatico," which means something more than "sympathetic." A man is +_simpatico_ when he is gracious and open-hearted and likable and +considerate of other folks' feelings. There ought to be a course in +_simpatico_ for every prospective missionary and business man in the +United States who has any intention of dealing with the Latin-American. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +THE CARIBBEAN WORLD + + +Readers of Robinson Crusoe associate the Caribbean Sea with piracy and +rum, but usually have few other ideas on the subject. Most people of the +United States have scarcely so much as heard that there be any Caribbean +world except that it is somewhere in the tropics. + +To be sure, the Caribbean Sea has a way of impressing itself upon those +who sail its troubled tides. Perhaps the shades of the villains who used +to cross these waters on their murderous expeditions still linger to raise +the adverse winds and toss the seasick passenger in his misery. Certain it +is that very few travelers have any affection for the seven hundred miles +of salt water between the Mosquito Coast and the islands so notorious in +the sixteenth century. + +It is with something of surprise, then, that the prowler about Panama +learns of a homogeneous population living on the chain of islands that +begins below Porto Rico and swings downward in a graceful curve to the tip +of the South American coast. These Lesser Antilles mark the eastern +boundaries of the famous, or _in_famous, Caribbean Sea. Though small in +size, their considerable numbers and large populations make them +important. If they are not so well known now, at least they have the +distinction of having been discovered by Columbus when he set out to find +a way to the East Indies and discovered the West Indies instead. + +[Illustration: COSTA RICA FARM HOME] + +The political complexion of these islands varies greatly. Government is +shared by Spain, France, England, and the United States, and the languages +spoken conform to the governing power. The purchase of the Danish West +Indies has given the United States a permanent and prominent influence in +the group. + +No account of matters Panamanian could omit reference to the people of +this West Indian world. From the beginning of Panama's history Caribbean +adventurers have crossed the sea in any craft that would float, and have +played a large part in the restless events of the Isthmus. West Indian +influence and blood were mingled with the history of the Isthmus for four +hundred years, and in these last days it has been the West Indian who +furnished the labor that dug the Panama Canal, and who still contributes +the brawn and perspiration for the work of the Canal Zone. Twenty-five +thousand of these people live on or near the Zone and are employed by its +government, and probably as many more live near by and mingle with the +native life of Panama. All through the interior there are always some West +Indians. + +Without the West Indian the digging of the Canal would not have been +impossible, but would have been much more difficult. Chinese coolies would +have cost more to import and could hardly have worked for less money. +Considering the cost of living on the Canal Zone, the West Indian has +furnished some of the cheapest labor in the world. In construction days +the nine or ten cents an hour wage was more than the black man had +received at home, but his living expenses on the Zone were very much +higher than on the Caribbean Islands. The wage scale of the West Indian on +the Canal Zone has been revised and increased several times by the +American government in an effort to keep pace with the rising cost of +living; but it must be said that the laborer's wage of about thirty +dollars a month, with from three dollars to six dollars deducted for the +rent of two rooms, does not afford a very sumptuous living for a man and +his family. The "silver" man on the Zone pays the same price for his food +and clothes as does the "gold" white man who receives twenty-five per cent +higher wages than is paid for the same work in the States, and in addition +has a furnished apartment or cottage free of rent cost. The men on the +"gold" rate complain of the high cost of living. What they would do if +reduced to one sixth of their present wages they do not stop to consider. +It is not a pleasant subject to face, but it is hoped that the wages of +the West Indian may be lifted to the point where he can at least buy food +enough to keep him in good physical condition. + +The West Indies furnishes the plantation labor of Panama and Costa Rica, +without which there would be little plantation work done. In the hot and +humid banana groves he endures the temperature and handles the huge banana +bunches as though born for the job, as perhaps he is. Out from Almirante +and Puerto Limon range the tracks of the plantation railroads through +hundreds of miles of banana forests, where the black man supplies the +labor for the largest farms in the world. Forty or fifty thousand of these +people live on and about the plantations of the Atlantic coast and without +them the largest agricultural enterprise ever carried on under one +management would collapse. + +The West Indian on the Isthmus is not the West Indian at home. He may live +and die on the mainland, but he thinks in terms of the islands from which +he came. Like the American Negro, he is of African descent, but his +African origin is so remote that no trace of it remains in his +consciousness, though it is evident in his psychology. Most of the West +Indians about the Canal Zone dream of returning to the islands again. + +These people of the Caribbean world have a decided race consciousness, and +in their thinking and living are a world unto themselves. Separate and +distinct from the Greater Antilles and the mainland, they know very little +of the continental life and customs, and any attempt to classify them with +American Negroes or Europeans raises a set of social problems difficult to +solve. + +[Illustration: BANANAS THIRTY FEET HIGH] + +To the North American the mental processes of the West Indian are a +psychological jungle in which the explorer is soon lost. Perhaps no one +has yet essayed to really understand this man, and those who have tried to +analyze him maintain that he does not understand himself. Certain it is +that he does not trouble himself with any self-analysis. He has enough +other things to occupy his attention. With the psychological background of +his remote African ancestors, his race characteristics have changed very +little since the days when his forefathers were forcibly torn from their +native land and deported into savage slavery. + +[Illustration: SAN BLAS INDIANS HAVE "POKER FACES"] + +The social sanctions of the West Indian are rigid and well established. +The list of forbidden things is long and complex, and of signs, and dreams +and portents, strange and powerful, there seems no end. Numerous negatives +appear in his social and personal creed, and he who violates these +prohibitions must be a courageous soul. To introduce any original, new +idea into this scheme of things is a difficult task, and is apt to arouse +a whole chain of reactions, complex and mysterious. This man will follow +literally any able leadership, but the leader must go in the direction of +the established currents of opinion or he will have a hard time of it. + +The West Indian has a religious capacity that impresses the visitor as a +remarkable aptitude for things sacred. Such, indeed, it is. And the +religious life of the earnest and conscientious members of this race +exhibits a fine type of devotion and sacrifice. As might be expected, +there is free expression of emotional experience, but on the whole those +who are truly religious match their songs by their deeds and their +testimonies by their lives. Practically nothing is known on the Isthmus of +anything bordering on hysteria. When it comes to familiarity with the +English Bible the average church member will put to shame his white +friend, and in interpretation of scripture some very unique and +interesting efforts are produced. + +In matters of doctrine most of these people are rigid immersionists. The +women invariably wear their hats in church, on the ground that Saint Paul +commanded such observance, but they ignore the exhortation of the same +apostle that the women keep silence in the churches. All special occasions +possess thrilling interest, and almost any West Indian will go hungry to +get good clothes. How they manage to dress as well as they do on the +incomes they receive is a mystery that has not yet been solved. + +An experienced missionary among these people says that practically every +West Indian at some time in his life is a member of some church. If this +is true, many of the West Indians in Panama are backsliders, as a majority +are not at present showing any interest in Christian observances or moral +living. Possibly many of those who are genuinely devout and consistently +Christian establish a membership in several different churches, one after +the other. Tiring of one church, discontented with the pastor, or +encountering personal difficulties with other members, it is easy and +convenient to join some other congregation, and of split-ups and +break-offs there seems no end. Nearly every church on the Isthmus has had +its deflections and divisions, and anything like the modern movement +toward unity and cooperation of the Christian program is a _terra +incognita_ to this enthusiastic individualist. + +A surprising thing is the capacity for financial self-sacrifice of the +West Indian. Out of the pennies that he receives as wages he contributes +liberally to the support of his church and for the education of his +children. Nearly all West Indian churches on and near the Canal Zone are +self-supporting, and nearly all West Indian schools are maintained from +tuition fees. If these people were to receive good wages, they would not +only wear good clothes but would contribute to community enterprises and +keep their children in school as long as possible. That the more dissolute +members of the community would spend their money for rum is no reason for +depriving the laborer of his hire. + +[Illustration: WHERE STYLES MOLEST NO MORE] + +Living without adequate means of recreation or possibilities of culture or +wide information, life is nevertheless saved from deadly monotony by the +exercise of the high gifts of controversy. When it comes to a straight, +head-on wrangle the West Indian shines in a glory all his own. Not even a +loquacious Oriental can surpass his powers of abuse and lordly contempt +for his adversary. If words were bullets, the whole population would +perish in twenty-four hours, innocent and guilty together. To the +uninitiated bystander it seems that an empire is being lost, but the +old-timers cease to heed the quarreling and go their way indifferent to +the social safety valve of these greatest natural controversialists of the +tropic world. A young woman on the train in Costa Rica left her seat to +speak to a friend and another girl slipped in next to the window. When the +visitor returned the program began. Back and forth flew claims, charges +and counter-charges as to the ownership of the seat. With indescribable +scorn the usurper said, "Do you want a seat in my lap?" which provoked +"Ah, now I see how you was raised." + +"Indeed, and you have no manners at all, it is plain to be seen." + +Back and forth the duel rages until the first claimant sought another +seat, saying, "I certainly does respect myself too highly to sit by the +likes of you." + +The combat closed thus: "When I look upon you I know what you is, for I +can read your face." + +All of which falls flat without the wholly inimitable accent of the +Jamaican dialect. + +This accent of the British subject in the West Indies is a dialect so +peculiar that it defies the most skillful impersonators. Somehow only +those to the manner born seem able to acquire or imitate the strong +combination of London cockney and African rhythm. The more intelligent and +better-educated people speak intelligibly, but it is common to hear +alleged English that is almost impossible to understand. There is not the +slightest resemblance to the traditional dialect of the Southern Negro, +and as for expressing it in cold type there is no alphabet on earth that +can represent the sounds and inflections produced. + +The West Indian in Panama has a certain economic efficiency on the level +to which he has been trained, otherwise he would not have been brought to +the Zone by tens of thousands and retained there through the years of +Canal construction on into the present period of operation and +maintenance. Under a boss this man is faithful and efficient, provided the +task assigned him is within the scope of his training and ability. And +however slow or inaccurate he may be, he can hardly help earning the wages +that he receives. And if he did not work at all, the patience with which +he endures the frequent abuse and cursings of the impatient gang bosses +ought to be worth something. Certainly, the reader of this would not take +what is handed out to the West Indian for ten times his wages. It is true +that he is not strong on independent judgment, and that when left to his +own counsel he may do some strange things and perhaps very little of +anything. But how is a man to develop judgment who has never borne +responsibility? + +Deep down in the heart of this man is slowly rising a resentment against +the economic conditions he finds on the Zone, and in many cases silent and +dangerous hate is gradually filling the hearts of the unorganized and +helpless "silver" men. Unless conditions are improved the time may come +when this resentment may flare up in a useless and hopeless protest. But +it is more likely that the wage scale will be readjusted from time to time +and the explosion forestalled. Occasionally some of these people get away +to the United States, but none of them ever return. For them the +patriarchal Canal Zone offers no attractions compared with the free +competition of the States. It is maintained by officials of the Zone that +the wage scale is as high as available funds will warrant; that if the +West Indian had any more money, it would do him no good, and that the +increases in wages already granted have fully kept pace with the rise in +the cost of living. + +In matters of personal morals the West Indian is accused of loose +matrimonial practices. A priest said to me one day that if two +commandments--the seventh and eighth--could be omitted from the Ten, the +West Indian would get along all right. This slander is not deserved; but +investigation into facts reveals that the morals of the West Indians are +but little better than those of Panama. Concubinage is widely practiced, +with a system of financial support; but no more so than everywhere else in +the tropics except on the Canal Zone, where moral conditions are +exceptionally good. The remark of the priest may have been due to the fact +that most of the West Indians are Protestants. + +Some characteristics of rare merit and interest occasionally arise among +these people. They do not sing as well as their northern cousins, but they +produce orators of no mean ability. Earnest, consistent, faithful, +affectionate, and original in expression, the best of these people afford +promise of what may be expected when better conditions bring large +opportunity. + +[Illustration: CHINESE ALWAYS START A SCHOOL] + +[Illustration: "SCHOOLDAYS"] + +Like other races not long exposed to civilization, the children of these +people show surprising precocity. They give excellent account of +themselves in primary schools, and in performances at public +entertainments they are letter-perfect. Fifty numbers on a program and +never a slip or a failure throughout, and not a complaint or criticism +except that it was a little short. One large church established a record +by producing a Christmas program containing one hundred and eight numbers. +Through the primary years these youngsters sometimes surpass their white +friends, but the economic pressure of living conditions crowds them nearly +all out of school at the end of the fourth or fifth grade. Once they get a +groundwork in the three "Rs" they are considered well educated for life. + +As may be expected, the birth rate is high, but large families are rare +because of the distressing and unnecessary high rate of infant mortality. +How could it be otherwise when a whole family lives in one room on +twenty-five dollars a month with food at New York prices? + +That the Jamaicans are a gregarious folk is to be expected. The social +instinct is always strong in any people of African descent. Canal Zone +bosses complain that their employees prefer to leave the clean and +sanitary quarters of the Zone and live in the Guachapali and San Miguel +districts of Panama and in Colon, where they are crowded together in a way +that would prove fatal to a white man. The constant company and crowded +conditions do not trouble the West Indians, whereas the rigid restrictions +of the silver quarters of the Zone he often finds objectionable. + +What the West Indian most needs is a fair chance. He is cursed and +disparaged on every hand. He is to blame for being ragged and unwashed, +but when he goes hungry and dresses up, then he is a hopeless spendthrift +and a fraudulent dude. It is useless to pay him fair wages because he +would spend the money. Unscrupulous landlords are allowed to extort +enormous rents for wretched quarters in Panama and Colon, because, if the +Jamaican did not spend his money that way, he would pay it out for +something else. He is looked down upon as not being highly educated, and +it is claimed that the more he knows the worse off he is. No matter what +happens he is to blame. If the cholera should appear in Panama, or the +Gold Hill should slide into the Canal, the West Indian would be the guilty +party. Surely, he is worth his wages merely as a target for the verbal +explosions of his boss. Some men would have difficulty in holding their +jobs were it not for the timely assistance of this "goat" of the Zone. +Living conditions in Caledonia and Guachapali would give the New York East +Side something to think about. Rooms ten or twelve feet square are rented +out to families who usually stretch a curtain across the middle, sleep +huddled together in the rear at night, and live in the front of the "flat" +the rest of the time. From some primitive prejudice comes a violent +dislike of fresh air, especially at night, when every room is as nearly as +possible hermetically sealed. In a tropical temperature no one has yet +explained how the inmates live till morning. + +Naked children swarm in the streets. At first the visitor is properly +shocked, but soon ceases to notice these ebony cherubs. In time, however, +one does get tired of it. Along the sidewalks and in the doorsteps the +evening hours are turned into neighborhood debating societies and +wrangling clubs, and between the arguments and disputes, and the always +nearby street meeting, there is never a dull moment. That is why they +prefer living there to the quiet and monotonous life in the silver town on +the Zone. + +Religious gatherings on the street are a marked feature of the night life +of this part of the city. Torchlights and crowds, vigorous singing and +enthusiastic exhortations mark the visible features of the efforts of +these earnest persuaders of their neighbors to flee from the wrath to +come. If street demonstrations were confined to religious meetings, all +might be well. While ever-present canteenas dispense cheap and deadly rum +there will always be people who will go hungry and ragged to buy +"firewater," and with one or two drinks aboard the West Indian becomes a +very talkative and quarrelsome person. Often have I seen sidewalks +spattered with blood, and a common sight is that of a couple of policemen +leading away a gory victim or culprit. + +So scanty is the food ration of these people that the general custom +prevails of eating very little during the day and then making a feast at +night of whatever food can be secured. The Methodist missionary school in +this district established a soup line at noon for the feeding of hungry +babies who came to the school without their breakfast and had nothing at +home to eat at noon. Any sort of "learning" under such circumstances was +impossible. + +Three or four things must be supplied if the West Indian is to rise above +his present level. He needs living wages, he needs intelligent and +responsible leadership; he needs a better education, and he needs a +broader social basis and a wider horizon for his circle of life. + +There are a few lawyers and doctors and teachers of this race, and there +are a number of preachers, who consider themselves to be the +intellectuals, but there is no concert of purpose or plan for progress +among these people. Each man is intent upon exalting his own personal +prominence, or furthering the interests of the little group to which he +belongs. West Indian life at present is segregated into little cliques and +rings, represented by churches, lodges, dancing clubs, and other +organizations. So far no common cause has united any of these factors in +any program of progress. So intent are they upon individual emphasis that +any thought of the social whole seems almost impossible. Several efforts +have been made to unite in a common program of service the different +churches in a given community, but so far small success has attended these +worthy plans. + +Perhaps more than almost anything else the West Indian needs racial +self-respect. He is humble enough before his boss, and if well treated is +loyal and faithful; but for his own kind he has little appreciation. "I +will never work for my own color," boasted a proud cook one day. And one +of the most difficult problems of the missionary grows out of the fact +that the West Indians generally despise each other. To arouse leadership +and stimulate ambition among a people who look down upon themselves is a +big task. The individual man will have to get his mind on something +besides his effort to exalt himself above all his fellows before any great +progress can be made. The fundamental trouble with the West Indian is that +he looks up to those whom he considers his superiors and looks down upon +everybody else. It seems difficult for him to look across or on a level, +and recognize other people as being on the same plane with himself. + +The educational equipment of these people needs to be extended beyond the +present mere elements of reading, writing, and arithmetic. Some +intellectual window into the great world out beyond the Caribbean Sea must +be provided if there is to be deliverance from the superstition and +iron-bound customs that have held them fast for ten thousand years. + +What the West Indian needs is not more vigorous swaying of congregations +nor more loudly shouting enthusiasts, but a program of Christian living +that will enlarge the boundaries of life and push back the horizons of +interest. Debating societies, reading courses, study clubs, extension +lectures, night schools, vocational training, good moving picture +programs--all of these will do much to break the spell of the past and +introduce new ideas where they will take root and bear harvest. Here is a +fertile field for a Christian settlement, but the settlement worker should +be a resident of the community. One difficulty with the mission work now +conducted is that it is done from the top down, and from the outside in. +Any attempt toward higher education will need some endowment. It is a +tragedy that these people, out of their wretched poverty, are compelled to +pay tuition fees for the meager education that their children receive. +Some of the plans now being formulated for a broader work in these +communities deserve every encouragement and support. + +It is greatly to the credit of the West Indian that he nearly always +manages in some way to send his children to school, cost what it may. +Considering his opportunities, he does well. If the American people were +suddenly asked to pay one or two dollars a month for each child sent to +school, there would be educational revolution. + +It is the intention of the Canal Zone government to house its employees on +the Zone as soon as quarters can be provided, but this will require some +time. As all "silver" employees are charged a monthly rent for these +quarters, the project is a business matter for the Zone. Twelve families +are usually quartered in one two-story house, two rooms and a porch +section to the family, with two wash rooms and sanitary quarters for the +whole house. At five dollars per month rent for each family, the house +yields an income of eight hundred and forty dollars per year. In a +building of about the same size four white families would be quartered +rent free. + +[Illustration: THREE IN A ROW] + +[Illustration: MOTHER, HOME, AND--THE SIMPLE LIFE] + +There is abundant opportunity in the Republic of Panama for the +organization of agricultural colonization schemes. Good land is plentiful. +Families could be placed on the land without much housing expense, and if +food could be supplied them for a few months, self-support would soon be +established. Some philanthropist might render valuable service and open up +new opportunities for a large number of these people by placing them out +on the land where each family could have its own house and where better +conditions prevail. A colony of one thousand souls grouped about a central +church and school and store would afford new hope and better living to +these dwellers in the crowded tenements. + +What may be the future of the West Indian on the Isthmus is not yet +clearly established, and the Canal Zone authorities have heretofore +regarded the "silver" men as more of a temporary necessity than permanent +residents. As industrial conditions on the Zone become more stable, +however, it appears that there always will be needed a large labor force +with a minimum of about twenty thousand people; and unless some new factor +appears or is imported, the West Indian is going to supply this labor +demand for years to come. This being the case, the laborer is worthy of +his hire and should be paid a fair wage for what he does. And the +missionaries and social workers who are interested in the welfare of these +people need a coordinated and unified program of religious and educational +advance. So long as the present disjointed and unconnected methods are +followed, scattering and sometimes inharmonious results will appear. + +So long as there is work for a laborer in Panama, so long the Caribbean +man will be found here in such numbers as may be needed, and so long as he +is here he at least deserves good treatment. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +THE PANAMA CANAL + + +Probably most pilgrims to Panama think of the Canal as the outstanding +feature of the American tropics, and in one way such it is. The traveler +will probably want to see the Canal first, and he will find it well worthy +of preferential position. + +The story of construction days and engineering problems has been ably told +elsewhere and does not belong here. Every intelligent traveler will secure +some good account of the work and read it as something that every man +should know. It is the romance de luxe of engineering achievement. The +author of the Arabian Nights Tales would have dug the Canal by the sweep +of a wand, or the rubbing of an old lamp, but the American method is +vastly more interesting and is much more likely to remain in working +order. Aladdin's engineering feats had a way of failing to stay put, if +the wrong man got hold of the lamp, but the present Canal shows no signs +of disappearing overnight. + +Before war conditions put a wall around everything, seeing the Canal was +one of the pleasantest and easiest of touring tasks. All was in plain +view, or could readily be found by asking, and most of the men on duty +thought it a pleasure to answer questions. Of camera fiends and sketchers +and notebook makers there were aplenty. But the war stopped all that for a +time. Anybody could look at the Canal from almost any point along its +survey, but the locks and docks were strictly private affairs. There are +statistics in abundance to be had for the asking concerning the Big Ditch. +Experts take pleasure in supplying us with entertainment by compiling and +translating figures into interesting statements. For instance, enough +excavating was done on the Canal to dig a tunnel fourteen feet in diameter +through the center of the earth, eight thousand miles of boring. It takes +a little time to comprehend the meaning of a tunnel from Valparaiso, +Chile, to Peking, China, or straight through from the north pole to the +southern tip of the world. + +Enough concrete was used to build a wall four feet thick and twenty-five +feet high clear around the State of Delaware. Probably by walking the two +hundred and sixty-six miles represented by this wall, one might understand +the amount of concrete involved in the Canal construction. + +The enormous size of the locks can only be understood by walking their +length through the underground tunnels and passageways in which is located +the marvelous machinery of their operation. To stand on the floor of a dry +lock and look up at a lock gate eighty feet high, seven feet thick and +sixty-five feet wide is an impressive experience, but to see a pair of +such gates swing open and shut at the touch of the finger is something to +be remembered. The emergency dams look like a steel girder bridge, which, +indeed, they are, and provide against accidents by as ingenious a piece of +mechanism as the entire system affords. Enormous iron chains with +hydraulic springs are stretched across the entrance to the locks to stop +any reckless ship which might otherwise strike the gates. The Gatun Dam +alone may be classed as one of the world's greatest achievements. + +The builders of the Canal may be pardoned for taking pride in the fact +that the entire construction cost, down to the present day--three years +after the opening of the Canal--is still within the original estimate of +$375,000,000, which figure included the $40,000,000 paid to the French for +the work of the earlier construction. This means that the cost of the +Canal was a little less than four dollars apiece for every inhabitant of +the United States. The national prestige alone gained by the successful +completion of the work has repaid this four-dollar investment many times +over. Before the European war $400,000,000 seemed like a good deal of +money. To-day we think of it as a very small sum. + +It is easy to find numerous compilations of figures which astonish and +perplex us, even though they do help us to understand the magnitude of the +work. And nothing is more disappointing than to try to understand the +Canal by looking at it from any point along the bank. You can't see the +Canal for the water! It is no different from a great Western irrigating +ditch and looks like any quiet river. There are no marks of effort or +strain anywhere, and when one looks about on the verdant and peaceful +landscape he half believes that the tales of the stirring times back in +construction days must have been dreams. + +[Illustration: CONSTRUCTION DAYS IN CULEBRA-GAILARD CUT] + +Culebra Cut looks like the Hudson palisades, and Gatun Lake is like any +other beautiful inland sea in a rolling country. The famous Gatun Dam is +merely a dyke at the end of the lake and the marvelous spillway is only a +picturesque waterfall in the middle of a dam. As for the locks, they are +big concrete chambers looking very much like a paved street on top and +revealing nothing of the complicated mechanism below; and the germ-proof +towns are like any other spotlessly clean villages with screened houses, +and show nothing to cause us astonishment. + +Any superficial view of the Canal is disappointing. It is like trying to +understand a deep mine by looking at the mouth of the shaft. The channel +is full of water, the machinery is out of sight, the great achievements of +sanitation have been largely removals of materials, microbes, and +conditions that have left no trace behind to tell their tale. In one way +it is a negative result. + +The idea of the Canal across the Isthmus is nearly as old as the discovery +of the Isthmus by white men, but it remained for the intrepid builder of +the Suez Canal to really undertake in earnest the project of a waterway +between the two oceans. DeLesseps was both engineer and promoter and never +really understood the size of his project. He had succeeded at Suez, but +that was a farmer's ditch beside the Culebra Cut and the Gatun Dam, and +the famous engineer was a very old man when he began on the Panama +project. The high prestige of his name brought him money on a stock +investment basis, and when unprincipled schemers got control of the +company the crash and scandal were immense. DeLesseps himself became +insane as the result of the worry and disgrace and died in a hospital. + +The French attempt began on January 1, 1880, with a great deal of oratory +and champagne, also the official blessing of the Bishop of Panama, which +seems to have been something of a Jonah on the enterprise. + +In striking contrast was the beginning of the American work when a few men +climbed out of a boat into water waist-deep and began cutting down jungle +brush. + +The actual construction and excavation work begun on the Isthmus by the +French was of a very high order, and much of it was used by the Americans. +The two causes which defeated the French were reckless financing at home +and tropical diseases on the Isthmus. So bad did the disease conditions +become that in the fall months of 1884 fifty-five thousand people died, +and in the single month of September, 1885, the total rate reached the +high-water mark of one hundred and seventy-seven per thousand of +population. The total of lives lost on the enterprise will never be known, +but is far greater than that of many wars which have received a +conspicuous notice on the historical page. The collapse of the DeLesseps +undertaking was followed by the organization of the New Canal Company, +upon which followed a chapter of bargainings and treaties and negotiations +and bickerings with the object of selling out the rights and holdings of +the company to the highest bidder. In all of these the Panama Railroad +figured very largely, and the Republic of Colombia kept a watchful eye on +the main chance for herself. + +The story of President Roosevelt's large part in the American undertaking +of the independence of Panama and the organization of the American effort +is one of the romances of American history. On November 18, 1903, +Washington recognized the new Republic of Panama, and later paid +$10,000,000 for the Canal Zone and entered into a treaty guaranteeing the +peace and perpetuity of the Isthmian Republic. Thus ended a half-century +of riot and revolution and rebellion which was stated to have included +fifty-three revolutions in fifty-seven years. Relations between the early +officials on the Canal Zone and the rulers of Panama were not ideal; some +of the Americans seemed to have had a real genius for offending the finer +sensibilities of the natives. + +The beginning of the American attempt is not a chapter of which anybody is +very proud. The effort to dig the Canal from Washington under a mass of +red tape which tied the hands of the men on the Isthmus proved an +impossible undertaking. The President succeeded in effecting a +reorganization which helped some, but not until all red tape was cut and +Army engineers were put in charge, was anything like real efficiency +obtained. Three great engineers were connected with the work--Wallace, +Stevens, and Goethals--and to each of these belongs credit for the very +high order of work done. While the man who finished the job bears the +outstanding name in connection with the Canal, without exception the +engineers who worked under the first two men speak in the highest terms of +the work that they accomplished. + +No snapshot resume of the building days, nor tourist instantaneous +exposure of visits can reveal, nor appreciate, the big problems that +confronted the engineers. It all looks easy enough now, but it was very +different then. + +Good health on the Canal Zone seems a very simple matter now, and such it +is; but when the doctors and sanitary engineers began work it was an +exceedingly serious situation that they undertook to cure, and without +their work there could be no Canal to-day. The complete elimination of the +last case of yellow fever has made entirely harmless the mosquito carriers +where they occasionally appear on the Isthmus. The best test of the work +of the Sanitary Department is the fact that the Zone and terminal cities +have remained clean and that there is no indication of relapse. Before +work could begin, a whole system of transportation had to be organized, a +steamer line put into operation, and an immense purchasing department +gotten into working order. Before men could be brought to the Isthmus to +do the work some provision had to be made for housing and feeding, and the +question of materials, supplies, food, fuel, recreation, and education was +no small matter. + +To dig the Canal required not only engineers and officials, but an army of +common laborers, and the labor question was not easy. The Panamanian might +have dug the Canal, but he did not do it; he did not want to do it, and +the probability is that he never could have done it. Employers on the Zone +refused to hire Panamanians for Canal work. + +Chinese coolies might have been imported from Canton or Amoy, but Panama +is a long way from southern China and still further from India, and no +intelligent man ever seriously proposed importing Hindus. If enough +Panamanian Indians could have been found, they might have done the work, +but the native Indian is a very uncertain and fragmentary factor of life +on the Isthmus. + +At this juncture the West Indian filled the breach and supplied the labor +for the job. Up to forty-five thousand of them were employed at one time, +and with the ebb and flow of the human tide between the Isthmus and the +Caribbean Islands several times that number came to the Isthmus. Somebody +else _might_ have supplied the labor, but the fact is West Indian _did_ do +the work, and at least deserves proper recognition therefor. + +The problems of suitable construction machinery were in a way simple. +Given a definite task, it remained to devise mechanical means to meet the +conditions. In practice, however, the case was not so simple as this +sounds, and some very difficult knots were untangled before the work was +well under way. Some of the old French machinery was used clear through +the construction period, but the jungle was sown with scrap iron of the +old French equipment that has only recently been removed. + +The electrical and mechanical equipment for the operation of the locks is +a marvel of adaptation and invention and nothing short of a technical +description can do the subject justice. To see the locks in operation is +to wonder at the mechanical contrivances which seem almost intelligent, +and some of the design work is the result of real genius. + +Of engineering problems, proper, it is better to let the engineer speak +with intelligence, but any layman can stand on Gold Hill and by vigorous +use of the imagination see something of the tremendous work that has been +done since the first shovelful of earth was turned on that New Year's Day +in 1880. Whether the French engineers anticipated landslides at Culebra is +not clear, but the American engineers knew from the start that the porous +soil would cave in more or less at that point. What it actually did do +surpassed the expectations of those who surveyed the work. When the banks +began to cave north of Gold Hill the surrounding country got the idea and +followed suit so fast that it looked as though the ten-mile strip would +all be needed. + +[Illustration: GATUN SPILLWAY, KEY TO THE CANAL] + +I spent a day in the big cut in January, 1917, and noted the rapid crumble +of the historic bank at this troubled point. The following night the +channel filled up for a length of eight hundred feet and shipping was +suspended. Then the dredgers went at it hammer and tongs, and in three +days and nights they had cleared a channel through that enormous mass of +material and on the fourth day ships were again passing in safety. It was +a fine illustration of the way dirt was made to fly in the old days. + +Some otherwise intelligent people have utterly failed to comprehend the +size of the task involved in the mere digging of the Canal. One high +official advocated the cure of slides by digging back a mile on each side +of the bank. Verily, he knew not what he said, and a member of Congress on +visiting the Canal reported that he was still in favor of a sea-level +route. Competent engineers assured him that to construct a sea-level canal +from ocean to ocean would require at least fifty years of continuous +labor. The wisdom of Theodore Roosevelt's ideas has been forever +vindicated by experience. Some practical man has said that no man can know +how great is the task of making the earth until he tries to move a little +of it. The congressman needed a little pick-and-shovel experience. + +Administrative problems are not especially acute on the Zone, but the +completed task gives room for a world of appreciation of the general +efficiency with which the whole work was carried out, and the +smooth-running machinery of the executive to-day attests the thoroughness +with which the departmental system was organized and initiated by the men +whose names will always be associated with the work. The task of operating +the Canal to-day would not be very great, nor would it require a very +large army of employees, but without any preconceived plan various related +industries to the number of six or seven have grown up about the Canal +administration and operation, and the Canal Zone government to-day is +doing a number of things never contemplated in the original plans. The +routing of ships is directly connected with the coal supply, and a great +coaling plant stands at Cristobal. A large cold storage plant makes +possible the supplying of refrigerated goods to shipping countries. While +the trans-shipping business at Colon is yet in its infancy, the docks +there are already a very considerable factor in Canal activities. +Sanitation and public health, of course, require a trained force of +specialists. The Canal employees must eat, and the commissary hotel and +restaurant are a very important branch of the service. The quartermaster +looks after the housing problem, and where there are five thousand +Americans, most of them living with families, the educational problem +necessitates a department by itself. The Balboa Docks employ hundreds of +men at high wages. + +In connection with the food problem come the large farming operations +conducted on the Canal Zone. An army of laborers is employed, and the +proceeds of the plantations and poultry yards is sold through the +commissary's stores. + +From the beginning much attention has been paid to the social life and +recreation needs of these exiles from home. A chain of government +clubhouses runs across the Isthmus, one in each town, where reading rooms, +games, gymnasiums, refreshment counters, discussion clubs, concerts, +dances, cigar stores, and motion-picture programs are provided for young +and old. During the dry season baseball is widely indulged in and plays an +important part in the social and recreational life of the Zone. + +[Illustration: CRISTOBAL STREETS] + +Next to the "spotless town" features of the Zone the visitor is impressed +by the smooth-running system through which everything is done. There may +be officials who are grouchy and will not take time to answer questions, +but I have never met one. The routine of operation and maintenance has +succeeded the drive of construction days when Governor Goethals +established the famous open house on Sunday morning and received anybody +who had anything to say to him. The last black laborer could see the +governor if he wished, and many of them did so. The public-be-hanged +attitude of occasional small executives in the States is delightfully +absent. The machinery of administration outwardly works as smoothly as do +the great gates of the locks. On the inner circle there are, of course, +problems and sometimes personalities, but they rarely escape from the +closets where ghosts are supposed to remain. + +[Illustration: FAT CATTLE OF COCLE] + +When the visitor begins to look about and beyond the Canal he becomes +aware of the conquered wilderness. Where once was dense and impassable +jungle now sweep smooth and verdant hills. One-time fever swamps are now +drained meadows, and the never-failing drip from the sanitary oil barrel +induces a very high mortality among the mosquitoes. Broad acres of rich +jungle lands have been cleared and are now model farms. Over the +grassgrown hills wander thousands of fat cattle, increasing in number +every year. The jungle of the Canal Zone is a very tame and conquered +jungle. The real article lies beyond the line where there is plenty. + +It was once thought that the best thing to do with the jungle was to let +it run wild after its kind, as a barrier to invasion. A little +experimenting proved that an army could cut its way through the jungle so +fast that the brush was nothing more than a screen for the advance of the +enemy. + +If the visitor stays long enough and gets close enough, he will learn of +things which might have been done differently on a second trial, but +regulation and adjustment have pretty well cleared up the points in +question, and, taking it all through, the Canal is as satisfactory and +complete a job as the world has ever seen. + +The Americans who live on the Zone are an interesting social experiment +without knowing it. They form one of the unique communities of the world. +Somebody has said that the Zone situation is described by the word +"suburban," but that does not express it. Every man lives in a +government-furnished house, rent free. Free also is his electric light and +a ration of fuel for cooking. Ice is so cheap that it is practically free. +He buys everything that he eats and wears in the commissary's stores, +where goods are sold to him at cost. So they are--at what they cost _him_. +Prices now do not differ materially from retail figures in the States on +the same goods. If housekeeping tires, there are the commissary +restaurants, clean and wholesome, always available for good meals at +reasonable prices. Good schools are furnished free, of course, for the +children. There is a free dispensary where all minor ailments are treated +and medicine furnished free. The government hospitals are among the best +in the world, and employees' rates are less than the cost of living at +home. The Zone man is under Civil Service rules, receives a generous +vacation, with a steamer rate to New York so low that it covers little +more than his meals en route. The scale of his wages is based on an +increase of twenty per cent over the pay for the same class of service in +the United States. Cheap household service abounds and is about as +satisfactory as household service is anywhere. If he is lonesome, the +government clubhouse, with its community life, good recreation, and +well-stocked reading room, is always open to him practically without cost; +and if he gets tired of the Zone, there is always Panama and the interior +country with its never-failing places of interest and exploration. + +Here are all the advantages of the socialized state and no workingmen or +clerks in all the world are so well paid, or taken care of, as these +Americans on the Zone. It is a fine, efficient piece of provision for the +men who do the work. Therefore the Zone dweller should be a satisfied and +happy man, dreading nothing but the day when he must return to the States. + +[Illustration: ENCHANTED ISLANDS IN GATUN LAKE] + +In practice, however, the American on the Canal Zone is not so contented +as the external features of his lot would lead one to suppose. There is an +undercurrent of petty complaint, directed at everything in general, and +indicative of a state of mind as much as of actual evils existent. These +complaints are the results of too much community life without room for +individual ownership or initiative. The followers of Bellamy should come +to the Zone and stay long enough to get a few pointers. + +The trouble is that there is necessarily much of uniformity of housing, +commissary, social, and living conditions. The American people are, after +all, strong individualists, and every man likes to have something that is +distinctively his own. + +When people work all day together, play ball together till meal time, all +eat the same things at the same price from the same store, on exactly +similar tables, with identical dishes; when they go to the movies together +and walk home down the same street together and sleep in houses and beds +all alike, they sometimes develop cases of nerves. + +On the testimony of one of the efficient medical men of the Zone a lot of +nervousness disappeared when war work absorbed the attention and energies +of the patriotic Americans, who enthusiastically devoted their spare time +to various forms of win-the-war industry. + +The problem of raising children on the Zone is admittedly beset with +difficulties. Health conditions are good enough, but many people are prone +to regard life on the Zone as a general vacation from the standards and +disciplines of the homeland, and children are often allowed to do very +much as they please. Many families employ a servant, and there is no +economic need for children doing any useful act of work. An unusual degree +of irresponsibility results. "It will be time enough to correct them when +we get back to the States," is a common remark. + +Of course there are many families where the highest ideals are earnestly +maintained, and no more faithful fathers and mothers may be found anywhere +than here in this colony of voluntary exiles. But American life on the +Canal Zone is at present apt to be regarded more as a vacation experience +than as a serious attempt to face the whole problem of living. + +Moral and religious safeguards are not absent. The early plan of providing +government-paid chaplains ended with construction days, and under the +leadership of a group of farsighted laymen the Union Church of the Canal +Zone was organized in February, 1914. All Protestant denominations except +two now cooperate with this piece of ecclesiastical statesmanship. A +centralized organization maintains work in all the civilian "gold" towns +along the Canal, employing four pastors, who must be ordained men of +evangelical churches. This Union Church does not regard itself as a +denomination but as a federation for Christian service. No attempt is made +to establish a doctrinal position, and members are not asked to sever +their relations with their home churches. The excellent results attained +under this management speak volumes for the wisdom of the plan and the +earnestness and ability of the men who have fostered the enterprise from +the start. The Union Church has devoted its benevolent moneys to opening a +mission station at David in Western Panama, in cooperation with the Panama +Mission of the Methodist Episcopal Church. + +Morally, the Canal Zone is as clean as any place on earth. The improvement +of moral conditions in Colon and Panama has done much to make the lives of +Americans wholesome and to decrease the dangers to childhood that have +existed in the past. There will always be Americans on the Canal Zone, and +a few of them will exercise the great American prerogative of speaking +their minds, but most of them will be better off here than at any other +time in their lives. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +PROWLING INTO THE FUTURE + + +Many prophets have taken in hand to tell us what the Panama Canal is to +bring forth in its commercial, social, political, geographical, and +educational results for the world. Probably no world-event has ever had so +much advance advertising as this much written-up achievement. Great as is +the Canal, it came near being outshone in brilliancy by the publicity +material sent out by journalists who found the subject to be profitable +copy. + +In the main, the prophets were right. The world war postponed the arrival +of some of the promised results, but it also enlarged the importance of +the Canal and assured more extensive and far-reaching effects than could +have been prophesied before the war began. It is now certain that we are +to have a new and more closely united America than was formerly possible, +and that the drawing together of the two Americas has been greatly +accelerated by the world vindication of democracy. In this closer +brotherhood of all Americans the Canal will play a large and important +part. + +Just how far the stream of influences will flow cannot be told, but it is +within the moderate possibilities to say that every country in the world +will be affected by the changes due to the new waterway. The French +originators of the first project saw an opportunity for commercial +investment and hoped to make good dividends from the venture. They did not +much concern themselves with by-products. The Americans who planned and +pushed and persevered until the work was again begun were thinking of +commercial and naval results, evident enough, but they could not have +foreseen the far consequences to follow, nor could they have known that on +the Canal Zone five or six related industries were to spring up under +management of the Canal Commission. It is now about as difficult to +predict the world-wide effects of the Canal factor as it would have been +in 1903 to foresee the related industries of the present situation. + +Shortening of trade routes is the first and obvious consideration. +Everything else grows out of the elimination of distances by the Canal +cut-off. It requires no prophetic gift to take the figures from any good +map and ascertain that from New York to San Francisco via Magellan is +13,135 miles, whereas via Panama it is 5,262--a saving of 7,873 miles, or +a month of steady steaming. Between New York and Honolulu there is a +saving of 6,610 miles; and Yokohama is 2,768 miles nearer New York via +Panama than by the Suez route. The list of distances saved may be +indefinitely extended. + +[Illustration: PANAMA PUBLIC WATER WORKS, INTERIOR COUNTRY] + +If there were no results other than the saving of a week or a month of +steamer time, the Canal would be cheap at several times its price. But +these changes in steamer schedules and prices introduce an entirely new +set of reactions into the commercial and social world, and this is where +the interesting problems arise. Left to herself, nature tends to establish +a balance of flora or fauna in any locality. Introduce a new plant or +animal or microbe and all sorts of readjustments begin at once, and before +a new balance is established almost anything may happen. Commerce finds +its level in much the same way and by the same law. Introduce a radical +disturbance, like the Panama short-cut, and everything begins to happen. +Add the direct and indirect results of the war with its weakening of +German influence and strengthening of inter-American interests, and we may +have practically a new world before a new balance is established. + +Commercial interests naturally forge to the front in any discussion of +canal results. So ably have these matters been discussed by experts that +any repetition of figures and industries here would be beyond the scope of +this work. + +It must be understood that the world war rendered obsolete our former +ideas regarding trade between the United States and Spanish-America. +Whether the extensive German political-commercial machine that covered all +Latin-America can regain its prestige in fifty years to come remains to be +seen, but it is certain that for a generation following the defeat of +Germany by the free nations of the world North America will have a +magnificent opportunity to enter South American trade on very advantageous +terms. And the great bulk of the west-coast trade will pass through the +Canal on its way to Gulf and Atlantic ports, as well as to Europe. + +The completion of the Panama Canal may be set down as the date of the +discovery of Latin-America by the people of the United States. Previous to +that date the North Americans were aware enough of the Monroe Doctrine, +but almost unaware of the lives and interests of the nations living south +of the Rio Grande River. With the opening of the Canal the North Americans +began thinking south, and so far as the process has gone it has been very +informing. Once the war is out of the way, the process will be greatly +accelerated. With uninterrupted commercial conditions, five years of the +expanded life due to the Canal will be about equal to sending the whole +people back to school for a year. The cultural and geographical values of +this new zone of thinking have hardly been felt as yet, but now that the +attention of the world is released from the battlefields of Europe and the +enormous social and financial problems arising from the expense of making +the world decent once for all, the tide of interest is again turning +southward along the shores of our own great oceans to the mighty events +that await us there. + +Spanish-America has twelve republics and eight thousand miles of coast +line on the Pacific ocean. The United States has a Pacific Coast of about +fifteen hundred miles. The eight thousand miles marks the western +boundaries of lands enormously rich in things that the world needs, but +exceedingly poor in finished products or adequate growth. Probably no +country on earth shows a wider margin to-day between present raw resources +and possible high developments than these same twelve Spanish-speaking +countries. The only analogy that bears on the case is that of the rapid +and extensive advancement of the Pacific States after the completion of +the transcontinental railroads. There is reason to believe that a similar +record of progress awaits the west coast of South America. + +The combined foreign trade of the west-coast republics before the war +reached the very respectable total of nearly one billion of gold dollars +in a single year. There are commercial prophets who believe that within +ten years from the completion of demobilization this volume of trade may +be doubled. This means new markets, new industries, new development of +mines, markets, manufactures, and agriculture, new colonization projects +and a score of other unpredictable results. No less an authority than Mr. +John L. Barrett says, "I believe that the Panama Canal will initiate in +all South American countries a genuine movement which will have a most +important bearing on the commerce and civilization of the world." + +An immense amount of iron lies buried in the mountains of the west coast. +Not much has ever been done about it. But enormous quantities of ore have +been destroyed by the processes of war, and South American iron may come +to high values sooner than its owners have supposed. + +It is only recently that consideration has been given to the idea of +establishing in connection with the Canal a great commercial +trans-shipping point. Colon is yet a little town, mostly West Indian +to-day, but already the Cristobal docks are piled high with South American +products awaiting reshipment. The proposed establishment of a free port at +Colon may yet result in a western Hongkong where the commerce of the seven +seas comes together to be distributed to the five continents. Whatever +might have been the results had there been no war, it is now sure that +everything that happens in South America has henceforth a very definite +significance for the United States. Whether we like it or not, we are out +of our exclusive dooryard and will have to take our place on the great +national street named America and play the game with our neighbors. + +For decades past Central America has been an unknown land to the United +States. We have contentedly supposed that the only crop was that of +revolutions and the only resources a few jungle fruits. But at last we are +discovering Central America, and some of us are astonished to there find +vast areas, fertile soils, varied and valuable products, intelligent +peoples, a volume of commerce and climate fit for Eden. We knew little and +cared less about Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and +Panama; and since the bulk of trade of these lands was with Europe, they +paid little attention to us. Why should they do otherwise? + +The presence of the United States on the Isthmus of Panama introduces a +new factor into the American tropics. It looks very small and +insignificant, that little ten-mile strip with the influence in Panamanian +affairs, but how far the North American influence is going to reach out +beyond the Zone limits cannot be known. Everybody is watching the results +for revolution-proof, permanently peaceful Panama, and there are other +countries not far away where there are people who are praying for +something like it, or just-as-good, for themselves. Doubtless their +prayers will not be answered directly but the influence of this leaven may +work out into a wide circle and instigate movements that we have not +counted upon. + +[Illustration: A JUNGLE CATHEDRAL] + +But the largest factor in the new American situation grows out of the new +world-emphasis on the Golden Rule. At last the world understands as never +before how finally determinative is the moral and spiritual factor in all +human progress. We may never know just how much the world had paid to +clear away the rubbish of autocracy and found the new age on the principle +of a square deal for great and small; but the deed is done, and henceforth +the one compelling sanction in all life must be the essential principle +for which the Allies have spent their treasure and spilled their blood. +The new internationalism will underlie all further development of +relations between the two Americas, which opens a new world of social +discovery and growth as fascinating as that which Columbus found in the +physical surface of the globe. + +The greater results of the closer fellowship of North and South America +will be registered in the realms of mind and spirit. Trade balances and +stock dividends there will be, but back of and beyond these will rise the +new American spirit, uniting the finest courtesy and artistic temperament +of the Latin with the practical initiative and efficient vigor of the +blend of blood in the United States. There is no gulf, great or small, +fixed between the two races. Each has something that the other needs, and +close fellowship will result in new race sympathy and mutual advantage. + +To ignore this basis of development is to forget that cold commercialism +will in time chill the fervor of friendships and alienate the growing +sympathy of nations. If we are to have no interest in our neighbors other +than the profits we may make from their trade, we will soon cease to be +friends and become bitter rivals at the big game of getting all we can. + +It takes two to play the game of reciprocal commercial success. If we +succeed on the great international chess board, it will be not by shrewd +defeat of our friends but by the coming to maturity of a high sense of +honor and fair play on both sides. It is not one of us against the other, +but both of us together against the normal difficulties of growth and +production. + +One of the native leaders of Latin-American life has explained that South +America was unfortunate in the character of the founders of her national +institutions. Adventurers, explorers for gain, greedy conquistadores made +the beginnings here, and the moral foundations were laid by religious +leaders who traveled with pirates and plunderers and officially blessed +their every act of crime. And from the beginning until now the type of +religion that has prevailed in Latin-America has not assisted in the +building up of free institutions, nor has it produced a high morality +among the people. + +The South American struggle for self-government and free ideals has been a +long, bloody, and heroic grapple with the reactionary and despotic forces +brought over from mediaeval Europe. Men like San Martin and Bolivar deserve +high honor for their work in breaking the bondage that held all life +helpless. One by one the colonies threw off their political yokes and +became republics, every one of them, in theory, modeled after the United +States. The passion of the South American patriot has been home-rule, but, +unfortunately, home-rule has not always meant self-government. That is +quite a different matter. The overthrow of European despotisms was +followed by innumerable internal revolutions. Panama had no monopoly on +internal dissensions, and makes no claim that her fifty-three revolutions +in fifty-seven years is the high-water mark of insurrections for South or +Central America. + +In short, the mere overthrow of a despotic government does not assure +stable political institutions nor efficient administration of public +affairs. Good government by popular sovereignty is something far more +fundamental than a matter of printed constitutions or shouting "Viva +independencia!" in the plazas. Without moral responsibility and free +consciences there can never be a successful democracy on earth. + +Free institutions and free consciences are winning out in South America, +but it is in spite of the established church and not because of it. It is +not politically a question of religion that we are discussing; it is a +matter of organized, crafty, and unscrupulous opposition to every movement +that makes for the development of democracy in South America. And since +the establishment of a better understanding and closer fellowship between +the two continents depends upon this very basis of free and morally +responsible social and political leaders, the question is most vital. +Everywhere there are a few intelligent, earnest men working away patiently +and steadily at the problem of making South America democratic by making +her people free to adopt with intelligence democratic institutions. One by +one the nations have declared for freedom of worship and conscience, and, +last of all, Peru, robbed and despoiled Peru of the conquest, +priest-ridden and fanatical Peru, threw off the galling yoke of spiritual +bondage and divorced church and state. It seems simple enough to read +about it here, but at every step of the way the old church left unturned +no stone of bigotry and intrigue and prejudice that could oppose the +coming of the modern age to Peru. + +The supreme tragedy of South American life has been that the light that +has been in her has been darkness. The spiritual leaders of the people +have themselves opposed all progress toward the light. Until a spiritual +leadership arises that will at least support aggressive and progressive +movements toward freedom and democracy and moral uplift, slow progress +will be made. And this matter concerns the whole American world. These are +now our next-door neighbors, and their children will yet be playing in our +yard. + +The surprising thing is that so much has already been accomplished with a +millstone tied about the neck of all progressive movements. No finer +tribute could be paid to the high ideals and large possibilities of South +American character than a recital of the results accomplished by her +intellectual and moral leaders in the face of enormous handicaps. + +The thinking minds of these southern republics are almost without a +religion to-day. Long since have they ceased to give even passive assent +to the demands of the commercial hierarchy that claims spiritual monopoly +over the souls of man. Technical outward conformity to the requirements of +the church may be a political advantage or a domestic convenience, but as +a principle of life and foundation for thought the intellectuals are +frankly agnostic. Man after man, when once confidence is gained, will +state that they do not believe in the claims of the church, and usually +have ceased to believe in anything at all--and these are the leaders of +the intellectual life of the nations with which we are to deal. And what +are they to do? No adequate substitute do they know, and until an open +Bible and a living Christ take the place of the mummery and the crucifix +we cannot denounce their course. Their intellectual nonconformity is to +their credit. + +The final problem is that of developing people fit to live with, not +mental and moral slaves under the dominance of superstition and +intolerance. Back of the cry for wider and richer trade routes is the need +of responsible men with whom we may transact business. More than shorter +shipping line, we need better shippers, north and south. Underneath vast +projects of material advancement lie all the social and industrial +problems of labor and wages and exchange and credits and fidelity to +contracts and personal honor. And above all this is the need of honesty +and efficiency and a personal faith in a living God who knows and cares +and takes account of what we do, of what we are, and is not to be bought +off by a check or an incantation. + +[Illustration: SHOE-BILLS ARE SMALL] + +What the bigger American world needs is bigger and better Americans, Latin +and Saxon. If the influences released by the Panama Canal help to produce +these citizens of the larger horizon, one of the greatest services +possible will be rendered to humanity. But the larger horizon is +conditioned upon a larger hope that flows from the mountain of the more +abundant life. And the Americans of the northland need the broader basis +and vision and character as much as their southern neighbors. + +What really has the Panama Canal to do with all this? Much every way, but +chiefly as a key for the unlocking of the long-closed doors and the +releasing of long-latent forces of international relations in trade and in +social and spiritual life. Should a great working example of educational +and social and spiritual life be established at Panama by some concerted +action of united Protestantism, the influence of the principles there +promulgated by progressive and devout men would extend over a very wide +range of Latin life. The procession that now passes through Panama will be +doubled and trebled in the coming decades, and what is planted here will +spread everywhere. "I saw it so done in Panama," may become the precedent +for almost anything new, whether good or bad. + +The influence of such institutions in the City of Panama will be more +far-reaching than if located on the Canal Zone. The Zone is wholly North +American; Panama is thoroughly Latin. The institutions of the Zone are +those of the United States and are looked on somewhat askance by Latin +visitors. It is all very great and imposing, but it is so radically +different in spirit and method, that points of close contact are hard to +establish. Panama is a different matter. Whatever is done there by +Spanish-speaking people will be visited and viewed with sympathetic +interest and appreciation. + +The heart of living faith that is to impress its throb on this blood +stream of Latin life must not be an imported made-in-the-States +institution, or it will be but an ineffectual flutter. Likewise it must be +something more comprehensive than the traditional schedule of occasional +gatherings of the faithful, important as these will be. To do this work +there needs be an interpretation of the Christian message that will relate +itself to a very wide circle of human life and interests. Through native +leadership and examples must be spoken a message that will compel +attention and challenge the minds as well as the hearts of men. A living +interpretation of a spiritual passion, a social service program with a +heart in it, an educational work that will not only teach the curriculum +but develop moral character, and intellectual propaganda of good +literature, a physical gospel of health and exercise, a recreational life +clean and wholesome, a personal moral standard of the New Testament +grade--these are what are needed in Panama and, broadly speaking, +everywhere else in Latin-America. Once established here they will be felt +over a wide reach of the southern world. + +There is a lot of cheap and easy optimism that maintains that all will yet +be well in some indefinite way. Some hopeful tourists have visited Panama +and taken the trip about South America, apparently seeing nothing but the +rainbow of promise everywhere. And these happy pilgrims have written +books, assuring us with a maximum of glittering generalities that right is +everywhere driving out wrong and that all will soon be well. Other writers +assume this attitude consciously, out of regard for the interests that pay +their expenses on the trip. Some people write in glowing terms from +motives of consideration for the feelings of their South American friends. +Would that we might tell only the bright sight of the story! It would be +far more pleasant. + +But, after all, the facts are the irreducible minimum upon which to build +all successful programs of reconstruction. Only when we reach the inner +and deeper springs of life and character can we hope to open fountains of +living waters for the desert of the human heart in bondage. Really to know +Latin-America is to believe in its high and fine possibilities. What +Latin-America needs is a fair chance. + +The end of the last great despotism of earth has left democracy a +triumphant political principle in human government. Henceforth no nation +may hope to keep step with the advance of mankind unless its political +procedures are essentially democratic. And while South America has long +had the form of democracy, it now becomes essential that her republics +develop the working reality of effective self-government. To do this two +things are indispensable. The successful democracy must be intelligent and +must find a moral foundation in the free consciences and minds of +self-disciplined citizens. Spiritual despotisms and religious +superstitions never did and never will eventuate in a capacity for +democracy. Only men who are intelligently free can exercise the functions +of free governments. + +The only working basis of democracy, in short, is that system of religious +ideals which has uniformly supported popular education, championed the +rights of the oppressed, advocated self-government, welcomed +investigation, and maintained freedom of conscience as of higher value +than iron-bound uniformity to prescribed standards. It requires but a +cursory glance at the record of history to know that no working democracy +has ever survived the opposition of an ecclesiastical hierarchy that has +remained the bitter foe of progress for a thousand years. + +There is more hope for Panama in the little Protestant chapel down by the +Malecon and the efficient and modern school maintained there by the force +of missionaries with their progressive ideals than in all the pageantry +and glitter of a system of repression and despotism that the world is +rapidly outgrowing. The religious Hun will take his place with the deposed +political despot who proposed to destroy the liberties of mankind. The +most urgent need of the mission work in Panama just now is that of trained +and efficient Latin leadership. No people can be effectively lifted from +without. + +A century ago nearly the whole of the southern world was in the throes of +political readjustment. Self-government and political freedom were the +watchwords and everywhere strong men arose and devoted their lives to the +task of breaking from the necks of the people the political yokes under +which they had staggered for two and one half centuries. + +To-day in Latin-America the second great struggle for freedom is under +way. Bound minds and consciences, superstitions and moral +despotisms--these are the stumbling-stones across the pathway of progress. +All over Latin-America men are rising and enlisting their hearts and minds +in the struggle for free consciences and independent judgment in the +things of the Spirit. Nearly all these countries achieved political +independence within a few years. When the climax came it was comparatively +sudden, and it may be that the breaking of the chains of moral and +spiritual despotisms will likewise be a shorter struggle than now seems +possible. Once again the clock is striking, and who knows but the end of +political despotism in all the earth may mark the rapid approach of +spiritual democracy and highest liberty in all America! + +Heroic has been the long struggle in Latin-America for self-government. +Splendid is the fight being made to-day for larger liberty. If +Pan-Americanism means anything at all, it means a social foundation in +honor and intelligence and brotherhood. It is time to address ourselves to +the great unfinished task begun by those intrepid pioneers. The Canal is +finished and the task of construction is done, but the end of construction +is the beginning of empire-building for the larger task yet incomplete. + + + + +Transcriber's Note: All apparent printer's errors retained. Formatting +transcribed as close as possible to original book. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Prowling about Panama, by George A. 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