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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50506 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50506)
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-Project Gutenberg's Down the Orinoco in a Canoe, by S. Pérez Triana
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Down the Orinoco in a Canoe
-
-Author: S. Pérez Triana
-
-Release Date: November 20, 2015 [EBook #50506]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DOWN THE ORINOCO IN A CANOE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: MAP SHOWING THE ORINOCO AND ITS TRIBUTARIES
- High-resolution Map]
-
-
-
-
- Down the Orinoco
- in a Canoe
-
-
- By
- S. Pérez Triana
-
- With an Introduction by
- R. B. Cunninghame Graham
-
- ‘Que ejcura que ejtá la Noche!
- La Noche! que ejcura ejtá!
- Asi de ejcura ej la ausencia ...
- Bogá, Negrito, bogá,
- Bogá!’
- Candelario Obeso
-
-
- New York
- Thomas Y. Crowell & Co.
- Publishers
- 1902
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-‘Climas pasé, mudé constelaciones, golfos inavegables,
-navegando.’—Ercilla: _La Araucana_.
-
-To read a book to which a friend has asked you to write a preface is an
-unusual—nay, even a pedantic—thing to do. It is customary for a
-preface-monger to look contemptuously at the unopened bundle of his
-friend’s proofs, and then to sit down and overflow you his opinions upon
-things created, and those which the creator has left in chaos. I plead
-guilty at once to eccentricity, which is worse than the sin of
-witchcraft, for witchcraft at one time may have exposed one to the
-chance of the stake; but eccentricity at all times has placed one
-outside the pale of all right-thinking men. To wear a different hat,
-waistcoat, or collar, from those affected by the Apollos who perambulate
-our streets, to cut your hair too short, to wear it by the twentieth
-fraction of an inch too long, is _scandalum magnatum_, and not to be
-endured. So in confessing that I have read ‘Down the Orinoco in a
-Canoe,’ not only in the original Spanish in which it first appeared, but
-in its English dress, is to condemn myself out of my own mouth, to be
-set down a pedant, perhaps a palterer with the truth, and at the best a
-man so wedded to old customs that I might almost be a Socialist.
-
-It is undoubtedly a far cry to Bogotá. Personally, more by good fortune
-than by any effort of my own, I know with some degree of certainty where
-the place is, and that it is not built upon the sea. My grandfather was
-called upon to mediate between Bolivar and General Paez, and I believe
-acquitted himself to the complete dissatisfaction of them both. Such is
-the mediator’s meed.
-
-The general public, of whom (or which) I wish to speak with all respect,
-is generally, I take it, in the position of the American Secretary of
-State to whom an office-seeker came with a request to be appointed the
-United States Vice-Consul for the town of Bogotá. The request was duly
-granted, and as the future Consul left the room the Secretary turned to
-the author of this book, and said: ‘Triany, where in thunder is Bogoter,
-any way?’ Still, Bogotá to-day is, without doubt, the greatest literary
-centre south of Panama. Putting aside the floods of titubating verse
-which, like a mental dysentery, afflict all members of the
-Spanish-speaking race, in Bogotá more serious literary work is done
-during a month than in the rest of the republics in a year. The
-President himself, Don José Manuel Marroquin, during the intervals of
-peace—which in the past have now and then prevailed in the republic over
-which he rules—has found the time to write a book, ‘El Moro,’ in which
-he draws the adventures of a horse. The book is written not without
-literary skill, contains much lore of horsemanship, and is a veritable
-mine of local customs; and for the moral of it—and surely Presidents,
-though not anointed, as are Kings, must have a moral in all they write,
-they do and say—it is enough to make a man incontinently go out and pawn
-his spurs.
-
-Thus, Bogotá, set in its plateau in Columbian wilds, is in a way a kind
-of Chibcha Athens. There all men write, and poets rave and madden
-through the land, and only wholesome necessary revolutions keep their
-number down. Still, in the crowd of versifiers one or two, such as
-Obeso, the negro poet, who, being denied all access to the lady of his
-love—the colour line being strictly drawn in Bogotá, as well befits a
-democratic government—brought out a paper once a week, entitled _Lectura
-para ti_, have written verse above the average of Spanish rhyme. Others,
-again, as Gregorio Gutierrez Gonzalez and Samuel Uribe Velazquez have
-written well on local matters, and Juan de Dios Carasquilla has produced
-a novel called ‘Frutos de mi Tierra,’ far better than the average
-‘epoch-making’ work of circulating library and press.
-
-Pérez Triana, son of an ex-President, and speaking English and Spanish
-with equal fluency, is a true son of Bogotá, and writes as easily as
-other people talk.
-
-His book occurred in this wise. The usual biennial revolution having
-placed his enemies in power, he found it requisite to leave the country
-with all speed. The seaports being watched, he then determined, like
-Fray Gaspar de Carbajal, to launch his boat upon the Orinoco, and, that
-the parallel should be exact, write an account of all he saw upon the
-way. Few books of travel which I have come across contain less details
-of the traveller himself. Strangely enough, he rescued no one
-single-handed from great odds. His strength and valour, and his
-fertility of brain in times of peril, together with his patience, far
-exceeding that of Indian fakirs, are not obtruded on the bewildered
-reader, as is usual in like cases.
-
-Though armed, and carrying on one occasion so much lethal stuff as to
-resemble, as he says himself, a ‘wandering arsenal,’ he yet slew no one,
-nor did he have those love adventures which happen readily to men in
-foreign lands from whom a kitchen wench would turn in scorn in their own
-native town: nothing of empire and little of patriotism is there in his
-book. In fact, he says that those who are his countrymen are those who
-have the same ideals as himself—a cursed theory which, if it once
-obtained, would soon abolish Custom-houses, and render armies useless,
-make navies all to be sold for scrap iron, and would leave hundreds of
-patriotic sweaters without a platitude. What chiefly seems to have
-appealed to this unusual traveller was the strangeness and beauty of the
-long reaches on the interminable waterways, the brightness of the moon,
-the thousand noises of the desert night, the brilliant birds,
-kaleidoscopic fish, and the enchantment of a world remote from all that
-to a really well-constituted modern mind makes life endurable. At times,
-although I tremble as I write, it seems to me he doubts of things which
-we all take on trust, such as the Stock Exchange. Even the army is not
-sacred to this democrat, sprung from a shameless State in which there is
-no King, and which, consequently, can never hope to contemplate a
-Coronation show, for he retails a joke current in Columbia, but which, I
-think, if duly followed up, might be encountered in Menander, or, at the
-least, in Aristophanes. A Columbian Mayor of a town sent to the
-President a hundred volunteers, with a request that all the ropes should
-be returned. Jokes such as these cannot be helpful to a State; in fact,
-a joke at all is to a serious man a rank impertinence, and if an author
-wishes to obtain a place within the ranks of Anglo-Saxon literature, he
-should not joke at all, or, if he does, joke about fat or thin men, bald
-heads or sea-sickness, or on some subject which the great public mind
-has set apart for wit. However, as a member of the Latin race, it cannot
-reasonably be expected of him that at one bound he should attain unto
-the fulness of our Anglo-Saxon grace.
-
-The careful reader of this book may possibly be struck with the
-different point of view from which a Latin looks at many questions which
-to an Englishman are set immovably as the foundations of the world,
-embedded in the putty of our prejudice.
-
-For instance, on arriving at the open plains after a tedious journey
-across mountain ranges and through forest paths, the thing that
-interests the author most is that the land in the Columbian _llanos_ is
-not held in many instances by individuals, but that so scant is
-population that it is open to all those who choose to take it up. This
-does not strike him as a folly or as affording room for speculation, but
-simply as a fact which, on the whole, he seems rather to approve of, but
-without enthusiasm, looking upon the matter as a curious generality, but
-not inclining to refine or to reduce it to any theory in particular. A
-state of mind almost impossible for Saxons (Anglo or Celtic), who, as a
-general rule, seem quite incapable of looking at a proposition as a
-whole, but must reduce it to its component parts.
-
-The voyage in itself was memorable, for no one of the party seems to
-have been the least the kind of man who generally ventures upon journeys
-of the sort, and furthermore because, since the first conquerors went
-down the river with the faith that in their case, if rightly used, might
-have smoothed out all the mountain ranges in the world, no one except a
-stray adventurer, or india-rubber trader, has followed in their steps.
-Leal, the jaguar-hunter, who slew his tigers as I have seen them slain
-in Paraguay, on foot, with a forked stick in one hand and in the other a
-bamboo lance; the Indian guide Gatiño; and the young Venezuelan Governor
-of a State, who, shut up in his house, fought to the death, his
-mistress, an ex-ballet dancer, handing him up loaded guns, are to the
-full as striking characters as I have met in any book of travels outside
-the types that crowd the pages of the ‘Conquistadores’ of America. The
-naked Indian in his canoe, before whose eyes the immeasurable wealth of
-powder, looking-glasses, a red flannel shirt, and other treasures, rich
-and rare to him, were spread, who yet had strength of mind to scorn them
-all rather than pledge his liberty for two days’ paddling, is the kind
-of Indian that merits such a chronicler as he has found. Long may he
-paddle on the _caños_ and the _aguapeys_, and die, still crowned with
-feathers and with liberty, as did his fathers, by some forgotten beach
-or by some _morichal_, where parrots chatter and toucans flit through
-the leaves, and hummingbirds hover like bees above the tropic flowers.
-
-What most delights me in the book is that the author had no settled plan
-by means of which he strove to square the circle of the globe.
-
-‘We wandered,’ as he says, ‘with the definite aim of reaching the
-Atlantic Ocean. Beyond that we did not venture to probe too deeply the
-mysterious and wonderful manifestations of Nature, but took them as they
-appeared to our limited means of vision and understanding, and sought
-nothing beyond.’
-
-A charming way to travel, and a wise, and if not profitable to commerce,
-yet to literature, for books writ in the fashion of this brief record of
-a trip through the great waterways of Venezuelan and Columbian wilds,
-although perhaps not ‘epoch-making,’ yet live and flourish when the
-smart travellers’ tales, bristling with paltry facts and futile figures,
-which for a season were sea-serpents in the press, have long been pulped
-to make the soles of ammunition boots.
-
- R. B. CUNNINGHAME GRAHAM.
-
-
-
-
- DOWN THE ORINOCO
- IN A CANOE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-
-The hour was about ten one evening in December, which in equatorial
-Andine latitudes is a month of clear skies, cold winds, and starry
-nights. The moon shone brilliantly, casting upon the ground shadows as
-clear as those caused by a strong electric light. Truly, the local poet
-who said that such nights as these might serve as days in other lands
-was right.
-
-We came out—three of us, Alex, Fermin and I—through an old Spanish
-gateway, a rectangular structure of _adobes_, or sun-burnt bricks,
-capped with a slanting roof of tiles, dark-reddish and moss-covered,
-with a swinging gate of cross wooden beams, held together by iron bolts.
-This was the gateway of the _hacienda_ of Boita, about thirty miles
-north of the city of Bogotá, in the South American Republic of Colombia.
-We passed into the open road, and turned our horses and our minds
-northwards.
-
-From south to north, as far as eyes could see, stretched the road, an
-old Spanish causeway, bordered on either side by low-lying stone fences,
-in front of which were ditches filled with water and covered with
-vegetation.
-
-The ground was hard with the consistency of baked clay. As no rain had
-fallen for weeks, the dust was thick, and the horses’ hoofs rang like
-hammer-strokes upon muffled or broken brass. We let the reins hang
-loose, and the horses, knowing their way, started at a brisk canter.
-Wrapped in thought and in our _ponchos_, we journeyed on.
-
-No sound was audible; we seemed to be travelling through a deserted or
-dead world; the neighbouring meadows, black beneath the moon, contrasted
-with the grayish white line of the broad causeway. Now and then the
-solitary houses, some close to the road, some far back, loomed up with
-the magic-lantern effects of moonlight, and their white walls seemed
-like huge tombstones in that lonely cemetery. Sometimes we crossed
-bridges, under which the water lay motionless, as though enchanted by
-the universal stillness; only a gentle breeze, causing ripples on the
-neighbouring pools, made them glitter and revealed their presence. A cow
-or a stray heifer would poise its head across the stone fence and watch
-us with wondering moist eyes, whilst two tiny columns of condensed
-breath rose from its nostrils.
-
-Beyond, black and frowning, misshapen and mysterious, the huge boulders
-of the Andes raised their vague outlines, forming a sort of irregular
-circle, in some directions quite close to us, in others lost in the
-darkness which the moon and the stars were too remote to overcome.
-Indeed, that other local poet was also right in thinking that under the
-brilliant moon those mountains looked like huge sepulchres, wherein are
-stored the ashes of dead worlds upon which judgment had been passed.
-
-And so we journeyed on.
-
-Many travellers have observed that whenever a voyage of a certain nature
-is undertaken—one that for some reason or other differs from the
-ordinary transference of one’s self elsewhere, when through
-circumstances beyond our control we know that the moment of starting
-necessarily marks an epoch in our lives, even as the beginning of a
-descent or an ascent from the summit or the foot of a mountain
-necessarily marks a change in our motions—our thoughts fly backwards,
-and not only cover the immediate time and space behind us, but, once
-started, plunge, so to speak, with the rapidity inherent to them, into
-the deepest recesses of our memory, so that, as our bodies are carried
-forward, our minds revisit old scenes, we hold converse with old
-friends, and the old-time world seems to live and throb again within our
-hearts.
-
-Unheeding the clatter of the horses’ hoofs, which was the only
-perceptible noise, my mind flew across the few leagues that separated me
-from my dear quaint old native town, cradled there to the south at the
-foot of two hills, each crowned by a tiny church. I saw its streets
-meeting at right angles, its two streams, dubbed rivers, parched with
-thirst, crawling under the ancient arched Spanish bridges, its low
-houses, with their enclosing _patios_ planted with roses and flowers
-that bloom all the year round, with fountains murmuring in the midst,
-and creepers covering the columns and the ceilings of the open
-corridors, and then climbing out of sight; the numerous churches, each
-one with its familiar legend; the convents—solid, spacious—turned into
-barracks or public offices or colleges; the still old cells desecrated,
-their dividing walls torn down so as to convert the space into large
-halls, and, ruthless iconoclasm having carried away the statues of the
-saints, no other trace of religion left but a stone cross, or a carved
-saint’s face set too high above ground to be reached by irreverent
-hands.
-
-Yes, there was the little Church of Holy Humility—El Humilladero—an
-_adobe_ structure, a mere hut, yet reverenced beyond words as being, so
-tradition said, the first church built in the land. And not far from it
-the Church of la Tercera and its convent, about which gruesome tales
-were told. Its monks never slept on mattresses, and, as they felt death
-approaching, would have themselves placed upon the ground to die close
-to their Mother Earth; and one of them, it was said, for some
-misdeameanour or possibly greater fault, had committed suicide, and
-wandered headless—people had seen him—on dark and stormy nights through
-the neighbouring street of the Arch, as it was called, though of the
-arch nothing but the memory remained. And close to that convent of la
-Tercera was the other one of the jolly Franciscan Fathers, four
-beautiful _patios_ surrounded with broad cloisters, into which opened
-over 600 cells, each provided, besides the sitting and sleeping room,
-with a snug kitchen, old Moorish style, an open hearth for charcoal
-fire, on which meats were roasted and earthenware saucepans simmered and
-purred all day long, extracting the juice from beef, mutton, plantains,
-mañoc, green corn, potatoes, and the other numerous vegetables of that
-region, forming a most substantial broth, a peculiarly rich _pot-au-feu_
-which enabled the reverend monks to recruit their strength and spirits
-after the pious labours of the day; and with this came, it is said, a
-copious supply of that beer, _chicha_, brewed from molasses and Indian
-corn, strong and delicious—to those who like it. These reverend monks,
-it is said, owned broad lands and numerous herds, and each had a lay
-brother who looked after the material wants of his superior, and
-received daily rations sufficient for ten or twenty men, so that a great
-part of them was sold by the monks to the profane outside the cloister
-walls. As the lay brother looked after all these worldly interests, he
-enabled the monk to devote his whole time and attention to finding a
-smooth path to heaven, not only for himself, but for as many others of
-his fellow-creatures as he met.
-
-But though of good cheer, they were not lacking in piety, nor were they
-unable to withstand temptation. Their church was beautiful, all full of
-gilt columns, carved woodwork, niches with statues of saints displaying
-rich silks and gems and gold embroidery.
-
-And though many of these things had disappeared in my day, and of the
-monks only a few more vital spirits survived, downcast and forlorn,
-lamenting the good old times, yet enough remained to give an idea of the
-happier age.
-
-A proof of the virtue of the monks was visible at the entrance of the
-church looking on the main street, where the Evil One himself had
-branded it, so to say, for the greater glory of God and the renown of
-the convent.
-
-It was whispered that Father Antonio, who combined profane
-accomplishments with spiritual insight, skilled in playing the guitar,
-not averse to a song or two, fond of cards for a friendly quiet game
-with the Father Superior and two or three other plump, kind-hearted
-brethren, where small sums were staked merely to give zest to the game,
-discovered to his horror one night that the Evil One, possibly in memory
-of his namesake (the monk’s, not the Evil One’s), had decided to tempt
-his virtue, and appeared in his cell in the guise of a beautiful damsel.
-
-Alas! the Evil One had reckoned without his host. Holy water was poured
-upon him, the cross with the Redeemer nailed on it which lay handy was
-taken up by Antonio, so that Beelzebub in his fright jumped out of the
-window with such force that his cloven foot left its imprint upon the
-granite slab outside the church, and this imprint I saw myself in my
-very young years. Although many people continue to see it, I have grown
-so short-sighted that, strive as I may, the stone now appears untouched
-and like the others. But then these things will happen, and they
-certainly should not lead us to doubt so pious a tradition.
-
-And so all the old memories of the town kept passing before me. I saw a
-living panorama, silent, bathed in mysterious light, moving slowly in
-the background of the mind, large, infinite in its magnitude, with space
-in it for men and buildings and mountains and rivers and broad plains
-and leafy forests, and, what is more, with space in it for Time, the
-boundless Time that contains all and everything.
-
-Schooldays, holidays spent in the neighbouring towns and villages which
-lie in the warmer valleys, my first voyage to a certain distance, and
-then across the ocean—life, in fact, with its ebb and flow under various
-suns and in different continents—all came back; but it were out of place
-to give my reflections on them here.
-
-Then, pausing for one moment as a bird alights on the mast of a ship
-before launching forth into mid-ocean, my mind rested for an instant on
-the old cemetery where so many loved ones slumbered. Alas! when we leave
-the graves of those whom we have loved, not knowing when we shall again
-kneel upon the sod that covers them, we feel that death itself has not
-severed the link that bound us to those who were blood of our blood and
-bone of our bone.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
-A little geography may not be amiss here. A glance at the map will show
-that the city of Bogotá is situated upon a vast plateau, at an altitude
-of about 8,500 feet above sea-level, 4 degrees from the equator, and 75
-degrees to the west of Greenwich. Its position in the continent is
-central. It is perched like a nest high up in the mountains. To reach
-the ocean, and thus the outer world, the inhabitants of Bogotá are even
-now still compelled to have recourse to quite primitive methods; true,
-there are some apologies for railways starting northward, southward and
-westward, but in some cases their impetus ends as soon as they reach the
-end of the plain, and in others long before attaining that distance.
-Once the railway journey finished—which does not exceed two or three
-hours on any of the lines—the traveller has to content himself with the
-ancient and slow method of riding, mostly mule riding. The ground is so
-broken and the roads are so bad that horses could not cross them as
-safely as that thoughtful, meditative, and much-maligned animal the
-mule. After covering a distance of some ninety to one hundred miles
-westward, the traveller reaches the town of Honda, which lies on the
-Magdalena River. Here steam-boats are to be found, stern-wheeled,
-shallow-bottomed, drawing no more than from 2½ to 3 feet, in which,
-within four or five days, he makes the journey down to the sea-coast.
-
-The map of the country would seem to show that the easiest way from the
-capital to the ocean would be towards the Pacific, and as the crow flies
-such is the case; but between Bogotá and the Pacific Ocean the Andes, at
-some period of their youth, must have frolicked and gambolled amongst
-themselves and lost their way home, so that they now form the most
-rugged country imaginable. Geographers, with that thirst for
-classification that afflicts—or should I rather say animates?—men of
-science, speak of two or three chains of mountains. The average man,
-however, who has to travel over that country, conceives his task as
-corresponding to a start made from one end of a huge comb, following the
-developments of it from the root to the point of each tooth until
-Providence and Nature take pity on him, and land him, so to speak, on
-the sea-shore.
-
-Bogotá is no thoroughfare. When you get there, there you are, and if you
-go there, it is because you were bent on it; it is not like other towns
-that may be on the road to somewhere else, so that travellers may chance
-to find themselves there.
-
-The plateau of Bogotá proper was formerly—no one knows how many
-centuries or thousands of years ago—a lake of about eighty square miles
-encased between the surrounding mountains. The waters of the lake broke
-through the barrier of mountains towards the south, draining it, and
-leaving the plateau dry, save for some small lakes that dot it here and
-there, and a few rivers of no great importance. I could not help
-thinking that this immense lake thus held aloft upon that mighty
-pedestal at such an altitude formed a sort of gigantic goblet such as is
-rarely seen under the sun. The river that marks the course through which
-the waters are supposed to have been drained drags its sluggish waves
-meandering in many turns and twists from north to south along the plain,
-and gives a sudden leap of 750 feet through the open gap on the
-mountain-side, forming those magnificent waterfalls called the
-Tequendama. The river plunges headlong, as if to make up for its
-previous semi-stagnant condition; it disappears between two mighty walls
-of stone, polished as if chiselled by the hand of man; it roars with a
-deafening sound; its waters appear, as they curl over the abyss, white
-as the wool of a lamb, and their consistency conveys the impression of
-wool rather than that of snow. The morning sun plays upon the mass of
-waters, and crowns it with a halo of rainbows varying in size. On the
-borders of the river, at the place where the cataract springs, are to be
-seen evergreens and pine-trees, and other such plants belonging to the
-temperate or cold zones; down below, where the water falls, and the
-river reappears like a dying stream following its course in the lower
-valley, palm-trees and tropical vegetation are to be seen, and birds of
-variegated plumage, parrots, cockatoos, parroquets and others, fly like
-living arrows from the sunlight, and plunge into the mist with piercing
-shrieks amidst the deafening roar of the cataract.
-
-As we journeyed on in the cool night air, it seemed to me that the whole
-country—north, south, east and west—lay at my feet, and to the mind’s
-eye it appeared with its vast interminable plains to the east crossed by
-numberless rivers, the mountain region to the north on the western side
-of the Magdalena Valley, the broad plains in the Lower Magdalena, and
-the rugged mountainous district of Antioquia on the western side of the
-river, and then mountains and more mountains towards the Pacific Ocean.
-
-Surely, if a journey in these days presents such difficulties, the first
-journey undertaken by the conquerors who discovered the plateau of
-Bogotá, may be held for a feat worthy of those men who, whatever their
-faults, were brave among the bravest.
-
-Towards the east of the Magdalena River, on the coast of the Atlantic,
-the city of Santa Marta had been founded somewhere in 1530. News of the
-vast empire alleged to exist in the interior of the country had reached
-the founders of the town, and they soon decided to conquer that region
-about which such marvels were told. In the month of August, 1536, an
-expedition of 700 soldiers, infantry, and 80 horse left Santa Marta to
-penetrate into the heart of the continent, confident in their courage,
-and lusting for gold and adventure. This part of the expedition marched
-by land, and 200 more men journeyed in boats along the river Magdalena.
-
-A full narrative of their adventures would be long. They met foes large
-and small, from poisonous reptiles and the numerous insects which made
-life a burden, to tigers and alligators: add to these fevers and
-illnesses absolutely unknown to them. It is said that one man, whilst
-sleeping in camp with all his companions, was snatched from his hammock
-by a famished tiger. At times the rank and file seemed ripe for mutiny,
-but the captain was a man of iron. His name was Gonzalo Jiménez de
-Quesada. Though himself sore smitten by some disease peculiar to the
-locality, he kept the lead, and dragged the rest in his train. Praise is
-likewise due to the chaplain of the expedition, Domingo de las Casas,
-who stoutly supported the commander. This friar was a kinsman of that
-other friar Bartolomé de las Casas, whose unwearying efforts in behalf
-of the native races won for him the well-deserved name of ‘Protector of
-the Indians.’
-
-After a while the boats and the shores of the great river were
-abandoned, and the men found themselves in a mountainous country where
-the temperature became more tolerable and pleasant as they climbed
-higher. Finally, their eyes beheld the Empire of the Chibchas. What a
-joy—after toil and suffering which had lasted over seventeen months,
-when only 160 of the original expedition were left—to gaze upon a land
-where cultivated fields were seen in all directions, and the
-hearth-smoke rising from the houses to heaven! This was the land of the
-Chibchas, who formed an empire second only to that of the Incas of Peru
-and the Aztecs of Mexico. They had a religion—by no means a bad one as
-religions went amongst the American aborigines—they had their code of
-laws, their division of time, their rules and codes in all matters
-appertaining to family life and administration of government; they
-tilled the soil, they believed in the immortality of the soul, they
-reverenced their dead, and practised barter according to well-defined
-laws.
-
-The thousands and thousands of soldiers which the Zipa or King of the
-Chibchas could bring against the Spaniards were overawed rather than
-overcome by force. The greater sagacity of the Spaniards, coupled with
-their courage, soon made them masters of the land. Jiménez de Quesada
-founded the city of Bogotá in 1537. He chose a spot on the plains which
-suited him—where the city now stands—and, clad in full armour,
-surrounded by his companions and by a large crowd of Indians, plucked
-some grass from the ground, and, unsheathing his sword, declared that he
-took possession of the land for the greater glory of God as the property
-of his King and master, Charles V. of Spain. Then turning, with a fierce
-glance, to those who surrounded him, he challenged one and all to single
-combat should they dare to dispute his action. Naturally, no dispute
-arose, and so the title was acquired. They had their own peculiar ways,
-those old Spanish conquerors! A similar method was followed by Nuñez de
-Balboa, when, in the name of his King and master, he took possession of
-the Pacific Ocean with whatever lands and islands might border on it,
-stepping into the waters clad in full armour, holding the flag of Spain
-in his left hand, and his trusty Toledo blade—_la de Juanes_—in his
-right.
-
-To speak of this conquest of the Chibcha Empire recalls the fact that
-the land of Bogotá was really the land of El Dorado. _El Dorado_ in
-Spanish means the gilt one, the man covered with gold, and all
-chroniclers and historians of the early period are agreed as to the
-origin of the tradition.
-
-The King of the Chibchas, amongst whom power and property passed by law
-of inheritance from uncle to nephew, was called the Zipa. His power as a
-monarch was absolute, but to attain the dignity of what we should
-nowadays call Crown Prince, and to become in due course King, it was not
-enough to be a nephew, or even to be the right nephew. The prospective
-heir to the throne had to qualify himself by passing through an ordeal
-which Princes of other nations and other times would certainly find most
-obnoxious. He had to live in a cave for six years, fasting the whole
-time, with limited rations, barely enough to sustain life. No meat or
-salt were to be eaten during the whole time. He must see no one, with
-the exception of his male servants, nor was he even allowed to gaze upon
-the sun. Only after sunset and before sunrise might he issue from his
-cave. After this ordeal he was qualified, but should he have so much as
-cast his eyes upon a woman during that period, his rights to the throne
-were lost. The consecration, so to speak, of the Zipa took the form of a
-most elaborate ceremony. The prospective Zipa would betake himself—being
-carried upon a special sort of frame so arranged that twenty men
-standing under it could lift it upon their shoulders—to one of the five
-sacred lakes that still exist in the plateau, generally to the lake of
-Guatavita. There, stripped naked, his body was smeared with a resinous
-substance, upon which gold-dust was sprinkled in large quantities.
-Naturally, after this process the man appeared like unto a very statue
-of gold. Two other high dignitaries or chiefs, called Caciques, as nude
-as the Zipa, would go with him upon a raft of twisted reeds and slowly
-paddle into the centre of the lake. All round the shore was a dense
-crowd, burning a species of aromatic herb which produced clouds of
-smoke. On every hand was heard the sound of music, or, rather, of noises
-representing the music customary at all ceremonies. On the raft, at the
-feet of the Zipa, lay a huge pile of gold and emeralds. Each of his
-companions, too, had gold and emeralds, wherewith to propitiate the god
-in whose honour the ceremony was performed. One of the chiefs in the
-raft would raise a white flag and wave it. The noise on the shores
-became deafening, whilst the gilded Zipa threw into the lake all the
-gold and all the emeralds; then his companions would follow his example.
-When all the gold and emeralds on the raft had been cast into the lake,
-the people ashore also made their offerings of gold. Thus, after six
-years’ fasting, the Zipa was (so to put it) anointed or qualified for
-kingship. On reaching the land the period of abstinence came to an end,
-and now that the Zipa was full-fledged Crown Prince, or Zipa (if his
-predecessor should have chanced to die), his first act was to get
-gloriously drunk.
-
-From the early days of the conquest, efforts were made to drain the five
-lakes, from which numerous samples of gold idols and roughly-worked gold
-have been recovered. Even recently a company was formed in England for
-that purpose. The tradition in this case being so universal, it seems
-rational to assume that vast treasures must lie at the bottom of these
-lakes, because the Chibchas were an ancient race, and their ceremonies
-must have been repeated during centuries. The country also is rich in
-emeralds and in gold—hence the belief in the large amount of treasure to
-be obtained from those lakes whose waters look so placid.
-
-Some years ago in Bogotá an enthusiast, who sought to form a company for
-the purpose of draining one of the lakes, carried about with him a few
-samples of gold, idols and suchlike, which, so he said, had been brought
-to light by a man whom he named, a good diver, who plunged five times
-into the lake, and after each plunge brought up one of the specimens
-exhibited. He argued thus: The bottom of the lake must be practically
-studded with gold, since Mr. X. succeeded each time. There are millions
-in the lake, and all that is needed is a little money to drain it.
-
-The argument seemed so strong, and the gold gleamed so bright in his
-hands, that he obtained numerous subscribers, until he had the
-misfortune to come across one of those sceptics impervious to reason,
-who, after listening to him, replied: ‘Yes, I have no doubt that there
-must be millions in the lake, since X. at each plunge brought out a bit
-of gold like those you show me; but what I cannot for the life of me
-understand is why he is not still plunging—it seems so easy!’ The tale
-went round the town, and the lake was not drained, nor has it been up to
-the present.
-
-This gilding of the man is the germ of the legend of El Dorado, which
-has cost so much blood, and in search of which so many thousands and
-thousands of men have wandered during past centuries in all possible
-directions on their bootless quest.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
-Returning to the lake, and now gathering the information furnished by
-geology, whose silent annals are so carefully and truthfully recorded
-(being as they are beyond reach of man’s little contentions and petty
-adjustments), we find that the original lake covered an area of about
-seventy-five square miles, and attained great depths. Its placid waters,
-beating possibly for centuries against the environing rocks, have left
-their marks, from which it may be seen that in some places the depth was
-120 feet, and in others 180.
-
-We cannot fix the date of the break in the mountains which allowed the
-drain to occur. So far man has not succeeded in grasping with invariable
-accuracy the chronology of the admirable geological archives to which we
-have referred, and in matters of this kind a discrepancy of a few
-hundred years more or less is accepted as a trifle scarcely worth
-mentioning. And possibly this may be right. For man’s passage through
-life is so short that his conception of time cannot be applied to
-Nature, whose evolutions, though apparently protracted and very slow to
-see, in truth are sure to develop themselves harmoniously in every way,
-as to time inclusive.
-
-But no matter how far back the draining of the great lake may have taken
-place, it had left its memory and impression, not only on the mountains
-and the rocks, but also in the minds of men. The legend ran thus: At one
-time there came among the Chibchas a man differing in aspect from the
-inhabitants of the plateau, a man from the East, the land where the sun
-rises, and from the low plains where the mighty rivers speed to the
-ocean. He had taught them the arts of peace, the cultivation of the
-soil, the division of time; he had established their laws, the precepts
-by which their life was to be guided, their form of government; in one
-word, he had been their apostle and legislator. His name was Bochica or
-Zuhe. He resembled in aspect the Europeans who invaded the country under
-Quesada.
-
-It is asserted by a pious Spanish Bishop, who in the middle of the
-seventeenth century wrote the history of the discovery and conquest of
-the Chibcha kingdom, that the said Bochica was none other than the
-Apostle St. Bartholomew, as to whose final work and preachings there is
-(not to overstate the case) some obscurity. The good old Bishop states
-that, as the Christian faith, according to the Divine decree, was to be
-preached in every corner of the earth, it must have also been preached
-amongst the Chibchas, and that, as nothing was known with certainty
-about the final whereabouts of the Apostle Bartholomew, and he was not
-unlike the description made of Bochica by the Chibchas (which,
-by-the-by, was such that it might have fitted any white man with a long
-blonde beard), it is evident that the saint must have visited those
-Andine regions. Furthermore, he adds, there is a stone on one of the
-mountains, situated between the plateau of Bogotá and the eastern
-plains, which bears the footprints of the saint. This, to many people,
-is decisive, and I, for my part, am not going to gainsay it, since it
-serves two important ends. It explains the saint’s whereabouts in a most
-creditable and appropriate fashion, and it puts a definite end to all
-doubts concerning Bochica’s identity. We cannot be too grateful to those
-who thus afford pleasant explanations of matters which would otherwise
-be intricate and difficult, perhaps even impossible, of solution.
-
-The legend went on to say that the god of the Chibchas (Chibchacum),
-becoming irate at their excesses and vices, flooded the plain where they
-lived, by turning into it several neighbouring rivers. The inhabitants,
-or such of them as were not drowned, took refuge on the neighbouring
-mountain-tops, where, animated by that fervour and love of the Deity
-which takes possession of every true believer when he finds himself
-thoroughly cornered, they prayed abundantly to the Bochica, whose
-precepts they had utterly forgotten. He, of course, took pity on them,
-and, appearing amidst them on the mountain-top one afternoon in all the
-glory of the setting sun, which covered him as with a sort of royal
-mantle, he dashed his golden sceptre against the mighty granite wall of
-the nearest mountain, which opened at the blow into the gap through
-which the waters poured, draining the lake, and leaving as a memorial of
-his power and his love for his chosen people those waterfalls whose
-thunder goes up like a perennial hymn to heaven high above the trees
-that crown the mountain-tops, and whose sprays are as incense for ever,
-wreathing on high at the foot of a stupendous altar.
-
-The cataract takes two leaps, first striking a protruding ledge at a
-distance of about 75 feet from the starting-point, a sort of
-spring-board from which the other mighty leap is taken. Close to the
-shore, at a distance of about 6 feet, on the very brim of the abyss,
-there is a rock about 10 feet square, which, when the waters are low,
-breaks the river, and appears like a sinking island in the mass of
-foaming waters. The rock is slippery, being covered with moss, which the
-waters and the mists keep constantly wet. Bolivar, the soldier to whose
-tenacity and genius Colombia and four other South American republics owe
-their political independence, once visited the cataracts, and stood on
-the very edge of the abyss; glancing fitfully at the small round island
-of stone that stood in the very centre of the waters, fascinated by the
-danger, he jumped, booted and spurred as he was, upon the stone, thus
-standing in the very vortex of the boiling current. After remaining
-there for a few minutes he jumped back. The tale is interesting, for few
-men indeed have the courage and nerve required, once upon the rock, not
-to fall from it and disappear in a shroud fit for any man, however
-great.
-
-After the little scene of the foundation of Bogotá, in what later on
-became the public square of the city, Quesada devoted himself to
-establishing a government. I cannot help thinking that challenges like
-that which he flung down for the purpose of establishing the right of
-property are, to say the least, peculiar. True it is that no one
-contradicted, and, according to the old proverb, silence gives consent.
-A comfortable little tag this, especially when you can gag the other
-side! And a most serviceable maxim to burglars, conquerors, and, in
-fact, all such as practise the art of invading somebody else’s premises,
-and taking violent possession of the premises and all that may be found
-on them. What I cannot for the life of me understand is, how it is that,
-the process being identical in essence, so many worthy men and so many
-worthy nations punish the misunderstood burglar, and bestow honours,
-praise, and, so far as it lies in their power, glory, upon the
-conqueror. It seems a pity that the gentle moralists who act in this
-puzzling fashion have not found time to indicate the point, in the
-process of acquiring somebody else’s property by violence and bloodshed,
-when the vastness of the undertaking transfigures crime into virtue. The
-average man would hold it for a boon if those competent to do it were to
-fix the limit, just as in chemistry a freezing or a boiling point is
-marked by a certain number of degrees of heat. What a blessing it would
-be for the rest of us poor mortals, who find ourselves beset by many
-doubts, and who through ignorance are prone to fall into grave errors!
-but as these hopes are certainly beyond fulfilment, and are possibly out
-of place, it is better to drop them.
-
-Quesada, after vanquishing the Chibchas and becoming lord of the land,
-did not have it all his own way. The fame of El Dorado existed all over
-the continent. Though peopled by numerous tribes, mostly hostile to each
-other, some knowledge of the power of the Chibcha Empire, covering over
-5,000 square miles and including a population estimated at over a
-million and a half of inhabitants, had in the course of centuries slowly
-permeated to very remote parts of what is now known as South America. In
-the land of Quito, situated below the equator, it is said that the
-conquerors who had invaded it heard from an Indian of the wonderful El
-Dorado. The Indian’s tale must have been enhanced with all the charms
-invented by a vivid imagination, playing safely at a distance. This set
-many of the conquerors on the road to Bogotá. Don Sebastian de
-Belalcázar, who had entered the continent by the Pacific, led his
-troops—not over 200 in number at the end of the journey—to the Bogotá
-plateau, thus making a march of several hundred leagues across forest
-and mountains, attracted by the renown of the land of El Dorado. Another
-expedition which had entered the continent by the north-east coast of
-the Atlantic, and had wandered along the Orinoco Valley for over two
-years, eventually found itself near the plateau, and entered it, so
-that, shortly after his arrival into the country and his conquest of it,
-Quesada found himself confronted with two powerful rivals. For the
-moment there was great danger that the conquerors might come to blows
-amongst themselves, but Quesada’s political ability matched his military
-gifts, and arrangements were soon made by which the three expeditions
-were merged into one, gold and emeralds distributed amongst the
-soldiers, numerous offices created, taxes established, the Indians and
-their belongings distributed amongst the Christian conquerors, and the
-reign of civilization established to the greater glory of God, and that
-of his beloved monarch, the King of all the Spains.
-
-One detail deserves mention as an instance of tenacious though
-unpretending heroism. The men who had come along the Orinoco had
-wandered for many weary months, and at times had been on the point of
-starvation, so that all their leather equipment had been devoured. With
-the expedition marched a friar who carried with him a fine Spanish cock
-and four hens. During that long journey, which cost the lives of so many
-men, the murderous attempts made against this feathered family were past
-counting; yet the useful birds were saved, and formed the basis of an
-innumerable progeny in the land of Colombia. The incident seems trivial,
-but, if well weighed, the friar’s sustained effort against others, and
-doubtless against himself, to save the precious germ, deserves the
-highest praise.
-
-After months of hunger, when the plenty found on the plateau had
-restored equanimity to the hearts of the conquerors, they must have felt
-how much they owed to the good friar, who, even if his sermons—about
-which I know nothing—may not have been of the best, had left behind him
-the hens to lay the egg so dear to civilized man, and the chanticleer to
-sing the praises of the Almighty and to remind everyone in this instance
-of the humble beings who serve Him and their fellow-creatures in such a
-practical way.
-
-It is not at all strange that the Spanish conquerors swallowed the
-wonderful tales of incalculable treasure to be found in different parts
-of the continent which they had just discovered. Columbus himself, in
-his second voyage, landed at Veraguas on the mainland, and reaped a most
-bountiful harvest of gold. Never before in the history of Spanish wars
-had such booty fallen to the lot of the common soldier as in that
-instance. Other expeditions in various parts of the continent were
-equally fortunate, so that they supported the belief that gold was
-inexhaustible. The ostensible object of the conquest was the conversion
-of the infidels to the true faith; officially the Government of the
-Metropolis proclaimed first and foremost its intense desire to save the
-souls of so many million men who groped in the darkness of heathenism.
-Doubtless many of the conquerors really thought that they were doing the
-work of God, but the great majority of them were certainly moved by more
-worldly ends and attractions.
-
-The Indians, on their side, not only in Colombia but everywhere else,
-received the Spaniards in a friendly and hospitable way. Some warlike
-tribes there were, but it does not appear that their hostilities against
-the Spaniards began before these had shown their cruel greed and
-insatiable thirst for gold. The precious metals and jewels that had been
-accumulated amongst the tribes in the course of many generations were
-given freely to the Spaniards, who, believing that greater treasures
-were kept back from them, did not hesitate to recur to the cruellest
-methods of extortion, burning, pillaging, killing, and destroying
-everything in their way.
-
-After a struggle which did not last long, the Indians—even those of
-riper civilization and better organized—were completely subdued, and the
-sway of the Spaniard established all over the land, whose former lords
-became the slaves of the conquerors.
-
-Those who know the Indian of to-day in certain parts of the South
-American continent can hardly understand how at one time that same race
-possessed the qualities indispensable to the civilization which it had
-attained at the time of the Spanish conquest. Boiling the whole thing
-down to hard facts, we find that the Spaniards discovered a land wherein
-they found a people with civilization inferior to that of the old world;
-that this people, divided and subdivided in many tribes, received the
-conquerors hospitably, treated them generously, and in their ignorance
-considered them as superior beings; that they gave over to the Spaniards
-all the gold and treasures which the latter coveted, and that it would
-have been feasible for those superior beings to establish the
-civilization and the religion which they longed to propagate amongst the
-infidels, by methods worthy of the Christian faith which they professed.
-Instead of this, violence and bloodshed were the only methods employed,
-not to civilize, but to despoil the natives; and the right of force,
-brutal and sanguinary, was the law of the land. To this and its
-accompaniments the poets lifted up pæans of praise, the Church gave its
-blessing, history its acceptance, and, barring a handful of the just, no
-one gave a thought to the oppressed and helpless Indians whose sole
-crime was they were weaker than their aggressors.
-
-Let us be thankful for what we have. Quintana, the great Spanish lyrical
-poet, pondering on these misdeeds and crimes, exclaims that they were
-crimes of the epoch, not of Spain. Fortunately it is, as we like to
-think, our privilege to live in an epoch when such things are
-impossible, when the mere thirst for gold, or its equivalent, cannot
-impel powerful nations to forget right and justice and to proclaim
-hypocritically that in so doing they are fulfilling the law of Him who
-said, ‘Love ye one another,’ and proclaimed charity amongst men as the
-supreme rule of life. Nowadays such wrongs as those perpetrated by the
-Spanish conquerors could not happen. Wars we have, and violence and
-destruction, and malcontents complain of them, saying that the same old
-burglarious spirit of brutal greed is the real cause of those wars; but
-those malcontents should not be (and, in fact, are not) listened to. I
-myself do not understand or pretend to explain where the justice of many
-wars comes in, but certainly they must be waged for good and honest
-ends, because the great and the powerful say that the ends are good and
-honest, that civilization and Christianity are served thereby; and it
-must be so since they say it, for they, like Brutus, are ‘honourable
-men.’ Let us be thankful, then, that we live in an age of justice and
-universal fairness amongst men!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
-But let us go back to our subject.
-
-All this time we journeyed on. The stars had kept their watch above our
-heads, and the moon, as if passing in review the various quarters of
-heaven, had been moving from west to east, and was very high on the
-horizon. We were chilled through after the night’s ride, longing to
-arrive at some wayside inn or _venta_ where we might get something warm.
-The dawn was heralded in the far east by a broad streak of light, which
-grew rapidly, covering that side of the horizon like a fan, and soon
-bursting into glorious daylight. In equatorial regions there is hardly
-any dawn or twilight; in those latitudes there is no prelude of
-semi-obscurity that either waxes into day or wanes slowly into the dark,
-like the note of the lute, falling into silence so faintly and softly
-that none can tell the exact moment when it dies. At evening the sun
-sinks to the verge of the horizon, and disappears like a luminous orb
-dropped into empty space, and darkness sets in almost immediately. In
-the mountainous lands his last rays crown the highest peaks with a halo
-of glory, when darkness has settled over the valleys and mountain
-flanks. The moment the sun sets the stars assert their empire, and they
-are more numerous to the eye than anywhere else in the world. As for the
-moon, I have already spoken of its brilliancy. Another phenomenon
-connected with it is worthy of notice in our special case. During the
-various months of the trip which I am now describing, it seems to me
-that we had a full moon every night. I know that this is not quite in
-accordance with the established rules, or what in modern parlance is
-sometimes called the schedule of time for lunar service, but I am
-narrating my impressions, and, according to them, such is the fact. I
-should suggest that, as everything in Spanish lands is more or less
-topsy-turvy at times, the rules applicable to the moon in well-regulated
-countries do not hold good there, but I remember just in time that these
-irregularities apply solely to things human that happen ‘tiles
-downwards,’ as the Spaniards say, and cannot, therefore, affect the
-phenomena of Nature. As an explanation must be found for my permanent
-moon, an acceptable compromise would be that the ordinary moon did duty
-on its appointed nights, leaving the others—during which we wandered
-over mountain, through valley and forest, and on the waters of the
-silent rivers—to be illuminated for our own special benefit by some
-deputy moon, for whose services we were then, and still are, most
-grateful.
-
-As to the topsy-turviness of things Spanish and Spanish-American, the
-story is told that Santiago, the patron saint of Spain, being admitted
-into the presence of God, asked and obtained for the land of Spain and
-for its people all sorts of blessings: marvellous fertility for the
-soil, natural wealth of all kinds in the mountains and the forests,
-abundance of fish in the rivers and of birds in the air; courage,
-sobriety, and all the manly virtues for men; beauty, grace, loveliness,
-for the women. All this was granted, but, on the point of leaving, the
-saint, it is said, asked from God that he would also grant Spain a good
-government. The request was denied, as then, it is said, the Lord
-remarked, the angels would abandon heaven and flock to Spain. The story
-has lost none of its point even at the present day.
-
-With the morning we reached the longed-for _venta_, a square,
-thatch-roofed hut, which stood by the roadside quite close to the
-mountain-range which we had reached after crossing the whole breadth of
-the plateau. Outside stood several pack-horses and mules, tied to the
-columns and waiting for their loads. Under the roof the space was
-divided into three rooms, one of them provided with a counter and
-shelves running along the sides of the walls, whereon bottles of various
-sizes and contents were exhibited, and where _chicha_, the national
-drink, was served to thirsty travellers. The middle room was what might
-be called the sitting, waiting, sleeping, and dining room all in one,
-and the other was the kitchen. The fire was built on the ground, several
-logs burning brightly in the open air, filling the room with smoke and
-heat, On three stones—the traditional stones of the first hearth—a
-saucepan was seen in full boil. In the parlour we saw several _peones_,
-or labourers, from the highlands on their way to the coffee estates to
-help in the harvest. Behind the counter, the _ventera_, barmaid and
-landlady all in one, buxom and wreathed in smiles, was already filling
-either the _totuma_, a large bowl cut from a gourd, containing about a
-quart of _chicha_, or the small glass of native whisky (_aguardiente_).
-
-We jumped from our horses and entered the so-called sitting-room,
-envying the men who slept deep and strong as virtue on the bare ground.
-In a few minutes Fermin had brought from our saddle-bags the copper
-kettle used for making chocolate, and the paste for the preparation of
-that delicious drink. Within twenty minutes of our arrival we had before
-us the steaming cups of chocolate which had been boiled three times, in
-accordance with the orthodox principle which lays it down that this must
-be done if it is to be rightly done; it was well beaten and covered with
-that foam peculiar to chocolate brewed in hot water, which looks at you
-with its thousand eyes or bubbles that burst as the liquor is imbibed.
-Never was a cup of chocolate more welcome. The night seemed to have been
-interminable now that it lay behind. We would fain have stretched
-ourselves on the ground with the labourers, but to reach our destination
-that day it was necessary to lose no time; so after an hour’s rest,
-during which our horses had had their _pienso_ of fodder, we started
-again, now over more broken country, leaving the plain behind us,
-climbing and descending the road which was still available for carts and
-wheeled vehicles of all sorts.
-
-And thus we advanced, seeing the sunrise darting its slanting rays,
-which were quite pleasant to feel in the early morning, until they
-became perpendicular, hot, and almost unbearable in the dusty road.
-
-The horses, after the long journey, slackened their pace, and we looked
-upon surrounding Nature with weary eyes and that emptiness of feeling in
-the brain, that consciousness of a void somewhere, which always follow
-nights passed absolutely without sleep.
-
-Towards four in the afternoon, after seventeen hours’ steady ride,
-interrupted only by the short stay at the roadside _venta_, we reached
-the _hacienda_ of Gambita, where one of our companions, Raoul, who had
-started ahead to prepare everything for the longer journey, was waiting
-for us. He came up quite briskly along the road, joyful at our arrival,
-full of spirits, and most anxious that the journey should be continued.
-He might well feel thus, as he had not passed a sleepless night on
-horseback like a knight-errant over field and moor. The desire for sleep
-and rest was overpowering—all else lacked interest for us; so that,
-alighting from our horses, we walked into the house, and, finding
-convenient sofas, stretched ourselves and slept. Like Dante after
-listening to the sorrowful tale of Francesca, we fell as a dead body
-falls, which goes to prove that identical effects may arise from totally
-different causes. Towards ten at night Raoul waked us. The supper
-waiting for us was quickly despatched, and our mules were saddled and
-ready.
-
-As I have said before, mules are far preferable to horses when
-travelling on the mountain-paths, which are called roads in the Andes.
-The old Shakespearian query, ‘What’s in a name?’ and the answer that a
-rose would smell as sweet even if called by another name, demonstrates
-the elasticity of words. To the average Englishman a road is a
-well-defined means of communication with or without rails, but offering
-all sorts of advantages for comfortable locomotion. Roads in the Andes
-at times are such as to invite the formation of legends. It is said that
-an American diplomatist, visiting a South American republic, alighted
-from the river steamer which had borne him far inland by the respective
-river, and was shown the mountain-road which he had to follow to reach
-the capital—a yellowish or reddish streak like a gash in the mountain,
-lying on its side like a rope carelessly thrown from the summit towards
-the base, following the sinuosities of the ground—and straightway
-remarked, ‘I’m off home; this road is only fit for birds.’
-
-On such roads the mule is the best friend of man. Had Richard III. found
-himself in the plight we all know of in some such locality, the generous
-offer of bartering his kingdom (which, by-the-by, at that moment was a
-minus quantity to him) would have made for a mule instead of for a
-horse, and although the phrase—‘A mule! a mule! my kingdom for a
-mule!’—sounds comical (for these are questions of habit), probably the
-stock phrase would bring down the house with laughter. If the camel is
-called the ship of the desert, the mule deserves the title of the
-balloon of the mountains.
-
-A friend of mine, knowing of my intended trip, had sent me his favourite
-mule, and well did the animal deserve the praises that its owner
-bestowed upon it; patient, sure-footed, collected, it carried me by
-precipice, ravine, ascended paths only fit for ants as lightly and
-carefully as if no weight were on its back. At the mud ditches which
-intersected the roads, and at times reached the proportions of miniature
-lakes, often treacherously deep, it would halt, looking at the waters
-with its big, ball-shaped, moist eyes, and no hint of mine, whether
-given with spur or whip, could disturb its equanimity. At the right
-moment, heedless of my meddling, it would jump or ford or slide as
-circumstances required. At the beginning of our companionship, during
-those long days, I began by endeavouring to have a mind of my own as to
-the part of the road to be selected. I soon saw that my efforts were
-useless, for that wisdom of the mule which men call stubbornness was
-invincible. And, frankly, it was lucky that I soon gained this
-conviction, as certainly the mule knew far better than I what should be
-done.
-
-How strange all this sounds in this land of railroads, automobiles,
-omnibuses, and wheeled conveyances of every sort! yet there is more
-genuine travelling, more real travelling, in going from one place to
-another on the back of a mule than in being cooped for hours or days in
-a railway compartment whirled along at lightning speed. What does one
-learn about the country, what does one see of its beauty or of its
-peculiarities, in this latter case? It may be transportation, it may be
-locomotion, but it is not travelling.
-
-If I were a man of ample means, I would certainly endow that splendid
-beast which carried me during so many days, or provide a pension for it,
-so that it might spend the remainder of its life in the enjoyment of
-meadows ever green, luscious with rich grass and sweet with the waters
-of rippling streams.
-
-From Gambita on, our cavalcade had something of the aspect of a caravan.
-There were Alex, Raoul, and myself, besides our servant Fermin, four
-muleteers, and ten or twelve mules laden with our luggage, tents,
-provisions, arms, and so forth. This mob of travellers was so unusual
-that the simple folks in the villages through which we passed said that
-his lordship the Archbishop was no doubt on a tour. On hearing this, and
-finding that the people began to kneel by the roadside, rather than
-shatter their illusion, I—knowing that I was the most episcopal-looking
-of our crowd—decided to give my blessing, which I did with due unction
-to the kneeling maidens and matrons along the roadside.
-
-From Gambita we shaped our course eastward. It was our intention to
-reach the Atlantic through the Orinoco River. We were seeking one of the
-many affluents of the river Meta, which is itself one of the largest
-tributaries of the Orinoco. The affluents of the Meta start on the
-eastern slope of the mountains which form the plateau of Bogotá.
-
-After three days’ ride from Gambita, we reached the estate of a friend
-near the town of Miraflores, where we had to prepare ourselves for the
-last stage of the land journey which would carry us through the dense
-forests bordering the lower eastern slope of the Cordilleras, and
-constituting a sort of fringe around the endless plains that extend for
-thousands of miles from the foot of the Cordilleras to the ocean. Across
-these plains flow the mighty rivers, their numerous affluents, and the
-countless _caños_, or natural canals connecting the rivers amongst
-themselves, and thus forming a perfect network of natural waterways.
-
-At Miraflores we stopped for twenty-four hours to recruit our forces and
-prepare everything, not only for the last stage of the land journey, but
-for the long canoe voyage that lay before us.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
-From Miraflores on, the descent was continuous. Before penetrating into
-the forest, we skirted the mountain for a good many miles. The road,
-barely 4 or 5 feet in width, had been cut out of the rock, like the
-cornice of a temple. On the one side we had the bluff of the mountain,
-and on the other a precipice of hundreds, and even thousands, of feet in
-depth. The inclination at times was so steep that at a distance the line
-of the road on the mountain seemed almost vertical, and the file of
-mules with riders or with loads on their backs appeared like so many
-flies on a wall.
-
-Up to the time that we reached Miraflores, we had followed what in
-Colombia are called, according to the loyal tradition still living on
-the lips, if not in the hearts, of the people, ‘royal roads,’ or
-_caminos reales_. These royal roads are paths along the mountain slopes,
-said to follow the old Indian trails, and the Indians had a peculiar way
-of selecting their paths or trails. They seem to have been impervious to
-fatigue, and Franklin’s adage, now accepted the world over, that time is
-money, did not obtain with them, for they had no money and abundant
-time. When an Indian wanted to cross a range of mountains, instead of
-selecting the lowest summit, he fixed his eye on the highest peak, and
-over it would wend his way. The explanation given is that thus he
-accomplished two ends—crossing the range and placing himself in a
-position to see the widest possible horizon. Be that as it may, the
-Spaniards who settled in the colonies accepted the precedent, and the
-result is a most wearisome and unpleasant one in the present day.
-
-But if as far as Miraflores we had the so-called ‘royal roads,’ from
-thence on in an easterly direction towards the plain we lacked even
-these apologies for roads. From Miraflores towards the _llanos_, along
-the slope of the Cordilleras, extends an intricate forest in its
-primeval state. We had to fight our way through the under-brush amongst
-the trunks of the huge trees, and at times really battling for each foot
-that we advanced. However, our guides, who were expert
-cattle-drivers—large quantities of cattle being driven through these
-forests from the plains to the uplands—knew the forest so well that the
-obstacles were reduced to their minimum.
-
-We rode in Indian file, the chief of the guides ahead of the line
-cutting with his cutlass, or _machete_, the branches and overhanging
-boughs, thorns, reeds, creepers, and the like, that might strike us in
-the face as we rode under them. Next to him followed two _peones_, who
-cleared the ground, if necessary, from fallen branches or stones against
-which our mules might stumble. At first this slow mode of travel was
-most interesting. The light scarcely filtered through the dense mass of
-leaves, so that we felt as if we stood constantly behind some cathedral
-stained-glass window. The air was full of the peculiar fragrance of
-tropical flowers and plants; the orchids swung high above our heads like
-lamps from the vaults of a temple, and the huge trunks of the trees,
-covered with creepers studded with multi-coloured flowers, appeared like
-the festooned columns of a temple on a feast-day.
-
-However, there were certain drawbacks: the ground was so wet and spongy
-that the feet of the animals sank into it, and progress was accordingly
-very slow. Now and then we would come to a halt, owing to a huge boulder
-of rock or large trunk of a tree barring the passage absolutely. It was
-then necessary for the guides to seek the best way of overcoming the
-obstacle. Frequently we had to alight from our mules, as it was
-dangerous to ride them in many places. The guides and the muleteers
-walked on the uneven ground—now stony, and now slippery—with the agility
-of deer, sure-footed and unconscious of the difficulty. I had to invent
-a means of advancing: I placed myself between two of the guides, hooking
-one arm to a guide’s on each side, and thus, though frequently
-stumbling, I never fell, but it may be readily understood that this mode
-of progression was neither comfortable nor rapid.
-
-Another inconvenience was found in the thorny bushes, prickly plants,
-and trees which it was dangerous to approach, such as the _palo_
-_santo_, so called because it is frequented by a kind of ant of that
-name, whose bite is most painful and induces a slight fever.
-
-On the second day the guide who was ahead fired his gun, and, on our
-asking him for the cause, said:
-
-‘Only a rattle-snake!’
-
-As a matter of fact, he had killed a large specimen, said to be seven
-years old, as shown by the seven rattles that were taken from its tail.
-These things did not help to make the ride through the intricate forest
-more pleasant. We longed to see the open sky, which we could only
-discern through the veil or network of leaves and branches, and, by a
-phenomenon of sympathy between the lungs and the eyes, it seemed to us
-that we lacked air to breathe. Now and then we would come to a clearing,
-but we soon plunged again into the thick of it, and felt like wanderers
-gone astray in an interminable labyrinth or maze of tall trees, moist
-foliage, and tepid atmosphere.
-
-The guides told us from the start that it would take from four to five
-days to reach the end of the forest. On the fifth day, towards noon,
-almost suddenly we came upon the open plain. Our hearts leaped for very
-joy, and we hailed the vast green motionless solitude, that extended far
-into the horizon before our eyes like a frozen sea, with a shout of joy.
-The trees of the forest stood as in battle-line in front of the endless
-plain; the sun darted its rays, which shimmered in the countless
-ribbons, some broader than others, of the silver streams sluggishly
-dragging their waves along the bosom of the unending prairie. Copses of
-_moriches_, an exceptionally graceful species of palm, dotted the plains
-in all directions. They seemed as though planted by the hand of man to
-hide behind them a castle, or some old feudal structure, which our
-imagination reared complete, full-fledged, with its walls, its roof, its
-turrets, and its legends. The site looked as if prepared for a large
-city about to be built, and waiting only for the arrival of its
-architects and inhabitants, even as the white page tarries for him that
-is to inscribe upon it a living and immortal thought.
-
-To continue our journey on the _llanos_, the assistance of the guides
-was even more necessary than in the thick of the forest. To attempt
-travelling on the _llanos_ without expert guides would be like seeking
-to cross the sea without a compass.
-
-Once in the _llanos_, we came within a few hours to the hamlet of San
-Pedro, a cattle-trading station consisting of a few thatch-roofed
-houses, almost deserted except during the various weeks of the year
-specially fixed for traders and breeders to meet. Here we were at last
-at the end of the first stage of our journey. It was New Year’s Day.
-Behind us lay the maze of forest, the meandering trails and paths, the
-sheer mountains, the cold fertile plateau, the native city, and the dead
-year. Before us we had the unlimited plain, the wandering rivers, and
-there, beyond all, like a promise, tossing, heaving, roaring, the sea,
-vast, immeasurable, the open roadway to the shores of other lands, some
-of them free, some of them perhaps hospitable, all girdled by the
-ever-beating waves which now die moaning on the sands, now dash their
-fury into foam on the rocks of the shore.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Before parting from our friends the mules, it may not be amiss to speak
-of the equipment for man and beast which obtains in Colombian Andine
-regions. The saddle used—sometimes native, sometimes European—offers
-nothing striking in its composition, only that it is provided with a
-crupper which must be very strong—strong as a braced strap—since in the
-steep ascents or descents the girth alone would be insufficient. The men
-wear leggings or _zamorros_, which, in fact, are rather seatless
-trousers than leggings, 2 feet wide, held together by a strap across the
-loins, the outside consisting of tanned hide with the hair on it, and
-the inside of soft leather. They have the advantage of being very easily
-put on and slipped off when the rider alights. The stirrups are a large
-shoe wherein the whole foot is encased, made of copper or brass. At
-first those unfamiliar with the roads find them awkward, bulky, and
-heavy, but one soon learns that they are an indispensable protection, a
-sort of armour or shield against the stones, trees, and sundry other
-obstacles which the rider’s foot is bound to strike. The _poncho_, which
-is a rectangular piece of woven cotton cloth about 5 to 6 feet long by 3
-to 3½ feet broad, with a slit in the centre, is worn by all riders, and
-a similar piece of india-rubber cloth, only somewhat larger, is carried
-strapped to the back of the saddle to be used when rain comes on. The
-real native accoutrement, in which the saddle differs, having a pommel
-and being high-seated in the back, is not complete without the lasso,
-made of twisted raw hide, kept soft and pliable by the frequent use of
-tallow, which is rubbed into it. The expert herdsman can throw the lasso
-a long distance, either across the neck of the horses or right over the
-horns of the cattle; their aim is unerring. They fasten the lasso to the
-pommel of the saddle, and turn their horses backwards so that they may
-better withstand the pull of the lassoed animal. Spurs in Colombia are
-frequently worn, especially when you ride somebody else’s hired mule or
-horse. The spurs are more formidable in appearance than harmful in
-reality; the rollocks, instead of being small with little pinlike pricks
-as in Europe, are huge in size, about 3 inches in diameter, and each
-prick about 1½ inches; they make a great rattle on the slightest
-provocation, but are less painful to the animal than the little European
-spurs. Apropos of this, I remember the case of an individual who,
-finding the Colombian spurs too heavy, only wore one, arguing that if he
-managed to make one side of his mule get along, the other side would be
-sure to follow, and hence only one spur was needed.
-
-On arriving at the wayside _venta_, or inn—and Heaven only knows how
-elastic a man’s conscience must be to bestow the name of inn upon many
-of these _ventas_—the first care of an experienced traveller is to see
-to the welfare of his mules and horses. If available, Indian corn, brown
-sugar of the species called _panela_, which is uncrystallized solidified
-molasses, and the best grass that can be got in the neighbourhood, are
-given to the animals. If there happens to be an enclosure, the mules and
-horses are let loose in it, so that they may rest more comfortably; but
-these enclosures are very frequently a delusion and a snare, as
-inexperienced travellers find when, on rising early in the morning the
-next day, they are told that the animals have jumped over the fence or
-broken through, or in some other way disappeared, whereupon the
-muleteers, with the boys and men available in the locality pressed into
-the service for the occasion, scour the mountains and the neighbouring
-forests in search of the missing animals, the search lasting at times
-four and five hours, during which the traveller frets, foams, and
-possibly, if he be quite natural and unspoiled by convention, swears.
-
-But notwithstanding these drawbacks, there is a special charm about this
-mode of travelling. In the morning about four the traveller arises from
-his not too soft couch. The first breakfast is at once prepared, and
-whilst it is being cooked the _mañanas_, or morning greeting, is
-indulged in, consisting of a little whisky, brandy, _aguardiente_, rum,
-or whatever spirits happen to be available. The hour, even in the hot
-lands, is cool. The stars still shine brightly in the heavens, and, were
-it not for the testimony of one’s watch, one would believe one’s self
-still in the middle of the night. The mules are brought forward, given
-their morning rations, the luggage is strapped on the ‘cargo’ mules, as
-they are called, and the others are saddled, and if all goes well,
-towards five or half-past, the journey begins.
-
-There is a characteristic odour in the temperate and low lands of the
-tropics at that special hour of morning, and the dawn is announced by a
-hum in the ear, which, whilst it is still dark, is not of birds, but of
-the thousand insects that inhabit the forest. Finally, when the sun
-bursts forth in all his glory, a hymn seems to start in all directions,
-and the mountains vibrate with echoes of universal animation from the
-grass and the bushes, the running streams, and the nests in the branches
-of the trees laden with life. In the cool air of the morning the mind is
-quite alert, and the climbing and descending, the fording of rivers, the
-crossing of ravines and precipices, the slow ascent of the sun in the
-horizon, the fresh stirring of the breeze in the leaves, the
-reverberation of the light on the drops of fresh dew still hanging from
-the boughs and dotting the many-coloured flowers—all these things induce
-such a feeling of communion with Nature that one feels one’s self an
-integral part of the large, immense, palpitating life that throbs in
-every direction, and the conception of immortality seems to crystallize,
-so to speak, in the mind of the traveller; but, of course, familiarity
-breeds contempt, and things beautiful, though they are a joy for ever,
-might tire Keats himself through repetition, so that at times travelling
-in this wise often seems slow, and one longs for some other means of
-locomotion. Yet I cannot help thinking with regret of the days when one
-will ask for a ticket—railway, ‘tube,’ balloon, or whatever it may
-be—from any place on earth to any other place. When that day arrives,
-men will be transported more rapidly from one place to another, but the
-real traveller will have disappeared, as the knight-errant disappeared,
-as the gentleman is being driven out from the world in these days when
-all things are bought and sold, and kindness and generosity are becoming
-empty words or obsolete relics of a past that very few understand, and
-fewer still care to imitate.
-
-On the very outskirts of the forest, within half an hour’s ride from the
-long file of trees, we came upon a group of thatch-roofed structures
-which form the so-called town or hamlet of San Pedro del Tua, a
-meeting-place, as I have said before, for herdsmen and dealers, deserted
-at the present season; the only persons who had remained were those
-whose poverty—heavier than any anchor—had kept them on the spot away
-from the Christmas and New Year’s festivities that were being celebrated
-in all the towns and villages of the neighbouring region. Our first care
-was to find a roof under which to pass the night. We inquired for the
-man in power, namely, the _correjidor_, a sort of justice of the peace,
-mayor, sheriff, all in one, an official to be found in hamlets or
-villages like that which we had just reached. It was not hard to find
-him, since there were only fifteen persons in the place. We had a letter
-of introduction to him, which made things easier. He immediately took us
-to the best house in the place, which happened to belong to him. He
-asked us what good winds had wafted us thither, and whither we went. As
-we did not care, until having felt our ground a little more, to state
-frankly that we wanted to cross into the neighbouring republic of
-Venezuela, one of us—the most audacious if not the best liar of the
-lot—calmly stated that we had come to the _llanos_ for the purpose of
-selecting and purchasing some land, as we intended to go into the
-cattle-breeding business, and possibly into some agricultural pursuit or
-other. The _correjidor_ said nothing, but an ironical smile seemed to
-flit across his lips. When we had become more familiar with things and
-customs in the plains, we understood why he had not replied, and the
-cause of his almost imperceptible smile. To purchase land in the
-_llanos_ would be tantamount to buying salt water in the midst of the
-ocean! People ‘squat’ wherever they like in those endless plains that
-belong to him who exploits them. The cattle, horses, sheep, are the
-elements of value to which ownership is attached, but the grazing lands
-belong to one and all, and as matters stand now, given the scarcity of
-population and its slow increase, such will be the condition of affairs
-for many a long year to come.
-
-Once inside the house that the _correjidor_ had placed at our disposal,
-and feeling more at ease with him, we told him of our intention to go to
-Venezuela, and asked for his assistance. His name was Leal, which means
-loyal; its sound had in it the clink of a good omen, and later events
-proved that he deserved it. He told us that our undertaking was by no
-means an easy one, nor one that could be accomplished without the
-assistance of expert and intelligent guides. He added that he knew the
-various ways to penetrate from Colombia into Venezuela, and that if we
-would accept his services he would accompany us. I need not state that
-the offer was accepted with alacrity.
-
-In the short journey from the skirt of the forest to the hamlet of San
-Pedro del Tua across the _llano_ itself, we had time to remark that its
-aspect, once in contact with it, was quite different from the beautiful
-velvety green waving in the sunlight, soft and thick, that we had seen
-from a distance. The ground was covered with a coarse grass varying in
-height and colour, we were told, according to the season of the year. A
-great many small pathways seemed to cross it in all directions, formed
-by the cropping of the grass and the animals that moved to and fro on
-the plains. We crossed various _caños_, which are natural canals,
-uniting the larger rivers. As we were at the beginning of the dry
-season, these canals were low, and we forded them without any
-difficulty, but in winter—that is to say, in the rainy season—they
-attain the dimension of large rivers, and travelling in the _llanos_ on
-horseback then becomes most difficult. We came frequently upon copses of
-the _moriche_ palms already described. In the centre of these copses one
-always finds a cool natural basin of water, which is preferred by the
-natives as being the healthiest and the sweetest of the locality—_agua
-de morichal_. There must be something in it, for the cattle also prefer
-this water to that of the rivers and _caños_.
-
-To our inexperienced eye the _llanos_ bore no landmark which might serve
-as a guide to our movements. After a copse of _moriche_ palms came
-another one, and then another one, and no sooner was one _caño_ crossed
-than another took its place, so that without guides it would have been
-impossible for us to know whether we were moving in the right direction.
-
-Leal advised us to lose no time, as the journey we had before us was a
-long one. Now that we were close to the beginning of our canoe journey
-on the rivers, we at once set to counting the belongings we had brought
-at such great expense and trouble from the high plateau of Bogotá, which
-seemed ever so far away when with the mind’s eye we beheld it perched
-like an eagle’s nest high up on the summit of those mountains that it
-had taken us about eighteen days to descend. As every inch of ground
-that we had left behind had been, so to say, felt by us, the distance
-appeared enormous, and the old city and the plateau seemed more like the
-remembrance of a dream than of a reality. We drew up our inventory, and
-found that we were the happy possessors of about eight cases, 50 pounds
-in weight each, containing preserved meats, vegetables, and food of all
-kinds in boxes, jars, tins, and so forth. Next came about six large jugs
-or demijohns of native fire-water, or _aguardiente_, a most useful and
-indispensable beverage in those latitudes, and about half a ton of salt,
-a most precious article in that region. We were going across the plains
-where there are neither salt-water fountains nor salt-bearing rock
-deposits, and we knew that as an article of barter, salt went far beyond
-anything else that we might possess, hence the large quantity which we
-carried. Our arsenal consisted of four fowling-pieces, six Remington and
-two Spencer rifles, plenty of ammunition, cartridges, gunpowder, one
-dozen cutlasses, or _machetes_, and four revolvers. We also had a box
-with books, our trunks with clothing, rugs, mosquito-nets, waterproof
-sheets, a medicine-chest, and two guitars of the native Colombian type;
-but what rendered us most important and steady service during the whole
-of that journey was a certain wicker basket, 1 yard long, ¾ of a yard
-wide, and 10 inches in height, which contained a complete assortment of
-cooking utensils and table-ware for six persons—plates, corkscrews,
-can-openers, frying-pans, and all that one could wish to prepare as
-sumptuous a meal as mortal man could desire in those vast solitudes. The
-saucepans, six in number, fitted one inside of the other, nest-wise;
-they were copper-bottomed, and proved of inestimable value. The tumblers
-and cups were also nested—pewter ware with porcelain inside. Everything
-was complete, compact, and so solid that, after the long journey with
-its vicissitudes, the wicker basket and its contents, though looking
-somewhat the worse for wear, were perfectly serviceable.
-
-Leal, a man of simple habits, who had never been in a town of more than
-4,000 or 5,000 inhabitants, on looking at that display of superfluous
-articles, argued that we were altogether too rich, and that our
-movements would be greatly facilitated were we to dispense with, say,
-two-thirds of what lay before him on the ground. We pleaded that since
-the worst had been accomplished, namely, the transportation across land,
-roads, and mountain trails, we might as well keep what we had, and only
-abandon it when forced to do so. Leal nodded his head, as one who sees
-that it is useless to argue, and nothing more was said on the subject.
-
-Everything was prepared on that New Year’s Day to start on the next day
-for the neighbouring cattle-farm of Santa Rosa del Tua, situated on the
-river Tua, one of the affluents of the Meta, which itself is one of the
-most important tributaries of the mighty Orinoco. These arrangements and
-decisions once arrived at, it was deemed prudent to celebrate our
-arrival into the place, and the arrival on the scene of life of the New
-Year, by a banquet worthy of the double occasion.
-
-A heifer was slaughtered. Leal brought upon the scene, in front of the
-house where we were stopping, the whole side of the animal trimmed and
-prepared for roasting; he had passed through it, skewer-wise, a long
-thin pole of some special wood hard and difficult to burn. A huge
-bonfire was lit on the ground, and Leal fixed the lower end of the
-skewer quite close to the fire, holding the side of the heifer now right
-over the flame, now at a certain distance, turning and twisting it with
-consummate skill. The air was soon scented with that odour of roast meat
-which so deliciously tickles the nostrils of him who has an empty
-stomach. Looking at Leal doing the roasting, I realized
-Brillat-Savarin’s dictum: _On devient cuisinier, on naît rotisseur_.
-Leal, if not a born poet, was a born roaster. Soon the meat was ready;
-our plates, forks, and knives not being sufficient for the crowd, we
-preferred not to bring them forth. Large leaves, green, fresh, and
-shiny, cut from the neighbouring banana and plantain trees, were laid on
-the ground both as a cover and as dishes. Leal unsheathed from his belt
-a long, thin shining knife as sharp as a razor, and with wonderful
-dexterity cut the huge joint, separating the ribs, so that everyone
-could have a bone with a large portion of hot, steaming, newly-broiled
-meat. Bread was not forthcoming, but there was an abundance of baked and
-roasted green plantains, crisp and mealy, which did service for the best
-bread; at least, so we thought. As for meat, never in my life do I
-remember having enjoyed such a delicious morsel: so the banquet
-consisted of meat and roasted plantains _à discretion_. A bottle of rum
-which belonged to our stock, and which I had forgotten in the inventory
-given above, went round the guests of that primitive board, warming our
-hearts into conviviality and good-humour. Finally came the big bowls of
-coffee, prepared according to the local fashion, which deserves to be
-described. The coffee is roasted and ground in the usual way, but these
-operations are only carried out just before the liquor is brewed. In a
-large saucepan cold water, sweetened to the taste with black sugar, is
-placed over the fire, and the necessary amount of ground coffee is
-thrown into it before it gets warm. The heating should not be too rapid;
-when the first bubbles indicate that the boiling-point is about to be
-reached, the saucepan is withdrawn from the fire, and a spoonful of cold
-water dashed upon the surface of the hot liquor almost in ebullition.
-This precipitates the roasted coffee to the bottom, and gives a most
-delicious beverage, which, though not as strong as the coffee distilled
-according to other methods, retains all the aroma and flavour of the
-grain. The method is a very good one in localities where delicate
-coffee-machines cannot be easily procured, and it is in truth nothing
-more or less than the method of preparing Turkish coffee, with less fuss
-than is required for the Oriental variety.
-
-We had soon grown, in that very first day of our encounter with him, to
-like Leal and to wonder at his intimate knowledge of the plains, the
-forests, and the rivers of that vast region. He was not a Colombian; he
-had been born on the shores of the river Gaurico, one of the affluents
-of the Orinoco. From boyhood he had thus come into daily contact with
-the mighty rivers and the deep and mysterious forests that cover their
-shores. His plan was that we should first follow the river Tua down to
-the Meta. On arriving at this latter river, we should have to find
-larger canoes, which would enable us to reach the Orinoco. Once on the
-Orinoco we would arrive at the settlement called Urbana, where we were
-sure to obtain larger craft in which to go as far as Caicara. Here we
-might wait for the steamers that go to Ciudad Bolivar. As to the time
-required for this journey, Leal said that, barring unforeseen obstacles,
-fifty days might suffice for us to reach Ciudad Bolivar. The only
-inhabited places which we would come across were first San Pedro del
-Arrastradero, then Orocue, and finally San Rafael, the last Colombian
-settlements where troops were stationed, and on inquiry Leal stated that
-on the river Meta it was necessary to follow the only channel that
-existed, so that it would be indispensable for us to touch at the
-various towns he had named, as there was no lateral _caños_ by which we
-might avoid them, should we want to do so, as was the case in other
-parts of the plains, where one might either follow the main stream or
-some _caño_ or tributary. If we wanted to take another river route, we
-might, on reaching San Pedro del Arrastradero, walk a short distance of
-about a mile to the _caño_ called Caracarate, which would take us to the
-river Muco, an affluent of the Vichada, almost as large as the Meta
-River, and flowing into the Orinoco. But, said Leal, if we follow the
-Vichada instead of arriving on the Orinoco below the rapids, we shall
-strike that river above the rapids, and these alone will entail more
-trouble and difficulty and require more time than any other part of the
-river. For the moment no decision was taken. The question was left open
-to be solved as might be most convenient at an opportune moment.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
-Early next morning, January 2, we started from the village, and, after a
-short ride across the plain, reached the river Tua, at the house of a
-small cattle-ranch called Santa Rosa del Tua.
-
-The owner of the premises welcomed us most hospitably, and, to our joy,
-placed at our disposal two small canoes. No others were to be found
-there at the moment. However, they were large enough to carry us and our
-belongings, and accordingly we made ready for an early start next day.
-
-The houses—or what serve for houses in the _llanos_—are built on the
-most primitive architectural principles. Poles, varying in thickness and
-in length, according to the proportions of the desired structure, are
-sunk into the ground at convenient distances, following the lines either
-of a perfect square or of a rectangle. Cross-beams are nailed or tied to
-the vertical poles at the required height; in the latter case the
-vertical poles are grooved, so as to give additional support. From the
-cross-beams on either side other beams are thrown, slanting so as to
-meet in the centre, thus forming the basis of the roof, which is again
-covered with reeds, upon which are placed several layers of palm-leaves,
-fastened by means of thin ropes to the slanting beams and poles; and
-thus the roof is completed. This finishes the house for use during the
-dry season.
-
-During the wet season the sides are covered in the same fashion as the
-roof. The palm-leaf most used is that of the _moriche_, which abounds in
-the _llanos_.
-
-When lying in the hammock during the dry season one feels the breath of
-the breeze as it blows across the plain, and may see the stars twinkling
-in the deep blue dome of heaven, like far-off tapers. The _llaneros_, or
-inhabitants of the plains, prefer to sleep in the open air, even without
-palm-leaf roofing above their heads. It is as though they felt
-imprisoned indoors, and pined for the ampler ether.
-
-Here we had thus reached the last stage of our land journey. The real
-voyage was about to begin.
-
-The reader who has followed me thus far will have gathered that there
-were three of us in this expedition—Alex, Raoul, and myself. With us
-came our servant Fermin, who adapted himself to the most urgent
-requirements, being now muleteer, now valet, now cook. Leal had engaged
-the services of several _peones_ to paddle the canoes when we reached
-the Tua River; these numbered seventeen, so that, including Leal and
-ourselves, we formed a group of twenty-two men. The canoes were so small
-that we were packed like herrings, but, as it was impossible to obtain
-others, we had to make the best of them.
-
-Raoul was a sportsman: more than once he had taken up arms against the
-harmless ducks that swarm at certain seasons of the year in the lakes
-studding the plateau of Bogotá. I had no personal knowledge of his
-powers, but, with the modesty and truthfulness characteristic of all
-hunters and fishermen, he carefully impressed upon us that he was a dead
-shot, and that when a bird, hare, or any furred or feathered creature,
-came within range of his gun its doom was certain.
-
-Immediately upon our arrival at the river Tua, the shores of which are
-covered with a dense forest, he called our attention to the numberless
-birds to be seen, and as soon as he could manage it he left us,
-accompanied by one of the men, and was speedily lost to sight amongst
-the trees. Shortly afterwards the report of his gun reached us with such
-frequency that one might think he was wasting powder for mere love of
-smoke. By-and-by he returned, bringing with him about sixteen different
-birds of various sizes and kinds, sufficient to feed the whole
-expedition for one or two days. He was on the point of starting on
-another murderous excursion, when we remonstrated against the wanton
-destruction of animal life. Leal quietly observed that if Raoul thus
-continued wasting powder and shot he would soon exhaust our store of
-those indispensable articles, the lack of which might entail most
-serious consequences later on. On hearing this we held what might be
-called a council of war, at which it was decided that no more birds or
-game were to be shot than were absolutely indispensable. We were
-influenced not so much by a feeling of humanity or love for the birds as
-by the fact that a long journey lay before us, that the loss of a canoe,
-the flooding of a river, or illness, or any accident that might befall
-us, would detain us for much longer than we had bargained. Raoul
-reluctantly listened to all these reasons, but, acknowledging their
-force, agreed to comply with them.
-
-Our descent of the river Tua began next day. The waters were very
-shallow, owing to the dry season, and, as our men could not use their
-paddles, they punted the canoes down-stream. We were often detained by
-palisades which obstructed the current. These were formed by trunks
-uprooted from the shores by the river in its flood, and then jettisoned
-in the bed of the stream. In the dry season they stood forth like small
-islands, and gathered round them all the floating débris of the river.
-These palisades, with which we met very often, gave us a deal of
-trouble. We often had to jump out of the canoes and either drag or push
-them, as they would stick to the sandy bottom, and punting failed to
-make them budge. We took to this task cheerfully, and found it tolerable
-sport, until one of our men was stung by a peculiar sort of fish, black
-and round, called _raya_. This lies hidden in the sand, and, when
-touched or trodden upon, stings, darting its harpoon into the ankle or
-the calf, leaving its point in the wound, a most painful one, which
-continues to smart for several days. The man, who was stung in our
-presence, cried and moaned like a child, so intense was the pain. After
-this we were decidedly chary of lending a hand in dragging or pushing
-the canoes, and—I must confess it to our shame—we would wade booted to
-the shore and wait till they had been got afloat again, rather than take
-the chances of being stung in our turn.
-
-We had started at about six in the morning; towards five in the
-afternoon Leal began to cast his eyes about in search of a nice, dry,
-sandy beach upon which to pitch our camp for the night. So far we had
-always found some house or hut to sleep in; now, for the first time, we
-were faced by the necessity of camping in the open air without any roof
-whatever above our heads. We experienced a peculiar sensation of
-unwarranted fear—a dread arising, doubtless, from the force of habit in
-the civilized man, naturally averse to imitating the birds and the
-beasts, which sleep under God’s heaven and run all risks; but whatever
-our feelings, we were forced to accept the inevitable.
-
-As soon as a satisfactory strip of beach was found, we jumped ashore.
-The canoes were dragged halfway out of the water, and tied with stout
-ropes to neighbouring trees to prevent their being carried away in case
-of an unexpected flood—by no means an impossible contingency. The men
-took out the mats upon which we were to sleep, and as there were swarms
-of the mosquitoes, sand-flies, and numerous insects which make life a
-burden in the early hours of the night on the shores of these rivers,
-the mosquito-bars, made of cotton cloth, were rigged up over the mats.
-
-Fermin, who had been promoted to the rank of private cook for Alex,
-Raoul, and myself, prepared our supper, making use of the saucepans and
-sundry implements contained in our travelling basket. To prepare their
-meals, the men used a huge iron pot, which was soon tilted over a large
-fire.
-
-We were four days on the river Tua punting or paddling, according to the
-depth of water. When we reached the river Meta, we had already arranged
-the daily routine best suited to our requirements, and I might as well,
-once for all, describe it.
-
-Our acting chief, Leal, ever watchful and alert, wakened us at about
-three in the morning. Every man had his appointed task: two of them
-prepared the indispensable coffee in the fashion of the land; others
-folded up the mats, the mosquito-bars, and whatever else might have been
-landed. Alex, Raoul, and I would in the meantime stand on the river
-brink, whilst two of the men poured upon us small cataracts of water
-drawn from the river in the _coyabras_ or _totumas_ cut from native
-gourds, which form an indispensable part of the domestic arrangements in
-the _llanos_. It would have been sheer madness to bathe in the river,
-with its _rayas_, or water-snakes, or perhaps some shy, dissembling
-alligator in quest of a tasty morsel.
-
-Sandy beaches are the best places for camping on the shores of tropical
-rivers. They are dry, clean, soft, and perfectly free from snakes,
-scorpions, tarantulas, and all such obnoxious creatures, which are more
-likely to be found amongst the high luxuriant grass and the leafy trees.
-
-Between four and five, as soon as it was ready, every man drank a large
-goblet of coffee and a small glass of aniseed _aguardiente_, which is
-said to be a specific against malaria. The men’s faith in the virtue of
-the distilled spirit was astounding; they never failed to take it, and
-would even ask for more, lest the quantity given were not enough to
-protect them from the dreaded illness. Though the merits of quinine are
-more universally acknowledged, it did not seem to be as acceptable, nor
-to be coveted with equal greediness.
-
-We generally started at about five in the morning, paddling steadily
-till about eleven, when we landed as soon as we found a suitable spot,
-if possible shaded with trees. Here we would hang the hammocks, prepare
-the midday repast, and wait until three, letting the hottest hours of
-the day pass by. At this time the sun seemed to dart real rays of fire
-upon the burnished waters, whose reflection dazzled and blinded our
-eyes.
-
-About three in the afternoon we would start again for two or three hours
-more, until a convenient beach was found; once there, the camp was
-formed without delay, the canoes tied up, the mats spread, and in a few
-minutes two huge bonfires, made of driftwood, sent their glad flames
-flickering in the night air. After supper we crept under the
-mosquito-bars, and waited for Leal to call us in the morning.
-
-The seasons in the plains, as is well known, are sharply divided into
-dry and rainy. The first lasts from May to November, and the second from
-November to May. During the wet season it rains from eighteen to twenty
-hours out of the twenty-four; showers are not frequent during the dry
-season, but they fall now and then.
-
-The third or fourth night that we spent on the banks of the Tua, I was
-awakened by feeling a moist sheet over my face, and at once realized
-that the heavy rain had beaten down the mosquito-bar. There was nothing
-for it but to cover myself with the waterproof _poncho_, sitting up for
-greater convenience, and disengaging myself from the fallen
-mosquito-net. There we all sat helpless under the dense cataract. The
-beach, slanting towards the river, bore with it the waters from the
-higher ground, and as my body made an indenture in the sand, I felt on
-either side a rushing stream. Fortunately, the shower was soon over, the
-bonfires were heaped with driftwood and blazed forth joyously. Coffee
-was specially prepared for the occasion, and we sat in the genial warmth
-of the flames until the sun burst forth on the horizon. That morning we
-did not start as early as usual: the tents and covers were spread in the
-sun, and after an hour or so were again dry and soft. Then we started on
-our journey, leaving behind us the discomforts of the night. The rain
-seemed to have gladdened the forest, and brightened the trees and bushes
-into a livelier green. During the journey we underwent a similar
-experience upon two or three other occasions.
-
-As for food, we had a comfortable supply, and hardly a day passed
-without our having either some fine bird, or at times a larger piece of
-game in the shape of a species of wild-boar, fairly plentiful in that
-locality, the flesh of which is quite agreeable after one learns to eat
-it. Besides game, we also had plenty of fish. All this without counting
-the salt meat and tinned provisions. The birds most abundant were ducks
-of various descriptions, wild turkeys, and a beautiful bird of fine
-dark-bluish plumage, similar to a wild turkey, called _paujil_ by the
-natives, the meat of which greatly resembles that of the pheasant.
-
-At about this stage of the journey an incident took place which shows
-how even the humblest tasks in life require a certain degree of ability
-and experience. One day on the river Tua, Raoul—who, as I have said, was
-a great hunter before the Lord, and had no more esteem than most men for
-the milder arts—had brought down a beautiful duck of exceptional size,
-and of the kind known as ‘royal duck.’ Not satisfied with his triumph as
-a Nimrod, he took it into his head to cook the bird himself and rival
-the achievements of Vattel or Carême. He invited me to help him in his
-undertaking. My culinary attainments being purely of a theoretical kind,
-I promised him my moral support and hearty co-operation in the shape of
-advice. We invited Alex to share our wonderful supper, to which he
-replied that, being aware of the perils most incident to the efforts of
-inexperienced cooks, however enthusiastic they might be, he preferred
-the men’s supper, which, though humbler, was far more to be depended on.
-Heedless of this taunt, Raoul went on with his work. A pot filled with
-water was placed over the fire, and as soon as it was boiling the bird
-was plunged into it. In due course Raoul began to pluck valiantly;
-feathers black and bluish fell from his hand numerous as flakes of snow
-in a winter storm. When he began to tire after a while, I took the bird
-in hand, and continued the task, the feathers falling like dry leaves in
-the autumnal forest. After half an hour of steady work, when the ground
-was literally covered with black feathers, that blessed bird seemed
-untouched. We were beginning to feel anxious and hungry, and the
-tempting whiffs from the large iron pot, where the men were stirring
-their stew, stung our nostrils in a tantalizing fashion. However, it was
-now a question of pride and self-esteem, and we were bound to cook the
-bird at any cost. By-and-by Alex, holding a steaming plate in his hand,
-came to us and invited us to eat. Raoul rejected the offer, and though I
-was most anxious to accept it, I felt bound in loyalty to stand by him.
-We told Alex that we wanted to reserve the fulness of our appetite for
-our delicious bird, to which Alex replied that by the time that bird was
-ready we should certainly be hungry enough to devour it, leaving the
-bones quite clean. Raoul and I took turns at plucking the duck, which at
-last seemed to yield, showing a few whitish specks here and there devoid
-of all feathery covering. Seeing our plight, Fermin, who had stood by,
-not being called upon to help, seized the bird, declaring that we had
-allowed it to become chilled, and that the perfect plucking of it was
-well-nigh impossible. However, he undertook the job most courageously,
-and finally, taking advantage of the shades of night, which facilitated
-a compromise, we dropped that royal duck into the boiling water and
-pretended to enjoy our supper, such as it was, when ready. How much we
-ate is a question as to which I need not go into detail here, but I must
-own that in lying down upon my mat under the mosquito-bar I felt
-famished. From that day onwards both Raoul and I decided to forego all
-interference in matters culinary, beyond occasional advice. I have no
-doubt that, had Fermin or one of the men undertaken the task, we should
-not only have had our supper much sooner, but a dish fit for any man’s
-palate.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-On the fourth day, about two hours’ sail from the confluence of the Tua
-with the Meta River, we stopped at a large cattle-ranch called Santa
-Barbara. The owner invited us to a dinner—the inevitable dishes of the
-_llano_: meat roasted over a bonfire, plaintains and coffee.
-
-The ranch consisted, we were told, of about 10,000 head of cattle, and
-was typical of the ranches to be found on the _llanos_ of Colombia and
-Venezuela.
-
-Here, in the person of what might be called the sub-manager, whose name
-was Secundino, we came face to face with a real tiger-hunter.
-
-After dinner I asked Secundino how men fleeted the time away in that
-lonely region beyond the din of civilized life. His statements
-corroborated what I had heard before, that there is no ownership of land
-in the _llanos_; the herds graze freely over the plains, the animals
-being practically wild, and kept together by the presence amongst them
-of a few tame cattle which, being accustomed to the presence of man,
-will remain in the neighbourhood of the houses or _caneyes_. Another
-great attraction to the cattle is the salt which is strewn upon large
-slabs of stone or flat boards. By these two devices, thousands of
-animals are kept within a comparatively short distance of the ranch.
-
-To enable each ranch-owner to brand the cattle belonging to him,
-_rodeos_ or round-ups are held two or three times during the year. These
-_rodeos_ are gatherings of the herds. The men ride out in all directions
-from the ranch, and drive the cattle towards the _corrales_. In this
-task they are greatly helped by the presence of the tame animals, which
-are easily led or driven as required, and are always followed by the
-others.
-
-Once in the _corrales_, the branding begins. A red-hot iron is used,
-shaped either to form one or two letters or some special sign which
-constitutes the trade or hall mark, so to speak, of the respective
-ranch. The animals are forced to pass through a long, narrow enclosure
-between two fences, and are branded as they go by; but with animals that
-give a great deal of trouble a different method is followed. This
-consists in starting the bull, heifer, or cow, as the case may be, on
-the run. A man on horseback follows, and when both the horse and the
-bull have attained sufficient impetus, the man seizes the bull by the
-tail, and with a sudden twist turns it over on its side, jumping at once
-from his horse to pass the tail under the bull’s leg; this compresses
-certain muscles, prevents all motion, and leaves the fallen animal
-helpless. The branding is then done without any difficulty, either on
-the fore or the hind quarters.
-
-Secundino told us that this way of throwing the cattle down was not
-confined to the branding season, but that it formed a frequent sport
-amongst herdsmen in the plains, as it required great skill to accomplish
-it. Another sport in which he and his friends indulged, and which he
-described with great zest, was riding wild bulls. The process consists
-first in throwing the bull to the ground, whereupon a thick rope is tied
-as a girdle, only that it is placed quite close to the withers and right
-under the forelegs of the animal. All this time the bull has been held
-on the ground, bellowing and panting for sheer rage; as soon as the rope
-is ready, the intending rider stands by the side of the animal with his
-two hands stuck between the rope and the skin, on either side of the
-spine, and the moment the bull is let loose and stands on its feet the
-man leaps on its back. Then follows a wonderful struggle: the beast,
-unaccustomed to any burden, rears and plunges, springs backwards and
-forwards with great violence; the man, always spurred, increases the
-fury of the animal by pricking its sides. His two arms, like bars of
-iron, stand rigid, and man and bullock seem as though made of one piece.
-At last the bull is exhausted, and sullenly acknowledges the superior
-force of the rider; but it takes rare courage and strength to accomplish
-this feat.
-
-After describing these and other pastimes, Secundino quietly added:
-
-‘Whenever my work leaves me time, I kill tigers.’
-
-He said this unpretentiously, yet with a certain air of
-self-consciousness that must have brought the shadow of a doubting smile
-to my lips. Secundino saw this, and, without appearing to take notice of
-it, invited us outside the house, and showed us, at a certain distance
-from it, lying on the ground, ten tigers’ skulls, some of which bore
-traces of having been recently cleansed from skin and flesh.
-
-‘You see,’ he added, ‘that I have some proofs of my tiger-killing!’
-
-He told us that the tigers were the worst enemies of the cattle-farmer.
-
-‘Other animals,’ he said, ‘will take just what they want, but the tiger
-is fierce, cruel, and kills for the sake of killing. If he should happen
-to get into an enclosure containing twenty or thirty young calves, he
-will kill them all, and take one away with him. We are at open and
-constant warfare with the tigers,’ he added, ‘and there is no truce
-between us.’
-
-The _llaneros_ usually kill tigers by spearing them. Referring to this,
-Secundino said that doubtless it was more dangerous than shooting the
-beast down at long range with a Winchester or a Remington rifle; ‘but,’
-he went on to say, ‘powder and lead are expensive, cartridges are
-difficult to obtain, and when once exhausted your weapon is no better
-than a broomstick. The spear, however, is always ready, and never fails
-you. When I go out tiger-hunting I take my dogs, who follow the scent
-and guide me. I carry with me, besides the spears, a muzzle-loader, in
-case of emergency. The moment the dogs see the tiger they give cry; the
-beast seeks higher ground, and the fight with the dogs begins at once.
-The tiger is afraid even of a cur. The dogs that we have here are well
-trained, and though at times they are killed by the tiger, that seldom
-happens. I follow my dogs, keeping the animal well in sight, with my
-spear ready, and at the right moment dash forward and plunge it into his
-breast. If the blow is a good one, that ends it. Now and then it is
-necessary to fire the rifle into him; but this is a great pity, owing to
-the waste of lead and gunpowder.’
-
-I am trying to repeat here word by word Secundino’s quiet statement. It
-sounds fanciful and exaggerated, but all those who have travelled over
-the plains of either Venezuela or Colombia will have heard that such is
-the commonest mode of tiger-killing amongst the _llaneros_. The tiger of
-these latitudes, however, is not the same as the tiger of India and
-other parts of Asia. It is smaller, but not less ferocious; it is
-spotted, and not striped. The spear used is very long, made of very hard
-wood, and has a most murderous appearance.
-
-Secundino, after telling me of his short way with tigers, asked me to
-handle the weapon, and generously gave me some instructions as to the
-exact poise to be adopted for striking a blow, explaining to me how
-dangerous it might be were I to forget the rules which he could
-recommend from experience. To begin with, I could hardly lift the spear,
-and, then, there was practically no chance of my ever going to seek a
-tiger in his lair. Secundino, however, was profoundly in earnest, and,
-rather than disabuse him or hurt his feelings, I solemnly promised him
-that I would never kill tigers otherwise than in strict conformity with
-his advice, and that at the first opportunity I would practise throwing
-the spear and poising my body, so as to make sure.
-
-Towards evening, as we were about leaving, when I was already seated in
-the canoe, whilst Leal was still ashore, I overheard these words passing
-between him and Secundino:
-
-‘How far are you going, Friend Leal?’
-
-‘Down to the Orinoco, to accompany these gentlemen.’
-
-‘How are you coming back, by land or by water?’
-
-‘I do not know yet—that depends.’
-
-‘Well, all right; if you come this way, I should like you to tackle a
-horse that we have here, which no one seems able to ride, and which I
-dare not tackle myself.’
-
-‘Never you mind,’ answered Leal; ‘I will see to it when I return.’
-
-Here was a revelation. Leal’s prowess grew in our estimation. This guide
-of ours was called upon to break in a horse which Secundino, the
-tiger-hunter, whose title to the name, if devoid of diplomas or academic
-signatures, was vouched for by the ten tiger-skulls which we had seen,
-would not dare to ride himself!
-
-On we went towards the Meta River, leaving our friends on the shore
-shouting to us messages of good speed. We soon noticed that our canoe,
-being lighter in draft, had left the other far behind it.
-
-It darkened much earlier than we expected, and to our great regret we
-saw that the second canoe could not catch us up, which was annoying, as
-supper, beds, and everything else, with the exception of a demijohn of
-aniseed _aguardiente_, were in it. We landed at the first beach that we
-struck, hoping against hope that the stragglers might overtake us.
-
-Time had passed so agreeably at Santa Barbara, listening to Secundino’s
-tales, that we had not noticed how late it was. It seemed to us,
-furthermore, that darkness had set in earlier than usual. On hearing
-some remark to that effect, Fermin observed that the sun had set for us
-that day earlier than usual. He laid stress upon the words ‘for us,’
-and, on being asked what he meant thereby, said that the darkness had
-been caused by a cloud which had interposed itself between us and the
-setting sun, thus bringing night earlier than usual.
-
-‘What nonsense are you talking about?’ said Raoul. ‘There is no cloud in
-the matter; we went on talking and talking, and forgot the time.’
-
-‘No, sir,’ Fermin said, without moving a muscle; ‘I know what I am
-talking about. The cloud was formed by the feathers of that bird which
-we tried to pluck yesterday; they are so many that they darken the light
-of the sun!’
-
-Up to this day I cannot say what happened. I do not know if we mistook
-the hour of the day and were overtaken by night, or if, in truth, as
-Fermin asserted, the wrathful ghost of the mishandled duck spread its
-black feathers above our heads, thus forming a mantle like the mantle of
-arrows which the Spartan warriors asked the Persian invaders to fire at
-them, so that they might fight in the shade. This problem, which
-contains historical, astronomical and atmospherical elements, will
-remain for ever as dark and mysterious as the feathers of the dead bird.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
-Night soon asserted her sway. The blue vault of heaven, alive with
-innumerable stars, was clear and diaphanous; no cloud was to be seen.
-The evening noises died away, and the dead silence was only broken now
-and then by a vague rumour wafted mysteriously through space—the wash of
-waters on the shore, or possibly the lisp of forests by the river. We
-gave up all hope of the other canoe arriving that night, and faced the
-inevitable—no supper, no beds. As in our own canoe we carried a demijohn
-of _aguardiente_, one or two generous draughts were our only supper. We
-were not hampered by excess of riches or of comforts; as to the
-selection of our beds, the whole extent of the beach was equally sandy
-and soft; but, having slept for many nights on the shores of the Tua,
-and knowing that we were at its confluence with the Meta, for the sake
-of a change—a distinction without a difference—we stretched ourselves
-full length on the side of the beach looking to the Meta River.
-
-The water-course, practically unknown to civilization, appeared to me as
-I lay there like a wandering giant lost amidst the forests and the
-plains of an unknown continent. The surface of the waters sparkled in
-the starlight like hammered steel. My thoughts followed the luminous
-ripples until they were lost to sight in the darkness of the opposite
-shore, or, wandering onwards with the flow, melted into the horizon.
-Whither went those waters? Whence came they? What were their evolutions,
-changes, and transformations? Idle questions! Flow of life or flow of
-wave, who but He that creates all things can know its source and its
-finality? Idle cavillings indeed!
-
-Suddenly, as drowsiness had begun to seize me, a wonderful phenomenon
-took place. There from the midst of the waters arose an indistinct yet
-mighty figure; high it stood amidst the waters which parted, forming a
-sort of royal mantle upon its shoulders; it gazed upon me with the
-sublime placidity of the still seas, the high mountains, the unending
-plains, the primeval forests, and all the manifestations of Nature,
-great and serene in their power and majesty. And the figure spoke:
-
-‘Listen to me, O pilgrim, lost in these vast solitudes; listen to the
-voice of the wandering streams! We rivers bring life to forest and
-valley; we are children of the mountains, heralds of continents,
-benefactors of man. My current, powerful and mighty though it seems, is
-but a tiny thread of the many streams that, mingled and interwoven, so
-to say, go to form the main artery of whirling, heaving water called the
-Orinoco. From north and south, from east and west, we all flow along the
-bosom of the plains, after having gathered unto ourselves the playful
-streamlets, the murmuring brooks that swell into torrents and dash down
-the mountain-sides, filling the hills and the intervening valleys with
-life and joy. They come from the highest slopes—nay, from the topmost
-peaks crowned with everlasting snow, the sources of our life; down they
-rush, and after innumerable turns and twists, after forming now
-cataracts, now placid lakes, reach the plain, and in their course they
-broaden the large streams which in turn merge with others in the huge
-basin, and form the vast artery that drains the surface of a great part
-of the continent, and bears its tribute to the Atlantic Ocean. Yea,
-verily indeed, we rivers are as twin brothers of Time; the hours pass
-and pass, ceaseless as our waves; they flow into Eternity, we into the
-bosom of the great deep. This land, the land of your birth and of mine,
-to-day an unknown quantity in the history of the world, is a destined
-site of a mighty empire. The whole continent of South America is the
-reserve store for the future generations of millions of men yet unborn.
-Hither they will come from all parts of the world: on the surface of the
-globe no more favourable spot exists for the home of mankind. Along the
-coast of the Pacific Ocean runs the mighty backbone of the Cordillera
-like a bulwark, high, immense, stately; above it, like the towers and
-turrets in the walls of a fortified city, rise the hundred snow-capped
-peaks that look east and west, now on the ocean, now on the
-ever-spreading undulating plains, and south and north to the line of
-mountains extending for thousands of miles.
-
-‘In the very heart of the tropical zone, where the equatorial sun darts
-his burning rays, are the plateaus of the Andes, hundreds of square
-miles in extent, with all the climates and the multitudinous products of
-the temperate zone. In the heart and bowels of the mountains are the
-precious metals coveted by man’s avarice and vanity, those forming the
-supreme goal of his endeavours; and the useful—indeed, the truly
-precious—metals, coal, iron, copper, lead, and all others that are known
-to man, exist in a profusion well-nigh illimitable. The trade-winds,
-whose wings have swept across the whole width of the Atlantic Ocean,
-laden with moisture, do not stop their flight when the sea of moving
-waters ceases and the sea of waving grass begins. Across the plains,
-over the tree-tops of the primeval forests, shaking the plumage of the
-palm-trees, ascending the slopes of the hills, higher, still higher,
-into the mountains, and finally up to the loftiest peaks, those winds
-speed their course, and there the last drops of moisture are wrung from
-them by that immeasurable barrier raised by the hand of God; their force
-seems to be spent, and, like birds that have reached their native
-forest, they fold their wings and are still. The moisture thus gathered
-and thus deposited forms the thousand currents of water that descend
-from the heights at the easternmost end of the continent, and convert
-themselves into the largest and most imposing water systems in the
-world. Thus is formed the Orinoco system, which irrigates the vast
-plains of Colombia and Venezuela. Further south, created by a similar
-concurrence of circumstances and conditions, the Amazon system drags the
-volume of its wandering sea across long, interminable leagues of
-Brazilian forest and plain. Its many streams start in their pilgrimage
-from the interior of Colombia, of Ecuador, of Peru, and of Bolivia, and
-these two systems of water-ways, which intersect such an immense extent
-of land thousands of miles from the mouth of the main artery that
-plunges into the sea, are connected by a natural canal, the Casiquiare
-River, so that the traveller might enter either river, follow its course
-deep into the heart of the continent, cross by water to the other, and
-then reappear on the ocean, always in the same boat.
-
-‘If the wealth of the mountains is boundless and virgin, if on the
-slopes and on the plateaus and the neighbouring valleys all the
-agricultural products useful to man may be grown—and the forests teem
-with wealth that belongs to him who first takes it—if the rocks likewise
-cover or bear immense deposits of all the metals and minerals useful to
-man, the lowlands and the plains offer grazing-ground for untold herds
-of cattle and horses, and further to the south beyond the Amazon,
-running southward, not eastward like the Orinoco and the Amazon, the
-Parana unrolls its waves, which, after leaving the tropic, enter the
-southern temperate zone, irrigating for untold miles the endless pampas
-of Argentina and Uruguay. In very truth, this continent is the Promised
-Land.
-
-‘In your pilgrimage along the waters of the Orinoco, you will see all
-the wonders of tropical Nature. Now the forests will stand on either
-bank close along the shores in serried file, and moving mirrors of the
-waters will reflect the murmuring tops of the trees, noisy and full of
-life as the winds sweep by in their flight, or else the frowning rock,
-bare and rugged, will stand forth from the current like the wall of a
-medieval castle. Now the trees will open a gap through which, as from
-under a triumphal arch, the current of a river, a wanderer from the
-mysterious and unknown depths of the neighbouring forests, pours forth
-into the main stream and mingles with the passing waters, joining his
-fate to theirs, even as the High Priest of some unknown creed might
-issue from the temple and mingle with the passing crowd. Some rivers
-that reach the main artery have had but a short pilgrimage, the junction
-of their many waters having taken place at no great distance from the
-main stream; others have had a long wandering, sometimes placid and
-serene, sometimes amidst rocks and boulders, with an ever frenzied and
-agitated course like the lives of men striving and struggling till the
-last great trumpet sounds. The course of the river will be studded with
-islands large enough for the foundation of empires, and before reaching
-the sea the river will extend and spread its current into a thousand
-streams, as if loth to part from the Mother Earth it sought to embrace
-more firmly in its grasp, and our waters will flow into the unplumbed
-deep, there to mingle with those of all the rivers, whether their course
-has been through lands alive with civilization, swarming with multitudes
-of men on their shores, laden with the memories of centuries and famous
-in history, or whether they, like us, have wandered through vast
-solitudes where Nature is still supreme in her primeval pride, as yet
-unpolluted by the hand of man. There we all meet, and to us what men
-call time and its divisions exist not, for all the transformations that
-affect mankind are as naught to us who form part and parcel of Nature
-itself, who only feel time after the lapse of æons which to the mind of
-man are practically incomprehensible. Seek to learn the lesson of
-humility, to acknowledge the power of the Creator, who gave to man what
-we rivers and all other material things can never hope for—a future
-beyond this earth, higher, brighter, infinite, eternal.’
-
-The figure seemed to sink slowly under the mantle of waters that had
-covered its shoulders; the sun was rising in the eastern horizon, the
-rumour of awakening Nature filled the air with its thousand echoes, and
-drifting rapidly towards us we saw Leal with the canoe that had remained
-behind the night before.
-
-On telling Alex, Raoul, and Fermin my experience, and asking in good
-faith what they had thought of the visitation, they looked askance at
-me. It seems that sleep had overpowered them; they had not seen the
-river-god of the Meta, and irreverently set down the whole occurrence to
-the quality of my supper the preceding night. It is ever thus with
-unbelievers; they will seek some material or vulgar explanation for that
-which they cannot understand and have not seen.
-
-That very morning, after the necessary arrangements and the usual
-morning coffee, we started down the Meta River. If we might have called
-the navigation on the Tua somewhat amphibious, navigation on the Meta,
-specially for such small craft as we possessed, seemed to us as on the
-open sea. Our first care was to seek larger canoes. Leal guided us
-through one of the neighbouring _caños_ to a cattle-ranch, where he
-expected to suit our requirements. This _caño_ chanced to be famous for
-its snakes, principally of the kind called _macaurel_, a dark brownish
-species, varying from 2 to 4 and 5 feet in length, and from ¼ inch to 2
-inches in diameter. When in repose they coil themselves around the
-branches of the trees, and their bite, if not cured immediately, is
-fatal. Leal shot one of the horrible reptiles in the body; the linking
-of the rings that take the place of vertebræ being thus unloosened, the
-coils became wider, the animal lost its grip and fell into the water,
-staining it with a blue-greenish reflection of a metallic hue. It seems
-that one shot of the smallest size is sufficient to kill these snakes,
-provided it breaks one of the rings above mentioned. I shuddered as we
-passed under the trees, knowing that many of these dreaded reptiles must
-be above our heads. The _caño_ in some parts was so narrow and the
-forest so dense that it was impossible to avoid the overhanging
-branches, and when I thought that we should have to go over the same
-route next day, disgust and a feeling of dread took possession of me. By
-the time we reached our destination, after a journey of eight or ten
-miles, over twenty of these creatures had been brought down. We obtained
-two large canoes, which seemed to us like veritable ships or floating
-palaces compared to the little craft we had used for so many days. We
-turned to the river Meta, and did not feel safe until we had left the
-_caño_ behind, and could breathe once more in the open air on the bosom
-of the large river, with only heaven above our heads.
-
-The Meta River, which flows entirely upon Colombian territory, describes
-large winding curves in its course eastward towards the Orinoco. Its
-banks are high and well defined, its channel fairly steadfast even in
-the dry season. This is not common, most of these rivers often shifting
-their course, to the despair of pilots and navigators. Both sides of the
-Meta we knew were occupied, or, rather, frequently visited, by various
-wild tribes. Now and then Leal would point out a part of the shore,
-stating that it belonged to some ranch, but how he could know was a
-mystery to us, as no visible difference existed.
-
-The temperature, though quite hot in the middle of the day, was
-agreeable, and even cool, in the early morning and a greater part of the
-night. The trade-wind, which blows steadily every day during the dry
-season, at times gathered such force that we were compelled, going
-against it as we did, to wait long hours for it to subside. Our canoes
-were not so arranged as to enable us to hoist sail and tack against the
-wind.
-
-On the river Meta we observed a large species of fish, which, had we
-been at sea, we should have identified at once as porpoises. The men
-told us that they were called _bufeos_, and in reality came from the
-sea, having ascended the waters of the Orinoco for thousands of miles,
-and branched off into the Meta River. One of the men, illiterate like
-all his fellows, but versed in forest, mountain and plain lore, stated
-that those _bufeos_ were the friends of man; that they loved music and
-song; that they would follow a boat or canoe whence the echoes of
-singing or of some musical instrument could be heard for miles and miles
-at a time; that when they were present in the water the alligators and
-all the other enemies of man kept away, or were driven away by the
-_bufeos_; and that whenever by chance the fishermen caught one of these,
-he would at once release it in remembrance of their friendship for
-mankind. These were, therefore, our old-time friends the porpoises.
-
-The simple tale of the man, one of our paddlers, who had never been in a
-city in his life nor seen any of the wonders of our times, to whose mind
-such words as civilization, Fatherland, and religion, as well as many
-others that form the glib vocabulary of modern man, were mere empty
-sounds or air, could not but set me a-thinking—first, as to the value of
-those words. Fatherland, our country, his and mine, yet how different
-the conception, and how those consecrated, holy words are abused by the
-tricksters, great and small, who control and exploit mankind for their
-own benefit! Patriotism should consist in justice and equality of rights
-and tolerance to all, whereas, in fact, it is but a mask for the greed
-and avarice of the strong. My countryman is he whose ideals are
-identical with mine. What makes another being my fellow-man and my
-brother is an identity of ideals, not a concurrence of geographical
-conditions of birth. If he who is born ten thousand miles away in an
-unknown climate and in a different latitude shares with me the love of
-justice and of freedom, and will struggle for them even as I would, why
-should we be separated by conventional distinctions which benefit
-neither him nor me nor justice nor freedom as ideals?
-
-I thought, are these lands and this vast continent still virgin in the
-sense that humanity has not exploited them? are they to be the last
-scene of the stale criminal imposture now called civilization? Are men
-to come by thousands and by millions to these plains and these
-mountains, and settle on the shores of these rivers, bringing with them
-their old prejudices, their old tyrannical conventionalities, the
-hatreds that have stained history with blood for hundreds and for
-thousands of years, rearing on these new lands the old iniquities,
-calling them fatherlands, baptizing their crimes with holy words, and
-murdering in the name of patriotism? If such is to be the future of
-these lands, far better were it that the mighty rivers should overflow
-their course and convert into one immense lake, twin brother of the
-neighbouring sea, the vast plains, the endless mysterious forest; and
-that the immense bulwark of the Andes, aflame with a thousand volcanoes,
-should make the region inhospitable and uninhabitable to man: for of
-iniquity there is enough, and no more should be created under God’s
-heaven.
-
-But the tale set me also a-thinking of the power of tradition and the
-beauty of song. If my memory plays me no trick, Arion, homeward-bound
-from the Court of Corinth, and laden with gifts of a King who worshipped
-song, was seized and thrown into the sea by the crew, but the listening
-dolphins or porpoises, grateful for the heavenly message thus delivered
-by him, bore him ashore and saved his life. So, more or less, runs the
-classical tale; and here in the wilds of America, from the lips of an
-unlettered woodman, the same beautiful conceit, clothed in simple words,
-had rung in my ears. The power of song, the beauty of the legend, had
-filtered itself through hundreds of generations from the days of our
-mother Greece, the mother of art and of beauty, across the mountains and
-the years and the seas and the continents, and the legend and the
-allegory were alive in their pristine and essential characteristics in
-the forests of tropical America. This gave me hope. If the power of
-things ideal, of things that have in them the divine charm of undying
-force, overcomes time and distance, why should not the ideal of
-righteousness, of liberty, and of justice prevail? And the vast
-continent of South America, why should it not be the predestined home of
-a happy and regenerate humanity? The trade-winds which come from the old
-world and across the ocean are purified on the heights of the
-Cordilleras. Even so humanity in that pilgrimage that is bound to take
-place ere long, as the ancient world begins to overflow, may regenerate
-itself and establish liberty and justice in that new world. If these be
-dreams, awakening were bitter.
-
-We soon heard that it was easy to reach one of the affluents of the
-Vichada by crossing the plains for about a mile overland, and, all
-things considered, decided to abandon the Meta River, even though the
-journey might be longer than we had at first intended. Thus, on the
-fourth day of navigation down the Meta we stopped, and at a place known
-as San Pedro del Arrastradero, where we found quite a large settlement,
-about 150 people, we left the Meta behind us and at once made ready for
-our journey through the Vichada, as large as the Meta, we were told, and
-inhabited by numerous savage tribes. This gave additional interest to
-the journey, and we looked forward to it with pleasure.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
-The settlement of San Pedro del Arrastradero—or of Arimena, as it is
-also called—lies on the right shore of the River Meta about 150 miles
-from its confluence with the Orinoco. Within a very short distance of
-the Meta at that point, less than a mile to the south, the _caño_ of
-Caracarate branches towards the Muco River, which, flowing to the
-south-east, joins the Vichada; the latter, of about the same volume as
-the Meta, flows south-east till it strikes the Orinoco above the rapids.
-The Meta and the Vichada and the Orinoco form a triangle, of which the
-last named is the base. The Vichada enters the main stream some fifty
-miles above, and the Meta about 200 miles below, the series of rapids
-which divide the river into the Lower and the Upper Orinoco.
-
-Scattered far and wide at long distances apart on the plain which
-borders the Meta are numerous cattle-ranches, and on its very shores are
-settlements testifying to the effort of civilized man. But the new
-region that we were about to enter, irrigated by the Muco, the Vichada,
-and their affluents, is absolutely wild, and has seldom been crossed by
-white men other than stray missionaries, or adventurous traders in
-search of cheap rubber, resinous substances, tonga beans, hammocks, etc.
-These the Indians exchange for trifles, or implements which they prize
-very highly: to the wild inhabitants an axe, a cutlass, a knife, are
-veritable treasures, distinguishing their owner among his fellows.
-
-The tribes along the shores of the Meta River were known to be mostly
-hostile and aggressive. Travellers on that river always, if possible,
-pitch their camps on islets in mid-stream for fear of night attacks, and
-even then they need to keep strict watch and have their arms beside
-them. It is dangerous for small expeditions to cross the part of the
-river below San Pedro del Arrastradero.
-
-But the tribes along the region that we were about to cross, though no
-less primitive than the others, are mild and easily amenable to
-civilization. They are numerous, and under good guidance might be
-advantageously employed in useful work, might be taught to gather the
-natural products abounding in the forests, and cultivate the soil
-systematically. Their present notions of agriculture are elementary;
-they only practise it on a very small scale, relying principally on what
-they can hunt and fish.
-
-At San Pedro we found an individual who for over thirty years had been
-in the habit of travelling on the Muco and the Vichada, often going as
-far as Ciudad Bolivar, near the mouth of the Orinoco. He had amassed a
-little fortune by trading with the Indians. He spoke their dialect, and
-practised polygamy in accordance with their unsophisticated rites and
-customs. It was said that he had a great number of children along the
-shores of the river; he could therefore recommend us to his family, so
-to speak. His name was Gondelles. He had often accompanied the
-missionaries who had attempted to preach the Gospel among the savages,
-and, unless Rumour was a lying jade, he had himself strenuously
-endeavoured to observe that Divine precept which refers to increasing
-and multiplying the human species!
-
-The Indians of this region are specially expert in weaving beautiful
-hammocks from fibres of the various kinds of _maguey_ or _agave_ plants,
-or else extracted from the leaves of the _moriche_. The most prized,
-however, are those made of fibre of the _cumare_ palm, soft and pliant
-as silk. A large and comfortable hammock woven of this fibre will take
-up the smallest possible space and last longer than any other. These
-Indians are also skilled in canoe-making; with their primitive stone
-instruments, aided by fire, they will make admirable canoes of one
-piece, hewn from the trunk of a tree. These canoes at times are so large
-that they will seat from twenty to twenty-five men comfortably, but most
-of them are small craft easily handled, holding six or eight persons at
-most.
-
-Some of the men who had accompanied us thus far now refused to continue
-the journey. We were informed that it would be comparatively easy to
-replace them with Indians who would accompany us for four or five days
-at a trifling wage. The tribes being numerous, it would not be difficult
-to find new hands at each stage.
-
-The wage of our new canoe men was always paid in kind: a handkerchief, a
-pound of salt, an empty bottle, a strip of gaudy silk—we had still some
-London cravats—were the most coveted articles. The idea of equity and
-work done for value received does not exist amongst the Indians. We soon
-found that it was folly to give them the article agreed upon until the
-work was done; for once the men had received what they coveted, they
-would abandon us, stealthily leaving the camp in the dusk at the first
-landing, and sometimes even rushing into the jungle in broad daylight.
-
-So now with a full crew, now crippled, we managed to continue the
-journey, first for six days on the Muco, and then on the Vichada, the
-navigation of which proved to be much longer than we had expected.
-
-The general aspect of Nature on these two rivers differed very little
-from what we had seen on the Meta. The shores of the Muco are generally
-covered with mangroves that push far into the current their submerged
-network of roots and branches, of which one must steer clear, as they
-are hiding-places for snakes, and are apt, if struck unexpectedly, to
-capsize the canoes. These beautiful clear waters, so harmless, so
-placid, in appearance, are in truth full of danger. Apart from
-alligators and water snakes, they abound in a species of small fish
-called _caribe_, which attack men and animals, especially if they find a
-sore spot in the skin. They swarm in such quantities and are so
-voracious that a bull or a horse crossing the river, if attacked by
-these fish, may lose a leg, or receive such a deep wound in the body
-that death is inevitable. No less perilous is the electric eel, which,
-on being touched, gives a shock so strong that the man or animal
-receiving it generally falls into the stream. Even tigers are known to
-have been struck by these peculiar fish, and it is said that some have
-been drowned, being unable to recover themselves in time.
-
-During the month of January the turtles begin to lay their eggs. Our
-attention was called to a specially bright star in the horizon, which
-the men asserted only appeared in that month of the year. It was called
-the star of the _terecayes_. The _terecay_ is a small species of turtle,
-and much prized, and with reason, on account of its exquisite flesh. On
-more than one occasion, quite unexpectedly, the canoes would be steered
-ashore, the men would jump on the sand and run as if guided by some
-well-known landmark. After a few yards they would stop, and, digging in
-the sand with their hands, would extract a nest full of _terecay_ eggs,
-the contents varying from fifty to over a hundred. Their experienced
-eyes had seen the tracks of the _terecay_ on the sand. These turtles,
-like all others, lay their eggs once a year on the sand, and cover them
-up carefully, leaving the cares of motherhood to the forces of Nature.
-Once hatched in this fashion, the young turtles must shift for
-themselves, and their instinct tells them that their numerous enemies
-lie in watch for their awakening to active life. The moment they break
-the shell they make as quickly as they can for the neighbouring waters,
-where they are comparatively safe.
-
-If the inhabitants of those regions lack book-learning and knowledge of
-things in which their more civilized fellow-creatures are versed, Nature
-and the life which they lead have given them a keenness of sight, of
-hearing, and of touch far beyond the average citizen of town and
-village. I often noticed of an evening, as the canoes were being tied
-and hoisted halfway out of the water, that the men walking along the
-beach would mutter to themselves, or call the attention of their fellows
-to the sand, which to me seemed smooth and uniform. Pointing to the
-ground, they would say, duck, turtle, tapir, alligator, wild-boar, deer,
-tiger, and so forth. The tracks which they saw were, so to speak, the
-visiting-cards of animals which had spent the day on the beach where our
-camp was pitched at night.
-
-When we first came in contact with a real wild Indian I experienced a
-feeling very difficult to describe.
-
-Here was a being whose appearance was identical with our own, save for
-details of colour of skin and other trivial distinctions which could not
-affect the essential organic elements; yet he awakened within us a
-curiosity akin to that with which we gaze at a wild animal in some
-zoological garden. What a deep gulf yawned between that forlorn brother
-and ourselves! The work of generations, the treasures heaped up by man
-for man during centuries of struggle and endeavour, hopes and fears,
-disappointments, traditions, ideals, conventionalities, all that
-constitutes civilization; the higher belief in a Supreme Being, the
-evolution of habits, the respect for established laws and regulations,
-the reverence for sacred things—all that world essential to us was as
-naught, absolutely non-existent, for that naked fellow-creature who
-stood before us, unprotected, lost amid the forest in a climate
-unfavourable to man. There was no one to help him, or make any effort to
-improve the natural forces within him, none to lift his soul into a
-higher and better world. Curiosity gave way to pity. The labour of the
-missionary—of the ideal missionary—became holier and greater in my eyes.
-Here was a field of promising harvest for a real worker.
-
-One clear and fragrant night, when all the camp slept, the bonfires half
-out, the river a few feet off, as I lay awake thinking of the world to
-which we belonged, so different from our present surroundings, so
-distant that it seemed a far-off cloud in the sky, something that had
-gone by, and which could never be reached again, I suddenly remembered
-the words uttered by one of our men when we landed that afternoon upon
-the beach. He had clearly enumerated a long list of animals whose tracks
-were upon the very sand covered by my body. Logic took possession of my
-brain with overpowering rapidity. The alligator, the tiger, and their
-numerous companions have visited this beach; they may again visit it
-during the night. What is to hinder them from doing so; and in that
-case, what is to protect me from their attack? Little did I care for the
-wild-boar, the tapir, or the deer—I knew they would be as scared of me
-as I was of the other animals; and so, after this attack of fright, my
-imagination worked till the sweat began to run clammy on my forehead. It
-seemed to me that from the neighbouring forest a veritable Noah’s-ark of
-living, rushing, roaring, famished beasts, multiplied by my fancy, and
-numerous as the progeny of Gondelles, came upon us. I almost felt the
-hot breath and saw the glistening eyes of the tiger outside the thin
-partition of cotton of my mosquito-bar, heard the awkward shamble of the
-alligator’s body, and felt the unpleasant, musky odour of the huge
-lizard an instant before it crushed my bones between its jaws. Unable to
-master myself, I sat upright, and would have yelled from dread but for
-the spectacle that met my eyes in the moonlight, flooding the
-surrounding scene. There to right and left of me snored all my
-companions; the river shone brilliantly, the breeze blew softly, no one
-stirred. This absence of fear on the part of those who were perfectly
-familiar with all the dangers of the region reassured me completely. Oh
-blessed snores and valiant snorers! My peace of mind returned, and,
-lying back upon my sandy couch, I lustily joined the tuneful choir.
-
-Community of danger constitutes the most acceptable guarantee; no man
-ever thinks of ascertaining who drives the locomotive that is to whirl
-him and hundreds of his fellow-creatures at lightning speed through
-glade and forest, over bridge and under tunnel; no man questions the
-capability of the captain responsible for the steamship and for the
-lives of thousands of his fellow-men; the most distrustful of us never
-gives a thought to these points. Why? Because we know that the driver or
-the captain, as the case may be, stakes his own life. Each humble
-boatman who listened to Cæsar’s proud assurance that the skiff could not
-sink because it carried him and all his fortunes equalled Cæsar in
-self-esteem, for the lives of those poor mariners were as dear to them
-as Cæsar’s life could be to him. The truth of my assertion that
-community of danger constitutes the acceptability of a given guarantee
-is demonstrated when, for instance, a traveller entrusting his life on a
-railway or a ship to the agent of a company advances or lends money to
-the same company. Then comes the hour of discrimination. All the
-appliances invented by that most wonderful engine of human ingenuity,
-the law of commerce, which in its numerous forms rules the world
-paramount and supreme, are brought to bear. No one’s word is accepted as
-sufficient; documents, signatures, seals, formalities, numerous and
-complicated, are employed as a delicate proof of the trust that the man
-of the world ever places in the good faith of his brother before God.
-This suspicion is responsible for an enormous amount of expense and
-trouble which, were good faith more abundant or were belief in its
-existence general, might be applied to relieve misery and sorrow. If the
-action of humanity all the world over in this dreary endeavour to
-protect man from the rascality of man be justified, we are, indeed, not
-very far removed in truth and in essence from the savages of the forest,
-who seize what they need and prey upon each other according to the
-dictates of nature. If beauty be but skin-deep, civilization is not more
-profoundly ingrained, and the smallest rub reveals the primitive
-ravening beast. Yet I may be mistaken; perhaps it is not distrust which
-begets all those precautions, but something so noble that I dare not
-presume to divine, much less to understand, it.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
-Though several years have elapsed since my journey across those wild
-vast regions, the remembrance of them is most vivid and clear in my
-mind. It seems to me that everything in that period of my life,
-landscape and human beings, forest and plain, stream and cloud,
-mountains and breezes, all, all are still alive; they form part of the
-panorama or scene wherein my memory keeps them immortal, abiding for
-ever as I saw them, though unattainable to me. What was, is; what was,
-must be; so I imagine. Memory is in this respect like the artist. The
-sculptor or the painter seizes one moment of life, fashions and records
-it in marble or in bronze, in line or colour, and there it remains
-defying time, unchanging and unchangeable. The gallery of the mind, the
-vast storehouse of the past, is infinite. It keeps in its inmost
-inexhaustible recesses the living record of our life, the tremulous
-shadowy hues of early night deepening into the dark, the glory of the
-rising sun casting its veil of light upon the waves, the sensation of
-the breeze as it fans our heated brow after an anxious night, the
-thunder of the ocean or the deafening tumult of frenzied crowds in hours
-of national misfortune or universal anger, the last parting word or look
-of those who are gone before, the blithe greeting of him who comes back
-to us after years of absence and of sorrow: all these manifestations of
-life, the ebb and flow of joy and happiness, of pain and grief, stand
-individualized, so to speak, in the memory, and nothing, save the loss
-of memory itself, can change them. Nothing so dear to the heart as those
-treasures; against them time and the vicissitudes of life are
-powerless—even as the lovers and the dancers and the singers and the
-enchanted leafy forest in Keats’ ‘Grecian Urn.’ That love will know no
-disappointment. Sweet as songs heard may be, far sweeter are those
-unheard of human ear; beautiful as are the green boughs of the forest,
-far lovelier are those whose verdure is imperishable, whose leaves will
-know no autumn; and sweeter than all melody, the unheard melody of those
-flutes, dumb and mute in the infinite harmony which man can imagine, but
-not create. Our own mind keeps that record of the past; hallowed and
-sacred should it be, for therein our sorrow may find relief, and our joy
-purity and new strength.
-
-Beautiful indeed were our days. Gliding softly over the waters, we would
-read, and there, in forced and intimate communion with Nature, would
-seek our old-time friends the historians, the poets, the humbler singers
-that had charmed, or instructed, or taught us how to live. The lessons
-of history seemed clearer and more intelligible, the puissant and
-sonorous voice of poetry sounded fitly under that blue sky in the midst
-of those forests, even as the notes of the organ seem to vibrate and
-echo as in their very home, under the fretted vault of some Gothic
-temple. The majesty of surrounding Nature lent an additional charm to
-the voice of the great ones who had delivered a message of consolation
-and of hope to mankind. We lived now in Rome, now in Greece, now in
-modern Europe, and frequently the songs of our own poets filled our
-minds with joy, as the twitter of native birds when the sun rose and the
-morning sparkled, bedewed with jewels that night had left on leaves and
-flowers.
-
-One day, when we had grown expert in bargaining with the Indians,
-shortly before sunset a solitary Indian paddled towards our camp. He had
-been attracted by the novel sight. We had learnt that within the memory
-of living man no such large convoy as ours had passed through those
-waters; groups of eight or ten men in one canoe were the largest ever
-seen—at least, the largest groups of strangers. Here was a small army,
-with two large canoes and great abundance of strange and wonderful
-equipment—boxes, trunks, weapons, cooking utensils, many men with white
-faces and marvellous strange array; indeed, enough to attract the
-attention and curiosity of any child of the forest. The canoe upon which
-the Indian stood was barely six feet in length—so narrow and shallow
-that at a distance he seemed to stand on the very mirror of the waters.
-He carried a large paddle, shaped like a huge rose-leaf somewhat blunted
-at the end, and with a very long stem. He plunged this gracefully in the
-water on either side, seeming hardly to bend or to make any effort, and
-in feathering there appeared a convex mirror of liquid glass, upon which
-the sunlight fell in prismatic hues each time that his paddle left the
-water. He drew near, and stood before us like a bronze statue. He was
-stark naked, save for a clout round his loins. On his brow was a crown
-of tiger-claws surmounted by two eagle feathers. Across his neck, hung
-by a string, was a small bag of woven fibre containing a piece of salt,
-some hooks made of bone and small harpoons which could be set on arrows,
-and two hollow reeds about an eighth of an inch in diameter and four or
-five inches long. By means of these reeds the Indians inhale through
-their nostrils an intoxicating powder, in which they delight. The man
-was young, powerfully built, about five feet ten in height, and well
-proportioned; his teeth glistening and regular; his eyes black and
-large, gleaming like live coals; he was a perfect incarnation of the
-primitive race, and the hardships and exposure of his past life had left
-no more trace on him than the flowing waters of the river on the
-swan’s-down.
-
-Guided by our civilized instinct, which in these utilitarian days
-prompts man to seek in whatever meets his eye, first and foremost, not
-its beauty or the symbol which it may represent, or the tendency towards
-something higher which it may indicate, but its utility, following this
-delightful system of our latest Christian civilization, I, in common
-with my companions, at once decided to exploit that simple spirit and
-press him into our service. Being unable to bargain ourselves—which was
-lucky for him, for in our enlightened way we should have driven a harder
-bargain than our men—we entrusted the task to Leal.
-
-The Indian, also true to his instinct, immediately indicated—first by
-signs, and then by word of mouth, when he saw he was understood—that he
-craved a part of the innumerable riches before his eyes. He really did
-not ask for much; he wanted some salt, a knife, a piece of glass like a
-small mirror that he saw glittering in the hands of one of our men, and
-whatever else we might be willing to give. He was told that he could
-have all that he asked and more. He smiled broadly, and a light of joy
-came over his face. These were signs truly human, not yet trained into
-the hypocritical conventions of well-bred society. As he stretched forth
-his hand, he was told that the gift was conditional—that he must earn
-the articles he coveted, that we expected him to sit beside the other
-paddlers and help to carry us for two or three days, whereupon he would
-receive these rich gifts from our prodigal bounty.
-
-This statement seemed to our Indian interlocutor absurd, just as
-something utterly incongruous and ludicrous in business would strike the
-mind of a London banker. In his primitive mental organism the idea that
-one man should work for another was something that found no place. Those
-forests, rivers, and plains were his home; he roved free and fearless
-through them, alone or in the company of others, each one of whom
-provided for himself. A bargain—that basis of civilization, of culture,
-that great agent of progress and of human development—was something
-which he could not understand. The essence of the fact, and the fact
-itself, were beyond him. We could see the struggle between his greed and
-his love of freedom. The riches that we offered him tempted him far more
-than glittering diamonds on the counter of a jeweller tempt a vain woman
-or a burglar at bay. Yet he overcame the temptation. The glad smile
-vanished; his face darkened with a look that we could interpret as
-reproach, and possibly contempt; he silently lifted his paddle, and with
-two strokes sped his canoe into mid-stream. Without glancing backwards,
-giving now and then a tremendous stroke, he disappeared in the distance.
-The rays of the sinking sun reddened the waters of the river and the
-surrounding horizon; the Indian, upright in his canoe, seemed as if clad
-in a sheet of flame, and finally vanished as though consumed in the
-crimson glow. The sun itself in the western horizon resembled a huge
-ball of red-hot iron, as if the Cyclops and the Titans, after playing,
-had left it behind on the bosom of the endless plain, flat and still as
-the sea in a calm.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
-The course of the rivers on the _llanos_ is far from being as straight
-as the proverbial path of righteousness. They meander, wind, and turn
-about, so that when on a sharp curve one often sails almost directly
-against the main direction of the waters. The Indians take short cuts
-overland which enable them to travel much faster than the canoes. Thus
-the news of our coming preceded us by several days, and long before we
-reached the mouth of the Vichada all the tribes had heard that the
-largest expedition known in their history was on the way.
-
-For reasons which he explained to us afterwards, Leal had, without
-consulting us, informed the first Indians whom we met that ours was a
-party of missionaries. I do not suppose that he went into any further
-details. In the mind of the Indians the remembrance of missionaries
-seems to have lingered from the days when Jesuit missions were
-established on nearly all the principal rivers of the Orinoco watershed.
-From the time of the Independence there have been no regular missions
-following a consistent plan and belonging to a special organization. Now
-and then desultory attempts have been made without any appreciable
-results. But the Indians respect the missionary; possibly they also fear
-him, and, as we could observe later on from our own experience, they
-expect from him gifts not only of a spiritual, but of a material kind.
-
-The result of all this is that a missionary is more likely to be
-welcomed and assisted than any other traveller. This was what guided
-Leal in what he considered a harmless assertion—a pious fraud, in which
-the fraud is more obvious than the piety.
-
-Be it remarked, however, that neither my companions nor I had the least
-responsibility for Leal’s action. When travelling along the mule-tracks
-leading to the plains, public opinion, or what under the existing
-circumstances took its place, had assigned to our expedition an
-episcopal character. This assimilation to the Church seemed to have been
-our fate. Here again we were incorporated in its fold in an official
-capacity, so to speak, without the least intention or effort on our
-part. When we learnt what Leal had done, it was too late to withdraw,
-and we resigned ourselves to our new ecclesiastical honours with proper
-humility.
-
-It is said that men may be great, some because they are born great,
-others because they achieve greatness, and others yet again because
-greatness is thrust upon them. In the present instance the clerical
-character was thrust upon us. We—at least, I can answer for myself—tried
-to live up to the new dignity, not only inwardly, but outwardly,
-assuming, as far as circumstances would permit, the sedate and reverent,
-contemplative demeanour which so well suits him who devotes his life to
-the welfare of others, seeking to guide them to heaven by an easy path,
-no matter at what cost of personal sacrifice or discomfort to himself.
-
-Strange, however, that this self-sacrificing mood adopted in imitation
-of true priests, who despise the comforts and joys of life, should have
-been assumed in our own spurious case for the special purpose of
-increasing those worldly comforts and material joys!
-
-We soon discovered, to our amazement, that our new position was far from
-being a sinecure.
-
-One day we were waiting for the noon-day heat to pass, having halted on
-a _poyata_, the name given to small beaches that seem to stretch like a
-tongue of sand from under the very roots of the forest into the river;
-we had fled for shelter to the coolness of the high vaulting trees, from
-whose trunks the hammocks swung invitingly. The blue heaven appeared
-like an enamelled background beyond the lace-work of the intertwined
-leaves and branches. The fires burned brightly and cheerily, their
-flames pale and discoloured in the bright glare of the sun; the pots
-simmered, and soon tempting whiffs were wafted by the lazy breeze that
-hardly stirred, welcome heralds of good things to come. The stomach
-reigns supreme just before and after a meal, which, if it be assured to
-a hungry mortal, constitutes for him the most satisfactory event in the
-immediate future, calming his anxieties or blunting the edge of care;
-and after it has been eaten, the process of digestion, which for the
-moment monopolizes the principal energies of the organism, seems to cast
-a veil over the unpleasant aspects of life, and to soften the thorns
-that beset our path.
-
-Some General of the Confederate Army in the United States, who had
-retired to his lands after the final collapse of the South, used to
-remark that one of the saddest things for an old man who had been very
-active in former years was to receive the frequent news of the death of
-former comrades and companions. ‘Whenever such news reaches me,’ he went
-on to say, ‘I always order two pigeons for my dinner; they are so
-soothing!’
-
-In the midst of our pleasant expectations we found ourselves suddenly
-invaded by a swarm of Indians, male and female of all ages, who came
-either from the forest or in canoes. They pounced on us so swiftly that
-we were practically swamped by them in an instant. They at once began to
-beg for presents, to touch and smell any of the articles belonging to us
-that they could, and they certainly would have taken everything had it
-been possible.
-
-The men were all in the primitive attire of the proud Indian whom we had
-been unable to press into our service a few days before. The women wore
-tunics made either from coarse cotton stuffs obtained from the traders,
-or from a sort of bark, pliant and fairly soft, called _marimba_. Some
-of the women were accompanied by two or three children.
-
-With the tribe—for it was a whole tribe that had fallen upon us—came a
-man dressed in trousers—the regulation article such as you may see in
-any civilized capital—and a woollen shirt of a deep red hue. He was the
-chief of the tribe, and had donned that garb in our honour.
-
-The captain told Leal that the various mothers who had brought their
-children were anxious to have them baptized. Leal replied that the
-matter would be attended to on our return trip, arguing furthermore that
-the three reverend missionaries should not be disturbed as they lay in
-their hammocks, for though, had they been ordinary men, they might be
-thought to be asleep, yet being persons of eminent piety it was more
-probable that they were entranced in meditation. Leal backed his plea
-with a gift, a most wonderful argument which carries conviction to wild
-Indians almost as quickly as to civilized men. The chief did not insist,
-and for the moment we were left to our pseudo-religious and silent
-contemplations.
-
-Shortly after, however, an Indian mother, with one child in her arms and
-two in her wake, proved obdurate and relentless. Her thirst for the
-baptismal waters—at least, on behalf of her children if not of
-herself—must be slaked at all costs. All Leal’s efforts proving
-fruitless, he ended by telling her that I was the chief missionary. Once
-recognised as a pillar of the Church, I was prepared for any sacrifice
-of self, so that on the Indian woman approaching me I got ready to
-perform whatever ceremony she might want to the best of my ability. She
-was not only prudent and cautious, but distrustful. She pulled my hat
-off, and ran her fingers swiftly through my hair. On seeing that I had
-no tonsure—her mimic was as clear as speech—she flung my hat violently
-on the ground, gesticulated and shouted, attracting the attention of all
-her companions.
-
-Here was a complication for which we had not bargained. If there were
-great advantages in our being taken for missionaries, there was also
-great danger in being exposed as sham missionaries. Something must be
-done to remedy the evil. Leal at once bethought himself of an expedient;
-he took the Indian woman towards the hammock where Alex slept in sweet
-oblivion, unconscious of what was going on around him. She at once
-dragged off his hat, and on finding a head brilliantly bald almost fell
-prostrate. Hierarchy, or what in her savage mind stood for it, evidently
-grew higher with the size of the tonsure, and here the tonsure was
-immense. Had she known the various dignities into which the Catholic
-priesthood is divided, she might have taken Alex for the Pope. Be that
-as it may, she was satisfied. Alex, on being informed, swallowed the
-pill gracefully, and prepared to do his duty.
-
-The woman brought forward her smallest child. Here again new
-difficulties ensued. We held a council of consultation as to the _modus
-operandi_. Opinions differed widely, and were supported vehemently, as
-is sure to be the case when all those discussing a given subject happen
-to be equally ignorant. Finally some sort of plan was adopted, and the
-child was baptized in accordance with a rite evolved from our own dim
-recollections, with such modifications as seemed most fit.
-
-There under the blue heaven, with the broad winding river at our feet,
-close by the dense, darkening forest that lay behind us, its branches
-overhead forming a panoply of green, studded with the gold and yellow
-and blue flowers of the numerous creepers, we performed the ceremony of
-baptism, initiating the young savage into the Church of Christ our Lord
-with a feeling of deep reverence, intensified by our own sense of
-ignorance. Let us hope that the solemnity of the act, which flashed
-before us like an unexpected revelation, compensated for any involuntary
-informality.
-
-But after the water had been poured on the babe’s head, and the ceremony
-had, as we thought, come to an end, the mother would not take her child
-back. She had evidently seen other baptisms, and our christening was not
-up to her standard. She made us understand that on former occasions
-‘book reading’ had taken place: such was Leal’s interpretation of her
-words.
-
-We had come to look upon this Indian woman as an expert critic. Through
-unpardonable neglect, which to this day I cannot explain satisfactorily,
-we had neither a breviary nor a prayer-book with us, so we laid hands on
-the next best thing, bearing in mind what a stickler for detail this
-Indian woman had proved to be. A book of poems, an anthology of Spanish
-poets, gilt-edged and finely bound, stood us in good service. Alex
-opened it at random, and read a short poem with due and careful
-elocution for the edification of the new little Christian.
-
-The ceremony had to be performed eight or ten times. After the third
-child we gave them only one stanza apiece, as our ardour was somewhat
-chilled.
-
-When all the children had been christened, the chief claimed the ‘usual’
-gifts. He soon explained to us that it was customary for the
-missionaries to make presents to the parents of the children newly
-baptized. I had begun to admire the zeal of these mothers in quest of a
-higher religion for their children; this demand showed that their
-fervour was accompanied by greed, being thus of the same nature as that
-species of ‘charity with claws’—the Spanish _caridad con uñas_. Trifles
-were distributed amongst the mothers, and the tribe disappeared,
-rejoicing in their possessions, for to these folk the things were no
-trifles, and, let us hope, exultant in the acquisition of eight or ten
-buds destined to bloom into Christian flowers.
-
-History doth indeed repeat itself, and humanity imitates humanity
-heedless of time and space. If I remember rightly, Clovis, justly
-anxious for the conversion of his legions to Christianity, presented
-each dripping warrior after baptism with a tunic—a most valuable article
-in those days, when Manchester looms did not exist and all weaving was
-done by hand. Those pious paladins, it is said, were like our Indian
-friends of the Vichada, always ready to be rechristened on the same
-terms as before—that is to say, in exchange for a new tunic. Yet, for
-all their sameness, things do somehow change with time. In these two
-instances we have the Church as a donor, and the new proselyte as a
-receiver of presents more or less valuable. Once the conversion fully
-assured, what a change in the parts within a few generations! The Church
-gives naught; at least, it gives nothing that is of this world. On the
-contrary, it takes all it can; the people are led to heaven, the poorer
-the easier, for in the kind and capacious bosom of Mother Church they
-are to deposit all worldly goods which might hamper their flight to
-higher regions. A beautiful and wonderful evolution, and we had not far
-to go to see it in full play and force. The savages of the Colombian
-plains are still in that primitive pitiful state when they have to be
-bribed, so to say, into the fold of the Church; many of the civilized
-people in the towns and cities obey and respect that Church which holds
-sway supreme over them in life and in death, guiding, controlling,
-saving them. Happy the nations where the chosen and appointed servants
-of the Most High, disciplined into some sort of priesthood or other,
-undertake the pleasing task of saving their reluctant fellow-men at the
-latter’s expense, but with the sure and certain faith of those who know
-that they are working for justice and for the happiness of their
-fellows, though these may choose to deny it. Happy, thrice happy, lands
-where the invasion of diabolical modern ideas has been baffled, and the
-good old doctrine of abject submission still rules!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-Whenever we started afresh in the morning, or after any temporary halt,
-the man at the prow of the canoe would call out, ‘_Vaya con Dios_,’ and
-the man on the stern, who steered with a paddle far larger than the
-others, would reply, ‘_y con la Virgen_’ (‘God go with us,’ ‘and the
-Virgin,’ respectively). The fair Queen of Heaven, being thus
-commemorated, piety was wedded to chivalry.
-
-The days followed each other in seemingly endless succession, like the
-windings of the river. Familiarity with the ever-varying aspects of
-Nature begot a sense of monotony and weariness. The forests and the
-prairies, dawn and sunset, the whole marvellous landscape, passed
-unheeded. We longed to reach the main artery; the Orinoco was our Mecca,
-apparently unattainable. Fishing and hunting had lost zest, and become
-simple drudgery, indispensable to renew our provender, as in the long
-journey nearly all our stores were exhausted.
-
-Raoul and Leal frequently shot at the alligators, which, singly, in
-couples, or in shoals, basked in the sun in a sort of gluttonous
-lethargy, with hanging tongues and half-closed eyes. The huge saurians,
-when hit, would turn over and make for the water, except on rare
-occasions when the bullet entered below the shoulder-blade, this being a
-mortal wound.
-
-We would sit listening to the even stroke of the paddles on the sides of
-the canoe and the drowsy sing-song of the men.
-
-Frequently, towards sundown, we heard the deep note of tigers in the
-forest, and always the confused uproar of a thousand animals, frogs,
-crickets, birds, ushering in the night.
-
-Besides alligators and wild-boar, the only other large animals which we
-frequently saw were the harmless tapirs.
-
-Snakes are not abundant on the Vichada, yet it was on the shores of that
-river that we came to quite close quarters with a water-snake of the boa
-constrictor species. The reptile was found coiled not far from our
-halting-place. Raoul at once fired his fowling-piece at short range,
-blinding and wounding it. He then discharged the five bullets of his
-revolver into the snake, and the men completed the work, beating it with
-their paddles. When stretched out, it measured some 16 feet in length,
-and was of corresponding thickness.
-
-These snakes, though not poisonous, are dangerous if hungry. They lurk
-at the drinking-places, and when a young calf, deer, or any other small
-animal comes within reach, they coil themselves round it and strangle
-it. They devour their prey slowly, and then fall into a sleep, which is
-said to last for several days.
-
-In all probability, the snake we had killed must have been at the end of
-one of these periods. Much to our astonishment, notwithstanding bullets
-and blows, the snake began to move in the direction of our hammocks. Had
-this not been seen in time, it might possibly have coiled itself around
-some unwary sleeper. More blows were administered, and this time the
-animal seemed quite dead. However, it managed to roll into the river,
-and on striking the water appeared to revive.
-
-This was our only meeting face to face with a denizen of these forests
-and rivers, and I can truly say we longed for no closer acquaintance
-with them.
-
-For obvious reasons of prudence, we soon made up our minds never to
-pitch our night camp on beaches easy of access to the Indians settled
-along the shores, but during the day we would frequently halt at their
-settlements, and this enabled us to see a good deal of their mode of
-life and peculiarities.
-
-We found the tribes docile and friendly, rather inclined to be
-industrious in their way than otherwise.
-
-The Indians of the Vichada basin are the bakers, if I may so call them,
-of that great region. The bread which they prepare is made from the
-_mañoc_, or _yuca_, root, which grows in plenty along the banks of
-rivers and streams. There are two kinds of _mañoc_, one sweet and
-harmless, the other bitter and poisonous, yet it is from this latter
-kind that the _casabe_ is prepared. The root, varying in length from 2
-to 3 feet, with a thickness of from 1 to 3 inches, is grated on
-specially-prepared boards of very hard wood. Thus a whitish pulp is
-obtained, which is then compressed in a most primitive manner. A hollow
-cylinder, made of matting of coarse and pliant straw, varying in length
-from 4 to 6, and sometimes 8, feet, and in diameter from 5 inches
-upwards, is filled with the pulp, sausage-wise. The cylinder is then
-hung from the branch of a tree, or a beam conveniently upraised on a
-frame; it is then stretched and twisted from below. The juice of the
-pulp flows through the mesh of the matting. When all the juice has been
-extracted, the pulp is emptied into large wooden basins, and is soaked
-in water, which is run off, the operation being repeated several times.
-The poisonous element, soluble in water, is thus eliminated, and the
-pulp is ready. It is then spread on a slab of stone, thin and perfectly
-even, called _budare_, which stands over a fire. The _casabe_ is soon
-baked, generally in round cakes from 12 to 18 inches in diameter, and
-from half an inch to an inch in thickness. After baking it is stored in
-special baskets, called _mapires_, where it can be kept for months, as
-it stands all weathers and is impervious to moisture. It has the taste
-and the consistency of sawdust, and hunger must be very keen for any
-novice to relish the food. Yet it is most nutritious, and after a while
-replaces biscuit and bread, especially when these are not to be found!
-Not only the Indians, but even the white men, or those who call
-themselves civilized in that vast region, use _casabe_ exclusively.
-Wheat flour is soon spoiled in that hot, damp atmosphere, where there
-are no facilities for protecting it against moisture and vermin, and
-though corn might be abundantly produced, there are no mills to grind
-the meal. Population is so scarce, and the few inhabitants are so far
-apart, that it would not pay to set up the necessary machinery. Nature
-seems to overwhelm man, who drifts back easily into primitive conditions
-of being.
-
-The Indians also prepare _mañoc_ flour. The method is the same as in the
-case of _casabe_, only that before baking the pulp is allowed to ferment
-to a certain degree; after that it is baked and reduced to powder. This
-powder, mixed with water, makes an acid, refreshing drink. If sugar or
-molasses be available, they are added.
-
-As I have said before, the Vichada Indians are expert weavers of
-hammocks, and carvers or makers of canoes. They fell a large tree, and,
-after months of labour, produce very fine canoes. The canoes, the
-hammocks, and the _casabe_ and _mañoc_ are sold to traders who realize
-large profits. A pair of trousers and a hat to the captain of a tribe
-are deemed a good price for a small canoe. Such articles as a cutlass,
-or an axe, are most highly prized by the Indians, and are paid for
-accordingly. It is pitiful to learn how these poor savages are cheated,
-when not robbed outright, by the pseudo-Christians who come in contact
-with them.
-
-They also manufacture torches from resinous substances extracted from
-the forests. Some of these substances are excellent for caulking
-purposes, and, as they are found in great abundance, should constitute
-an important article of trade. A torch made from _peraman_ about 3 to 4
-feet in length, lighted as night set in, would burn with a brilliant
-yellow flame, and throw a strong glare over the camp in the small hours
-when the bonfires had been reduced to embers.
-
-We had been on the Vichada about twenty-five days, when one of us
-developed symptoms of fever, and as these increased within the next
-twenty-four hours, we looked about for some convenient spot where we
-might rest for a few days, lest the attack might become really serious.
-It was our intention to build up some sort of hut—a comparatively easy
-matter, as some of our men were old hands at that kind of work.
-Fortunately for us, however, we met coming from the mouth of the Vichada
-a Venezuelan _mañoc_ trader, who was sailing to one of the Vichada
-affluents, where he expected to receive a load of _mañoc_ and _casabe_.
-The man’s name was Valiente. He had three canoes and ten men with him.
-We were delighted to meet him, as it had been impossible for us to
-gather correct information from the Indians.
-
-He told us that we were still two or three days’ journey from the
-Orinoco, advised us not to put up at any of the beaches, but to push on
-to within a few hours of the mouth of the Vichada, where, on the left
-bank, we would find an abandoned _caney_ that had been built by
-cattle-ranchers some years previously. He had just been there. It was
-possible, he added, that we might find some Indians in possession, in
-which case we should enforce the right of the white man and drive them
-out. At any rate, the _caney_ was on high ground, the forests around
-were clear, and we should find it far more comfortable than anywhere
-else in that neighbourhood.
-
-Following his advice, we hurried on as fast as we could, promising to
-wait for him at Santa Catalina, that being the name of the place.
-Valiente thought that he would start back in six or eight days.
-
-In due course we reached Santa Catalina. On the high bluff, about 300
-yards from the shore, we saw the welcome outlines of a _caney_; it
-showed unmistakable signs of having been built by white men. We could
-see from the river that it was inhabited. This was not so pleasant, but
-we had made up our minds that we would take possession of the _caney_
-with or without the consent of its occupants. If soft words proved
-insufficient, we were bound to appeal to the last argument of Kings and
-of men at bay—force.
-
-I really did not feel inclined to violence; peaceful means and
-diplomatic parleying seemed to me preferable, but as we had no choice,
-following the practice sanctioned by experience, of preparing for war if
-you want to insure peace, we decided to make a great display of force,
-even as the Great Powers, with their military and naval manœuvres—a show
-of teeth and claws to overawe the occupants of the _caney_.
-
-We moored on the bank near by. Notwithstanding my appearance, which, as
-I have chronicled in these pages, had warranted the belief in others
-that I belonged to the holiest of human professions, I was told off to
-ascertain whether we should occupy the premises peacefully or by force.
-I donned a red shirt, suspended from a broad leather belt a most
-murderous-looking cutlass and a six-shooter, cocked my hat sideways in a
-desperado fashion, and, full of ardour, advanced, flanked on either side
-by Leal and one of our men, each of whom carried a rifle and the
-inevitable _machete_. Verily, we looked like a wandering arsenal!
-
-Remembering that the actor’s success is said to be greater the more he
-lives up to his part, I endeavoured to look as fierce as possible, and
-tried to call to mind scenes of dauntless courage, assaults of
-fortresses, heroic deeds from my historical repertory. I must have
-succeeded, for I felt uncommonly brave, particularly as there seemed to
-be no danger warranting our preparations.
-
-Unfortunately, I happen to be afflicted with myopia, which at a certain
-distance blurs the outline of objects large or small.
-
-As we continued to advance I could distinguish that someone was coming
-towards us. My courage evaporated; I felt sure that this must be some
-hostile Indian intent on hindering our access to the longed-for _caney_.
-I would fain have turned tail, but vanity, which is the source of
-nine-tenths of the displays of human courage, pricked me on. My ears
-awaited the wild whoop of the advancing Indian, and my eyes were
-prepared to witness the onslaught of his ferocious braves from the
-neighbouring bushes. Yet the die was cast, and forward we went.
-
-Imagine my surprise when, from the approaching figure, still indistinct
-and vague to my short-sighted eyes, a greeting of the utmost courtesy in
-the purest Castilian rang forth in the air of the clear afternoon. I
-shall never forget it. Those words in my native tongue, uttered in the
-midst of that wilderness, 500 leagues from the nearest town or civilized
-settlement, conjured up in one moment cherished memories of a distant
-world.
-
-Greatly relieved, I put aside my weapons of assault and destruction,
-which, to speak the truth, were most inconvenient to walk in.
-
-I knew before, and am more convinced than ever since that day, that I am
-not compounded of the clay of heroes: in which I am like the rest of the
-world. Peace and peaceful avocations are much more in my line. I love
-heroes—military ones especially—in books, in pictures, or in statues; as
-every-day companions, I believe—not having met any heroes in the
-flesh—that they must be unbearable. They really owe it to themselves to
-get killed or to die the moment they have attained their honours. They
-are sure to be ruined if left to the vulgarizing influences of daily
-life, mixing with the rest of humanity in every-day toil and strife. You
-cannot have your bust or portrait in Parliament or Assembly, your niche
-in the cathedral or in public hall, and your equestrian statue with your
-horse eternally lifting his fore-legs for the edification of coming
-generations, and at the same time insist on walking about the streets in
-the guise of a commonplace mortal! If you live in bronze and marble, if
-your name fills half a column of the encyclopædia, and appears as a
-noble example in the books in which children are taught to consider
-brutal violence the highest evolution of human intellect and action, you
-cannot ask your humble companions on earth to put up with you in their
-midst. Heroes should find their places, and stick to them, for their own
-greater glory and the comfort of their fellow-men.
-
-The gentleman whom we met was named Aponte, and came from Caracas, the
-capital of Venezuela. He had been appointed to the governorship of the
-Amazon Territory. After spending several years in its capital, San
-Carlos, he became afflicted with cataract. People told him that the
-Vichada Indians cured cataract with the juice of certain herbs, which
-they kept secret. He had arrived at Santa Catalina about ten days before
-us, accompanied by his sister and a young Corsican who had been in his
-employ at San Carlos. An Indian woman from one of the tribes had taken
-him in charge, and made daily applications of some milky juice extracted
-from plants, and, strange to say, he found relief. I have since heard
-that he is completely cured.
-
-An occulist, who travelled through those regions two or three years
-later, investigated the truth of these alleged cures, and found them to
-be authentic. He could not, however, induce the Indians to tell him what
-they use. This knowledge of the virtue of plants amongst the Indians is
-found in nearly all tropical lands. Quinine, to which humanity owes so
-much, was also an Indian secret, and was discovered by a well-known
-combination of circumstances. Towards the middle of the eighteenth
-century, in one of the Peruvian States, the Indians were treated very
-cruelly by their masters. The daughter of the house won the love of the
-Indian slaves by her kindness and charity. It had been noticed that no
-Indians died from malarial and other fevers, which proved fatal to the
-white men, but what means they employed could not be learned either by
-threats or entreaties.
-
-The daughter of the cruel master was taken ill. Her nurse, an Indian
-woman, gave her some concoction which saved her life, but would not
-reveal the secret for years. On her deathbed she told her young mistress
-what plant it was that the Indians employed against fever. Thus the
-_cinchona_, or Peruvian bark, was discovered. In the Choco regions in
-Colombia, which teem with snakes, the Indians know not only the plants
-that cure the bite and counteract the poison, but those which confer
-immunity. They also have a combination of substances forming a sort of
-paste, which, when applied to the wounds and ulcers of man or animal,
-however sore they may be, exercise a healing and immediate action.
-
-I had an uncle, Dr. Triana, well known to European botanists, and
-especially to collectors of orchids, to several varieties of which his
-name is linked (the numerous varieties of _Catleya trianensis_ are named
-after him). He lived for a long time in the Choco region, and brought
-back large quantities of this paste, which he used with success in cases
-of wounds and ulcers, both in Europe and America, but he could never
-persuade the Indians to tell him its exact composition.
-
-The young Corsican whom we found with Mr. Aponte was a sort of
-globe-trotter, jack-of-all-trades, hail-fellow-well-met with everybody.
-He was an explorer, a dentist, could serve as barber if required, had
-acted as clerk to Mr. Aponte, had with him a fairly well-stocked
-medicine-chest, and proved to be a first-rate cook. He either knew
-something of medicine or made up for ignorance by his daring. At any
-rate, he took our sick companion in hand, administered to him some of
-his drugs, and in two or three days restored him to perfect health. This
-was a great blessing. Thus disappeared from our horizon the only ominous
-cloud which darkened it during those days of so much sunlight and
-freedom. Those who know not what tropical fevers are can form no idea of
-the dread that their presence inspires when one sees them stealthily
-gaining ground. At times they act slowly, and give one a chance of
-struggling against them, but often they develop with lightning rapidity,
-and a man in full health and in the bloom of life is cut down suddenly
-in a few days or in a few hours.
-
-Figarella was the name of the Corsican ‘doctor’ who enlivened the few
-days we spent at Santa Catalina with his songs, his tales of Corsica,
-the narrative of his adventures, true and fanciful, in all parts of the
-world, and who managed to prepare sumptuous dinners with turtle eggs,
-wild-boar meat, fresh fish, and other ingredients, picked up the Lord
-only knows where. I often had qualms that he must be drawing too freely
-on his medicine-chest, but the dishes proved palatable, and as we
-survived from day to day we have nothing but thanks and gratitude to the
-friend whom we met in the midst of those wilds, with whom our lives came
-in contact for a few days, who then remained behind to work out his own
-destiny, as we ours, even as two ships that sight each other for a
-moment in mid-ocean and then both disappear.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-Friend Valiente turned up at Santa Catalina, his canoes laden with
-_mañoc_ and _casabe_, two days after our arrival.
-
-Though the ranch had been abandoned for some time, stray cattle, more or
-less wild, roamed about the neighbourhood. Leal and Valiente soon
-lassoed a fine heifer, which, slaughtered without delay, replenished our
-commissariat. We celebrated a banquet like that held on New Year’s Day
-at San Pedro del Tua. We still had a little coffee, but of rum, which
-had then formed such an attraction, only the fragrant memory remained.
-Its place was supplied with what was left of our last demijohn of
-aniseed _aguardiente_.
-
-As Valiente intended following the same route, we decided to wait for
-him. He knew that part of the Vichada and the Orinoco well. There were
-several small rapids which it was not advisable to cross without a
-pilot.
-
-Two days after leaving Santa Catalina we struck the Orinoco, with a
-feeling of boundless joy. It seemed to us as if we had reached the open
-ocean, and the air itself appeared purer, more charged with invigorating
-oxygen.
-
-After a short spin from the mouth of the Vichada, we reached Maipures,
-where Venezuelan authorities were stationed. Knowing that Venezuelans,
-as a rule, are inclined to be less reverent and respectful towards the
-Church and its servants than the average Colombian, we abandoned our
-ecclesiastical character, dropping it, as Elias dropped his mantle upon
-earth, on the waters of the Vichada, where it had done us such good
-service.
-
-It was indispensable that we should find a pilot for the rapids. It
-seems that in former days the Venezuelan Government kept two or three
-pilots at Maipures, but we found to our sorrow that they had disappeared
-long since. However, not far from Maipures we were told that we should
-find a man named Gatiño, one of the best pilots on the river. We at once
-started in quest of him, and found him in the thick of the forest about
-a mile from the shore. He was gathering tonga beans, and had formed a
-little camp, accompanied by his family, which consisted of his wife, two
-children, a boy and girl of fourteen and twelve respectively, and two
-smaller children of five and six. He agreed to take us across the
-rapids, provided we would wait at Maipures until he could pack his beans
-and gather some india-rubber extracted by himself. As there was no help
-for it, we agreed to wait. Maipures turned out to be nothing but a group
-of some fifteen or twenty tumble-down, rickety houses, inhabited by
-about a score of people, amongst them the prefect or political
-representative of the Government. He received us most cordially, and
-placed one of the buildings at our service. I believe both Valiente and
-Leal gave him to understand that we were high and mighty personages
-representing the Colombian Government on a tour of inspection through
-the lands awarded to Colombia by a recent decision in a case of
-arbitration between the two republics, handed down by the Queen of
-Spain. Maipures, where the functionary in question was supreme, came
-within the new jurisdiction, and possibly the belief that we might
-exercise some influence in maintaining him in his important office may
-have had to do with his courtesy and goodwill towards us. It was lucky,
-however, that such an impression was created. Shortly after our arrival
-he informed us that the Governor of the Amazon territory had just
-communicated to him orders to prevent all travellers on the river from
-ascending or descending the stream—in a word, to keep them as prisoners
-at Maipures. On reading the Governor’s note to us, he argued, ‘This
-cannot apply to you, for, being Colombians, you are outside the
-Governor’s jurisdiction.’ Here, again, as when conferring ecclesiastical
-dignity upon us, Leal had acted with prudence and foresight.
-
-At Maipures we felt, as we never felt before or after during the
-journey, the presence of the numerous insects, and noticed that these
-winged creatures worked with method and discipline. The _puyon_ sounded
-the charge shortly after sunset, attacking without haste and without
-rest during the whole night. At dawn it would retire to camp, sated with
-our gore. The post of honour was taken by the sand-flies, which would
-remain on duty during the earlier part of the forenoon. In their turn
-they were replaced by some other arm of the service during the hot hours
-of the day, and so on till nightfall, when the _puyon_, refreshed and
-eager, would again fall upon his prey. There is no greater regularity in
-the change of guards at a fortress than is observed by these insects in
-their war upon men and animals.
-
-The mosquito-net was the only real protection. Some relief is obtained
-by filling the room with smoke from smouldering horse or cattle manure,
-but the nauseous smell and the ammonia fumes made the remedy worse than
-the evil. We also feared to share the fate of herrings and other fish
-subject to the process, and preferred the seclusion of our
-mosquito-bars.
-
-These, however, were all minor troubles, mentioned here as a matter of
-record. From our temporary abode we could hear the distant thunder of
-the rapids, as of batteries of cannon in a great artillery duel. The
-waters of the Orinoco, suddenly twisted into a narrow bed, wrestle with
-the boulders of granite scattered in the channel, which they have frayed
-through the very heart of the huge basaltic mountains.
-
-Life in those regions, from what we gathered, is as wild, as untamed,
-and irresponsible as the rivers or forests, and as the animals that roam
-in them. Violence and force are the only law, greed is the sole guiding
-principle, amongst men. The functionaries in most cases are only
-authorized robbers and slayers. The Indians, being the most helpless
-victims, are plundered and murdered, as best suits the fancy of those
-representatives of organized Governments, whose crimes remain hidden
-behind the dense veil of interminable forests.
-
-When news of any of these misdeeds does chance to reach the official
-ear, the facts are so distorted on the one hand, and there is so little
-desire to investigate on the other, that no redress is ever obtained.
-
-Whilst at Maipures there came in a man from San Carlos, the capital of
-one of the Amazon territories. He told a gruesome story. The Governor of
-that province, whom he represented as a prototype of the official
-robbers just mentioned, had exasperated his companions by his
-all-absorbing greed. The Governor seized all the tonga beans and
-india-rubber extracted by the poor Indians, who were forced to work
-without any pay, unfed, whip-driven. His companions, who expected a
-share in the plunder, conspired to murder him. He was known to be
-fearless and an admirable shot. One night, however, his house was
-surrounded by a score or so of his followers; a regular siege ensued;
-the young Governor kept his assailants at bay for several hours. He was
-accompanied by a young Spanish ballet-dancer, who had followed his
-fortunes undaunted by the dangers of that wild land. She would reload
-the guns whilst he scanned the ground from the only window of the room.
-One of the assailants crept upon the roof of the house and shot him from
-behind. He died in a few hours. The canoes laden with all kinds of
-produce despatched by him—not down the Orinoco, for he feared they might
-be seized on the long journey through Venezuelan territory, but through
-the Casiquiare to the Amazon—were said to be worth £40,000 or £50,000.
-Even if not accurate in all its details, which I repeat from the
-statement of the new arrival at Maipures, this instance gives an idea of
-the conditions that prevail in those localities.
-
-True to his word, Gatiño turned up at Maipures on the third day, and we
-continued our journey at once.
-
-The rapids of the Orinoco break the open current of the river for a
-distance of some forty or fifty miles. The Maipures rapids are from five
-to six miles in length. The river then continues its quiet flow for
-about twenty or twenty-five miles down to the rapids of Atures; thence
-it flows to the ocean without any further obstacle of importance.
-
-Gatiño had his own canoe of a special type, much larger than ours, very
-deep, heavy, capacious, and comfortable. It was the real home of his
-family.
-
-I asked him why he did not settle somewhere on the banks of those
-rivers. He told me that both on the Orinoco and on the affluents there
-were numberless spots on high ground, free from all floods, abundant in
-game, within easy reach of good fishing, healthy and cool, where he
-would fain settle. ‘But we poor wretches,’ he added, ‘have no rights.
-When we least expect it, up turns a fine gentleman sent by some
-Government or other with a few soldiers; they lift our cattle and steal
-our chickens, destroy what they do not take away, and compel us to
-accompany them, paddling their canoes or serving them as they may want
-without any pay. Whenever I hear,’ he went on to say, ‘that white men in
-authority are coming along the river, I start immediately in my canoe
-through the _caños_ as far inland as I can. The wild Indians and the
-savages are kind and generous; it is the whites and the whites in
-authority who are to be dreaded.’
-
-Gatiño was himself a full-blooded Indian, but, having been brought up on
-some settlement, he considered himself a civilized man, and in truth it
-was strange to see how he practised the highest virtues of an honest
-man. He loved his wife and family tenderly; he worked day and night for
-their welfare. He longed for a better lot for his children, the eldest
-of whom ‘studied’ at the city of San Fernando de Atabapo, the only city
-which he knew of by personal experience. As it consists of eighty or a
-hundred thatch-roofed houses, one may well imagine what the word ‘city’
-implied in his case; yet his thoughts were constantly centred on the
-learning which that child was storing to the greater honour and
-happiness of his wandering family. Reading and writing formed the
-curriculum of that university, possibly because they marked the limit of
-the teacher’s attainments; but let us be ashamed of mocking the humble
-annals of so good a man.
-
-I cannot forbear mentioning an incident, a parallel to which it would be
-difficult to find amongst nominally civilized folk. One of our men who
-had accompanied us from San Pedro de Arimena, knowing our plight and our
-dependence on Gatiño, took him aside, informing him that we had plenty
-of gold, and that as one of us was ill, and we desired to reach the open
-river as soon as possible, it would be easy for him to name his price.
-He suggested that Gatiño should charge one or two thousand dollars for
-the job, which we would be bound to pay. Gatiño not only did not improve
-that wonderful opportunity, but he forbore from telling us of the advice
-given to him. He charged us 100 dollars, a moderate price for the work,
-and it was only when on the other side of the rapids that Leal learned
-the incident from the other men.
-
-Here was a test which not many men brought up in the midst of civilized
-life could have withstood.
-
-Gatiño and his family will ever remain in my mind as a bright, cheerful
-group. Alas for them, lost in those solitudes amongst wild beasts and
-wild Indians, and subject to the voracity of the white men, who become
-more ferocious than the worst tiger when their unbridled greed has no
-responsibility and no punishment to dread!
-
-We had three canoes (including Gatiño’s) to take down. We were obliged
-to empty them completely. The men carried everything on their backs
-along the shore, whilst the canoes shot the rapids.
-
-When I saw Gatiño on the first rapids, I believed him to be bent on
-suicide. At that point the river, cut and divided by the rocks, left a
-narrow channel of about 300 feet in length close in to the shore. Thus
-far the canoes had been dragged by the current and held by means of
-ropes. On reaching the channel, Gatiño manned the canoe with four men at
-the prow, and sat at the stern. The canoe, still tied by the rope, which
-was held by four men, was kept back as much as possible from the
-current, which increased in speed at every inch. At the end of the
-channel the whole river poured its foaming volume into a huge, cup-like
-basin, studded with rocks, where the water seethed as if boiling. From
-the basin the river flowed on placidly for several miles. This was the
-end of the first rapids.
-
-Halfway down the channel the men let go the ropes, and the canoe, with
-its crew, seemed like a huge black feather upon a sea of foam, and the
-whole length of the channel, white and frothy, appeared like the arched
-neck of a gigantic horse curved to drink from the waters below. The
-waters, before entering the basin, formed a small cataract shooting over
-the protruding ledge. The canoe fell into the basin, and seemed about to
-be dashed against a rock that stood in its way. On again striking the
-waters, Gatiño gave the word of command, and the four men began to
-paddle steadily and with great force, as if to increase the impetus.
-Gatiño remained quiet and motionless in his place, holding his paddle
-out of the water ready to strike. At a given moment he uplifted it,
-thrust it deeply into the waves, and moved it dexterously, so that the
-canoe turned as if on a pivot, and quietly glided along the rock upon
-which it would have been dashed into a thousand pieces.
-
-Gatiño explained to me that it was necessary for the men to paddle so as
-to give the canoe her own share in the impetus, and make it more
-responsive to his steering.
-
-Though he assured me that there was no danger, and though the journey
-along the shore was tiresome and slow, I did not venture to accompany
-him when shooting the other rapids before reaching the open river.
-
-The Orinoco has drilled an open passage-way through a spur of the
-mountains at Maipures. The struggle between the waters and the rocks
-must have lasted centuries.
-
-‘Here shalt thou halt,’ said the rock.
-
-‘Further will I go,’ replied the river.
-
-Like the spoils of battle on a stricken field, the shattered rocks stud
-the current, which sweeps roaring and foaming around and over them. They
-resemble the ruins in the breach of a battered bastion. The river is the
-victor, but, as will happen when two great forces counteract each other,
-the result is a compromise, and the course of the stream is deviated.
-The difference of level from the beginning to the end of the rapids is
-in itself not sufficient to cause the violence with which the waters
-run. It arises from the sudden compression of the powerful volume of
-waters into a narrow space. The waters rush through the openings made in
-the rock with a deafening sound, torn by the remnants of pillars in the
-bed through which they pass. They fill the air with the tumult of their
-advance; one would say an army was entering a conquered city, quivering
-with the rapture of triumph, lifting up the thunder of battle, Titanic
-bugle-calls, and the pæans of victory. After each one of these narrow
-breaches in the wall of granite the river plunges into deep basins,
-where the foaming waters soon sink into their former quiet flow. The
-soldiers have crossed the first entrenchments, and collect their forces
-before the next assault. Soon the margins on either side begin to hem
-in, the waters stir more rapidly, and soon again the mad rush, the
-desperate plunge, the wild, roaring, irresistible onslaught, and again
-through the very heart of the mountain into the next basin. Finally,
-after storming the last redoubt, the river, like a lion freed from the
-toils which imprisoned him, leaps upon the bosom of the plain, bounding
-forward in solemn flow towards the ocean. The clear tropical sun
-reflects itself on its ever-moving bosom, even as the clouds and the
-forests, the mountains and the birds on wing. The wandering mirror keeps
-on its course, being, as Longfellow has it, like unto the life of a good
-man ‘darkened by shadows of earth, but reflecting an image of heaven.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
-We spent ten days in covering the distance from the upper to beyond the
-lower rapids, walking whenever it was impossible to use the canoes,
-which were drifted by the current or shot over the rapids. The delay was
-due chiefly to the loading and unloading of the canoes, and the
-necessarily slow transportation of packages, bundles, and sundry
-articles along the shore.
-
-The banks of the river on either side along the whole length of the
-rapids are high and rocky, sometimes extending for a mile or two in
-flat, grass-covered, wavy meadows, and then rising in small hills,
-abrupt and ragged on the very edge of the water. This is specially the
-case in the narrow part of the gorges. The grass in the small
-meadow-like plains is the same as on the shores of the Meta, and the
-whole aspect of the region, bare of large forests, is that of a field in
-a civilized country.
-
-A few days after leaving Maipures we noticed, to our joy, the absence of
-mosquitoes and other such tormentors. They seemed to have been blown
-away by the wind, which had freer scope in the more open stretches along
-the main river.
-
-We missed the soft couch of the sand beaches to which we had become
-accustomed, the thin layer of sand or earth being powerless to soften
-the bed-rock on which we now had to stretch ourselves, but the flight of
-the mosquitoes and their companions more than made up for this.
-
-Our commissariat had dwindled to utter meagreness; we had neither sugar
-nor coffee, and _casabe_ was our only bread. The last drops of
-_aguardiente_ had been drained at Santa Catalina. At Maipures we had
-obtained a drink which they called white rum—in truth, pure alcohol,
-which we had to drown in three times the quantity of water before we
-swallowed it. Our cigars, cigarettes and tobacco were all gone; they
-were part and parcel of an enchanted past—smoke wafted heavenward like
-so many of our hopes and illusions. We had obtained native tobacco, with
-which we made cigars or rolled cigarettes out of newspaper clippings.
-Thus we consumed many a literary article or political effusion which it
-would have been utterly impossible to utilize in any other way. Corn-cob
-pipes also came in handily.
-
-Game, furred or feathered, was not to be found on the shores of the
-rapids; we had to rely principally on fishing, which was most abundant
-in the quieter pools and basins. We ate all sorts of fish, some of
-admirable quality, especially the _morrocoto_, far superior to the
-French sole or the American shad, blue fish, or Spanish mackerel. If
-Marguery could meet with it, his immense renown would increase tenfold,
-as with this fish at his disposal he would be certain to evolve what
-from a culinary point of view would amount to an epic poem of the most
-sublime order. Such, at least, was my opinion when eating that fish,
-with my imagination duly fired by a voracious appetite and a lack of
-material condiments which gave rise to dreams worthy of Lucullus in
-exile.
-
-Rice and salt we had in plenty; butter, oil, and lard were unknown
-quantities. Had we been in Lent, necessity would have enabled us very
-easily to observe the ordinance of the Roman Church with regard to
-abstinence from meat. We thought of this, and although we were not sure
-of our dates, we at once decided to offer up our enforced diet in a
-truly Catholic spirit in atonement for some of our many sins! May our
-offering prove acceptable!
-
-We did not go to sleep as readily on our new hard beds as on the sand.
-The clearness of the air and freedom from insects also contributed to
-long watches, which we spent in listening to the far-off roar of the
-river pealing incessantly through the night air, whilst Gatiño would
-tell us about the life of men and beasts in those territories. The voice
-of the river seemed like the distant bass of a powerful orchestra, all
-the high notes of which had been lost in space.
-
-Gatiño was familiar with the rivers that flow into the Orinoco above its
-confluence with the Vichada, and the numerous _caños_ which intersect
-that region were so well known to him that on one occasion, when flying
-from some Governor on his way to the upper territories who was anxious
-to obtain his services as a guide, Gatiño had managed to lose himself in
-such an intricate maze of _caños_ and water-ways, and, finally, in a
-small lagoon, unknown to all except the wild Indians, that the Governor
-had given up the chase in despair. He had travelled on the Casiquiare
-and the Rio Negro, and had visited the Upper Amazon. According to him,
-the Upper Orinoco and its affluents are as abundant in india-rubber
-forests as the Amazon and its tributaries, the Putumayo, the Napo and
-the Yarabi. The gum or india-rubber is identical in quality with that of
-the best species of Para. In some places the trees grow so closely that
-a man may extract from twenty to forty pounds of india-rubber a day.
-Besides large virgin areas rich in india-rubber forests, in other parts
-_piazaba_ palm forests stretch for hundreds of acres at a time. This
-_piazaba_ is used for matting, broom-making, and twisting of ropes and
-cables. It is perfectly impervious to moisture, and is even said to
-improve instead of rotting in water. Not far from where we were in one
-of the _caños_, the _piazaba_ forest followed the water-course for a
-distance of, Gatiño said, ‘twenty twists.’ An odd system of measuring,
-but the only one at his command. ‘Twenty twists’ might be five or twenty
-miles, according to the size of the curves. These forests further
-contained infinite abundance of sarsaparilla, tonga bean, _peraman_ and
-_caraña_, the resinous substances used for caulking and torch-making.
-Gatiño himself exploited those sources of wealth as far as his own
-personal means and limitations would allow him. He stated his
-willingness at any time to guide us to the spots where rubber, tonga
-bean, and so forth, could be found, adding that he knew we would treat
-him well, but that he would never consent to act as a guide to others,
-especially to the white men in official positions who now and then
-appeared along the river. These he held in special abhorrence, and no
-doubt their doings justified his feelings.
-
-Gatiño’s statements as to the wealth of the Orinoco were perfectly
-truthful. It seems strange that such vast sources of wealth should
-remain practically unexploited. The rapids of the Orinoco act as a
-barrier, before which traders and explorers have come to a standstill.
-Some sixty or seventy years ago cart-roads existed on the shores along
-the rapids; these were built by the missionaries, and parts of them are
-still intact. Vegetation being weak on the hard soil of those banks, it
-would be easy to re-establish them. The great obstacle, however, is to
-be found in the numerous affluents which fall into the Orinoco along the
-rapids. The missionaries had large pontoon-like rafts on which they
-transported their carts from one side to the other. Were this primitive
-service started once more, the flow of natural products extracted from
-the forests would soon establish itself from the Upper to the Lower
-Orinoco.
-
-One day, having left our canoes behind, we arrived at the shores of the
-Cantaniapo, a clear stream flowing into the Orinoco between two
-stretches of rapids. No tree shaded us from the fierce glare of the sun.
-The waters murmured most invitingly on the pebbles of the beach. On the
-other side was a sort of shed, a vestige of former splendour. A small
-canoe was moored alongside, tied with a _piazaba_ rope to the trunk of a
-neighbouring tree. So near, and yet so far! We should have to wait,
-perhaps, broiling in the sun for hours, till our canoes arrived. Whilst
-we discussed the arduous architectural problem of building a tent with
-such articles as coats, india-rubber waterproof sheets, and so on, a
-noise as of a body falling into the water drew our attention to the
-river. Leal, holding his _machete_ between his teeth, was swimming
-_llanero_ fashion—that is to say, throwing each arm out of the water in
-succession, and covering a distance equal to the length of his body at
-every stroke. The peril, potentially speaking, was extreme; one never
-knows whether the alligators and other inhabitants of those waters may
-or may not be at hand. Yet Leal did not seem to care. Fortunately, he
-soon landed on the opposite shore, jumped into the canoe, cut the rope
-and paddled back. On our remonstrating with him, he argued that the
-danger was slight; alligators hate noise, and he had taken care to be as
-noisy as possible.
-
-‘Furthermore,’ he added, ‘I had my _machete_ with me.’
-
-We stopped that night under the shed. Gatiño came in due time. We
-particularly wished to bathe in the transparent waters of that river,
-not as Leal had done, but in our usual prudent way, standing on the
-shore far from all possible danger.
-
-The next morning we saw the only living tiger which met our eyes during
-that long trip. Early, before striking the camp, the shout went forth—‘A
-tiger! A tiger!’ There, at a distance of about 150 feet from us, on a
-small protruding ledge which plunged into the river, forming a sort of
-natural drinking-place, stood a beautiful specimen of the native tiger.
-The wind, which, as Leal told us, blew from the land, carried the scent
-in the wrong direction, and this explained the tiger’s visit. On hearing
-the shout, Leal sprang up and seized one of the rifles. The tiger looked
-towards our group and turned tail, bolting in the direction whence he
-had come, behind a clump of bushes. Leal followed him. We soon heard a
-shot, and after a few minutes Leal returned, disgusted. He had only
-wounded the animal. I argued with him that we were most thankful to the
-lord of the forest for his abrupt courtesy in leaving the field entirely
-to us, as, had he felt inclined to enter into closer relations, we might
-have found it awkward, to say the least.
-
-Valiente had come with Gatiño. Our belongings seemed to him, as they had
-previously seemed to Leal, an abnormal accumulation of wealth. We had
-kept with us, not knowing whether they might again be required, our
-riding-saddles. My own was large, comfortable, and soft, a work of art
-in its way. Valiente seemed to admire it. The remarks which he made
-deserve to be noted here.
-
-‘This saddle is certainly very fine and comfortable; but how do you
-manage when crossing a river? Do you not find it very heavy on your
-head?’
-
-I could not understand what he meant, until I remembered that the
-_llaneros_, when swimming across a river, generally carry their saddles
-on their heads to keep them dry. At first I thought Valiente was
-‘pulling my leg.’ A mere glance at my person should suffice to persuade
-anyone that not even the furious onslaught of a regiment of Cossacks
-would induce me in any circumstances to plunge into a river where there
-was a chance of meeting alligators and such-like; I was still less
-likely to venture on such feats with the additional burden of a heavy
-saddle on my head. However, Valiente was perfectly in earnest, and meant
-no harm; so I assured him with perfect calm that I had never noticed on
-any occasion, either in or out of the water, that the saddle was a heavy
-one.
-
-‘Possibly,’ I added, ‘it is a question of habit.’
-
-‘May be,’ he said, ‘but it would be a long time before I got used to it.
-Look at my saddle!’ he went on to say; ‘it only weighs a fourth of
-yours. Still, I should like to try yours, not for real hard
-work—branding, lassoing, or rounding up cattle—but just to prance round
-the town on a good horse and charm the girls. That’s about what it’s fit
-for!’
-
-That day, marked in the calendar of our memory as the ‘tiger day,’ our
-supper consisted of boiled rice and _casabe_. Somehow or other there had
-been no fishing. Yet we did not grumble; custom had taught us to be
-easily satisfied. We learned from Gatiño that within twelve miles from
-us the Atures ruins were to be found. Behind the thick forest which
-separates it from the river stands a short range of high cliffs. They
-are the last spur of the chain through which the Orinoco has drilled its
-way. At a height of 600 to 700 metres on the vertical wall, so straight
-and smooth that it seems to have been polished all over by the hand of
-man, there appear, carved in the very substance of the rock, a huge
-alligator and two human figures, standing near its head and tail
-respectively. All are of colossal dimensions. According to the
-measurements of other travellers provided with the required instruments,
-the length of the alligator exceeds 500 feet, and the human figures are
-of proportionate size. It is difficult to understand what sort of
-scaffolding was used to carry out this work at such a height, no support
-or traces of support of any kind in the rock being apparent; what
-instruments were used for the carving, and what purpose the whole work
-served: all this is very perplexing.
-
-Footprints of human endeavour, thoughts of past generations entirely
-lost to our minds, left there in the midst of the forest, marking the
-passage of men who must have been powerful at a period so remote that
-only these traces remain. What more eloquent proof of the nothingness,
-the vanity, of our own ephemeral individual life!
-
-The mere magnitude of the work carried out demonstrates that in those
-regions, totally deserted to-day, where Nature has reasserted her
-absolute sway, and where the wanderer has to fight for every inch of
-ground in the jungle and the thicket, there must once have been
-multitudes of men educated in certain arts—arts which in their turn must
-have been links in a chain of sequence indispensable to their own
-existence, as isolated effort in one direction would be
-incomprehensible. Nothing of those myriads of men survives beyond this
-dumb expression of their thoughts and aspirations.
-
-Were those figures carved on that huge wall, on the virgin rock of the
-mountains, hundreds or thousands of years ago? Who knows? Who can tell?
-
-With the rapidity inherent to human thought, my mind sped to the
-pyramids of Egypt, the ruins of Babylon and Nineveh, the buried cities
-of Ceylon, the excavated temples and palaces in Yucatan and elsewhere,
-wherever vestiges of vanished generations are found.
-
-That sculpture on the rock on the shores of the Orinoco brought to my
-mind the dying lion cut into the granite on the banks of the Lake of
-Lucerne, as a symbol of respect and admiration to the loyalty and
-steadfastness of the compatriots of William Tell, who died for a cause
-upon which judgment has been passed in the minds of men and in the pages
-of history. I could not help thinking that perhaps when Macaulay’s
-famous New Zealander shall stand upon the broken arches of London Bridge
-to gaze at the ruins of St. Paul’s, when England and London shall have
-crumbled into potsherds, so in years to come some native of these
-Orinoco regions, then populous and civilized, may sail on the cool
-waters of Lucerne and interrogate the mute rock, anxious to know the
-allegory embodied in that dying lion holding in its claws the shield
-which bears the three secular lilies of old France. Even as the rock was
-mute to us, so shall the rock again be mute to him who thousands of
-years hence may question Thorwaldsen’s sculpture. The efforts of man are
-powerless against time and oblivion, even though they choose the
-largest, the most lasting manifestations of Nature for their pedestal.
-
-Time passes grimly on. The endeavours of pride, of flattery, of
-gratitude, the emblems of glory, all become dumb and meaningless.
-Egyptian hieroglyphics, figures and signs carved in monoliths or
-pyramids or in the rock of the mountains, after the lapse of what, to
-the world, is but an instant, all become confused, vague, and
-undefinable. The seeker and the student find all those attempts to
-perpetuate the memory or the aspirations of men, now on the burning
-sands of the desert, now decked in the foliage and wealth of Nature,
-aggressively reasserting her empire, now in the naked summits of the
-uplifted mountains—yea, the seeker finds them all; but he knows not
-whether they be expressions of human pride anxious to survive the life
-of the body, or whether they be witnesses of servile flattery paying
-tribute to the mighty, or the grateful offering of nations to their
-heroes and their benefactors, or the emblem of some dim forgotten
-religion, whose very rites are as unintelligible to living men as is the
-mystic power which once gave them force.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-With the accession of Gatiño and his family and Valiente and his men,
-our numbers had gradually increased, and the camp at night had quite a
-lively aspect. The men would tell their adventures, and conversation
-frequently turned on local topics. We had gradually drifted into
-practical indifference concerning the doings of that distant world to
-which we belonged, and towards which we were moving. Newspapers,
-letters, telegrams, the multifarious scraps of gossip, the bursts of
-curiosity which fill so great a part in the life of modern man, had
-totally disappeared as daily elements in our own. To tell the truth, I
-did not miss them greatly. I have always thought that the daily
-newspapers are thieves of time, and cannot but approve the system of a
-certain friend of mine, an Englishman, who, residing in New York, had no
-other source of information for the world’s news than the weekly edition
-of the _Times_. He was dependent on it even for the news of American
-life and politics.
-
-He argued that the ups and downs of a given event were of little
-interest to him.
-
-‘All that one need know,’ he said, ‘is the upshot, the crystallized
-fact, without wasting valuable time in the slow developments which, at
-times, are pure inventions of the editor—“padding,” as it is called. I
-am a little behind-hand at times,’ he remarked, ‘but at the end of the
-year I make it up, balance the account, and start afresh.’
-
-Certainly if all the attention given to local news of no importance, or
-to descriptions of fires, crimes, and sundry topics which never change
-in essence and vary solely as regards names and secondary details, were
-devoted to studying something useful, the average mind of the great
-newspaper-reading nations would not have been degraded to the depths
-revealed by a glance at a collection of the newspapers and reading
-matter on the bookstalls of any railway-station in France, England, or
-the United States, where the flood of trash and sensationalism swamps
-and carries away with it public intelligence, or what stands for it.
-
-Gautier used to complain of the curse of the daily press.
-
-‘Formerly,’ he said, ‘every human being brayed in his own original
-asinine way. Now we only get variations on the leaders in their
-respective newspapers!’
-
-The great French writer expressed the simple truth in a pointed way. The
-cheap press, like cheap liquor, is a public calamity.
-
-Our men poured forth personal impressions of Nature. The world varies in
-size and in beauty in proportion to the eye and the mind that
-contemplate it. In Leal’s and Valiente’s conversation especially there
-was something like the voice of the forest and the murmuring waters.
-They had lived to some purpose in those deserts, and to them cities,
-railways, palaces, sea-going ships, and all the other methods of modern
-locomotion—material civilization, in fact—were as wonderful as the
-beauties and splendours of Eastern tales are to us.
-
-Talking about tigers, Leal told us that they roamed all over those
-plains, especially on the banks of the Meta and the Orinoco, where the
-forests intersect breeding and grazing plains. The cattle-ranchers must
-be ever on the watch, and from instinct and experience the cattle
-acquire a natural spirit of defence without which the losses would be
-far heavier than at present.
-
-Whenever the cattle scent the approach of the tiger, they crowd
-together, the young calves in the centre, the cows and young heifers
-covering them behind their bodies, and the bulls pacing around and
-outside the group like sentinels before a tent. There is no exaggeration
-in this tale. Leal assured us that he had himself seen these
-preparations on more than one occasion.
-
-The tiger, whose daring and ferocity are multiplied tenfold by hunger,
-frequently attacks the group: then ensues a life and death struggle. The
-tiger tries to jump upon the bull sideways or from behind, whilst the
-bull strives to face the tiger constantly. As the latter is far more
-agile and can leap from a long distance, he frequently lands upon the
-bull, sometimes breaking his spine with the blow. If he misses, the bull
-gores him. Occasionally both animals die, the tiger in its
-death-struggle tearing the bull’s neck open with its claws.
-
-‘More than once,’ said Leal, ‘have I found the two enemies dead in a
-pool of blood side by side.’
-
-The tigers also crouch in the bushes close to the drinking-places, and
-jump upon the animals as they lower their heads into the water. They rip
-open the necks of their victims, drag them into the jungle, and there
-devour them.
-
-The hunters know that a sated tiger is far less daring than a hungry
-one, and they frequently place a calf or some other easy prey within his
-reach. After his meal he is hunted down, but Leal added that this is not
-considered fair play amongst thoroughbred _llaneros_; it is a trick
-unworthy of a real sportsman.
-
-The tigers live exclusively upon other animals. They prefer cattle, and
-have a special predilection for donkeys and mules; they are gourmets.
-The choicest morsel to their taste seems to be the fat neck of donkeys
-and mules; they have, too, a pretty taste in turtles. They can crush the
-back of the younger turtles not yet fully developed. These awkward
-amphibians rush, if their ponderous movements can be so described, into
-the water for fear of the tiger. There he is powerless to harm them.
-
-The alligator rivals the tiger in voracity and fierceness. They are
-sworn enemies, and attack each other whenever they meet. The odds are on
-the tiger’s side if the struggle be on land, and in favour of the
-alligator if the pair meet in the water. The tiger seeks to turn the
-alligator over on his back, or to get at the body towards the stomach,
-where the softer skin can be penetrated by the tiger’s claws, which
-disembowel his enemy. The alligator defends himself by striking terrific
-blows with his tail, and seeks to scrunch the tiger between his
-formidable jaws. Fights between them, Leal said, are frequently seen on
-the beaches, and are a fascinating though ghastly spectacle.
-
-The tigers frequently cross rivers infested with alligators, and display
-a really marvellous cunning in avoiding their enemy in his own element.
-The tiger will stand on the beach at a given point of the river, and
-there roar with all his might for an hour or so on end. The alligators,
-in the hope of getting at him, congregate in the water at that
-particular point. When the members of the assembly thus convened have,
-so far as the tiger can judge, met at the appointed place, he starts
-up-stream along the banks as rapidly as possible, and crosses two or
-three miles higher up. There are two details to be noted: first, the
-stratagem by which the tiger misleads his enemies; and, second, his
-choice of a crossing-place, so that the alligator would have to swim
-against the current to get at him.
-
-Both Leal and Valiente had the true cattle-breeder’s love for cattle,
-which to them are man’s best friends.
-
-‘They give us milk and meat and cheese,’ Leal would say; ‘they help us
-to cultivate the ground, and their very presence drives away fevers,
-mosquitoes, and miasmas. We and the cattle are allies against the boas,
-the tigers, the snakes, and all the beasts without which these lands
-would be a real paradise.’
-
-The tales of our friends sounded most wonderful in Fermin’s ears. He was
-a townsman, accustomed to bricks and mortar; furthermore, he was
-naturally sceptical as to all that he heard, and felt rather small at
-seeing our men’s familiarity with things and manifestations of Nature
-which to him were so strange and new.
-
-Fermin came from the city of Medellin, where he had spent most of his
-life. It is a typical old Spanish town of the central tropical belt. It
-nestles amongst the hills, 100 miles from the left bank of the Magdalena
-River, at a height of about 4,500 feet. The ground around is
-mountainous. The valley is small and beautiful, with numberless streams
-coursing down the hills, and luxuriant vegetation in perpetual bloom.
-
-Prior to this journey, Fermin’s travels had never taken him beyond his
-own province. Like all Colombians, he had been a soldier at some period
-of his life, a ‘volunteer’ of the type described in a telegram (very
-well known in Colombia) which a candid or witty—the distinction is at
-times difficult—mayor sent to a colleague in a neighbouring town:
-‘Herewith I send a hundred volunteers; kindly return the ropes!’ Having
-joined the army in this wise, it is not strange that Fermin left it as
-soon as he could. His military career was no longer and no more glorious
-than Coleridge’s.
-
-Continental Europeans are wont to grow amusingly solemn and censorious
-when they hear of the system still obtaining in many parts of Spanish
-America for the formation of armies which are chiefly engaged in the
-civil wars that devastate those countries from time to time; this system
-is nothing more nor less than the press-gang method practised all over
-Europe not so long ago. But between this press-gang, which suddenly
-compels a man to join the ranks destined to fight, and the conscription,
-which forces him into the army whether he likes it or not, I can only
-see a difference of detail, but none in essence. Individual liberty is
-as much violated in the one case as in the other. In both cases the
-weak, the helpless, and the poor are the prey of the more cunning and
-more powerful, and as for the causes at stake, whatever the name or
-pretext may be, if the whole question is sifted, greed and ambition
-masquerading under some conventional high-sounding name will be found to
-be the real and essential motors. Militarism is a form of exploitation
-of mankind which adds human blood to the ingredients productive of gold
-and power to others; it is nothing but an engine of plunder and of
-pride, the more disgusting on account of its sleek hypocrisy. Your
-money-lender frankly tells you that he will charge you three, four, or
-five per cent. per month, and despoil you of house and home if you
-cannot pay; this, though cruel, is frank and open and above-board. But
-your advocate of militarism will despoil you like the cosmopolite Jew,
-telling you that glory shall be yours, that patriotism and the holy
-traditions of religion, the dynasty, the empire, or the nation, as the
-case may be, are at stake, and that it is necessary for you to risk your
-skin in consequence. With such baubles and clownish maunderings men have
-been led on, and are still being led on, to cut each other’s throats for
-the personal benefit and satisfaction of their leaders, who give them a
-bit of ribbon or stamped metal if they survive and have luck. Meanwhile
-the exploiters sit safe on their office chairs, pocket the shekels, and
-chuckle at the pack of fools, the smug middle-class flunkies, and the
-dirty, bamboozled millions, the cannon fodder, fit only for bayonet and
-shrapnel.
-
-After leaving the army, Fermin, who by trade was a journeyman tailor,
-had joined the remnants of a wrecked theatrical company, a group of
-strollers travelling through the towns and villages of his province, and
-giving performances from the modern and the ancient Spanish repertory,
-to the enjoyment and the edification of the natives.
-
-He had been in my service for over a year, proving himself admirable as
-a valet, and certainly very plastic, for during the journey he had been
-by turns muleteer, amateur paddler, fisherman, hunter and cook.
-
-The people of his province, a hardy mountaineer race, so prolific that
-population doubles itself every twenty-eight years, are known all over
-Spanish America for their readiness at repartee, the frequent metaphors
-that brighten their daily speech, and a knack of humorous exaggeration.
-
-Fermin, referring to one of the men whose idleness he criticised, said,
-‘That fellow is so lazy that he cannot even carry a greeting!’ and
-talking of the wonderful climbing ability of a certain mule, he said
-that, if it could only find the way, it would reach the gates of heaven
-and bray in the ears of St. Peter!
-
-One evening, during a lull in the conversation, Fermin, who had quietly
-listened to tales of fierce tigers, chivalrous bulls, alligators, and
-many other natives of forest or stream, burst forth, saying that he also
-knew of some wonderful beasts; but I prefer to quote his words as nearly
-as possible.
-
-‘The truth is,’ said he, ‘that before starting on this trip I knew
-nothing about tigers, alligators, boas, and so forth, except from
-picture-books. I had even thought that people lied a great deal about
-those animals, but sight has now convinced me of their existence. I have
-no doubt they are to be found somewhere in my native province, but it is
-not about them that I am going to talk. I will tell you something which
-will show that we, too, have wonderful animals in our part of the
-country.
-
-‘Some years ago I was the first lover in a theatrical company which,
-though modest in its pretensions, scored great success wherever it
-played. One night, in the mining region near the Cauca River, we were
-forced to sleep in the very shed where we had performed the comic opera
-entitled “The Children of Captain Grant,” a most popular seafaring tale
-set to music.
-
-‘Mosquitoes were as abundant and aggressive as anywhere in the world,
-but they seemed to me to have far stronger lungs than those of these
-localities. Anyhow, there was a specially sustained high-sounding ring
-in their little trumpets, so that they formed a sort of orchestra
-beneath the moon.
-
-‘One of the lady artistes held the doctrine that life was sacred in all
-its manifestations; that man has no right to kill any animal, however
-small it may be, so she did not kill the mosquitoes that swarmed around
-her, but tried to blow them away with her fan. However, as some of them
-alighted on her forehead and on her hands, she would take them carefully
-between thumb and forefinger and place them on the side of a basin half
-filled with water, moistening their wings so that they stuck and
-remained harmless for the time being.
-
-‘The smokers amongst us—all the men, in fact—after lighting their cigars
-or cigarettes, threw their wooden matches into the basin, a necessary
-precaution lest the thatch-roofed shed might catch fire.
-
-‘In the earlier part of the night the mosquitoes made sleep almost
-impossible, and there we lay on the ground or upon canvas stretchers
-snoozing and tossing about, waiting for the morning. As night advanced,
-with the arrival of a welcome breeze, they seemed to diminish in
-numbers. I began to doze, but was awakened by one of my companions who
-called my attention to the echo of distant music, sweet and low, a
-harmony of lutes and soft recorders, whose sounds were wafted on the
-wings of the night air. We went out of the shed, and the sounds ceased.
-On returning to it we heard the melody again. This was a mystery. Nearly
-all our companions were asleep. We were determined to ascertain whence
-the music came, and, on investigation, found that the blessed
-mosquitoes, placed by the charitable and humane artiste on the sides of
-the basin, had contrived to build a raft with the fag-ends of matches,
-on which, waiting for their wings to dry completely, they were whiling
-the night away gaily singing the most popular ditty in our operetta,
-descriptive of the joys of life on the ocean wave!
-
-‘This will show you,’ Fermin added, ‘that, though we have neither
-tigers, nor boas, nor turtles, nor fighting bulls, nor alligators, in
-our province, our mosquitoes beat all yours in talent and ability!’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Not far from the Atures rapids, we stopped at Puerto Real, a short curve
-in the river where the waters penetrate into a sort of bay justifying
-the name of ‘port,’ but with no other title to it, for no human
-habitation, not even the humblest hut, exists on either shore. Here the
-canoes were laden permanently, as the river flowed straight to the
-ocean, free from all rapids except at a few narrow places where the
-current is swifter. These, however, did not call for the precautions of
-the past days.
-
-Leal considered his task at an end. We were on the open Orinoco in the
-Republic of Venezuela, and in the hands of a guide as careful and expert
-as Gatiño. This led Leal to return. In vain did we seek to persuade him
-to accompany us, to enter Colombia by the Magdalena River, thence to
-Bogotá, and then by the road we had followed to San Pedro del Tua. He
-would not abandon his companions, and decided to go back by the
-identical route we had followed. We deeply felt parting from that noble
-companion whose quiet, unobtrusive courage, whose skilled prudence and
-ready intelligence, had not only contributed greatly to our comfort
-during the ninety odd days that he had been with us, but had doubtless
-saved our lives on more than one occasion.
-
-As a proof of the extent and value of his services, I will quote a
-letter received many months after in Europe, when, in the midst of
-modern civilization, the events and occurrences of my journey through
-the tropical regions of South America seemed more like a dream than a
-reality. Alex, who had returned to Bogotá, wrote as follows:
-
-
-‘I have just received a letter from Leal, dated from his home at San
-Pedro del Tua. You will remember that he left us with fourteen of our
-men, to return by the Vichada and the Meta. On the very day of their
-departure, whilst they were ascending the rapids, and we proceeded on
-our journey down-stream, only a few hours after bidding us farewell, one
-of the two canoes, carrying seven men, struck the trunk of a tree lying
-under the water, and capsized. The men were all good swimmers, and soon
-overtook the canoe, which was drifting with the stream. After a good
-deal of trouble, they succeeded in turning it over. Whilst they were
-getting back into it, they were attacked by two enormous alligators
-which sought to overturn the canoe, striking it furiously with their
-tails. One of the sailors was struck on the head and stunned, losing his
-grip, and before he could be pulled in the other alligator cut his body
-in two, as if with a saw, crushing him between its jaws, so that the man
-was actually devoured in the very presence of his companions.’
-
-
-On reading these tragic details, I felt a cold shiver run through me,
-like a man who sees lightning strike an object close to him, or feels a
-murderous bullet whizz past his head. A retrospective fear seized upon
-me at the thought of the many nights spent on the lonely beaches, and
-the numberless times that our canoes had struck submerged rocks or
-trunks of trees. Surely a kind Providence had watched over us during
-that long journey. ‘The child’s heart within the man’s’ revived in me,
-with the faith in God learnt from the lips of my mother, and my soul
-went to her who, during those long, anxious days, had prayed night and
-day to Him above for the safety of her absent son.
-
-Greatly diminished in numbers, we continued downwards, hoping to strike
-some camp of tonga-bean-gatherers, the harvest season having just begun.
-
-If the Meta had seemed large and mighty to us, the Orinoco bore the
-aspect of an inland sea. The breezes and the hurricanes blow upon its
-billows and dash them into surf on the bank; the trade-winds—our old
-friends of the Meta—reappeared on the Orinoco, only far stronger than
-before. One would say that they spend their force in the long journey,
-and are somewhat weary in the upper regions. It is impossible to make
-any progress in the teeth of the trade-wind. With a stern or a side wind
-the canoes hoist their sails and travel with the speed of birds on the
-wing. The great force of the wind is generally felt during the middle
-hours of the day; it lulls in the morning and afternoon.
-
-Far more frequently than on the Meta we were forced to wait for hours on
-the sandy desert beaches, or close in to the shore covered with jungle,
-waiting, waiting for the wind to sink. The worst feature of these
-breezes is that they raise a great quantity of sand to a height varying
-from 2 to 3 feet.
-
-Cooking becomes impossible, as the wind blows the fire out, scattering
-the embers and the logs, and unless rocks or trees be available on which
-to sit at a certain height, one is compelled to stand, as it is
-impossible to breathe the air, which is impregnated with sand. At such
-times we were compelled to make our meals of _casabe_ dipped in water,
-and drink more freely of the white rum which took the place of warmer
-food and drink. Once we were kept thus imprisoned for nearly thirty
-hours; our helplessness against the elements exercised a most depressing
-influence.
-
-The tonga bean, called in Spanish _zarrapia_, constitutes a most
-important article of trade, and is obtained in large quantities on the
-shore of the Orinoco and of many of its affluents below the rapids. It
-is said to abound also in the Upper Orinoco, but there it is seldom
-gathered.
-
-The tonga-tree is large and leafy, very similar to the mango-tree. The
-branches, which spread over an area of 20, 30, or 40 feet, are covered
-with thick foliage, and the yield of fruit is enormous. The fruit
-resembles the mango in shape and appearance. Under a sweet pulp, quite
-palatable, is found an oval nut, identical with that of the mango, and
-inside this nut, which has the consistency of a walnut, is encased a
-small elongated bean of a pink colour. It soon turns dark red when
-exposed to air and sun. The trees shed the fruit in the months of
-February and March; the men gather it from the ground, clean off the
-pulp, and break the nut with stones. This must be carefully done to
-avoid breaking the bean, which is then placed in the sun on dry,
-untanned hides, and after two or three days packed in bags ready for
-transportation.
-
-The tonga bean is chiefly used in perfumery, and is a very good
-substitute for vanilla.
-
-We were told that the exports averaged, at the prices then ranging, a
-yearly output of £100,000 to £150,000. I understand that the price has
-fallen considerably of late years, but as the gathering costs very
-little, and the transportation, owing to the numerous waterways, is
-cheap, there must still be great profits in the business.
-
-Traders flock from the different parts of the river to certain
-well-known camps, from which they branch off into the forests, bringing
-back the bean for sale to the camps. Although the Venezuelan Government
-has more than once granted special privileges and monopolies to
-individuals and companies for the exploitation of the tonga bean, its
-gathering is practically free, as it would be next to impossible to
-watch over such vast uninhabited areas where men can easily conceal
-themselves in the forests.
-
-Our progress was far slower than before, as we generally lost half a day
-waiting for the breeze to fall. This was owing principally to the size
-of our canoes, too small for navigation in a high wind.
-
-In due time we came upon the first camp, a most welcome sight to our
-eyes; a whole village of tents stood pitched on the bank of the river,
-and upwards of twenty or thirty canoes were moored along the shore.
-Amongst them we saw a small one-masted schooner, which raised its
-graceful lines above the surrounding small craft. We gazed upon it with
-covetous eyes, and decided to make every possible effort to acquire it,
-if it could be had for love or money.
-
-We did not attract any attention at first; the people in the camp
-thought that we were tonga-bean-gatherers like themselves, coming from
-some point above; but they showed great interest and courtesy on hearing
-that we came not only from beyond the rapids, but from the upper
-affluents of the Orinoco. We soon closed a bargain for the schooner,
-into which we transferred our belongings, and the next day the three
-small sails were let loose to the very breeze that, during the past few
-days, had nailed us to the shores.
-
-Besides the schooner, we obtained a supply of provisions, though not as
-much as we wished. The traders had only what they needed, and were loath
-to part with them, especially as we were going towards the centres of
-supply.
-
-In the course of a day or two we stopped at a large flat island, some
-twelve miles in length, as we were told, and varying from two to four
-miles in breadth; this is known as the Beach of Lard (_Playa de la
-Manteca_). This island is the laying-place of hundreds of thousands of
-turtles, which come to it every year in the laying season. The island
-belongs to the Government, who place a small detachment of soldiers to
-watch over it. The traders buy the right of working a given section of
-the ground. They dig out the eggs, from which the oil is extracted. It
-is used for cooking, and is a substitute for lard and butter—hence the
-name of the beach.
-
-The turtles swarm in myriads, and are forced by those coming up behind
-them to go further into the island. After laying their eggs they seek
-the water, but are so numerous that it is necessary for the soldiers and
-traders to keep a pathway open, otherwise many of them could not get
-back to the river.
-
-It is a marvel to see countless acres of ground covered with turtles as
-thick as the stones of a pavement; and the fact might be incredible if
-it were not vouched for by so many travellers.
-
-A turtle lays, according to its size and age, from fifty to three or
-four hundred eggs. The men—traders or Government agents—are free to take
-as many turtles as they like; the eggs are the only article of barter
-upon which a price is set.
-
-Some idea of the number of turtles laying eggs on the beach may be
-gathered from the reckoning of a French traveller who investigated the
-subject.
-
-The oil extracted from the eggs is gathered in demijohns holding on an
-average seven gallons each, and the average yield of a good year is
-about ten thousand demijohns. Each demijohn requires from four to five
-thousand eggs; ten thousand demijohns represent from four to five
-millions, which means that there must be from four to five hundred
-thousand turtles. The tale seems extravagant.
-
-It is needless to say that we took in as large a supply of turtles and
-of eggs as we could carry. The sailors of the schooner were delighted at
-the prospect of turtle meat and turtle eggs _ad libitum_. The eggs are
-boiled in salt water, and keep for a practically indefinite period.
-
-The capacity for eating these eggs shown by the natives of those regions
-seems to be unlimited. I could not understand, looking at the size of
-the men and at the young mountain of turtle eggs before which they sat,
-and which disappeared after a period of sustained assimilation, how it
-was possible that they did not swell outwardly or explode. Here was a
-case in which the envelope was, to all purposes and appearances, smaller
-than the contents assimilated—a problem for some sapient naturalist to
-investigate whenever he may chance to stray into those remote regions.
-
-It is said that the turtle yields seven kinds of meat, and that in the
-hands of a good cook it is transfigured into calf’s head, veal, tender
-loin steak, chicken, venison, pork, and (naturally) turtle meat. Be that
-as it may, notwithstanding the uncouth and, to some, repulsive
-appearance of the animal, it is evident that the various parts of its
-body are not only palatable, but may be disguised to imitate the
-varieties mentioned, a peculiarity which in its turn works inversely, as
-in the well-known case of mock-turtle soup.
-
-The turtles we bought were placed on their backs, which seems to be the
-universal method of keeping them all the world over. There in the bottom
-of our schooner the poor beasts had ample opportunity to watch the
-flight of clouds by day and the grouping of the constellations by night.
-I fear, however, that they did not improve their time with the study
-either of atmospherical changes or of astronomical wonders.
-
-Fermin rapidly learnt how to cook and prepare turtles in the various
-native ways, to which he added devices of his own, reminiscent of the
-preparation of other meats and dishes in his native province.
-
-The change of diet was most welcome at first, but after the fourth or
-fifth day the very name of turtle was revolting. Fermin was told that,
-if nothing else but turtle was to be found, we preferred to fall back on
-boiled rice and _casabe_. Relying, however, on his ability and the
-protean plasticity of turtle meat, he insisted on serving some of it as
-wild-boar flesh, and only upon a formal threat of shooting, or being
-left tied to the trunk of a tree along the shore, like a new Andromache,
-did he cease his attempts to deceive our palates. Thus, notwithstanding
-the plentiful supply of turtles and turtle eggs, we drifted back to the
-diet of _casabe_, boiled fish and boiled rice.
-
-We had hoped to strike some cattle-farm, but we scanned the horizon in
-vain. The plains and the forests rolled before our eyes, an interminable
-blank for our purposes.
-
-Finally, as everything happens at last, our expectation was gratified;
-near the confluence of our old friend the Meta with the Orinoco, we came
-upon a cattle-ranch where we obtained corn, molasses, eggs, lard,
-cheese, coffee, and the whole side of a recently slaughtered heifer.
-
-I can readily understand that persons of a delicate taste, should they
-happen to read these awkwardly penned lines, must feel disgusted at the
-recurrence of such vulgar and material details. Their amazement will
-certainly be great, for in all probability they will be surrounded by
-all the comforts and the luxury of civilized life. There is no harsher
-censor of the misdeeds or faults arising out of somebody else’s hunger
-than the drowsy philosopher who passes judgment in a comfortable
-armchair after a plentiful meal; his untempted rectitude makes him the
-austerest critic of failings and weaknesses in others. However, the
-opinion of those immaculate beings, with their hot-house virtue, safe
-from wind and wet behind glass panes, receives precisely the attention
-it deserves.
-
-Still, I admit that, after having crossed those regions, it were better
-if I could describe what I saw in a series of pen-pictures which would
-unroll before the reader in sequence or harmonious groups the numerous
-sublime aspects of Nature; it were far better that, even as the essence
-retains the perfume of the flower, the written word should convey to
-other minds the deep impression left upon my own by the mysterious
-murmuring forest, the invisible wind whose breath so often cooled my
-forehead, the constant throb of the wandering waves pent within their
-narrow channels, the infinite azure of the sky, and the numberless
-sounds and rumours, now soft, now deafening, which fill the air in that
-world still free from the burden of civilization, living the life of
-untrodden Nature, a link in the endless chain of existence ravening on
-death, with the great drama of being made manifest in a thousand diverse
-shapes.
-
-Happy were I could I seize one single note from that vast symphony,
-capture it, and fix it with my words! Vain wishes!
-
-We passed from those solitudes, leaving no more trace behind us than the
-clouds in the sky, and although the impression of the greatness and the
-majesty of Nature sank deeply into my heart, so that at times my soul,
-returning to the days of the past, loses itself in the depths of the
-forests and the summits of the mountains, follows the course of the
-rivers, or bathes itself in the pure atmosphere of the free and
-boundless plain, whenever I seek to utter my inmost feelings, so that
-others may feel and understand with me, only the faintest shadow of my
-thought falls on the blank page. The gift of seeing and of feeling, and
-of creating what we have felt and seen so that others in their turn may
-feel a similar impression, has been given by the Almighty only to those
-few chosen artists and men of genius who throw upon the work which they
-create ‘the light that never was on land or sea.’ I must perforce limit
-myself to the humble narrative of our daily life. I have no higher
-ambition in writing these pages, and I shall be fortunate if I meet with
-readers who understand my motive.
-
-The schooner took us down to La Urbana (a settlement with urban
-pretensions); it boasts some _adobe_ houses covered with tiles, and a
-small church. Here we abandoned the schooner, and were obliged to take
-to a far smaller canoe—large enough, however, for navigation on the
-Orinoco—in which we proceeded to Caicara, where we expected to meet the
-steamers plying between Ciudad Bolivar and the Apure River.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-The journey from La Urbana to Caicara passed off without any incident.
-On jumping ashore at this latter point we hoped that we were leaving our
-canoes for good, and that the rest of the journey to Ciudad Bolivar
-would take place by steam.
-
-The people received us very kindly, and, though the town was far from
-modern or rich, we enjoyed some comforts that we had lacked during the
-long journey which lay behind us.
-
-Though eight weeks had passed since the news of the death of the
-Governor of San Carlos had reached Maipures, nothing was known about it
-at Caicara. This will give an idea of the abandonment in which those
-vast territories are left by those under whose political authority they
-live. Grave international complications with the neighbouring States
-might arise from disturbances like that at San Carlos, and yet the news
-had only come down by mere chance, brought by travellers who had no
-personal interest in it.
-
-Finding that there was no certainty as to the steamers likely to touch
-at Caicara, we reluctantly decided to take again to the slow and sure
-method of canoeing, rather than wait for him who had not promised to
-come, and thus we proceeded on our journey in the same canoes that we
-had imagined we were abandoning once for all two days before. A feeling
-of discontent began to possess us. It was not that we were dissatisfied
-with the kind of life, nor that we had become over-sensitive to the
-privations inherent to it, nor that we complained of being plain squires
-compelled to adopt the practices of knight-errants, such as not eating
-off linen, nor sleeping on comfortable couches, nor under roof of house
-or mansion; no, our great longing arose at the thought of those far away
-in the civilized world, to whom our long silence must necessarily be a
-source of anxiety. For the rest, however, the life we were leading had
-become a sort of second nature, and we found it by no means
-disagreeable. We ate with healthy appetites, and when night came,
-stretched on our matting, we heedlessly let the wind fold its wings or
-shriek into madness, whilst the river either murmured gently along like
-a stream across the green meadow or lashed into fury like a lion.
-
-We rowed or sailed as the river and the wind permitted, gaining ground
-without the loss of an available minute, with the tenacity of one who
-has a given task to accomplish, and wants to perform it with the least
-possible delay. One night, shortly after halting, a shudder of delight
-ran through us on hearing one of the men exclaim, ‘Steamer coming!’ We
-turned in the direction pointed out by him, but saw nothing. However, we
-had learnt by that time to trust to the keener senses of the natives.
-Shortly afterwards, with ear to ground, we heard, or thought we heard, a
-far-off indistinct vibration as of the paddles of a steamer striking the
-water. The sound soon became unmistakable. Here was an unexpected
-redemption. From sheer joy we ceased the preparations for our evening
-meal. To attract the attention of those on board the steamer the
-bonfires were piled up high, and, to leave no possible loophole to
-adverse fate, Alex and four of the men sailed into mid-stream, so as to
-be quite close to the craft. Soon it loomed majestic and welcome to our
-eyes. The pennant of whitish smoke rose in the still blue night, and
-floated as a signal of welcome. The boat advanced steadily; we could see
-the people on board. That rather undersized vessel was to us, for the
-moment, the great in fact, the only—steamer in the world. We fired our
-revolvers. Alex and his men bawled themselves hoarse. No sign of
-recognition came from the steamer as she ploughed on swiftly,
-relentlessly, disdainfully, soon to be lost in the distance. This was
-wanton cruelty, and, as we thought at the time, a sin against human
-nature. Our feelings were not such as might be commended to the
-attention and imitation of Sunday-school children! Our language was
-decidedly ‘unfit for publication.’ According to the reckoning of our
-men, which events proved accurate, we should require twelve days more to
-reach Ciudad Bolivar, whilst the steamer, sailing day and night as it
-could, even against the breeze, would cover the distance in forty-eight
-or sixty hours. It is well that we possessed no magic powers enabling us
-to destroy, as if with a thunder-bolt, for in that case the steamer
-would not have reached its destination. So it generally happens in life
-when the action of others foils our little plans or obstructs our way.
-Looking solely to our own side of the question, we are apt to make no
-allowance, and attribute to utter perversity what from the standpoint of
-the other side may be perfectly reasonable. As revolutions are frequent
-in those latitudes, and as steamers had on several occasions been seized
-by parties of men ambushed on the shore, the captain of the steamer
-probably thought that prudence and caution were his safest guides. He
-may have believed that, besides the small group which he saw in the
-canoe and on the shore, a formidable host might be lurking in the
-forest, and under those circumstances his behaviour is perfectly
-intelligible.
-
-As we approached the end of our journey, our impatience and anxiety grew
-keener. Up to that time we had never lost our equanimity, and now, when
-we could reckon with a fair degree of accuracy the date of our arrival
-at Ciudad Bolivar, the smallest obstacle or detention irritated us
-beyond measure. Yet all things end. On April 20 we arrived at a small
-outlying village three hours from Ciudad Bolivar.
-
-Our approach to a civilized community awakened slumbering feelings of
-vanity, and for the first time during many months we bethought ourselves
-of our appearance. I had an authentic mane on my head; our beards were
-thick and bushy as the jungle on the banks of the river. Such clothes as
-we had could hardly have passed muster under the eyes of the most
-lenient critic. Most of those that we possessed at starting had been
-left behind amongst the Indians, in payment of work, and what little
-remained had not been improved by the moisture of the climate. On taking
-stock, I soon found that my dress coat and trousers—evolved by some
-London artist—were the only decent clothes left to me; yet I could not
-screw up courage to don them, as I feared that if, after several months’
-journey through the wildest regions of South America, I jumped ashore at
-noonday on the banks of the Orinoco in a swallow-tail, the authorities
-would probably provide me with free board and lodging in some cool
-lunatic asylum! We consoled ourselves with the thought that we were
-clean, and thus near to godliness, and that we could soon replace our
-patched and tattered clothes at Ciudad Bolivar.
-
-I have forgotten to mention our visit to the cattle estates of General
-Crespo, at that time President of Venezuela, a typical son of the
-_llanos_. These estates had a frontage of twenty-five leagues along the
-river, and extend Heaven only knows how far into the interior. The
-manager, or _major-domo_, told us that the herds on those estates
-numbered upwards of 200,000 head of cattle. The figure appears
-fantastic, but the fact that at that time 1,500 three-year-old bullocks
-were exported monthly to the neighbouring West India Island, principally
-Trinidad, may serve as a basis for calculation.
-
-On that eventful 20th of April the breeze blew tantalizingly against us,
-yet we would not be detained, and decided to advance in its very teeth.
-The men jumped ashore and pulled the canoes with ropes. The city, built
-as upon a terrace, soon appeared in the distance, its white, red-roofed
-houses standing out under the clear sky like dabs of paint upon a blue
-canvas. Behind the town the hill continued to rise, and opposite the
-city the river itself, encased into a narrow space, is only one-third of
-a mile broad. It was a delight to look once more on houses, towers and
-churches, and other signs of civilized life. The sight was an
-enchantment after the eternal panorama of forest, mountain, plain and
-river. We had a feeling akin to that of Columbus and his companions when
-the watch shouted ‘Land! land!’ We could echo those words in their full
-significance. The struggle was at an end; river, forest, rapids, fevers,
-wild beasts, poisonous snakes, savages, and all the obstacles that lay
-behind us, were over, leaving no further trace than the dust along the
-roads or the foam of the waves on the sands. Thanks to the Divine
-protection, we had reached the end of an adventurous journey full of
-possibilities of mishap and of danger, and all that had taken place was
-simply as a memory in our minds.
-
-We attracted great attention on landing, and were soon installed in one
-of the good hotels of the towns. We stared with something like
-wonderment at mirrors, tables, sofas, as at so many good old friends
-from whom we had been long separated. In us, primitive man had very soon
-reasserted full sway, and we had to make some effort to return to the
-habits and customs of civilized life. As soon as we could, we placed
-ourselves in the hands of a barber in the town. He had been told of our
-great store of luggage, and, inquisitive as all men of his profession
-are, on hearing one of us humming for very joy under his razor and
-shears, asked (I know not whether in innocence or banter): ‘How many of
-you are in the company, and what opera are you going to begin with?’ To
-this I replied: ‘We are not an opera company, but a circus, and our
-performances will begin shortly; we are on the look-out for a clown.’ He
-did not proceed with his cross-examination.
-
-Ciudad Bolivar is famous in the annals of Venezuelan and Colombian
-history. It bears the name of the emancipator of those regions. Formerly
-it was called Angostura, which means ‘the Narrows.’ In 1819 one of the
-first Colombian Congresses was held at that city, and its deliberations,
-which soon crystallized into action, brought about the expulsion of the
-Spaniards after a daring and sanguinary series of campaigns. The very
-men who sat at Ciudad Bolivar, 300 miles from the shores of the
-Atlantic, ended their military campaign on the plateau of Ayacucho in
-1824, having marched thousands of leagues across plain and forests,
-snow-capped mountains, precipices, jungle, fighting for every inch of
-ground against the stubborn soldiers of Spain in one of the most heroic
-and tenacious struggles on both sides that are to be found in the annals
-of history.
-
-The river, as I have stated before, narrows after its long pilgrimage,
-and, even as a regiment which closes its ranks, rolls its waves in
-denser array opposite the city. No sooner does it reach the outside
-limits than it broadens again, and, after running through fertile plains
-and swampy valleys for a distance of 600 kilometres, reaches the sea.
-The normal depth opposite Ciudad Bolivar is 120 metres. During the rainy
-season the level rises from 10 to 20 metres.
-
-Verily the Orinoco is a living, wandering sea of fresh water gathered
-from the northern plains of South America, which forms the tribute of
-those lands to the Atlantic Ocean. We had just followed it in its
-pilgrimage for a long part of its course. We had known it in tempest and
-in calm; we had watched the dawn gilding its throbbing waters or the
-twilight covering them with flickering shadows; we had listened to the
-whispering of the winds and the roar of the hurricane along its shores;
-we had seen the monsters which roam in its waters, admired the river’s
-Titanic sport, dashing in the rapids, or its majestic quiet in the deep
-basins of granite where the current seems to rest before leaping in a
-wild onslaught through the cañons; and now we saw it majestically unroll
-before our eyes in the august pageant of its last procession to the
-ocean. We could not but think that, if that great artery of palpitating
-life which vibrates through the centre of the continent had stood us in
-such good service, its possibilities for the development of those vast
-unknown territories, when once appreciated by humanity, were practically
-unlimited. To our mind’s eye, prophetic with desire, the vast solitudes
-we had left behind became resonant glad with the presence of myriads of
-men; the forests were cleared, the plains tilled, and a happy and
-prosperous nation, the outcome of the present struggling democracies
-that own those lands, increased by swarms of immigrants from distant
-overcrowded countries, reared its cities and towns along the banks of
-the river which, in its immutable, defiant majesty and power, still
-rolled to the sea, serving men, but remaining a bond of union, a mighty
-link between the Cordilleras and the ocean.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-I have thus far sought to give an idea of my personal impressions during
-a journey most memorable to me; and I am aware that I bring no new or
-useful contribution from a scientific point of view. We had no
-instruments of observation, not even an ordinary every-day compass,
-enabling us to fix the cardinal points with certainty. Furthermore, had
-we possessed more complicated instruments, we were too ignorant to use
-them. Let these remarks be borne in mind should errors of appreciation
-be noticed, as certainly they exist, in this disjointed narrative.
-
-We wandered on with the definite aim of reaching the Atlantic Ocean.
-Beyond that we did not venture to scrutinize too deeply the mysterious
-and wonderful manifestations of Nature, but took them as they appeared
-to our limited means of vision and understanding, and sought nothing
-beyond.
-
-However, before closing these pages, assuming that some kind reader’s
-patience may have enabled him to accompany me thus far, it may not be
-amiss to give some accurate data which I take from the admirable
-monograph entitled ‘South America: an Outline of its Physical
-Geography,’ published in the _Geographical Journal_ of April, 1901, by
-Colonel George Earl Church, a book which might be called ‘South America
-in a Nutshell,’ wonderfully accurate and concise, and worthy of the
-highest praise.
-
-The total length of the Orinoco is about 1,500 miles, but if measured by
-its Guaviari branch it is several hundred miles longer. It reaches its
-maximum height in August. To its point of junction with the Guaviare it
-takes a north-west course. Ninety miles before its union with that
-stream it receives its principal eastern affluent, the Ventuario. From
-the Guaviare it runs north nearly as far as the Apure, where it suddenly
-turns east. Between the Guaviare and the Meta the course of the river is
-obstructed by the Maipures Rapids, which extend for a length of four
-miles, with a total fall of about 40 feet. Below this the Atures Rapids
-cover a distance of about six miles, falling about 30 feet. Navigation
-is then free for about 700 miles, as far as the rapids of Cariben,
-within six miles of the mouth of the Meta. The river at this point is
-about a mile wide. Its course continues to the north, and at the mouth
-of the Apure it is two miles wide in the dry season, and about seven
-when in flood. At Cariben it rises 32 feet; but at the Angostura, or
-‘Narrows,’ 372 miles from the sea, it has risen to 60 feet. It enters
-the sea by its main trunk, the Boca Grande. About 100 miles above its
-mouth it throws off a branch northward to the Gulf of Paria, also 100
-miles in length. Six other considerable arms find their way to the ocean
-across a vast delta about 7,000 square miles in area. The Boca Grande is
-the deepest and main navigable entrance at all seasons, the muddy bar
-usually maintaining a depth of 16 feet. The basin of the Orinoco covers
-an area of 364,500 square miles.
-
-The principal affluents flowing from the Andean slopes are the Apure,
-the Arauca, the Meta, and the Guaviare.
-
-The Apure is 695 miles long, of which 564 are navigable. The Apure in
-its turn receives numerous tributaries, some of which are navigable for
-short distances.
-
-The Arauca, the Meta and the Guaviare, are also navigable.
-
-The Casiquiare Canal unites the upper Orinoco with the Rio Negro branch
-of the Amazon. It is about 300 miles long, with an average depth of 30
-feet, and has a strong current in the direction of the Negro. The list
-of affluents of the Orinoco and of its tributaries would be a very long
-one, and would serve no useful purpose here.
-
-Evidently the Orinoco and the Orinoco system, with their innumerable
-ramifications in all directions, form a basis for the easy exploitation
-of the vast sources of natural wealth which exist in the immense
-territory through which their waters flow.
-
-That territory lies within the borders of the Republics of Colombia and
-Venezuela. Up to the present neither nation has seriously attempted to
-utilize the valuable elements so bountifully offered by Nature. In the
-matter of navigation, ocean-going steamers sail frequently as far as
-Ciudad Bolivar. From this latter point river steamers ply once or twice
-a month up the Orinoco, turning into the Apure as far as San Fernando de
-Apure, and during the tonga-bean harvest follow the course of the main
-river generally as far as the Caura, where the harvesters established
-their central camps a good many years ago. An effort was made to
-establish navigation on the Orinoco and its affluents above the rapids,
-and also to run small steamers in the navigable part between the Atures
-and Maipures rapids; but the French company, which held a charter
-practically placing the whole region at its disposal, failed of its
-object, after spending a considerable amount of money. During our
-journey, in several places we could see, rotting in the sun, the
-remnants of broken-down steamers, which appeared uncanny objects in
-those surroundings. The rapids, acting as a barrier, have deterred
-traders and explorers. The upper part of the Orinoco is the most
-abundant in natural wealth. As I have had occasion to note in these
-pages, india-rubber, _piazaba_, tonga bean, resinous and medicinal
-plants, are found in practically unlimited quantities along the shores
-of all the rivers above the rapids, and the small proportion which is
-gathered is generally shipped through the Rio Negro by way of the
-Amazon, as traders prefer that long and tedious journey to the
-difficulties of the Orinoco Rapids.
-
-Yet to give life to the Orinoco, to establish a stream of natural
-products down its waters, and to facilitate the opening of the forests
-and mountains beyond the rapids, it would not be necessary to carry out
-work of a very stupendous nature, beyond the resources of the peoples
-and the nations most interested in the work. A cursory glance at the
-elements of the problem reveals the possibility of carrying out a plan,
-the general outlines of which might be the following:
-
-A line of steamers should be established plying at least twice a month
-between Ciudad Bolivar and the highest accessible point for navigation
-below the Atures Rapids.
-
-The old road along the rapids, which extended from that highest point of
-navigation to beyond Maipures where the river is again free and open,
-should be reconstructed. A railway could be built along either shore,
-the ground being mostly level and hard. It would not be necessary to
-undertake great engineering works, and the road-bed itself would require
-neither deep cuttings nor terracing, nor expensive culverts and works of
-drainage, and the few bridges required, being of short span, would not
-run into high figures.
-
-Steam navigation should also be established beyond the rapids on the
-rivers forming the upper basin. This could be done at first by means of
-small steam-launches such as are used in the affluents of the Amazon
-River, but the service should be carried out faithfully and
-periodically, even though at first freight and passengers were lacking.
-People in Spanish America are generally very sceptical as to these
-enterprises, but once a feeling of confidence was created, explorers
-would flock both from Colombia and from Venezuela, as they would know
-that they would have an outlet for whatever products they might gather.
-
-The Indians on the Vichada, and even those on the Meta, would supply
-abundant labour, and the exports of natural products would soon furnish
-all the freight that might be desired to make the whole arrangement of
-steamers above and below the rapids, and the railway along the same, a
-paying concern.
-
-A line of steamers should also follow the course of the Meta River as
-far as La Cruz, a port situated about ninety miles from Bogotá, thus
-tapping the import and export trade of the most thickly-populated region
-of Colombia, the inhabitants of which in the three provinces of
-Santander, Boyacá, and Cundinamarca, are over 1,500,000 in number.
-
-Supposing four steamers to be needed for navigation on the lower river
-and on the Meta, to be bought at Ciudad Bolivar at a cost of £10,000
-each, £40,000 would be required under this head. Taking the length of
-the railway at 60 kilometres, including the bridges, at a cost of £2,000
-per kilometre, £120,000 would be required for the railway; and supposing
-that ten small steam-launches of twenty to thirty tons burden were
-started for the rivers on the upper basin, £20,000 would be required—in
-all, £180,000 for the whole undertaking.
-
-The preceding figures are not imaginative, and might, perhaps, be
-reduced in actual practice. If it has been possible to raise the capital
-required for the construction of a railway of upwards of 200 kilometres
-in length along the shores of the Congo, where climate, distance, and
-natives combine to establish far more serious obstacles than exist on
-the Orinoco, should it not be possible to find the capital for the
-establishment of modern means of transportation in a region which offers
-far brighter and surer prospects than the Congo? Let it be remembered
-that from Colombia and from Venezuela civilized white, coloured and
-Indian labour could be found in abundance, and that Europeans engaged in
-the undertaking, and provided with steamers, could in two days, if on
-the Meta, reach the high and healthy plateaus of Bogotá and find
-themselves in a civilized community where they would lack none of the
-luxuries or comforts of their own land; and that in the Lower Orinoco
-they would have Ciudad Bolivar, to which the same remarks, barring the
-advantage of climate, may be applied. The two Governments of Colombia
-and Venezuela, equally interested in the development of the Orinoco
-basin, might unite their efforts and guarantee in a form satisfactory to
-European capitalists the paltry yearly amount required to pay the
-service of interest and sinking fund on the £180,000. Taking the
-interest at 6, with a sinking fund of 1 per cent., £12,600 yearly would
-be required—that is to say, £6,300 for each Government. I know that at
-the present moment such a task would be well-nigh impossible, but I also
-know that if a sincere effort were made, notwithstanding the universal
-feeling of distrust, it would be possible to create securities specially
-applicable to this purpose, which would satisfy the most exacting
-capitalist.
-
-In the midst of the daily turmoil and agitation and sanguinary struggle
-which constitutes the life of those democracies, these problems, urgent
-and vital as they are, pass unheeded; and the more the pity, for in
-their solution lies the basis of a permanent peace. Prosperity begets
-abhorrence of internal revolutions. The development of Mexico is a case
-in point, from which Colombia and Venezuela might take heed. Woe to them
-if they do not! The world begins to sicken at the very mention of the
-constant strife which converts into a positive hell those regions where
-Nature has shown herself prodigal beyond measure in all her gifts. Not
-only the valley of the Orinoco, with its boundless prairies, its dense
-forests, and its innumerable affluents, but the uplands of the Andine
-regions and the plains extending in Venezuela towards the North Atlantic
-or Caribbean Sea, and in Colombia to the Pacific Ocean, are coveted by
-nations where humanity is overcrowded by races which would fain
-establish colonies in those regions. The development of humanity cannot
-be stayed; the human wave, even as the stream of water contained by a
-dyke, will sooner or later break through the walls that imprison it and
-flood the surrounding country. It were well for men animated by real
-patriotism in Colombia and in Venezuela to ponder over these
-possibilities, so that the two nations might themselves open the
-flood-gates for immigration without delay, so that the new-comers would
-prove a fresh source of strength and power, helping to build up on the
-basis of the now existing nations free and mighty commonwealths, rather
-than as conquerors, who (whether they come from the North as wolves in
-sheep’s clothing under cover of the Monroe doctrine, or from across the
-ocean, driven by necessity stronger than all political conventionality)
-would come as masters.
-
-Now is our accepted time. The moments are counted during which the
-danger may be averted and the inevitable turned to account; but, alas!
-feuds and errors deep-rooted in medieval soil, luxuriant in this our
-twentieth century, darken the minds of men, influence their judgment,
-turn away their activity from the real aims that would lead their
-nations to greatness, and force them into barbarous struggles which the
-world regards with amazement and brands as crimes against mankind.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
-After a week in Ciudad Bolivar, we bethought ourselves of continuing the
-journey to the sea. Civilization had reclaimed us for her own, and
-rigged in European attire, such as befits the tropics, with all the
-social conventionalities once again paramount in our mind, we set forth
-on that, the last stage of the journey. We had been, not a nine days’
-but a nine hours’ wonder in the historical town which rears its houses
-and churches alongside the narrows of the majestic stream. Early in the
-afternoon of a dazzling tropical day, cloudless, blue and hazy from the
-very brilliancy of the air, we stepped into the large steamboat that was
-to carry us to the neighbouring British island of Trinidad, once also a
-Spanish possession. The usual events accompanying the departure of all
-steamers from the shore repeated themselves: clanging of chains,
-shouting of orders, groans of the huge structure, shrill whistles, and
-that trepidation, the dawn as it were of motion, something like a
-hesitation of things inert apparently unwilling to be set in motion,
-which is the life of matter inanimate; then the steady throbbing of the
-machinery, the stroke of the paddles, splash, splash, until regularity
-and monotony are attained, and the ship, wheeled into midstream after
-describing a broad arc, set the prow eastward with the current to the
-ocean.
-
-We looked at the town as it dwindled indistinct, seeming to sink into
-the vast azure of the horizon, swallowed in the scintillating folds of
-the blue distance. We sat on the deck as if in a trance. Shortly after
-starting, wild Nature reasserted her sway, and the small oasis built by
-the hand of man in the heart of the untamed region, seemed to us who
-knew how unmeasurable were those forests and those plains, like a tiny
-nest perched on the branches of a lofty and over-spreading _ceiba_. A
-feeling of superiority over our fellow-passengers unconsciously filled
-our breasts. For were we not boon companions, fellow-travellers, tried
-and trusted comrades of those rushing waters? Had we not shared their
-pilgrimage for days and days, in calm and in storm, in sunshine and in
-darkness? Had we not slept on their bosom or travelled upon it for
-countless hours, till the secret of their mystery and the joy of their
-wandering had penetrated into our very soul? What knew they, the other
-travellers of a few hours, of the intimate life of those waters which we
-had watched, gathering their strength from all the points of the
-compass, swelling the current of the central stream, mingling their life
-with it, now as rivulets, now as rivers, now placid in the embrace, now
-plunging, foaming, as if loath to loose their identity? Yea, verily, we
-were comrades, fellow-pilgrims, with the splendid travelling sea, there
-on its final march to the boundless deep.
-
-Forest and plain, marsh, morass, jungle, succeeded one another in
-interminable procession, and the setting sun now broke its ray on the
-low-lying hills, now reverberated on the far-off marshes on either side
-of the current, tinging them with a crimson glow. Towards sunset the
-whistle of the steamer frightened a flock of flamingoes gathered to
-roost, as is their wont when the shadows of evening approach. The whole
-flock sought refuge in flight, and their widespread wings, as they rose
-before us, seemed like a huge transparent pink curtain lifted before our
-very eyes, rising higher and higher until it vanished in space.
-
-Night fell upon the scene. First the stars and then the moon kindled
-their beacon fires, dispelling darkness into a semi-obscurity fraught
-with mystery, embalmed with the effluvia from the forest and the river.
-We felt like a shadow crossing the wilderness. The littleness of self,
-the insignificance of the human being, became overwhelming.
-
-What could it matter if that daring shell with its human freight were
-dashed to pieces against a submerged tree and swallowed in the waves?
-Nature, impassible, would take no notice of the event; in far-off homes
-sorrow would fill the loving hearts. The river would be looked upon as a
-grave, wondrous vast, where a dear one had found his rest, but the river
-itself would suffer no change, and our world of hopes, ambitions,
-infinite longings, would leave no more trace than the smallest bubble of
-the floating foam.
-
-And thus the morrow came. With the light of day the circle of the
-horizon broadened; we were out at sea, no trace of land was visible. The
-waves tossed the struggling craft tenderly, gliding under its keel, the
-wind caressed the flying pennants on the mastheads and seemed to whisper
-promises of freedom as it rustled through the rigging. The mighty river
-had disappeared, paying its tribute, like a human being to the grave, to
-Father Ocean. And the long journey which lay behind us was nothing more
-than a dream in our memory, for things dreamt and things lived do so
-intermingle their identity in our minds that the attempt to disentangle
-their threads were useless. And so we drifted into the broad,
-unmeasurable expanse of waters which seemed to palpitate and tremble as
-with the touch of life under the glorious rays of the morning sun.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
- BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
---Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---In the text versions only, italicized text is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
---Corrected a few palpable typographical errors.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-Project Gutenberg's Down the Orinoco in a Canoe, by S. Prez Triana
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Down the Orinoco in a Canoe
-
-Author: S. Prez Triana
-
-Release Date: November 20, 2015 [EBook #50506]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DOWN THE ORINOCO IN A CANOE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: MAP SHOWING THE ORINOCO AND ITS TRIBUTARIES
- High-resolution Map]
-
-
-
-
- Down the Orinoco
- in a Canoe
-
-
- By
- S. Prez Triana
-
- With an Introduction by
- R. B. Cunninghame Graham
-
- 'Que ejcura que ejt la Noche!
- La Noche! que ejcura ejt!
- Asi de ejcura ej la ausencia ...
- Bog, Negrito, bog,
- Bog!'
- Candelario Obeso
-
-
- New York
- Thomas Y. Crowell & Co.
- Publishers
- 1902
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-'Climas pas, mud constelaciones, golfos inavegables,
-navegando.'--Ercilla: _La Araucana_.
-
-To read a book to which a friend has asked you to write a preface is an
-unusual--nay, even a pedantic--thing to do. It is customary for a
-preface-monger to look contemptuously at the unopened bundle of his
-friend's proofs, and then to sit down and overflow you his opinions upon
-things created, and those which the creator has left in chaos. I plead
-guilty at once to eccentricity, which is worse than the sin of
-witchcraft, for witchcraft at one time may have exposed one to the
-chance of the stake; but eccentricity at all times has placed one
-outside the pale of all right-thinking men. To wear a different hat,
-waistcoat, or collar, from those affected by the Apollos who perambulate
-our streets, to cut your hair too short, to wear it by the twentieth
-fraction of an inch too long, is _scandalum magnatum_, and not to be
-endured. So in confessing that I have read 'Down the Orinoco in a
-Canoe,' not only in the original Spanish in which it first appeared, but
-in its English dress, is to condemn myself out of my own mouth, to be
-set down a pedant, perhaps a palterer with the truth, and at the best a
-man so wedded to old customs that I might almost be a Socialist.
-
-It is undoubtedly a far cry to Bogot. Personally, more by good fortune
-than by any effort of my own, I know with some degree of certainty where
-the place is, and that it is not built upon the sea. My grandfather was
-called upon to mediate between Bolivar and General Paez, and I believe
-acquitted himself to the complete dissatisfaction of them both. Such is
-the mediator's meed.
-
-The general public, of whom (or which) I wish to speak with all respect,
-is generally, I take it, in the position of the American Secretary of
-State to whom an office-seeker came with a request to be appointed the
-United States Vice-Consul for the town of Bogot. The request was duly
-granted, and as the future Consul left the room the Secretary turned to
-the author of this book, and said: 'Triany, where in thunder is Bogoter,
-any way?' Still, Bogot to-day is, without doubt, the greatest literary
-centre south of Panama. Putting aside the floods of titubating verse
-which, like a mental dysentery, afflict all members of the
-Spanish-speaking race, in Bogot more serious literary work is done
-during a month than in the rest of the republics in a year. The
-President himself, Don Jos Manuel Marroquin, during the intervals of
-peace--which in the past have now and then prevailed in the republic
-over which he rules--has found the time to write a book, 'El Moro,' in
-which he draws the adventures of a horse. The book is written not
-without literary skill, contains much lore of horsemanship, and is a
-veritable mine of local customs; and for the moral of it--and surely
-Presidents, though not anointed, as are Kings, must have a moral in all
-they write, they do and say--it is enough to make a man incontinently go
-out and pawn his spurs.
-
-Thus, Bogot, set in its plateau in Columbian wilds, is in a way a kind
-of Chibcha Athens. There all men write, and poets rave and madden
-through the land, and only wholesome necessary revolutions keep their
-number down. Still, in the crowd of versifiers one or two, such as
-Obeso, the negro poet, who, being denied all access to the lady of his
-love--the colour line being strictly drawn in Bogot, as well befits a
-democratic government--brought out a paper once a week, entitled
-_Lectura para ti_, have written verse above the average of Spanish
-rhyme. Others, again, as Gregorio Gutierrez Gonzalez and Samuel Uribe
-Velazquez have written well on local matters, and Juan de Dios
-Carasquilla has produced a novel called 'Frutos de mi Tierra,' far
-better than the average 'epoch-making' work of circulating library and
-press.
-
-Prez Triana, son of an ex-President, and speaking English and Spanish
-with equal fluency, is a true son of Bogot, and writes as easily as
-other people talk.
-
-His book occurred in this wise. The usual biennial revolution having
-placed his enemies in power, he found it requisite to leave the country
-with all speed. The seaports being watched, he then determined, like
-Fray Gaspar de Carbajal, to launch his boat upon the Orinoco, and, that
-the parallel should be exact, write an account of all he saw upon the
-way. Few books of travel which I have come across contain less details
-of the traveller himself. Strangely enough, he rescued no one
-single-handed from great odds. His strength and valour, and his
-fertility of brain in times of peril, together with his patience, far
-exceeding that of Indian fakirs, are not obtruded on the bewildered
-reader, as is usual in like cases.
-
-Though armed, and carrying on one occasion so much lethal stuff as to
-resemble, as he says himself, a 'wandering arsenal,' he yet slew no one,
-nor did he have those love adventures which happen readily to men in
-foreign lands from whom a kitchen wench would turn in scorn in their own
-native town: nothing of empire and little of patriotism is there in his
-book. In fact, he says that those who are his countrymen are those who
-have the same ideals as himself--a cursed theory which, if it once
-obtained, would soon abolish Custom-houses, and render armies useless,
-make navies all to be sold for scrap iron, and would leave hundreds of
-patriotic sweaters without a platitude. What chiefly seems to have
-appealed to this unusual traveller was the strangeness and beauty of the
-long reaches on the interminable waterways, the brightness of the moon,
-the thousand noises of the desert night, the brilliant birds,
-kaleidoscopic fish, and the enchantment of a world remote from all that
-to a really well-constituted modern mind makes life endurable. At times,
-although I tremble as I write, it seems to me he doubts of things which
-we all take on trust, such as the Stock Exchange. Even the army is not
-sacred to this democrat, sprung from a shameless State in which there is
-no King, and which, consequently, can never hope to contemplate a
-Coronation show, for he retails a joke current in Columbia, but which, I
-think, if duly followed up, might be encountered in Menander, or, at the
-least, in Aristophanes. A Columbian Mayor of a town sent to the
-President a hundred volunteers, with a request that all the ropes should
-be returned. Jokes such as these cannot be helpful to a State; in fact,
-a joke at all is to a serious man a rank impertinence, and if an author
-wishes to obtain a place within the ranks of Anglo-Saxon literature, he
-should not joke at all, or, if he does, joke about fat or thin men, bald
-heads or sea-sickness, or on some subject which the great public mind
-has set apart for wit. However, as a member of the Latin race, it cannot
-reasonably be expected of him that at one bound he should attain unto
-the fulness of our Anglo-Saxon grace.
-
-The careful reader of this book may possibly be struck with the
-different point of view from which a Latin looks at many questions which
-to an Englishman are set immovably as the foundations of the world,
-embedded in the putty of our prejudice.
-
-For instance, on arriving at the open plains after a tedious journey
-across mountain ranges and through forest paths, the thing that
-interests the author most is that the land in the Columbian _llanos_ is
-not held in many instances by individuals, but that so scant is
-population that it is open to all those who choose to take it up. This
-does not strike him as a folly or as affording room for speculation, but
-simply as a fact which, on the whole, he seems rather to approve of, but
-without enthusiasm, looking upon the matter as a curious generality, but
-not inclining to refine or to reduce it to any theory in particular. A
-state of mind almost impossible for Saxons (Anglo or Celtic), who, as a
-general rule, seem quite incapable of looking at a proposition as a
-whole, but must reduce it to its component parts.
-
-The voyage in itself was memorable, for no one of the party seems to
-have been the least the kind of man who generally ventures upon journeys
-of the sort, and furthermore because, since the first conquerors went
-down the river with the faith that in their case, if rightly used, might
-have smoothed out all the mountain ranges in the world, no one except a
-stray adventurer, or india-rubber trader, has followed in their steps.
-Leal, the jaguar-hunter, who slew his tigers as I have seen them slain
-in Paraguay, on foot, with a forked stick in one hand and in the other a
-bamboo lance; the Indian guide Gatio; and the young Venezuelan Governor
-of a State, who, shut up in his house, fought to the death, his
-mistress, an ex-ballet dancer, handing him up loaded guns, are to the
-full as striking characters as I have met in any book of travels outside
-the types that crowd the pages of the 'Conquistadores' of America. The
-naked Indian in his canoe, before whose eyes the immeasurable wealth of
-powder, looking-glasses, a red flannel shirt, and other treasures, rich
-and rare to him, were spread, who yet had strength of mind to scorn them
-all rather than pledge his liberty for two days' paddling, is the kind
-of Indian that merits such a chronicler as he has found. Long may he
-paddle on the _caos_ and the _aguapeys_, and die, still crowned with
-feathers and with liberty, as did his fathers, by some forgotten beach
-or by some _morichal_, where parrots chatter and toucans flit through
-the leaves, and hummingbirds hover like bees above the tropic flowers.
-
-What most delights me in the book is that the author had no settled plan
-by means of which he strove to square the circle of the globe.
-
-'We wandered,' as he says, 'with the definite aim of reaching the
-Atlantic Ocean. Beyond that we did not venture to probe too deeply the
-mysterious and wonderful manifestations of Nature, but took them as they
-appeared to our limited means of vision and understanding, and sought
-nothing beyond.'
-
-A charming way to travel, and a wise, and if not profitable to commerce,
-yet to literature, for books writ in the fashion of this brief record of
-a trip through the great waterways of Venezuelan and Columbian wilds,
-although perhaps not 'epoch-making,' yet live and flourish when the
-smart travellers' tales, bristling with paltry facts and futile figures,
-which for a season were sea-serpents in the press, have long been pulped
-to make the soles of ammunition boots.
-
- R. B. CUNNINGHAME GRAHAM.
-
-
-
-
- DOWN THE ORINOCO
- IN A CANOE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-
-The hour was about ten one evening in December, which in equatorial
-Andine latitudes is a month of clear skies, cold winds, and starry
-nights. The moon shone brilliantly, casting upon the ground shadows as
-clear as those caused by a strong electric light. Truly, the local poet
-who said that such nights as these might serve as days in other lands
-was right.
-
-We came out--three of us, Alex, Fermin and I--through an old Spanish
-gateway, a rectangular structure of _adobes_, or sun-burnt bricks,
-capped with a slanting roof of tiles, dark-reddish and moss-covered,
-with a swinging gate of cross wooden beams, held together by iron bolts.
-This was the gateway of the _hacienda_ of Boita, about thirty miles
-north of the city of Bogot, in the South American Republic of Colombia.
-We passed into the open road, and turned our horses and our minds
-northwards.
-
-From south to north, as far as eyes could see, stretched the road, an
-old Spanish causeway, bordered on either side by low-lying stone fences,
-in front of which were ditches filled with water and covered with
-vegetation.
-
-The ground was hard with the consistency of baked clay. As no rain had
-fallen for weeks, the dust was thick, and the horses' hoofs rang like
-hammer-strokes upon muffled or broken brass. We let the reins hang
-loose, and the horses, knowing their way, started at a brisk canter.
-Wrapped in thought and in our _ponchos_, we journeyed on.
-
-No sound was audible; we seemed to be travelling through a deserted or
-dead world; the neighbouring meadows, black beneath the moon, contrasted
-with the grayish white line of the broad causeway. Now and then the
-solitary houses, some close to the road, some far back, loomed up with
-the magic-lantern effects of moonlight, and their white walls seemed
-like huge tombstones in that lonely cemetery. Sometimes we crossed
-bridges, under which the water lay motionless, as though enchanted by
-the universal stillness; only a gentle breeze, causing ripples on the
-neighbouring pools, made them glitter and revealed their presence. A cow
-or a stray heifer would poise its head across the stone fence and watch
-us with wondering moist eyes, whilst two tiny columns of condensed
-breath rose from its nostrils.
-
-Beyond, black and frowning, misshapen and mysterious, the huge boulders
-of the Andes raised their vague outlines, forming a sort of irregular
-circle, in some directions quite close to us, in others lost in the
-darkness which the moon and the stars were too remote to overcome.
-Indeed, that other local poet was also right in thinking that under the
-brilliant moon those mountains looked like huge sepulchres, wherein are
-stored the ashes of dead worlds upon which judgment had been passed.
-
-And so we journeyed on.
-
-Many travellers have observed that whenever a voyage of a certain nature
-is undertaken--one that for some reason or other differs from the
-ordinary transference of one's self elsewhere, when through
-circumstances beyond our control we know that the moment of starting
-necessarily marks an epoch in our lives, even as the beginning of a
-descent or an ascent from the summit or the foot of a mountain
-necessarily marks a change in our motions--our thoughts fly backwards,
-and not only cover the immediate time and space behind us, but, once
-started, plunge, so to speak, with the rapidity inherent to them, into
-the deepest recesses of our memory, so that, as our bodies are carried
-forward, our minds revisit old scenes, we hold converse with old
-friends, and the old-time world seems to live and throb again within our
-hearts.
-
-Unheeding the clatter of the horses' hoofs, which was the only
-perceptible noise, my mind flew across the few leagues that separated me
-from my dear quaint old native town, cradled there to the south at the
-foot of two hills, each crowned by a tiny church. I saw its streets
-meeting at right angles, its two streams, dubbed rivers, parched with
-thirst, crawling under the ancient arched Spanish bridges, its low
-houses, with their enclosing _patios_ planted with roses and flowers
-that bloom all the year round, with fountains murmuring in the midst,
-and creepers covering the columns and the ceilings of the open
-corridors, and then climbing out of sight; the numerous churches, each
-one with its familiar legend; the convents--solid, spacious--turned into
-barracks or public offices or colleges; the still old cells desecrated,
-their dividing walls torn down so as to convert the space into large
-halls, and, ruthless iconoclasm having carried away the statues of the
-saints, no other trace of religion left but a stone cross, or a carved
-saint's face set too high above ground to be reached by irreverent
-hands.
-
-Yes, there was the little Church of Holy Humility--El Humilladero--an
-_adobe_ structure, a mere hut, yet reverenced beyond words as being, so
-tradition said, the first church built in the land. And not far from it
-the Church of la Tercera and its convent, about which gruesome tales
-were told. Its monks never slept on mattresses, and, as they felt death
-approaching, would have themselves placed upon the ground to die close
-to their Mother Earth; and one of them, it was said, for some
-misdeameanour or possibly greater fault, had committed suicide, and
-wandered headless--people had seen him--on dark and stormy nights
-through the neighbouring street of the Arch, as it was called, though of
-the arch nothing but the memory remained. And close to that convent of
-la Tercera was the other one of the jolly Franciscan Fathers, four
-beautiful _patios_ surrounded with broad cloisters, into which opened
-over 600 cells, each provided, besides the sitting and sleeping room,
-with a snug kitchen, old Moorish style, an open hearth for charcoal
-fire, on which meats were roasted and earthenware saucepans simmered and
-purred all day long, extracting the juice from beef, mutton, plantains,
-maoc, green corn, potatoes, and the other numerous vegetables of that
-region, forming a most substantial broth, a peculiarly rich _pot-au-feu_
-which enabled the reverend monks to recruit their strength and spirits
-after the pious labours of the day; and with this came, it is said, a
-copious supply of that beer, _chicha_, brewed from molasses and Indian
-corn, strong and delicious--to those who like it. These reverend monks,
-it is said, owned broad lands and numerous herds, and each had a lay
-brother who looked after the material wants of his superior, and
-received daily rations sufficient for ten or twenty men, so that a great
-part of them was sold by the monks to the profane outside the cloister
-walls. As the lay brother looked after all these worldly interests, he
-enabled the monk to devote his whole time and attention to finding a
-smooth path to heaven, not only for himself, but for as many others of
-his fellow-creatures as he met.
-
-But though of good cheer, they were not lacking in piety, nor were they
-unable to withstand temptation. Their church was beautiful, all full of
-gilt columns, carved woodwork, niches with statues of saints displaying
-rich silks and gems and gold embroidery.
-
-And though many of these things had disappeared in my day, and of the
-monks only a few more vital spirits survived, downcast and forlorn,
-lamenting the good old times, yet enough remained to give an idea of the
-happier age.
-
-A proof of the virtue of the monks was visible at the entrance of the
-church looking on the main street, where the Evil One himself had
-branded it, so to say, for the greater glory of God and the renown of
-the convent.
-
-It was whispered that Father Antonio, who combined profane
-accomplishments with spiritual insight, skilled in playing the guitar,
-not averse to a song or two, fond of cards for a friendly quiet game
-with the Father Superior and two or three other plump, kind-hearted
-brethren, where small sums were staked merely to give zest to the game,
-discovered to his horror one night that the Evil One, possibly in memory
-of his namesake (the monk's, not the Evil One's), had decided to tempt
-his virtue, and appeared in his cell in the guise of a beautiful damsel.
-
-Alas! the Evil One had reckoned without his host. Holy water was poured
-upon him, the cross with the Redeemer nailed on it which lay handy was
-taken up by Antonio, so that Beelzebub in his fright jumped out of the
-window with such force that his cloven foot left its imprint upon the
-granite slab outside the church, and this imprint I saw myself in my
-very young years. Although many people continue to see it, I have grown
-so short-sighted that, strive as I may, the stone now appears untouched
-and like the others. But then these things will happen, and they
-certainly should not lead us to doubt so pious a tradition.
-
-And so all the old memories of the town kept passing before me. I saw a
-living panorama, silent, bathed in mysterious light, moving slowly in
-the background of the mind, large, infinite in its magnitude, with space
-in it for men and buildings and mountains and rivers and broad plains
-and leafy forests, and, what is more, with space in it for Time, the
-boundless Time that contains all and everything.
-
-Schooldays, holidays spent in the neighbouring towns and villages which
-lie in the warmer valleys, my first voyage to a certain distance, and
-then across the ocean--life, in fact, with its ebb and flow under
-various suns and in different continents--all came back; but it were out
-of place to give my reflections on them here.
-
-Then, pausing for one moment as a bird alights on the mast of a ship
-before launching forth into mid-ocean, my mind rested for an instant on
-the old cemetery where so many loved ones slumbered. Alas! when we leave
-the graves of those whom we have loved, not knowing when we shall again
-kneel upon the sod that covers them, we feel that death itself has not
-severed the link that bound us to those who were blood of our blood and
-bone of our bone.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
-A little geography may not be amiss here. A glance at the map will show
-that the city of Bogot is situated upon a vast plateau, at an altitude
-of about 8,500 feet above sea-level, 4 degrees from the equator, and 75
-degrees to the west of Greenwich. Its position in the continent is
-central. It is perched like a nest high up in the mountains. To reach
-the ocean, and thus the outer world, the inhabitants of Bogot are even
-now still compelled to have recourse to quite primitive methods; true,
-there are some apologies for railways starting northward, southward and
-westward, but in some cases their impetus ends as soon as they reach the
-end of the plain, and in others long before attaining that distance.
-Once the railway journey finished--which does not exceed two or three
-hours on any of the lines--the traveller has to content himself with the
-ancient and slow method of riding, mostly mule riding. The ground is so
-broken and the roads are so bad that horses could not cross them as
-safely as that thoughtful, meditative, and much-maligned animal the
-mule. After covering a distance of some ninety to one hundred miles
-westward, the traveller reaches the town of Honda, which lies on the
-Magdalena River. Here steam-boats are to be found, stern-wheeled,
-shallow-bottomed, drawing no more than from 2 to 3 feet, in which,
-within four or five days, he makes the journey down to the sea-coast.
-
-The map of the country would seem to show that the easiest way from the
-capital to the ocean would be towards the Pacific, and as the crow flies
-such is the case; but between Bogot and the Pacific Ocean the Andes, at
-some period of their youth, must have frolicked and gambolled amongst
-themselves and lost their way home, so that they now form the most
-rugged country imaginable. Geographers, with that thirst for
-classification that afflicts--or should I rather say animates?--men of
-science, speak of two or three chains of mountains. The average man,
-however, who has to travel over that country, conceives his task as
-corresponding to a start made from one end of a huge comb, following the
-developments of it from the root to the point of each tooth until
-Providence and Nature take pity on him, and land him, so to speak, on
-the sea-shore.
-
-Bogot is no thoroughfare. When you get there, there you are, and if you
-go there, it is because you were bent on it; it is not like other towns
-that may be on the road to somewhere else, so that travellers may chance
-to find themselves there.
-
-The plateau of Bogot proper was formerly--no one knows how many
-centuries or thousands of years ago--a lake of about eighty square miles
-encased between the surrounding mountains. The waters of the lake broke
-through the barrier of mountains towards the south, draining it, and
-leaving the plateau dry, save for some small lakes that dot it here and
-there, and a few rivers of no great importance. I could not help
-thinking that this immense lake thus held aloft upon that mighty
-pedestal at such an altitude formed a sort of gigantic goblet such as is
-rarely seen under the sun. The river that marks the course through which
-the waters are supposed to have been drained drags its sluggish waves
-meandering in many turns and twists from north to south along the plain,
-and gives a sudden leap of 750 feet through the open gap on the
-mountain-side, forming those magnificent waterfalls called the
-Tequendama. The river plunges headlong, as if to make up for its
-previous semi-stagnant condition; it disappears between two mighty walls
-of stone, polished as if chiselled by the hand of man; it roars with a
-deafening sound; its waters appear, as they curl over the abyss, white
-as the wool of a lamb, and their consistency conveys the impression of
-wool rather than that of snow. The morning sun plays upon the mass of
-waters, and crowns it with a halo of rainbows varying in size. On the
-borders of the river, at the place where the cataract springs, are to be
-seen evergreens and pine-trees, and other such plants belonging to the
-temperate or cold zones; down below, where the water falls, and the
-river reappears like a dying stream following its course in the lower
-valley, palm-trees and tropical vegetation are to be seen, and birds of
-variegated plumage, parrots, cockatoos, parroquets and others, fly like
-living arrows from the sunlight, and plunge into the mist with piercing
-shrieks amidst the deafening roar of the cataract.
-
-As we journeyed on in the cool night air, it seemed to me that the whole
-country--north, south, east and west--lay at my feet, and to the mind's
-eye it appeared with its vast interminable plains to the east crossed by
-numberless rivers, the mountain region to the north on the western side
-of the Magdalena Valley, the broad plains in the Lower Magdalena, and
-the rugged mountainous district of Antioquia on the western side of the
-river, and then mountains and more mountains towards the Pacific Ocean.
-
-Surely, if a journey in these days presents such difficulties, the first
-journey undertaken by the conquerors who discovered the plateau of
-Bogot, may be held for a feat worthy of those men who, whatever their
-faults, were brave among the bravest.
-
-Towards the east of the Magdalena River, on the coast of the Atlantic,
-the city of Santa Marta had been founded somewhere in 1530. News of the
-vast empire alleged to exist in the interior of the country had reached
-the founders of the town, and they soon decided to conquer that region
-about which such marvels were told. In the month of August, 1536, an
-expedition of 700 soldiers, infantry, and 80 horse left Santa Marta to
-penetrate into the heart of the continent, confident in their courage,
-and lusting for gold and adventure. This part of the expedition marched
-by land, and 200 more men journeyed in boats along the river Magdalena.
-
-A full narrative of their adventures would be long. They met foes large
-and small, from poisonous reptiles and the numerous insects which made
-life a burden, to tigers and alligators: add to these fevers and
-illnesses absolutely unknown to them. It is said that one man, whilst
-sleeping in camp with all his companions, was snatched from his hammock
-by a famished tiger. At times the rank and file seemed ripe for mutiny,
-but the captain was a man of iron. His name was Gonzalo Jimnez de
-Quesada. Though himself sore smitten by some disease peculiar to the
-locality, he kept the lead, and dragged the rest in his train. Praise is
-likewise due to the chaplain of the expedition, Domingo de las Casas,
-who stoutly supported the commander. This friar was a kinsman of that
-other friar Bartolom de las Casas, whose unwearying efforts in behalf
-of the native races won for him the well-deserved name of 'Protector of
-the Indians.'
-
-After a while the boats and the shores of the great river were
-abandoned, and the men found themselves in a mountainous country where
-the temperature became more tolerable and pleasant as they climbed
-higher. Finally, their eyes beheld the Empire of the Chibchas. What a
-joy--after toil and suffering which had lasted over seventeen months,
-when only 160 of the original expedition were left--to gaze upon a land
-where cultivated fields were seen in all directions, and the
-hearth-smoke rising from the houses to heaven! This was the land of the
-Chibchas, who formed an empire second only to that of the Incas of Peru
-and the Aztecs of Mexico. They had a religion--by no means a bad one as
-religions went amongst the American aborigines--they had their code of
-laws, their division of time, their rules and codes in all matters
-appertaining to family life and administration of government; they
-tilled the soil, they believed in the immortality of the soul, they
-reverenced their dead, and practised barter according to well-defined
-laws.
-
-The thousands and thousands of soldiers which the Zipa or King of the
-Chibchas could bring against the Spaniards were overawed rather than
-overcome by force. The greater sagacity of the Spaniards, coupled with
-their courage, soon made them masters of the land. Jimnez de Quesada
-founded the city of Bogot in 1537. He chose a spot on the plains which
-suited him--where the city now stands--and, clad in full armour,
-surrounded by his companions and by a large crowd of Indians, plucked
-some grass from the ground, and, unsheathing his sword, declared that he
-took possession of the land for the greater glory of God as the property
-of his King and master, Charles V. of Spain. Then turning, with a fierce
-glance, to those who surrounded him, he challenged one and all to single
-combat should they dare to dispute his action. Naturally, no dispute
-arose, and so the title was acquired. They had their own peculiar ways,
-those old Spanish conquerors! A similar method was followed by Nuez de
-Balboa, when, in the name of his King and master, he took possession of
-the Pacific Ocean with whatever lands and islands might border on it,
-stepping into the waters clad in full armour, holding the flag of Spain
-in his left hand, and his trusty Toledo blade--_la de Juanes_--in his
-right.
-
-To speak of this conquest of the Chibcha Empire recalls the fact that
-the land of Bogot was really the land of El Dorado. _El Dorado_ in
-Spanish means the gilt one, the man covered with gold, and all
-chroniclers and historians of the early period are agreed as to the
-origin of the tradition.
-
-The King of the Chibchas, amongst whom power and property passed by law
-of inheritance from uncle to nephew, was called the Zipa. His power as a
-monarch was absolute, but to attain the dignity of what we should
-nowadays call Crown Prince, and to become in due course King, it was not
-enough to be a nephew, or even to be the right nephew. The prospective
-heir to the throne had to qualify himself by passing through an ordeal
-which Princes of other nations and other times would certainly find most
-obnoxious. He had to live in a cave for six years, fasting the whole
-time, with limited rations, barely enough to sustain life. No meat or
-salt were to be eaten during the whole time. He must see no one, with
-the exception of his male servants, nor was he even allowed to gaze upon
-the sun. Only after sunset and before sunrise might he issue from his
-cave. After this ordeal he was qualified, but should he have so much as
-cast his eyes upon a woman during that period, his rights to the throne
-were lost. The consecration, so to speak, of the Zipa took the form of a
-most elaborate ceremony. The prospective Zipa would betake
-himself--being carried upon a special sort of frame so arranged that
-twenty men standing under it could lift it upon their shoulders--to one
-of the five sacred lakes that still exist in the plateau, generally to
-the lake of Guatavita. There, stripped naked, his body was smeared with
-a resinous substance, upon which gold-dust was sprinkled in large
-quantities. Naturally, after this process the man appeared like unto a
-very statue of gold. Two other high dignitaries or chiefs, called
-Caciques, as nude as the Zipa, would go with him upon a raft of twisted
-reeds and slowly paddle into the centre of the lake. All round the shore
-was a dense crowd, burning a species of aromatic herb which produced
-clouds of smoke. On every hand was heard the sound of music, or, rather,
-of noises representing the music customary at all ceremonies. On the
-raft, at the feet of the Zipa, lay a huge pile of gold and emeralds.
-Each of his companions, too, had gold and emeralds, wherewith to
-propitiate the god in whose honour the ceremony was performed. One of
-the chiefs in the raft would raise a white flag and wave it. The noise
-on the shores became deafening, whilst the gilded Zipa threw into the
-lake all the gold and all the emeralds; then his companions would follow
-his example. When all the gold and emeralds on the raft had been cast
-into the lake, the people ashore also made their offerings of gold.
-Thus, after six years' fasting, the Zipa was (so to put it) anointed or
-qualified for kingship. On reaching the land the period of abstinence
-came to an end, and now that the Zipa was full-fledged Crown Prince, or
-Zipa (if his predecessor should have chanced to die), his first act was
-to get gloriously drunk.
-
-From the early days of the conquest, efforts were made to drain the five
-lakes, from which numerous samples of gold idols and roughly-worked gold
-have been recovered. Even recently a company was formed in England for
-that purpose. The tradition in this case being so universal, it seems
-rational to assume that vast treasures must lie at the bottom of these
-lakes, because the Chibchas were an ancient race, and their ceremonies
-must have been repeated during centuries. The country also is rich in
-emeralds and in gold--hence the belief in the large amount of treasure
-to be obtained from those lakes whose waters look so placid.
-
-Some years ago in Bogot an enthusiast, who sought to form a company for
-the purpose of draining one of the lakes, carried about with him a few
-samples of gold, idols and suchlike, which, so he said, had been brought
-to light by a man whom he named, a good diver, who plunged five times
-into the lake, and after each plunge brought up one of the specimens
-exhibited. He argued thus: The bottom of the lake must be practically
-studded with gold, since Mr. X. succeeded each time. There are millions
-in the lake, and all that is needed is a little money to drain it.
-
-The argument seemed so strong, and the gold gleamed so bright in his
-hands, that he obtained numerous subscribers, until he had the
-misfortune to come across one of those sceptics impervious to reason,
-who, after listening to him, replied: 'Yes, I have no doubt that there
-must be millions in the lake, since X. at each plunge brought out a bit
-of gold like those you show me; but what I cannot for the life of me
-understand is why he is not still plunging--it seems so easy!' The tale
-went round the town, and the lake was not drained, nor has it been up to
-the present.
-
-This gilding of the man is the germ of the legend of El Dorado, which
-has cost so much blood, and in search of which so many thousands and
-thousands of men have wandered during past centuries in all possible
-directions on their bootless quest.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
-Returning to the lake, and now gathering the information furnished by
-geology, whose silent annals are so carefully and truthfully recorded
-(being as they are beyond reach of man's little contentions and petty
-adjustments), we find that the original lake covered an area of about
-seventy-five square miles, and attained great depths. Its placid waters,
-beating possibly for centuries against the environing rocks, have left
-their marks, from which it may be seen that in some places the depth was
-120 feet, and in others 180.
-
-We cannot fix the date of the break in the mountains which allowed the
-drain to occur. So far man has not succeeded in grasping with invariable
-accuracy the chronology of the admirable geological archives to which we
-have referred, and in matters of this kind a discrepancy of a few
-hundred years more or less is accepted as a trifle scarcely worth
-mentioning. And possibly this may be right. For man's passage through
-life is so short that his conception of time cannot be applied to
-Nature, whose evolutions, though apparently protracted and very slow to
-see, in truth are sure to develop themselves harmoniously in every way,
-as to time inclusive.
-
-But no matter how far back the draining of the great lake may have taken
-place, it had left its memory and impression, not only on the mountains
-and the rocks, but also in the minds of men. The legend ran thus: At one
-time there came among the Chibchas a man differing in aspect from the
-inhabitants of the plateau, a man from the East, the land where the sun
-rises, and from the low plains where the mighty rivers speed to the
-ocean. He had taught them the arts of peace, the cultivation of the
-soil, the division of time; he had established their laws, the precepts
-by which their life was to be guided, their form of government; in one
-word, he had been their apostle and legislator. His name was Bochica or
-Zuhe. He resembled in aspect the Europeans who invaded the country under
-Quesada.
-
-It is asserted by a pious Spanish Bishop, who in the middle of the
-seventeenth century wrote the history of the discovery and conquest of
-the Chibcha kingdom, that the said Bochica was none other than the
-Apostle St. Bartholomew, as to whose final work and preachings there is
-(not to overstate the case) some obscurity. The good old Bishop states
-that, as the Christian faith, according to the Divine decree, was to be
-preached in every corner of the earth, it must have also been preached
-amongst the Chibchas, and that, as nothing was known with certainty
-about the final whereabouts of the Apostle Bartholomew, and he was not
-unlike the description made of Bochica by the Chibchas (which,
-by-the-by, was such that it might have fitted any white man with a long
-blonde beard), it is evident that the saint must have visited those
-Andine regions. Furthermore, he adds, there is a stone on one of the
-mountains, situated between the plateau of Bogot and the eastern
-plains, which bears the footprints of the saint. This, to many people,
-is decisive, and I, for my part, am not going to gainsay it, since it
-serves two important ends. It explains the saint's whereabouts in a most
-creditable and appropriate fashion, and it puts a definite end to all
-doubts concerning Bochica's identity. We cannot be too grateful to those
-who thus afford pleasant explanations of matters which would otherwise
-be intricate and difficult, perhaps even impossible, of solution.
-
-The legend went on to say that the god of the Chibchas (Chibchacum),
-becoming irate at their excesses and vices, flooded the plain where they
-lived, by turning into it several neighbouring rivers. The inhabitants,
-or such of them as were not drowned, took refuge on the neighbouring
-mountain-tops, where, animated by that fervour and love of the Deity
-which takes possession of every true believer when he finds himself
-thoroughly cornered, they prayed abundantly to the Bochica, whose
-precepts they had utterly forgotten. He, of course, took pity on them,
-and, appearing amidst them on the mountain-top one afternoon in all the
-glory of the setting sun, which covered him as with a sort of royal
-mantle, he dashed his golden sceptre against the mighty granite wall of
-the nearest mountain, which opened at the blow into the gap through
-which the waters poured, draining the lake, and leaving as a memorial of
-his power and his love for his chosen people those waterfalls whose
-thunder goes up like a perennial hymn to heaven high above the trees
-that crown the mountain-tops, and whose sprays are as incense for ever,
-wreathing on high at the foot of a stupendous altar.
-
-The cataract takes two leaps, first striking a protruding ledge at a
-distance of about 75 feet from the starting-point, a sort of
-spring-board from which the other mighty leap is taken. Close to the
-shore, at a distance of about 6 feet, on the very brim of the abyss,
-there is a rock about 10 feet square, which, when the waters are low,
-breaks the river, and appears like a sinking island in the mass of
-foaming waters. The rock is slippery, being covered with moss, which the
-waters and the mists keep constantly wet. Bolivar, the soldier to whose
-tenacity and genius Colombia and four other South American republics owe
-their political independence, once visited the cataracts, and stood on
-the very edge of the abyss; glancing fitfully at the small round island
-of stone that stood in the very centre of the waters, fascinated by the
-danger, he jumped, booted and spurred as he was, upon the stone, thus
-standing in the very vortex of the boiling current. After remaining
-there for a few minutes he jumped back. The tale is interesting, for few
-men indeed have the courage and nerve required, once upon the rock, not
-to fall from it and disappear in a shroud fit for any man, however
-great.
-
-After the little scene of the foundation of Bogot, in what later on
-became the public square of the city, Quesada devoted himself to
-establishing a government. I cannot help thinking that challenges like
-that which he flung down for the purpose of establishing the right of
-property are, to say the least, peculiar. True it is that no one
-contradicted, and, according to the old proverb, silence gives consent.
-A comfortable little tag this, especially when you can gag the other
-side! And a most serviceable maxim to burglars, conquerors, and, in
-fact, all such as practise the art of invading somebody else's premises,
-and taking violent possession of the premises and all that may be found
-on them. What I cannot for the life of me understand is, how it is that,
-the process being identical in essence, so many worthy men and so many
-worthy nations punish the misunderstood burglar, and bestow honours,
-praise, and, so far as it lies in their power, glory, upon the
-conqueror. It seems a pity that the gentle moralists who act in this
-puzzling fashion have not found time to indicate the point, in the
-process of acquiring somebody else's property by violence and bloodshed,
-when the vastness of the undertaking transfigures crime into virtue. The
-average man would hold it for a boon if those competent to do it were to
-fix the limit, just as in chemistry a freezing or a boiling point is
-marked by a certain number of degrees of heat. What a blessing it would
-be for the rest of us poor mortals, who find ourselves beset by many
-doubts, and who through ignorance are prone to fall into grave errors!
-but as these hopes are certainly beyond fulfilment, and are possibly out
-of place, it is better to drop them.
-
-Quesada, after vanquishing the Chibchas and becoming lord of the land,
-did not have it all his own way. The fame of El Dorado existed all over
-the continent. Though peopled by numerous tribes, mostly hostile to each
-other, some knowledge of the power of the Chibcha Empire, covering over
-5,000 square miles and including a population estimated at over a
-million and a half of inhabitants, had in the course of centuries slowly
-permeated to very remote parts of what is now known as South America. In
-the land of Quito, situated below the equator, it is said that the
-conquerors who had invaded it heard from an Indian of the wonderful El
-Dorado. The Indian's tale must have been enhanced with all the charms
-invented by a vivid imagination, playing safely at a distance. This set
-many of the conquerors on the road to Bogot. Don Sebastian de
-Belalczar, who had entered the continent by the Pacific, led his
-troops--not over 200 in number at the end of the journey--to the Bogot
-plateau, thus making a march of several hundred leagues across forest
-and mountains, attracted by the renown of the land of El Dorado. Another
-expedition which had entered the continent by the north-east coast of
-the Atlantic, and had wandered along the Orinoco Valley for over two
-years, eventually found itself near the plateau, and entered it, so
-that, shortly after his arrival into the country and his conquest of it,
-Quesada found himself confronted with two powerful rivals. For the
-moment there was great danger that the conquerors might come to blows
-amongst themselves, but Quesada's political ability matched his military
-gifts, and arrangements were soon made by which the three expeditions
-were merged into one, gold and emeralds distributed amongst the
-soldiers, numerous offices created, taxes established, the Indians and
-their belongings distributed amongst the Christian conquerors, and the
-reign of civilization established to the greater glory of God, and that
-of his beloved monarch, the King of all the Spains.
-
-One detail deserves mention as an instance of tenacious though
-unpretending heroism. The men who had come along the Orinoco had
-wandered for many weary months, and at times had been on the point of
-starvation, so that all their leather equipment had been devoured. With
-the expedition marched a friar who carried with him a fine Spanish cock
-and four hens. During that long journey, which cost the lives of so many
-men, the murderous attempts made against this feathered family were past
-counting; yet the useful birds were saved, and formed the basis of an
-innumerable progeny in the land of Colombia. The incident seems trivial,
-but, if well weighed, the friar's sustained effort against others, and
-doubtless against himself, to save the precious germ, deserves the
-highest praise.
-
-After months of hunger, when the plenty found on the plateau had
-restored equanimity to the hearts of the conquerors, they must have felt
-how much they owed to the good friar, who, even if his sermons--about
-which I know nothing--may not have been of the best, had left behind him
-the hens to lay the egg so dear to civilized man, and the chanticleer to
-sing the praises of the Almighty and to remind everyone in this instance
-of the humble beings who serve Him and their fellow-creatures in such a
-practical way.
-
-It is not at all strange that the Spanish conquerors swallowed the
-wonderful tales of incalculable treasure to be found in different parts
-of the continent which they had just discovered. Columbus himself, in
-his second voyage, landed at Veraguas on the mainland, and reaped a most
-bountiful harvest of gold. Never before in the history of Spanish wars
-had such booty fallen to the lot of the common soldier as in that
-instance. Other expeditions in various parts of the continent were
-equally fortunate, so that they supported the belief that gold was
-inexhaustible. The ostensible object of the conquest was the conversion
-of the infidels to the true faith; officially the Government of the
-Metropolis proclaimed first and foremost its intense desire to save the
-souls of so many million men who groped in the darkness of heathenism.
-Doubtless many of the conquerors really thought that they were doing the
-work of God, but the great majority of them were certainly moved by more
-worldly ends and attractions.
-
-The Indians, on their side, not only in Colombia but everywhere else,
-received the Spaniards in a friendly and hospitable way. Some warlike
-tribes there were, but it does not appear that their hostilities against
-the Spaniards began before these had shown their cruel greed and
-insatiable thirst for gold. The precious metals and jewels that had been
-accumulated amongst the tribes in the course of many generations were
-given freely to the Spaniards, who, believing that greater treasures
-were kept back from them, did not hesitate to recur to the cruellest
-methods of extortion, burning, pillaging, killing, and destroying
-everything in their way.
-
-After a struggle which did not last long, the Indians--even those of
-riper civilization and better organized--were completely subdued, and
-the sway of the Spaniard established all over the land, whose former
-lords became the slaves of the conquerors.
-
-Those who know the Indian of to-day in certain parts of the South
-American continent can hardly understand how at one time that same race
-possessed the qualities indispensable to the civilization which it had
-attained at the time of the Spanish conquest. Boiling the whole thing
-down to hard facts, we find that the Spaniards discovered a land wherein
-they found a people with civilization inferior to that of the old world;
-that this people, divided and subdivided in many tribes, received the
-conquerors hospitably, treated them generously, and in their ignorance
-considered them as superior beings; that they gave over to the Spaniards
-all the gold and treasures which the latter coveted, and that it would
-have been feasible for those superior beings to establish the
-civilization and the religion which they longed to propagate amongst the
-infidels, by methods worthy of the Christian faith which they professed.
-Instead of this, violence and bloodshed were the only methods employed,
-not to civilize, but to despoil the natives; and the right of force,
-brutal and sanguinary, was the law of the land. To this and its
-accompaniments the poets lifted up pans of praise, the Church gave its
-blessing, history its acceptance, and, barring a handful of the just, no
-one gave a thought to the oppressed and helpless Indians whose sole
-crime was they were weaker than their aggressors.
-
-Let us be thankful for what we have. Quintana, the great Spanish lyrical
-poet, pondering on these misdeeds and crimes, exclaims that they were
-crimes of the epoch, not of Spain. Fortunately it is, as we like to
-think, our privilege to live in an epoch when such things are
-impossible, when the mere thirst for gold, or its equivalent, cannot
-impel powerful nations to forget right and justice and to proclaim
-hypocritically that in so doing they are fulfilling the law of Him who
-said, 'Love ye one another,' and proclaimed charity amongst men as the
-supreme rule of life. Nowadays such wrongs as those perpetrated by the
-Spanish conquerors could not happen. Wars we have, and violence and
-destruction, and malcontents complain of them, saying that the same old
-burglarious spirit of brutal greed is the real cause of those wars; but
-those malcontents should not be (and, in fact, are not) listened to. I
-myself do not understand or pretend to explain where the justice of many
-wars comes in, but certainly they must be waged for good and honest
-ends, because the great and the powerful say that the ends are good and
-honest, that civilization and Christianity are served thereby; and it
-must be so since they say it, for they, like Brutus, are 'honourable
-men.' Let us be thankful, then, that we live in an age of justice and
-universal fairness amongst men!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
-But let us go back to our subject.
-
-All this time we journeyed on. The stars had kept their watch above our
-heads, and the moon, as if passing in review the various quarters of
-heaven, had been moving from west to east, and was very high on the
-horizon. We were chilled through after the night's ride, longing to
-arrive at some wayside inn or _venta_ where we might get something warm.
-The dawn was heralded in the far east by a broad streak of light, which
-grew rapidly, covering that side of the horizon like a fan, and soon
-bursting into glorious daylight. In equatorial regions there is hardly
-any dawn or twilight; in those latitudes there is no prelude of
-semi-obscurity that either waxes into day or wanes slowly into the dark,
-like the note of the lute, falling into silence so faintly and softly
-that none can tell the exact moment when it dies. At evening the sun
-sinks to the verge of the horizon, and disappears like a luminous orb
-dropped into empty space, and darkness sets in almost immediately. In
-the mountainous lands his last rays crown the highest peaks with a halo
-of glory, when darkness has settled over the valleys and mountain
-flanks. The moment the sun sets the stars assert their empire, and they
-are more numerous to the eye than anywhere else in the world. As for the
-moon, I have already spoken of its brilliancy. Another phenomenon
-connected with it is worthy of notice in our special case. During the
-various months of the trip which I am now describing, it seems to me
-that we had a full moon every night. I know that this is not quite in
-accordance with the established rules, or what in modern parlance is
-sometimes called the schedule of time for lunar service, but I am
-narrating my impressions, and, according to them, such is the fact. I
-should suggest that, as everything in Spanish lands is more or less
-topsy-turvy at times, the rules applicable to the moon in well-regulated
-countries do not hold good there, but I remember just in time that these
-irregularities apply solely to things human that happen 'tiles
-downwards,' as the Spaniards say, and cannot, therefore, affect the
-phenomena of Nature. As an explanation must be found for my permanent
-moon, an acceptable compromise would be that the ordinary moon did duty
-on its appointed nights, leaving the others--during which we wandered
-over mountain, through valley and forest, and on the waters of the
-silent rivers--to be illuminated for our own special benefit by some
-deputy moon, for whose services we were then, and still are, most
-grateful.
-
-As to the topsy-turviness of things Spanish and Spanish-American, the
-story is told that Santiago, the patron saint of Spain, being admitted
-into the presence of God, asked and obtained for the land of Spain and
-for its people all sorts of blessings: marvellous fertility for the
-soil, natural wealth of all kinds in the mountains and the forests,
-abundance of fish in the rivers and of birds in the air; courage,
-sobriety, and all the manly virtues for men; beauty, grace, loveliness,
-for the women. All this was granted, but, on the point of leaving, the
-saint, it is said, asked from God that he would also grant Spain a good
-government. The request was denied, as then, it is said, the Lord
-remarked, the angels would abandon heaven and flock to Spain. The story
-has lost none of its point even at the present day.
-
-With the morning we reached the longed-for _venta_, a square,
-thatch-roofed hut, which stood by the roadside quite close to the
-mountain-range which we had reached after crossing the whole breadth of
-the plateau. Outside stood several pack-horses and mules, tied to the
-columns and waiting for their loads. Under the roof the space was
-divided into three rooms, one of them provided with a counter and
-shelves running along the sides of the walls, whereon bottles of various
-sizes and contents were exhibited, and where _chicha_, the national
-drink, was served to thirsty travellers. The middle room was what might
-be called the sitting, waiting, sleeping, and dining room all in one,
-and the other was the kitchen. The fire was built on the ground, several
-logs burning brightly in the open air, filling the room with smoke and
-heat, On three stones--the traditional stones of the first hearth--a
-saucepan was seen in full boil. In the parlour we saw several _peones_,
-or labourers, from the highlands on their way to the coffee estates to
-help in the harvest. Behind the counter, the _ventera_, barmaid and
-landlady all in one, buxom and wreathed in smiles, was already filling
-either the _totuma_, a large bowl cut from a gourd, containing about a
-quart of _chicha_, or the small glass of native whisky (_aguardiente_).
-
-We jumped from our horses and entered the so-called sitting-room,
-envying the men who slept deep and strong as virtue on the bare ground.
-In a few minutes Fermin had brought from our saddle-bags the copper
-kettle used for making chocolate, and the paste for the preparation of
-that delicious drink. Within twenty minutes of our arrival we had before
-us the steaming cups of chocolate which had been boiled three times, in
-accordance with the orthodox principle which lays it down that this must
-be done if it is to be rightly done; it was well beaten and covered with
-that foam peculiar to chocolate brewed in hot water, which looks at you
-with its thousand eyes or bubbles that burst as the liquor is imbibed.
-Never was a cup of chocolate more welcome. The night seemed to have been
-interminable now that it lay behind. We would fain have stretched
-ourselves on the ground with the labourers, but to reach our destination
-that day it was necessary to lose no time; so after an hour's rest,
-during which our horses had had their _pienso_ of fodder, we started
-again, now over more broken country, leaving the plain behind us,
-climbing and descending the road which was still available for carts and
-wheeled vehicles of all sorts.
-
-And thus we advanced, seeing the sunrise darting its slanting rays,
-which were quite pleasant to feel in the early morning, until they
-became perpendicular, hot, and almost unbearable in the dusty road.
-
-The horses, after the long journey, slackened their pace, and we looked
-upon surrounding Nature with weary eyes and that emptiness of feeling in
-the brain, that consciousness of a void somewhere, which always follow
-nights passed absolutely without sleep.
-
-Towards four in the afternoon, after seventeen hours' steady ride,
-interrupted only by the short stay at the roadside _venta_, we reached
-the _hacienda_ of Gambita, where one of our companions, Raoul, who had
-started ahead to prepare everything for the longer journey, was waiting
-for us. He came up quite briskly along the road, joyful at our arrival,
-full of spirits, and most anxious that the journey should be continued.
-He might well feel thus, as he had not passed a sleepless night on
-horseback like a knight-errant over field and moor. The desire for sleep
-and rest was overpowering--all else lacked interest for us; so that,
-alighting from our horses, we walked into the house, and, finding
-convenient sofas, stretched ourselves and slept. Like Dante after
-listening to the sorrowful tale of Francesca, we fell as a dead body
-falls, which goes to prove that identical effects may arise from totally
-different causes. Towards ten at night Raoul waked us. The supper
-waiting for us was quickly despatched, and our mules were saddled and
-ready.
-
-As I have said before, mules are far preferable to horses when
-travelling on the mountain-paths, which are called roads in the Andes.
-The old Shakespearian query, 'What's in a name?' and the answer that a
-rose would smell as sweet even if called by another name, demonstrates
-the elasticity of words. To the average Englishman a road is a
-well-defined means of communication with or without rails, but offering
-all sorts of advantages for comfortable locomotion. Roads in the Andes
-at times are such as to invite the formation of legends. It is said that
-an American diplomatist, visiting a South American republic, alighted
-from the river steamer which had borne him far inland by the respective
-river, and was shown the mountain-road which he had to follow to reach
-the capital--a yellowish or reddish streak like a gash in the mountain,
-lying on its side like a rope carelessly thrown from the summit towards
-the base, following the sinuosities of the ground--and straightway
-remarked, 'I'm off home; this road is only fit for birds.'
-
-On such roads the mule is the best friend of man. Had Richard III. found
-himself in the plight we all know of in some such locality, the generous
-offer of bartering his kingdom (which, by-the-by, at that moment was a
-minus quantity to him) would have made for a mule instead of for a
-horse, and although the phrase--'A mule! a mule! my kingdom for a
-mule!'--sounds comical (for these are questions of habit), probably the
-stock phrase would bring down the house with laughter. If the camel is
-called the ship of the desert, the mule deserves the title of the
-balloon of the mountains.
-
-A friend of mine, knowing of my intended trip, had sent me his favourite
-mule, and well did the animal deserve the praises that its owner
-bestowed upon it; patient, sure-footed, collected, it carried me by
-precipice, ravine, ascended paths only fit for ants as lightly and
-carefully as if no weight were on its back. At the mud ditches which
-intersected the roads, and at times reached the proportions of miniature
-lakes, often treacherously deep, it would halt, looking at the waters
-with its big, ball-shaped, moist eyes, and no hint of mine, whether
-given with spur or whip, could disturb its equanimity. At the right
-moment, heedless of my meddling, it would jump or ford or slide as
-circumstances required. At the beginning of our companionship, during
-those long days, I began by endeavouring to have a mind of my own as to
-the part of the road to be selected. I soon saw that my efforts were
-useless, for that wisdom of the mule which men call stubbornness was
-invincible. And, frankly, it was lucky that I soon gained this
-conviction, as certainly the mule knew far better than I what should be
-done.
-
-How strange all this sounds in this land of railroads, automobiles,
-omnibuses, and wheeled conveyances of every sort! yet there is more
-genuine travelling, more real travelling, in going from one place to
-another on the back of a mule than in being cooped for hours or days in
-a railway compartment whirled along at lightning speed. What does one
-learn about the country, what does one see of its beauty or of its
-peculiarities, in this latter case? It may be transportation, it may be
-locomotion, but it is not travelling.
-
-If I were a man of ample means, I would certainly endow that splendid
-beast which carried me during so many days, or provide a pension for it,
-so that it might spend the remainder of its life in the enjoyment of
-meadows ever green, luscious with rich grass and sweet with the waters
-of rippling streams.
-
-From Gambita on, our cavalcade had something of the aspect of a caravan.
-There were Alex, Raoul, and myself, besides our servant Fermin, four
-muleteers, and ten or twelve mules laden with our luggage, tents,
-provisions, arms, and so forth. This mob of travellers was so unusual
-that the simple folks in the villages through which we passed said that
-his lordship the Archbishop was no doubt on a tour. On hearing this, and
-finding that the people began to kneel by the roadside, rather than
-shatter their illusion, I--knowing that I was the most episcopal-looking
-of our crowd--decided to give my blessing, which I did with due unction
-to the kneeling maidens and matrons along the roadside.
-
-From Gambita we shaped our course eastward. It was our intention to
-reach the Atlantic through the Orinoco River. We were seeking one of the
-many affluents of the river Meta, which is itself one of the largest
-tributaries of the Orinoco. The affluents of the Meta start on the
-eastern slope of the mountains which form the plateau of Bogot.
-
-After three days' ride from Gambita, we reached the estate of a friend
-near the town of Miraflores, where we had to prepare ourselves for the
-last stage of the land journey which would carry us through the dense
-forests bordering the lower eastern slope of the Cordilleras, and
-constituting a sort of fringe around the endless plains that extend for
-thousands of miles from the foot of the Cordilleras to the ocean. Across
-these plains flow the mighty rivers, their numerous affluents, and the
-countless _caos_, or natural canals connecting the rivers amongst
-themselves, and thus forming a perfect network of natural waterways.
-
-At Miraflores we stopped for twenty-four hours to recruit our forces and
-prepare everything, not only for the last stage of the land journey, but
-for the long canoe voyage that lay before us.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
-From Miraflores on, the descent was continuous. Before penetrating into
-the forest, we skirted the mountain for a good many miles. The road,
-barely 4 or 5 feet in width, had been cut out of the rock, like the
-cornice of a temple. On the one side we had the bluff of the mountain,
-and on the other a precipice of hundreds, and even thousands, of feet in
-depth. The inclination at times was so steep that at a distance the line
-of the road on the mountain seemed almost vertical, and the file of
-mules with riders or with loads on their backs appeared like so many
-flies on a wall.
-
-Up to the time that we reached Miraflores, we had followed what in
-Colombia are called, according to the loyal tradition still living on
-the lips, if not in the hearts, of the people, 'royal roads,' or
-_caminos reales_. These royal roads are paths along the mountain slopes,
-said to follow the old Indian trails, and the Indians had a peculiar way
-of selecting their paths or trails. They seem to have been impervious to
-fatigue, and Franklin's adage, now accepted the world over, that time is
-money, did not obtain with them, for they had no money and abundant
-time. When an Indian wanted to cross a range of mountains, instead of
-selecting the lowest summit, he fixed his eye on the highest peak, and
-over it would wend his way. The explanation given is that thus he
-accomplished two ends--crossing the range and placing himself in a
-position to see the widest possible horizon. Be that as it may, the
-Spaniards who settled in the colonies accepted the precedent, and the
-result is a most wearisome and unpleasant one in the present day.
-
-But if as far as Miraflores we had the so-called 'royal roads,' from
-thence on in an easterly direction towards the plain we lacked even
-these apologies for roads. From Miraflores towards the _llanos_, along
-the slope of the Cordilleras, extends an intricate forest in its
-primeval state. We had to fight our way through the under-brush amongst
-the trunks of the huge trees, and at times really battling for each foot
-that we advanced. However, our guides, who were expert
-cattle-drivers--large quantities of cattle being driven through these
-forests from the plains to the uplands--knew the forest so well that the
-obstacles were reduced to their minimum.
-
-We rode in Indian file, the chief of the guides ahead of the line
-cutting with his cutlass, or _machete_, the branches and overhanging
-boughs, thorns, reeds, creepers, and the like, that might strike us in
-the face as we rode under them. Next to him followed two _peones_, who
-cleared the ground, if necessary, from fallen branches or stones against
-which our mules might stumble. At first this slow mode of travel was
-most interesting. The light scarcely filtered through the dense mass of
-leaves, so that we felt as if we stood constantly behind some cathedral
-stained-glass window. The air was full of the peculiar fragrance of
-tropical flowers and plants; the orchids swung high above our heads like
-lamps from the vaults of a temple, and the huge trunks of the trees,
-covered with creepers studded with multi-coloured flowers, appeared like
-the festooned columns of a temple on a feast-day.
-
-However, there were certain drawbacks: the ground was so wet and spongy
-that the feet of the animals sank into it, and progress was accordingly
-very slow. Now and then we would come to a halt, owing to a huge boulder
-of rock or large trunk of a tree barring the passage absolutely. It was
-then necessary for the guides to seek the best way of overcoming the
-obstacle. Frequently we had to alight from our mules, as it was
-dangerous to ride them in many places. The guides and the muleteers
-walked on the uneven ground--now stony, and now slippery--with the
-agility of deer, sure-footed and unconscious of the difficulty. I had to
-invent a means of advancing: I placed myself between two of the guides,
-hooking one arm to a guide's on each side, and thus, though frequently
-stumbling, I never fell, but it may be readily understood that this mode
-of progression was neither comfortable nor rapid.
-
-Another inconvenience was found in the thorny bushes, prickly plants,
-and trees which it was dangerous to approach, such as the _palo_
-_santo_, so called because it is frequented by a kind of ant of that
-name, whose bite is most painful and induces a slight fever.
-
-On the second day the guide who was ahead fired his gun, and, on our
-asking him for the cause, said:
-
-'Only a rattle-snake!'
-
-As a matter of fact, he had killed a large specimen, said to be seven
-years old, as shown by the seven rattles that were taken from its tail.
-These things did not help to make the ride through the intricate forest
-more pleasant. We longed to see the open sky, which we could only
-discern through the veil or network of leaves and branches, and, by a
-phenomenon of sympathy between the lungs and the eyes, it seemed to us
-that we lacked air to breathe. Now and then we would come to a clearing,
-but we soon plunged again into the thick of it, and felt like wanderers
-gone astray in an interminable labyrinth or maze of tall trees, moist
-foliage, and tepid atmosphere.
-
-The guides told us from the start that it would take from four to five
-days to reach the end of the forest. On the fifth day, towards noon,
-almost suddenly we came upon the open plain. Our hearts leaped for very
-joy, and we hailed the vast green motionless solitude, that extended far
-into the horizon before our eyes like a frozen sea, with a shout of joy.
-The trees of the forest stood as in battle-line in front of the endless
-plain; the sun darted its rays, which shimmered in the countless
-ribbons, some broader than others, of the silver streams sluggishly
-dragging their waves along the bosom of the unending prairie. Copses of
-_moriches_, an exceptionally graceful species of palm, dotted the plains
-in all directions. They seemed as though planted by the hand of man to
-hide behind them a castle, or some old feudal structure, which our
-imagination reared complete, full-fledged, with its walls, its roof, its
-turrets, and its legends. The site looked as if prepared for a large
-city about to be built, and waiting only for the arrival of its
-architects and inhabitants, even as the white page tarries for him that
-is to inscribe upon it a living and immortal thought.
-
-To continue our journey on the _llanos_, the assistance of the guides
-was even more necessary than in the thick of the forest. To attempt
-travelling on the _llanos_ without expert guides would be like seeking
-to cross the sea without a compass.
-
-Once in the _llanos_, we came within a few hours to the hamlet of San
-Pedro, a cattle-trading station consisting of a few thatch-roofed
-houses, almost deserted except during the various weeks of the year
-specially fixed for traders and breeders to meet. Here we were at last
-at the end of the first stage of our journey. It was New Year's Day.
-Behind us lay the maze of forest, the meandering trails and paths, the
-sheer mountains, the cold fertile plateau, the native city, and the dead
-year. Before us we had the unlimited plain, the wandering rivers, and
-there, beyond all, like a promise, tossing, heaving, roaring, the sea,
-vast, immeasurable, the open roadway to the shores of other lands, some
-of them free, some of them perhaps hospitable, all girdled by the
-ever-beating waves which now die moaning on the sands, now dash their
-fury into foam on the rocks of the shore.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Before parting from our friends the mules, it may not be amiss to speak
-of the equipment for man and beast which obtains in Colombian Andine
-regions. The saddle used--sometimes native, sometimes European--offers
-nothing striking in its composition, only that it is provided with a
-crupper which must be very strong--strong as a braced strap--since in
-the steep ascents or descents the girth alone would be insufficient. The
-men wear leggings or _zamorros_, which, in fact, are rather seatless
-trousers than leggings, 2 feet wide, held together by a strap across the
-loins, the outside consisting of tanned hide with the hair on it, and
-the inside of soft leather. They have the advantage of being very easily
-put on and slipped off when the rider alights. The stirrups are a large
-shoe wherein the whole foot is encased, made of copper or brass. At
-first those unfamiliar with the roads find them awkward, bulky, and
-heavy, but one soon learns that they are an indispensable protection, a
-sort of armour or shield against the stones, trees, and sundry other
-obstacles which the rider's foot is bound to strike. The _poncho_, which
-is a rectangular piece of woven cotton cloth about 5 to 6 feet long by 3
-to 3 feet broad, with a slit in the centre, is worn by all riders, and
-a similar piece of india-rubber cloth, only somewhat larger, is carried
-strapped to the back of the saddle to be used when rain comes on. The
-real native accoutrement, in which the saddle differs, having a pommel
-and being high-seated in the back, is not complete without the lasso,
-made of twisted raw hide, kept soft and pliable by the frequent use of
-tallow, which is rubbed into it. The expert herdsman can throw the lasso
-a long distance, either across the neck of the horses or right over the
-horns of the cattle; their aim is unerring. They fasten the lasso to the
-pommel of the saddle, and turn their horses backwards so that they may
-better withstand the pull of the lassoed animal. Spurs in Colombia are
-frequently worn, especially when you ride somebody else's hired mule or
-horse. The spurs are more formidable in appearance than harmful in
-reality; the rollocks, instead of being small with little pinlike pricks
-as in Europe, are huge in size, about 3 inches in diameter, and each
-prick about 1 inches; they make a great rattle on the slightest
-provocation, but are less painful to the animal than the little European
-spurs. Apropos of this, I remember the case of an individual who,
-finding the Colombian spurs too heavy, only wore one, arguing that if he
-managed to make one side of his mule get along, the other side would be
-sure to follow, and hence only one spur was needed.
-
-On arriving at the wayside _venta_, or inn--and Heaven only knows how
-elastic a man's conscience must be to bestow the name of inn upon many
-of these _ventas_--the first care of an experienced traveller is to see
-to the welfare of his mules and horses. If available, Indian corn, brown
-sugar of the species called _panela_, which is uncrystallized solidified
-molasses, and the best grass that can be got in the neighbourhood, are
-given to the animals. If there happens to be an enclosure, the mules and
-horses are let loose in it, so that they may rest more comfortably; but
-these enclosures are very frequently a delusion and a snare, as
-inexperienced travellers find when, on rising early in the morning the
-next day, they are told that the animals have jumped over the fence or
-broken through, or in some other way disappeared, whereupon the
-muleteers, with the boys and men available in the locality pressed into
-the service for the occasion, scour the mountains and the neighbouring
-forests in search of the missing animals, the search lasting at times
-four and five hours, during which the traveller frets, foams, and
-possibly, if he be quite natural and unspoiled by convention, swears.
-
-But notwithstanding these drawbacks, there is a special charm about this
-mode of travelling. In the morning about four the traveller arises from
-his not too soft couch. The first breakfast is at once prepared, and
-whilst it is being cooked the _maanas_, or morning greeting, is
-indulged in, consisting of a little whisky, brandy, _aguardiente_, rum,
-or whatever spirits happen to be available. The hour, even in the hot
-lands, is cool. The stars still shine brightly in the heavens, and, were
-it not for the testimony of one's watch, one would believe one's self
-still in the middle of the night. The mules are brought forward, given
-their morning rations, the luggage is strapped on the 'cargo' mules, as
-they are called, and the others are saddled, and if all goes well,
-towards five or half-past, the journey begins.
-
-There is a characteristic odour in the temperate and low lands of the
-tropics at that special hour of morning, and the dawn is announced by a
-hum in the ear, which, whilst it is still dark, is not of birds, but of
-the thousand insects that inhabit the forest. Finally, when the sun
-bursts forth in all his glory, a hymn seems to start in all directions,
-and the mountains vibrate with echoes of universal animation from the
-grass and the bushes, the running streams, and the nests in the branches
-of the trees laden with life. In the cool air of the morning the mind is
-quite alert, and the climbing and descending, the fording of rivers, the
-crossing of ravines and precipices, the slow ascent of the sun in the
-horizon, the fresh stirring of the breeze in the leaves, the
-reverberation of the light on the drops of fresh dew still hanging from
-the boughs and dotting the many-coloured flowers--all these things
-induce such a feeling of communion with Nature that one feels one's self
-an integral part of the large, immense, palpitating life that throbs in
-every direction, and the conception of immortality seems to crystallize,
-so to speak, in the mind of the traveller; but, of course, familiarity
-breeds contempt, and things beautiful, though they are a joy for ever,
-might tire Keats himself through repetition, so that at times travelling
-in this wise often seems slow, and one longs for some other means of
-locomotion. Yet I cannot help thinking with regret of the days when one
-will ask for a ticket--railway, 'tube,' balloon, or whatever it may
-be--from any place on earth to any other place. When that day arrives,
-men will be transported more rapidly from one place to another, but the
-real traveller will have disappeared, as the knight-errant disappeared,
-as the gentleman is being driven out from the world in these days when
-all things are bought and sold, and kindness and generosity are becoming
-empty words or obsolete relics of a past that very few understand, and
-fewer still care to imitate.
-
-On the very outskirts of the forest, within half an hour's ride from the
-long file of trees, we came upon a group of thatch-roofed structures
-which form the so-called town or hamlet of San Pedro del Tua, a
-meeting-place, as I have said before, for herdsmen and dealers, deserted
-at the present season; the only persons who had remained were those
-whose poverty--heavier than any anchor--had kept them on the spot away
-from the Christmas and New Year's festivities that were being celebrated
-in all the towns and villages of the neighbouring region. Our first care
-was to find a roof under which to pass the night. We inquired for the
-man in power, namely, the _correjidor_, a sort of justice of the peace,
-mayor, sheriff, all in one, an official to be found in hamlets or
-villages like that which we had just reached. It was not hard to find
-him, since there were only fifteen persons in the place. We had a letter
-of introduction to him, which made things easier. He immediately took us
-to the best house in the place, which happened to belong to him. He
-asked us what good winds had wafted us thither, and whither we went. As
-we did not care, until having felt our ground a little more, to state
-frankly that we wanted to cross into the neighbouring republic of
-Venezuela, one of us--the most audacious if not the best liar of the
-lot--calmly stated that we had come to the _llanos_ for the purpose of
-selecting and purchasing some land, as we intended to go into the
-cattle-breeding business, and possibly into some agricultural pursuit or
-other. The _correjidor_ said nothing, but an ironical smile seemed to
-flit across his lips. When we had become more familiar with things and
-customs in the plains, we understood why he had not replied, and the
-cause of his almost imperceptible smile. To purchase land in the
-_llanos_ would be tantamount to buying salt water in the midst of the
-ocean! People 'squat' wherever they like in those endless plains that
-belong to him who exploits them. The cattle, horses, sheep, are the
-elements of value to which ownership is attached, but the grazing lands
-belong to one and all, and as matters stand now, given the scarcity of
-population and its slow increase, such will be the condition of affairs
-for many a long year to come.
-
-Once inside the house that the _correjidor_ had placed at our disposal,
-and feeling more at ease with him, we told him of our intention to go to
-Venezuela, and asked for his assistance. His name was Leal, which means
-loyal; its sound had in it the clink of a good omen, and later events
-proved that he deserved it. He told us that our undertaking was by no
-means an easy one, nor one that could be accomplished without the
-assistance of expert and intelligent guides. He added that he knew the
-various ways to penetrate from Colombia into Venezuela, and that if we
-would accept his services he would accompany us. I need not state that
-the offer was accepted with alacrity.
-
-In the short journey from the skirt of the forest to the hamlet of San
-Pedro del Tua across the _llano_ itself, we had time to remark that its
-aspect, once in contact with it, was quite different from the beautiful
-velvety green waving in the sunlight, soft and thick, that we had seen
-from a distance. The ground was covered with a coarse grass varying in
-height and colour, we were told, according to the season of the year. A
-great many small pathways seemed to cross it in all directions, formed
-by the cropping of the grass and the animals that moved to and fro on
-the plains. We crossed various _caos_, which are natural canals,
-uniting the larger rivers. As we were at the beginning of the dry
-season, these canals were low, and we forded them without any
-difficulty, but in winter--that is to say, in the rainy season--they
-attain the dimension of large rivers, and travelling in the _llanos_ on
-horseback then becomes most difficult. We came frequently upon copses of
-the _moriche_ palms already described. In the centre of these copses one
-always finds a cool natural basin of water, which is preferred by the
-natives as being the healthiest and the sweetest of the locality--_agua
-de morichal_. There must be something in it, for the cattle also prefer
-this water to that of the rivers and _caos_.
-
-To our inexperienced eye the _llanos_ bore no landmark which might serve
-as a guide to our movements. After a copse of _moriche_ palms came
-another one, and then another one, and no sooner was one _cao_ crossed
-than another took its place, so that without guides it would have been
-impossible for us to know whether we were moving in the right direction.
-
-Leal advised us to lose no time, as the journey we had before us was a
-long one. Now that we were close to the beginning of our canoe journey
-on the rivers, we at once set to counting the belongings we had brought
-at such great expense and trouble from the high plateau of Bogot, which
-seemed ever so far away when with the mind's eye we beheld it perched
-like an eagle's nest high up on the summit of those mountains that it
-had taken us about eighteen days to descend. As every inch of ground
-that we had left behind had been, so to say, felt by us, the distance
-appeared enormous, and the old city and the plateau seemed more like the
-remembrance of a dream than of a reality. We drew up our inventory, and
-found that we were the happy possessors of about eight cases, 50 pounds
-in weight each, containing preserved meats, vegetables, and food of all
-kinds in boxes, jars, tins, and so forth. Next came about six large jugs
-or demijohns of native fire-water, or _aguardiente_, a most useful and
-indispensable beverage in those latitudes, and about half a ton of salt,
-a most precious article in that region. We were going across the plains
-where there are neither salt-water fountains nor salt-bearing rock
-deposits, and we knew that as an article of barter, salt went far beyond
-anything else that we might possess, hence the large quantity which we
-carried. Our arsenal consisted of four fowling-pieces, six Remington and
-two Spencer rifles, plenty of ammunition, cartridges, gunpowder, one
-dozen cutlasses, or _machetes_, and four revolvers. We also had a box
-with books, our trunks with clothing, rugs, mosquito-nets, waterproof
-sheets, a medicine-chest, and two guitars of the native Colombian type;
-but what rendered us most important and steady service during the whole
-of that journey was a certain wicker basket, 1 yard long, of a yard
-wide, and 10 inches in height, which contained a complete assortment of
-cooking utensils and table-ware for six persons--plates, corkscrews,
-can-openers, frying-pans, and all that one could wish to prepare as
-sumptuous a meal as mortal man could desire in those vast solitudes. The
-saucepans, six in number, fitted one inside of the other, nest-wise;
-they were copper-bottomed, and proved of inestimable value. The tumblers
-and cups were also nested--pewter ware with porcelain inside. Everything
-was complete, compact, and so solid that, after the long journey with
-its vicissitudes, the wicker basket and its contents, though looking
-somewhat the worse for wear, were perfectly serviceable.
-
-Leal, a man of simple habits, who had never been in a town of more than
-4,000 or 5,000 inhabitants, on looking at that display of superfluous
-articles, argued that we were altogether too rich, and that our
-movements would be greatly facilitated were we to dispense with, say,
-two-thirds of what lay before him on the ground. We pleaded that since
-the worst had been accomplished, namely, the transportation across land,
-roads, and mountain trails, we might as well keep what we had, and only
-abandon it when forced to do so. Leal nodded his head, as one who sees
-that it is useless to argue, and nothing more was said on the subject.
-
-Everything was prepared on that New Year's Day to start on the next day
-for the neighbouring cattle-farm of Santa Rosa del Tua, situated on the
-river Tua, one of the affluents of the Meta, which itself is one of the
-most important tributaries of the mighty Orinoco. These arrangements and
-decisions once arrived at, it was deemed prudent to celebrate our
-arrival into the place, and the arrival on the scene of life of the New
-Year, by a banquet worthy of the double occasion.
-
-A heifer was slaughtered. Leal brought upon the scene, in front of the
-house where we were stopping, the whole side of the animal trimmed and
-prepared for roasting; he had passed through it, skewer-wise, a long
-thin pole of some special wood hard and difficult to burn. A huge
-bonfire was lit on the ground, and Leal fixed the lower end of the
-skewer quite close to the fire, holding the side of the heifer now right
-over the flame, now at a certain distance, turning and twisting it with
-consummate skill. The air was soon scented with that odour of roast meat
-which so deliciously tickles the nostrils of him who has an empty
-stomach. Looking at Leal doing the roasting, I realized
-Brillat-Savarin's dictum: _On devient cuisinier, on nat rotisseur_.
-Leal, if not a born poet, was a born roaster. Soon the meat was ready;
-our plates, forks, and knives not being sufficient for the crowd, we
-preferred not to bring them forth. Large leaves, green, fresh, and
-shiny, cut from the neighbouring banana and plantain trees, were laid on
-the ground both as a cover and as dishes. Leal unsheathed from his belt
-a long, thin shining knife as sharp as a razor, and with wonderful
-dexterity cut the huge joint, separating the ribs, so that everyone
-could have a bone with a large portion of hot, steaming, newly-broiled
-meat. Bread was not forthcoming, but there was an abundance of baked and
-roasted green plantains, crisp and mealy, which did service for the best
-bread; at least, so we thought. As for meat, never in my life do I
-remember having enjoyed such a delicious morsel: so the banquet
-consisted of meat and roasted plantains _ discretion_. A bottle of rum
-which belonged to our stock, and which I had forgotten in the inventory
-given above, went round the guests of that primitive board, warming our
-hearts into conviviality and good-humour. Finally came the big bowls of
-coffee, prepared according to the local fashion, which deserves to be
-described. The coffee is roasted and ground in the usual way, but these
-operations are only carried out just before the liquor is brewed. In a
-large saucepan cold water, sweetened to the taste with black sugar, is
-placed over the fire, and the necessary amount of ground coffee is
-thrown into it before it gets warm. The heating should not be too rapid;
-when the first bubbles indicate that the boiling-point is about to be
-reached, the saucepan is withdrawn from the fire, and a spoonful of cold
-water dashed upon the surface of the hot liquor almost in ebullition.
-This precipitates the roasted coffee to the bottom, and gives a most
-delicious beverage, which, though not as strong as the coffee distilled
-according to other methods, retains all the aroma and flavour of the
-grain. The method is a very good one in localities where delicate
-coffee-machines cannot be easily procured, and it is in truth nothing
-more or less than the method of preparing Turkish coffee, with less fuss
-than is required for the Oriental variety.
-
-We had soon grown, in that very first day of our encounter with him, to
-like Leal and to wonder at his intimate knowledge of the plains, the
-forests, and the rivers of that vast region. He was not a Colombian; he
-had been born on the shores of the river Gaurico, one of the affluents
-of the Orinoco. From boyhood he had thus come into daily contact with
-the mighty rivers and the deep and mysterious forests that cover their
-shores. His plan was that we should first follow the river Tua down to
-the Meta. On arriving at this latter river, we should have to find
-larger canoes, which would enable us to reach the Orinoco. Once on the
-Orinoco we would arrive at the settlement called Urbana, where we were
-sure to obtain larger craft in which to go as far as Caicara. Here we
-might wait for the steamers that go to Ciudad Bolivar. As to the time
-required for this journey, Leal said that, barring unforeseen obstacles,
-fifty days might suffice for us to reach Ciudad Bolivar. The only
-inhabited places which we would come across were first San Pedro del
-Arrastradero, then Orocue, and finally San Rafael, the last Colombian
-settlements where troops were stationed, and on inquiry Leal stated that
-on the river Meta it was necessary to follow the only channel that
-existed, so that it would be indispensable for us to touch at the
-various towns he had named, as there was no lateral _caos_ by which we
-might avoid them, should we want to do so, as was the case in other
-parts of the plains, where one might either follow the main stream or
-some _cao_ or tributary. If we wanted to take another river route, we
-might, on reaching San Pedro del Arrastradero, walk a short distance of
-about a mile to the _cao_ called Caracarate, which would take us to the
-river Muco, an affluent of the Vichada, almost as large as the Meta
-River, and flowing into the Orinoco. But, said Leal, if we follow the
-Vichada instead of arriving on the Orinoco below the rapids, we shall
-strike that river above the rapids, and these alone will entail more
-trouble and difficulty and require more time than any other part of the
-river. For the moment no decision was taken. The question was left open
-to be solved as might be most convenient at an opportune moment.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
-Early next morning, January 2, we started from the village, and, after a
-short ride across the plain, reached the river Tua, at the house of a
-small cattle-ranch called Santa Rosa del Tua.
-
-The owner of the premises welcomed us most hospitably, and, to our joy,
-placed at our disposal two small canoes. No others were to be found
-there at the moment. However, they were large enough to carry us and our
-belongings, and accordingly we made ready for an early start next day.
-
-The houses--or what serve for houses in the _llanos_--are built on the
-most primitive architectural principles. Poles, varying in thickness and
-in length, according to the proportions of the desired structure, are
-sunk into the ground at convenient distances, following the lines either
-of a perfect square or of a rectangle. Cross-beams are nailed or tied to
-the vertical poles at the required height; in the latter case the
-vertical poles are grooved, so as to give additional support. From the
-cross-beams on either side other beams are thrown, slanting so as to
-meet in the centre, thus forming the basis of the roof, which is again
-covered with reeds, upon which are placed several layers of palm-leaves,
-fastened by means of thin ropes to the slanting beams and poles; and
-thus the roof is completed. This finishes the house for use during the
-dry season.
-
-During the wet season the sides are covered in the same fashion as the
-roof. The palm-leaf most used is that of the _moriche_, which abounds in
-the _llanos_.
-
-When lying in the hammock during the dry season one feels the breath of
-the breeze as it blows across the plain, and may see the stars twinkling
-in the deep blue dome of heaven, like far-off tapers. The _llaneros_, or
-inhabitants of the plains, prefer to sleep in the open air, even without
-palm-leaf roofing above their heads. It is as though they felt
-imprisoned indoors, and pined for the ampler ether.
-
-Here we had thus reached the last stage of our land journey. The real
-voyage was about to begin.
-
-The reader who has followed me thus far will have gathered that there
-were three of us in this expedition--Alex, Raoul, and myself. With us
-came our servant Fermin, who adapted himself to the most urgent
-requirements, being now muleteer, now valet, now cook. Leal had engaged
-the services of several _peones_ to paddle the canoes when we reached
-the Tua River; these numbered seventeen, so that, including Leal and
-ourselves, we formed a group of twenty-two men. The canoes were so small
-that we were packed like herrings, but, as it was impossible to obtain
-others, we had to make the best of them.
-
-Raoul was a sportsman: more than once he had taken up arms against the
-harmless ducks that swarm at certain seasons of the year in the lakes
-studding the plateau of Bogot. I had no personal knowledge of his
-powers, but, with the modesty and truthfulness characteristic of all
-hunters and fishermen, he carefully impressed upon us that he was a dead
-shot, and that when a bird, hare, or any furred or feathered creature,
-came within range of his gun its doom was certain.
-
-Immediately upon our arrival at the river Tua, the shores of which are
-covered with a dense forest, he called our attention to the numberless
-birds to be seen, and as soon as he could manage it he left us,
-accompanied by one of the men, and was speedily lost to sight amongst
-the trees. Shortly afterwards the report of his gun reached us with such
-frequency that one might think he was wasting powder for mere love of
-smoke. By-and-by he returned, bringing with him about sixteen different
-birds of various sizes and kinds, sufficient to feed the whole
-expedition for one or two days. He was on the point of starting on
-another murderous excursion, when we remonstrated against the wanton
-destruction of animal life. Leal quietly observed that if Raoul thus
-continued wasting powder and shot he would soon exhaust our store of
-those indispensable articles, the lack of which might entail most
-serious consequences later on. On hearing this we held what might be
-called a council of war, at which it was decided that no more birds or
-game were to be shot than were absolutely indispensable. We were
-influenced not so much by a feeling of humanity or love for the birds as
-by the fact that a long journey lay before us, that the loss of a canoe,
-the flooding of a river, or illness, or any accident that might befall
-us, would detain us for much longer than we had bargained. Raoul
-reluctantly listened to all these reasons, but, acknowledging their
-force, agreed to comply with them.
-
-Our descent of the river Tua began next day. The waters were very
-shallow, owing to the dry season, and, as our men could not use their
-paddles, they punted the canoes down-stream. We were often detained by
-palisades which obstructed the current. These were formed by trunks
-uprooted from the shores by the river in its flood, and then jettisoned
-in the bed of the stream. In the dry season they stood forth like small
-islands, and gathered round them all the floating dbris of the river.
-These palisades, with which we met very often, gave us a deal of
-trouble. We often had to jump out of the canoes and either drag or push
-them, as they would stick to the sandy bottom, and punting failed to
-make them budge. We took to this task cheerfully, and found it tolerable
-sport, until one of our men was stung by a peculiar sort of fish, black
-and round, called _raya_. This lies hidden in the sand, and, when
-touched or trodden upon, stings, darting its harpoon into the ankle or
-the calf, leaving its point in the wound, a most painful one, which
-continues to smart for several days. The man, who was stung in our
-presence, cried and moaned like a child, so intense was the pain. After
-this we were decidedly chary of lending a hand in dragging or pushing
-the canoes, and--I must confess it to our shame--we would wade booted to
-the shore and wait till they had been got afloat again, rather than take
-the chances of being stung in our turn.
-
-We had started at about six in the morning; towards five in the
-afternoon Leal began to cast his eyes about in search of a nice, dry,
-sandy beach upon which to pitch our camp for the night. So far we had
-always found some house or hut to sleep in; now, for the first time, we
-were faced by the necessity of camping in the open air without any roof
-whatever above our heads. We experienced a peculiar sensation of
-unwarranted fear--a dread arising, doubtless, from the force of habit in
-the civilized man, naturally averse to imitating the birds and the
-beasts, which sleep under God's heaven and run all risks; but whatever
-our feelings, we were forced to accept the inevitable.
-
-As soon as a satisfactory strip of beach was found, we jumped ashore.
-The canoes were dragged halfway out of the water, and tied with stout
-ropes to neighbouring trees to prevent their being carried away in case
-of an unexpected flood--by no means an impossible contingency. The men
-took out the mats upon which we were to sleep, and as there were swarms
-of the mosquitoes, sand-flies, and numerous insects which make life a
-burden in the early hours of the night on the shores of these rivers,
-the mosquito-bars, made of cotton cloth, were rigged up over the mats.
-
-Fermin, who had been promoted to the rank of private cook for Alex,
-Raoul, and myself, prepared our supper, making use of the saucepans and
-sundry implements contained in our travelling basket. To prepare their
-meals, the men used a huge iron pot, which was soon tilted over a large
-fire.
-
-We were four days on the river Tua punting or paddling, according to the
-depth of water. When we reached the river Meta, we had already arranged
-the daily routine best suited to our requirements, and I might as well,
-once for all, describe it.
-
-Our acting chief, Leal, ever watchful and alert, wakened us at about
-three in the morning. Every man had his appointed task: two of them
-prepared the indispensable coffee in the fashion of the land; others
-folded up the mats, the mosquito-bars, and whatever else might have been
-landed. Alex, Raoul, and I would in the meantime stand on the river
-brink, whilst two of the men poured upon us small cataracts of water
-drawn from the river in the _coyabras_ or _totumas_ cut from native
-gourds, which form an indispensable part of the domestic arrangements in
-the _llanos_. It would have been sheer madness to bathe in the river,
-with its _rayas_, or water-snakes, or perhaps some shy, dissembling
-alligator in quest of a tasty morsel.
-
-Sandy beaches are the best places for camping on the shores of tropical
-rivers. They are dry, clean, soft, and perfectly free from snakes,
-scorpions, tarantulas, and all such obnoxious creatures, which are more
-likely to be found amongst the high luxuriant grass and the leafy trees.
-
-Between four and five, as soon as it was ready, every man drank a large
-goblet of coffee and a small glass of aniseed _aguardiente_, which is
-said to be a specific against malaria. The men's faith in the virtue of
-the distilled spirit was astounding; they never failed to take it, and
-would even ask for more, lest the quantity given were not enough to
-protect them from the dreaded illness. Though the merits of quinine are
-more universally acknowledged, it did not seem to be as acceptable, nor
-to be coveted with equal greediness.
-
-We generally started at about five in the morning, paddling steadily
-till about eleven, when we landed as soon as we found a suitable spot,
-if possible shaded with trees. Here we would hang the hammocks, prepare
-the midday repast, and wait until three, letting the hottest hours of
-the day pass by. At this time the sun seemed to dart real rays of fire
-upon the burnished waters, whose reflection dazzled and blinded our
-eyes.
-
-About three in the afternoon we would start again for two or three hours
-more, until a convenient beach was found; once there, the camp was
-formed without delay, the canoes tied up, the mats spread, and in a few
-minutes two huge bonfires, made of driftwood, sent their glad flames
-flickering in the night air. After supper we crept under the
-mosquito-bars, and waited for Leal to call us in the morning.
-
-The seasons in the plains, as is well known, are sharply divided into
-dry and rainy. The first lasts from May to November, and the second from
-November to May. During the wet season it rains from eighteen to twenty
-hours out of the twenty-four; showers are not frequent during the dry
-season, but they fall now and then.
-
-The third or fourth night that we spent on the banks of the Tua, I was
-awakened by feeling a moist sheet over my face, and at once realized
-that the heavy rain had beaten down the mosquito-bar. There was nothing
-for it but to cover myself with the waterproof _poncho_, sitting up for
-greater convenience, and disengaging myself from the fallen
-mosquito-net. There we all sat helpless under the dense cataract. The
-beach, slanting towards the river, bore with it the waters from the
-higher ground, and as my body made an indenture in the sand, I felt on
-either side a rushing stream. Fortunately, the shower was soon over, the
-bonfires were heaped with driftwood and blazed forth joyously. Coffee
-was specially prepared for the occasion, and we sat in the genial warmth
-of the flames until the sun burst forth on the horizon. That morning we
-did not start as early as usual: the tents and covers were spread in the
-sun, and after an hour or so were again dry and soft. Then we started on
-our journey, leaving behind us the discomforts of the night. The rain
-seemed to have gladdened the forest, and brightened the trees and bushes
-into a livelier green. During the journey we underwent a similar
-experience upon two or three other occasions.
-
-As for food, we had a comfortable supply, and hardly a day passed
-without our having either some fine bird, or at times a larger piece of
-game in the shape of a species of wild-boar, fairly plentiful in that
-locality, the flesh of which is quite agreeable after one learns to eat
-it. Besides game, we also had plenty of fish. All this without counting
-the salt meat and tinned provisions. The birds most abundant were ducks
-of various descriptions, wild turkeys, and a beautiful bird of fine
-dark-bluish plumage, similar to a wild turkey, called _paujil_ by the
-natives, the meat of which greatly resembles that of the pheasant.
-
-At about this stage of the journey an incident took place which shows
-how even the humblest tasks in life require a certain degree of ability
-and experience. One day on the river Tua, Raoul--who, as I have said,
-was a great hunter before the Lord, and had no more esteem than most men
-for the milder arts--had brought down a beautiful duck of exceptional
-size, and of the kind known as 'royal duck.' Not satisfied with his
-triumph as a Nimrod, he took it into his head to cook the bird himself
-and rival the achievements of Vattel or Carme. He invited me to help
-him in his undertaking. My culinary attainments being purely of a
-theoretical kind, I promised him my moral support and hearty
-co-operation in the shape of advice. We invited Alex to share our
-wonderful supper, to which he replied that, being aware of the perils
-most incident to the efforts of inexperienced cooks, however
-enthusiastic they might be, he preferred the men's supper, which, though
-humbler, was far more to be depended on. Heedless of this taunt, Raoul
-went on with his work. A pot filled with water was placed over the fire,
-and as soon as it was boiling the bird was plunged into it. In due
-course Raoul began to pluck valiantly; feathers black and bluish fell
-from his hand numerous as flakes of snow in a winter storm. When he
-began to tire after a while, I took the bird in hand, and continued the
-task, the feathers falling like dry leaves in the autumnal forest. After
-half an hour of steady work, when the ground was literally covered with
-black feathers, that blessed bird seemed untouched. We were beginning to
-feel anxious and hungry, and the tempting whiffs from the large iron
-pot, where the men were stirring their stew, stung our nostrils in a
-tantalizing fashion. However, it was now a question of pride and
-self-esteem, and we were bound to cook the bird at any cost. By-and-by
-Alex, holding a steaming plate in his hand, came to us and invited us to
-eat. Raoul rejected the offer, and though I was most anxious to accept
-it, I felt bound in loyalty to stand by him. We told Alex that we wanted
-to reserve the fulness of our appetite for our delicious bird, to which
-Alex replied that by the time that bird was ready we should certainly be
-hungry enough to devour it, leaving the bones quite clean. Raoul and I
-took turns at plucking the duck, which at last seemed to yield, showing
-a few whitish specks here and there devoid of all feathery covering.
-Seeing our plight, Fermin, who had stood by, not being called upon to
-help, seized the bird, declaring that we had allowed it to become
-chilled, and that the perfect plucking of it was well-nigh impossible.
-However, he undertook the job most courageously, and finally, taking
-advantage of the shades of night, which facilitated a compromise, we
-dropped that royal duck into the boiling water and pretended to enjoy
-our supper, such as it was, when ready. How much we ate is a question as
-to which I need not go into detail here, but I must own that in lying
-down upon my mat under the mosquito-bar I felt famished. From that day
-onwards both Raoul and I decided to forego all interference in matters
-culinary, beyond occasional advice. I have no doubt that, had Fermin or
-one of the men undertaken the task, we should not only have had our
-supper much sooner, but a dish fit for any man's palate.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-On the fourth day, about two hours' sail from the confluence of the Tua
-with the Meta River, we stopped at a large cattle-ranch called Santa
-Barbara. The owner invited us to a dinner--the inevitable dishes of the
-_llano_: meat roasted over a bonfire, plaintains and coffee.
-
-The ranch consisted, we were told, of about 10,000 head of cattle, and
-was typical of the ranches to be found on the _llanos_ of Colombia and
-Venezuela.
-
-Here, in the person of what might be called the sub-manager, whose name
-was Secundino, we came face to face with a real tiger-hunter.
-
-After dinner I asked Secundino how men fleeted the time away in that
-lonely region beyond the din of civilized life. His statements
-corroborated what I had heard before, that there is no ownership of land
-in the _llanos_; the herds graze freely over the plains, the animals
-being practically wild, and kept together by the presence amongst them
-of a few tame cattle which, being accustomed to the presence of man,
-will remain in the neighbourhood of the houses or _caneyes_. Another
-great attraction to the cattle is the salt which is strewn upon large
-slabs of stone or flat boards. By these two devices, thousands of
-animals are kept within a comparatively short distance of the ranch.
-
-To enable each ranch-owner to brand the cattle belonging to him,
-_rodeos_ or round-ups are held two or three times during the year. These
-_rodeos_ are gatherings of the herds. The men ride out in all directions
-from the ranch, and drive the cattle towards the _corrales_. In this
-task they are greatly helped by the presence of the tame animals, which
-are easily led or driven as required, and are always followed by the
-others.
-
-Once in the _corrales_, the branding begins. A red-hot iron is used,
-shaped either to form one or two letters or some special sign which
-constitutes the trade or hall mark, so to speak, of the respective
-ranch. The animals are forced to pass through a long, narrow enclosure
-between two fences, and are branded as they go by; but with animals that
-give a great deal of trouble a different method is followed. This
-consists in starting the bull, heifer, or cow, as the case may be, on
-the run. A man on horseback follows, and when both the horse and the
-bull have attained sufficient impetus, the man seizes the bull by the
-tail, and with a sudden twist turns it over on its side, jumping at once
-from his horse to pass the tail under the bull's leg; this compresses
-certain muscles, prevents all motion, and leaves the fallen animal
-helpless. The branding is then done without any difficulty, either on
-the fore or the hind quarters.
-
-Secundino told us that this way of throwing the cattle down was not
-confined to the branding season, but that it formed a frequent sport
-amongst herdsmen in the plains, as it required great skill to accomplish
-it. Another sport in which he and his friends indulged, and which he
-described with great zest, was riding wild bulls. The process consists
-first in throwing the bull to the ground, whereupon a thick rope is tied
-as a girdle, only that it is placed quite close to the withers and right
-under the forelegs of the animal. All this time the bull has been held
-on the ground, bellowing and panting for sheer rage; as soon as the rope
-is ready, the intending rider stands by the side of the animal with his
-two hands stuck between the rope and the skin, on either side of the
-spine, and the moment the bull is let loose and stands on its feet the
-man leaps on its back. Then follows a wonderful struggle: the beast,
-unaccustomed to any burden, rears and plunges, springs backwards and
-forwards with great violence; the man, always spurred, increases the
-fury of the animal by pricking its sides. His two arms, like bars of
-iron, stand rigid, and man and bullock seem as though made of one piece.
-At last the bull is exhausted, and sullenly acknowledges the superior
-force of the rider; but it takes rare courage and strength to accomplish
-this feat.
-
-After describing these and other pastimes, Secundino quietly added:
-
-'Whenever my work leaves me time, I kill tigers.'
-
-He said this unpretentiously, yet with a certain air of
-self-consciousness that must have brought the shadow of a doubting smile
-to my lips. Secundino saw this, and, without appearing to take notice of
-it, invited us outside the house, and showed us, at a certain distance
-from it, lying on the ground, ten tigers' skulls, some of which bore
-traces of having been recently cleansed from skin and flesh.
-
-'You see,' he added, 'that I have some proofs of my tiger-killing!'
-
-He told us that the tigers were the worst enemies of the cattle-farmer.
-
-'Other animals,' he said, 'will take just what they want, but the tiger
-is fierce, cruel, and kills for the sake of killing. If he should happen
-to get into an enclosure containing twenty or thirty young calves, he
-will kill them all, and take one away with him. We are at open and
-constant warfare with the tigers,' he added, 'and there is no truce
-between us.'
-
-The _llaneros_ usually kill tigers by spearing them. Referring to this,
-Secundino said that doubtless it was more dangerous than shooting the
-beast down at long range with a Winchester or a Remington rifle; 'but,'
-he went on to say, 'powder and lead are expensive, cartridges are
-difficult to obtain, and when once exhausted your weapon is no better
-than a broomstick. The spear, however, is always ready, and never fails
-you. When I go out tiger-hunting I take my dogs, who follow the scent
-and guide me. I carry with me, besides the spears, a muzzle-loader, in
-case of emergency. The moment the dogs see the tiger they give cry; the
-beast seeks higher ground, and the fight with the dogs begins at once.
-The tiger is afraid even of a cur. The dogs that we have here are well
-trained, and though at times they are killed by the tiger, that seldom
-happens. I follow my dogs, keeping the animal well in sight, with my
-spear ready, and at the right moment dash forward and plunge it into his
-breast. If the blow is a good one, that ends it. Now and then it is
-necessary to fire the rifle into him; but this is a great pity, owing to
-the waste of lead and gunpowder.'
-
-I am trying to repeat here word by word Secundino's quiet statement. It
-sounds fanciful and exaggerated, but all those who have travelled over
-the plains of either Venezuela or Colombia will have heard that such is
-the commonest mode of tiger-killing amongst the _llaneros_. The tiger of
-these latitudes, however, is not the same as the tiger of India and
-other parts of Asia. It is smaller, but not less ferocious; it is
-spotted, and not striped. The spear used is very long, made of very hard
-wood, and has a most murderous appearance.
-
-Secundino, after telling me of his short way with tigers, asked me to
-handle the weapon, and generously gave me some instructions as to the
-exact poise to be adopted for striking a blow, explaining to me how
-dangerous it might be were I to forget the rules which he could
-recommend from experience. To begin with, I could hardly lift the spear,
-and, then, there was practically no chance of my ever going to seek a
-tiger in his lair. Secundino, however, was profoundly in earnest, and,
-rather than disabuse him or hurt his feelings, I solemnly promised him
-that I would never kill tigers otherwise than in strict conformity with
-his advice, and that at the first opportunity I would practise throwing
-the spear and poising my body, so as to make sure.
-
-Towards evening, as we were about leaving, when I was already seated in
-the canoe, whilst Leal was still ashore, I overheard these words passing
-between him and Secundino:
-
-'How far are you going, Friend Leal?'
-
-'Down to the Orinoco, to accompany these gentlemen.'
-
-'How are you coming back, by land or by water?'
-
-'I do not know yet--that depends.'
-
-'Well, all right; if you come this way, I should like you to tackle a
-horse that we have here, which no one seems able to ride, and which I
-dare not tackle myself.'
-
-'Never you mind,' answered Leal; 'I will see to it when I return.'
-
-Here was a revelation. Leal's prowess grew in our estimation. This guide
-of ours was called upon to break in a horse which Secundino, the
-tiger-hunter, whose title to the name, if devoid of diplomas or academic
-signatures, was vouched for by the ten tiger-skulls which we had seen,
-would not dare to ride himself!
-
-On we went towards the Meta River, leaving our friends on the shore
-shouting to us messages of good speed. We soon noticed that our canoe,
-being lighter in draft, had left the other far behind it.
-
-It darkened much earlier than we expected, and to our great regret we
-saw that the second canoe could not catch us up, which was annoying, as
-supper, beds, and everything else, with the exception of a demijohn of
-aniseed _aguardiente_, were in it. We landed at the first beach that we
-struck, hoping against hope that the stragglers might overtake us.
-
-Time had passed so agreeably at Santa Barbara, listening to Secundino's
-tales, that we had not noticed how late it was. It seemed to us,
-furthermore, that darkness had set in earlier than usual. On hearing
-some remark to that effect, Fermin observed that the sun had set for us
-that day earlier than usual. He laid stress upon the words 'for us,'
-and, on being asked what he meant thereby, said that the darkness had
-been caused by a cloud which had interposed itself between us and the
-setting sun, thus bringing night earlier than usual.
-
-'What nonsense are you talking about?' said Raoul. 'There is no cloud in
-the matter; we went on talking and talking, and forgot the time.'
-
-'No, sir,' Fermin said, without moving a muscle; 'I know what I am
-talking about. The cloud was formed by the feathers of that bird which
-we tried to pluck yesterday; they are so many that they darken the light
-of the sun!'
-
-Up to this day I cannot say what happened. I do not know if we mistook
-the hour of the day and were overtaken by night, or if, in truth, as
-Fermin asserted, the wrathful ghost of the mishandled duck spread its
-black feathers above our heads, thus forming a mantle like the mantle of
-arrows which the Spartan warriors asked the Persian invaders to fire at
-them, so that they might fight in the shade. This problem, which
-contains historical, astronomical and atmospherical elements, will
-remain for ever as dark and mysterious as the feathers of the dead bird.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
-Night soon asserted her sway. The blue vault of heaven, alive with
-innumerable stars, was clear and diaphanous; no cloud was to be seen.
-The evening noises died away, and the dead silence was only broken now
-and then by a vague rumour wafted mysteriously through space--the wash
-of waters on the shore, or possibly the lisp of forests by the river. We
-gave up all hope of the other canoe arriving that night, and faced the
-inevitable--no supper, no beds. As in our own canoe we carried a
-demijohn of _aguardiente_, one or two generous draughts were our only
-supper. We were not hampered by excess of riches or of comforts; as to
-the selection of our beds, the whole extent of the beach was equally
-sandy and soft; but, having slept for many nights on the shores of the
-Tua, and knowing that we were at its confluence with the Meta, for the
-sake of a change--a distinction without a difference--we stretched
-ourselves full length on the side of the beach looking to the Meta
-River.
-
-The water-course, practically unknown to civilization, appeared to me as
-I lay there like a wandering giant lost amidst the forests and the
-plains of an unknown continent. The surface of the waters sparkled in
-the starlight like hammered steel. My thoughts followed the luminous
-ripples until they were lost to sight in the darkness of the opposite
-shore, or, wandering onwards with the flow, melted into the horizon.
-Whither went those waters? Whence came they? What were their evolutions,
-changes, and transformations? Idle questions! Flow of life or flow of
-wave, who but He that creates all things can know its source and its
-finality? Idle cavillings indeed!
-
-Suddenly, as drowsiness had begun to seize me, a wonderful phenomenon
-took place. There from the midst of the waters arose an indistinct yet
-mighty figure; high it stood amidst the waters which parted, forming a
-sort of royal mantle upon its shoulders; it gazed upon me with the
-sublime placidity of the still seas, the high mountains, the unending
-plains, the primeval forests, and all the manifestations of Nature,
-great and serene in their power and majesty. And the figure spoke:
-
-'Listen to me, O pilgrim, lost in these vast solitudes; listen to the
-voice of the wandering streams! We rivers bring life to forest and
-valley; we are children of the mountains, heralds of continents,
-benefactors of man. My current, powerful and mighty though it seems, is
-but a tiny thread of the many streams that, mingled and interwoven, so
-to say, go to form the main artery of whirling, heaving water called the
-Orinoco. From north and south, from east and west, we all flow along the
-bosom of the plains, after having gathered unto ourselves the playful
-streamlets, the murmuring brooks that swell into torrents and dash down
-the mountain-sides, filling the hills and the intervening valleys with
-life and joy. They come from the highest slopes--nay, from the topmost
-peaks crowned with everlasting snow, the sources of our life; down they
-rush, and after innumerable turns and twists, after forming now
-cataracts, now placid lakes, reach the plain, and in their course they
-broaden the large streams which in turn merge with others in the huge
-basin, and form the vast artery that drains the surface of a great part
-of the continent, and bears its tribute to the Atlantic Ocean. Yea,
-verily indeed, we rivers are as twin brothers of Time; the hours pass
-and pass, ceaseless as our waves; they flow into Eternity, we into the
-bosom of the great deep. This land, the land of your birth and of mine,
-to-day an unknown quantity in the history of the world, is a destined
-site of a mighty empire. The whole continent of South America is the
-reserve store for the future generations of millions of men yet unborn.
-Hither they will come from all parts of the world: on the surface of the
-globe no more favourable spot exists for the home of mankind. Along the
-coast of the Pacific Ocean runs the mighty backbone of the Cordillera
-like a bulwark, high, immense, stately; above it, like the towers and
-turrets in the walls of a fortified city, rise the hundred snow-capped
-peaks that look east and west, now on the ocean, now on the
-ever-spreading undulating plains, and south and north to the line of
-mountains extending for thousands of miles.
-
-'In the very heart of the tropical zone, where the equatorial sun darts
-his burning rays, are the plateaus of the Andes, hundreds of square
-miles in extent, with all the climates and the multitudinous products of
-the temperate zone. In the heart and bowels of the mountains are the
-precious metals coveted by man's avarice and vanity, those forming the
-supreme goal of his endeavours; and the useful--indeed, the truly
-precious--metals, coal, iron, copper, lead, and all others that are
-known to man, exist in a profusion well-nigh illimitable. The
-trade-winds, whose wings have swept across the whole width of the
-Atlantic Ocean, laden with moisture, do not stop their flight when the
-sea of moving waters ceases and the sea of waving grass begins. Across
-the plains, over the tree-tops of the primeval forests, shaking the
-plumage of the palm-trees, ascending the slopes of the hills, higher,
-still higher, into the mountains, and finally up to the loftiest peaks,
-those winds speed their course, and there the last drops of moisture are
-wrung from them by that immeasurable barrier raised by the hand of God;
-their force seems to be spent, and, like birds that have reached their
-native forest, they fold their wings and are still. The moisture thus
-gathered and thus deposited forms the thousand currents of water that
-descend from the heights at the easternmost end of the continent, and
-convert themselves into the largest and most imposing water systems in
-the world. Thus is formed the Orinoco system, which irrigates the vast
-plains of Colombia and Venezuela. Further south, created by a similar
-concurrence of circumstances and conditions, the Amazon system drags the
-volume of its wandering sea across long, interminable leagues of
-Brazilian forest and plain. Its many streams start in their pilgrimage
-from the interior of Colombia, of Ecuador, of Peru, and of Bolivia, and
-these two systems of water-ways, which intersect such an immense extent
-of land thousands of miles from the mouth of the main artery that
-plunges into the sea, are connected by a natural canal, the Casiquiare
-River, so that the traveller might enter either river, follow its course
-deep into the heart of the continent, cross by water to the other, and
-then reappear on the ocean, always in the same boat.
-
-'If the wealth of the mountains is boundless and virgin, if on the
-slopes and on the plateaus and the neighbouring valleys all the
-agricultural products useful to man may be grown--and the forests teem
-with wealth that belongs to him who first takes it--if the rocks
-likewise cover or bear immense deposits of all the metals and minerals
-useful to man, the lowlands and the plains offer grazing-ground for
-untold herds of cattle and horses, and further to the south beyond the
-Amazon, running southward, not eastward like the Orinoco and the Amazon,
-the Parana unrolls its waves, which, after leaving the tropic, enter the
-southern temperate zone, irrigating for untold miles the endless pampas
-of Argentina and Uruguay. In very truth, this continent is the Promised
-Land.
-
-'In your pilgrimage along the waters of the Orinoco, you will see all
-the wonders of tropical Nature. Now the forests will stand on either
-bank close along the shores in serried file, and moving mirrors of the
-waters will reflect the murmuring tops of the trees, noisy and full of
-life as the winds sweep by in their flight, or else the frowning rock,
-bare and rugged, will stand forth from the current like the wall of a
-medieval castle. Now the trees will open a gap through which, as from
-under a triumphal arch, the current of a river, a wanderer from the
-mysterious and unknown depths of the neighbouring forests, pours forth
-into the main stream and mingles with the passing waters, joining his
-fate to theirs, even as the High Priest of some unknown creed might
-issue from the temple and mingle with the passing crowd. Some rivers
-that reach the main artery have had but a short pilgrimage, the junction
-of their many waters having taken place at no great distance from the
-main stream; others have had a long wandering, sometimes placid and
-serene, sometimes amidst rocks and boulders, with an ever frenzied and
-agitated course like the lives of men striving and struggling till the
-last great trumpet sounds. The course of the river will be studded with
-islands large enough for the foundation of empires, and before reaching
-the sea the river will extend and spread its current into a thousand
-streams, as if loth to part from the Mother Earth it sought to embrace
-more firmly in its grasp, and our waters will flow into the unplumbed
-deep, there to mingle with those of all the rivers, whether their course
-has been through lands alive with civilization, swarming with multitudes
-of men on their shores, laden with the memories of centuries and famous
-in history, or whether they, like us, have wandered through vast
-solitudes where Nature is still supreme in her primeval pride, as yet
-unpolluted by the hand of man. There we all meet, and to us what men
-call time and its divisions exist not, for all the transformations that
-affect mankind are as naught to us who form part and parcel of Nature
-itself, who only feel time after the lapse of ons which to the mind of
-man are practically incomprehensible. Seek to learn the lesson of
-humility, to acknowledge the power of the Creator, who gave to man what
-we rivers and all other material things can never hope for--a future
-beyond this earth, higher, brighter, infinite, eternal.'
-
-The figure seemed to sink slowly under the mantle of waters that had
-covered its shoulders; the sun was rising in the eastern horizon, the
-rumour of awakening Nature filled the air with its thousand echoes, and
-drifting rapidly towards us we saw Leal with the canoe that had remained
-behind the night before.
-
-On telling Alex, Raoul, and Fermin my experience, and asking in good
-faith what they had thought of the visitation, they looked askance at
-me. It seems that sleep had overpowered them; they had not seen the
-river-god of the Meta, and irreverently set down the whole occurrence to
-the quality of my supper the preceding night. It is ever thus with
-unbelievers; they will seek some material or vulgar explanation for that
-which they cannot understand and have not seen.
-
-That very morning, after the necessary arrangements and the usual
-morning coffee, we started down the Meta River. If we might have called
-the navigation on the Tua somewhat amphibious, navigation on the Meta,
-specially for such small craft as we possessed, seemed to us as on the
-open sea. Our first care was to seek larger canoes. Leal guided us
-through one of the neighbouring _caos_ to a cattle-ranch, where he
-expected to suit our requirements. This _cao_ chanced to be famous for
-its snakes, principally of the kind called _macaurel_, a dark brownish
-species, varying from 2 to 4 and 5 feet in length, and from inch to 2
-inches in diameter. When in repose they coil themselves around the
-branches of the trees, and their bite, if not cured immediately, is
-fatal. Leal shot one of the horrible reptiles in the body; the linking
-of the rings that take the place of vertebr being thus unloosened, the
-coils became wider, the animal lost its grip and fell into the water,
-staining it with a blue-greenish reflection of a metallic hue. It seems
-that one shot of the smallest size is sufficient to kill these snakes,
-provided it breaks one of the rings above mentioned. I shuddered as we
-passed under the trees, knowing that many of these dreaded reptiles must
-be above our heads. The _cao_ in some parts was so narrow and the
-forest so dense that it was impossible to avoid the overhanging
-branches, and when I thought that we should have to go over the same
-route next day, disgust and a feeling of dread took possession of me. By
-the time we reached our destination, after a journey of eight or ten
-miles, over twenty of these creatures had been brought down. We obtained
-two large canoes, which seemed to us like veritable ships or floating
-palaces compared to the little craft we had used for so many days. We
-turned to the river Meta, and did not feel safe until we had left the
-_cao_ behind, and could breathe once more in the open air on the bosom
-of the large river, with only heaven above our heads.
-
-The Meta River, which flows entirely upon Colombian territory, describes
-large winding curves in its course eastward towards the Orinoco. Its
-banks are high and well defined, its channel fairly steadfast even in
-the dry season. This is not common, most of these rivers often shifting
-their course, to the despair of pilots and navigators. Both sides of the
-Meta we knew were occupied, or, rather, frequently visited, by various
-wild tribes. Now and then Leal would point out a part of the shore,
-stating that it belonged to some ranch, but how he could know was a
-mystery to us, as no visible difference existed.
-
-The temperature, though quite hot in the middle of the day, was
-agreeable, and even cool, in the early morning and a greater part of the
-night. The trade-wind, which blows steadily every day during the dry
-season, at times gathered such force that we were compelled, going
-against it as we did, to wait long hours for it to subside. Our canoes
-were not so arranged as to enable us to hoist sail and tack against the
-wind.
-
-On the river Meta we observed a large species of fish, which, had we
-been at sea, we should have identified at once as porpoises. The men
-told us that they were called _bufeos_, and in reality came from the
-sea, having ascended the waters of the Orinoco for thousands of miles,
-and branched off into the Meta River. One of the men, illiterate like
-all his fellows, but versed in forest, mountain and plain lore, stated
-that those _bufeos_ were the friends of man; that they loved music and
-song; that they would follow a boat or canoe whence the echoes of
-singing or of some musical instrument could be heard for miles and miles
-at a time; that when they were present in the water the alligators and
-all the other enemies of man kept away, or were driven away by the
-_bufeos_; and that whenever by chance the fishermen caught one of these,
-he would at once release it in remembrance of their friendship for
-mankind. These were, therefore, our old-time friends the porpoises.
-
-The simple tale of the man, one of our paddlers, who had never been in a
-city in his life nor seen any of the wonders of our times, to whose mind
-such words as civilization, Fatherland, and religion, as well as many
-others that form the glib vocabulary of modern man, were mere empty
-sounds or air, could not but set me a-thinking--first, as to the value
-of those words. Fatherland, our country, his and mine, yet how different
-the conception, and how those consecrated, holy words are abused by the
-tricksters, great and small, who control and exploit mankind for their
-own benefit! Patriotism should consist in justice and equality of rights
-and tolerance to all, whereas, in fact, it is but a mask for the greed
-and avarice of the strong. My countryman is he whose ideals are
-identical with mine. What makes another being my fellow-man and my
-brother is an identity of ideals, not a concurrence of geographical
-conditions of birth. If he who is born ten thousand miles away in an
-unknown climate and in a different latitude shares with me the love of
-justice and of freedom, and will struggle for them even as I would, why
-should we be separated by conventional distinctions which benefit
-neither him nor me nor justice nor freedom as ideals?
-
-I thought, are these lands and this vast continent still virgin in the
-sense that humanity has not exploited them? are they to be the last
-scene of the stale criminal imposture now called civilization? Are men
-to come by thousands and by millions to these plains and these
-mountains, and settle on the shores of these rivers, bringing with them
-their old prejudices, their old tyrannical conventionalities, the
-hatreds that have stained history with blood for hundreds and for
-thousands of years, rearing on these new lands the old iniquities,
-calling them fatherlands, baptizing their crimes with holy words, and
-murdering in the name of patriotism? If such is to be the future of
-these lands, far better were it that the mighty rivers should overflow
-their course and convert into one immense lake, twin brother of the
-neighbouring sea, the vast plains, the endless mysterious forest; and
-that the immense bulwark of the Andes, aflame with a thousand volcanoes,
-should make the region inhospitable and uninhabitable to man: for of
-iniquity there is enough, and no more should be created under God's
-heaven.
-
-But the tale set me also a-thinking of the power of tradition and the
-beauty of song. If my memory plays me no trick, Arion, homeward-bound
-from the Court of Corinth, and laden with gifts of a King who worshipped
-song, was seized and thrown into the sea by the crew, but the listening
-dolphins or porpoises, grateful for the heavenly message thus delivered
-by him, bore him ashore and saved his life. So, more or less, runs the
-classical tale; and here in the wilds of America, from the lips of an
-unlettered woodman, the same beautiful conceit, clothed in simple words,
-had rung in my ears. The power of song, the beauty of the legend, had
-filtered itself through hundreds of generations from the days of our
-mother Greece, the mother of art and of beauty, across the mountains and
-the years and the seas and the continents, and the legend and the
-allegory were alive in their pristine and essential characteristics in
-the forests of tropical America. This gave me hope. If the power of
-things ideal, of things that have in them the divine charm of undying
-force, overcomes time and distance, why should not the ideal of
-righteousness, of liberty, and of justice prevail? And the vast
-continent of South America, why should it not be the predestined home of
-a happy and regenerate humanity? The trade-winds which come from the old
-world and across the ocean are purified on the heights of the
-Cordilleras. Even so humanity in that pilgrimage that is bound to take
-place ere long, as the ancient world begins to overflow, may regenerate
-itself and establish liberty and justice in that new world. If these be
-dreams, awakening were bitter.
-
-We soon heard that it was easy to reach one of the affluents of the
-Vichada by crossing the plains for about a mile overland, and, all
-things considered, decided to abandon the Meta River, even though the
-journey might be longer than we had at first intended. Thus, on the
-fourth day of navigation down the Meta we stopped, and at a place known
-as San Pedro del Arrastradero, where we found quite a large settlement,
-about 150 people, we left the Meta behind us and at once made ready for
-our journey through the Vichada, as large as the Meta, we were told, and
-inhabited by numerous savage tribes. This gave additional interest to
-the journey, and we looked forward to it with pleasure.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
-The settlement of San Pedro del Arrastradero--or of Arimena, as it is
-also called--lies on the right shore of the River Meta about 150 miles
-from its confluence with the Orinoco. Within a very short distance of
-the Meta at that point, less than a mile to the south, the _cao_ of
-Caracarate branches towards the Muco River, which, flowing to the
-south-east, joins the Vichada; the latter, of about the same volume as
-the Meta, flows south-east till it strikes the Orinoco above the rapids.
-The Meta and the Vichada and the Orinoco form a triangle, of which the
-last named is the base. The Vichada enters the main stream some fifty
-miles above, and the Meta about 200 miles below, the series of rapids
-which divide the river into the Lower and the Upper Orinoco.
-
-Scattered far and wide at long distances apart on the plain which
-borders the Meta are numerous cattle-ranches, and on its very shores are
-settlements testifying to the effort of civilized man. But the new
-region that we were about to enter, irrigated by the Muco, the Vichada,
-and their affluents, is absolutely wild, and has seldom been crossed by
-white men other than stray missionaries, or adventurous traders in
-search of cheap rubber, resinous substances, tonga beans, hammocks, etc.
-These the Indians exchange for trifles, or implements which they prize
-very highly: to the wild inhabitants an axe, a cutlass, a knife, are
-veritable treasures, distinguishing their owner among his fellows.
-
-The tribes along the shores of the Meta River were known to be mostly
-hostile and aggressive. Travellers on that river always, if possible,
-pitch their camps on islets in mid-stream for fear of night attacks, and
-even then they need to keep strict watch and have their arms beside
-them. It is dangerous for small expeditions to cross the part of the
-river below San Pedro del Arrastradero.
-
-But the tribes along the region that we were about to cross, though no
-less primitive than the others, are mild and easily amenable to
-civilization. They are numerous, and under good guidance might be
-advantageously employed in useful work, might be taught to gather the
-natural products abounding in the forests, and cultivate the soil
-systematically. Their present notions of agriculture are elementary;
-they only practise it on a very small scale, relying principally on what
-they can hunt and fish.
-
-At San Pedro we found an individual who for over thirty years had been
-in the habit of travelling on the Muco and the Vichada, often going as
-far as Ciudad Bolivar, near the mouth of the Orinoco. He had amassed a
-little fortune by trading with the Indians. He spoke their dialect, and
-practised polygamy in accordance with their unsophisticated rites and
-customs. It was said that he had a great number of children along the
-shores of the river; he could therefore recommend us to his family, so
-to speak. His name was Gondelles. He had often accompanied the
-missionaries who had attempted to preach the Gospel among the savages,
-and, unless Rumour was a lying jade, he had himself strenuously
-endeavoured to observe that Divine precept which refers to increasing
-and multiplying the human species!
-
-The Indians of this region are specially expert in weaving beautiful
-hammocks from fibres of the various kinds of _maguey_ or _agave_ plants,
-or else extracted from the leaves of the _moriche_. The most prized,
-however, are those made of fibre of the _cumare_ palm, soft and pliant
-as silk. A large and comfortable hammock woven of this fibre will take
-up the smallest possible space and last longer than any other. These
-Indians are also skilled in canoe-making; with their primitive stone
-instruments, aided by fire, they will make admirable canoes of one
-piece, hewn from the trunk of a tree. These canoes at times are so large
-that they will seat from twenty to twenty-five men comfortably, but most
-of them are small craft easily handled, holding six or eight persons at
-most.
-
-Some of the men who had accompanied us thus far now refused to continue
-the journey. We were informed that it would be comparatively easy to
-replace them with Indians who would accompany us for four or five days
-at a trifling wage. The tribes being numerous, it would not be difficult
-to find new hands at each stage.
-
-The wage of our new canoe men was always paid in kind: a handkerchief, a
-pound of salt, an empty bottle, a strip of gaudy silk--we had still some
-London cravats--were the most coveted articles. The idea of equity and
-work done for value received does not exist amongst the Indians. We soon
-found that it was folly to give them the article agreed upon until the
-work was done; for once the men had received what they coveted, they
-would abandon us, stealthily leaving the camp in the dusk at the first
-landing, and sometimes even rushing into the jungle in broad daylight.
-
-So now with a full crew, now crippled, we managed to continue the
-journey, first for six days on the Muco, and then on the Vichada, the
-navigation of which proved to be much longer than we had expected.
-
-The general aspect of Nature on these two rivers differed very little
-from what we had seen on the Meta. The shores of the Muco are generally
-covered with mangroves that push far into the current their submerged
-network of roots and branches, of which one must steer clear, as they
-are hiding-places for snakes, and are apt, if struck unexpectedly, to
-capsize the canoes. These beautiful clear waters, so harmless, so
-placid, in appearance, are in truth full of danger. Apart from
-alligators and water snakes, they abound in a species of small fish
-called _caribe_, which attack men and animals, especially if they find a
-sore spot in the skin. They swarm in such quantities and are so
-voracious that a bull or a horse crossing the river, if attacked by
-these fish, may lose a leg, or receive such a deep wound in the body
-that death is inevitable. No less perilous is the electric eel, which,
-on being touched, gives a shock so strong that the man or animal
-receiving it generally falls into the stream. Even tigers are known to
-have been struck by these peculiar fish, and it is said that some have
-been drowned, being unable to recover themselves in time.
-
-During the month of January the turtles begin to lay their eggs. Our
-attention was called to a specially bright star in the horizon, which
-the men asserted only appeared in that month of the year. It was called
-the star of the _terecayes_. The _terecay_ is a small species of turtle,
-and much prized, and with reason, on account of its exquisite flesh. On
-more than one occasion, quite unexpectedly, the canoes would be steered
-ashore, the men would jump on the sand and run as if guided by some
-well-known landmark. After a few yards they would stop, and, digging in
-the sand with their hands, would extract a nest full of _terecay_ eggs,
-the contents varying from fifty to over a hundred. Their experienced
-eyes had seen the tracks of the _terecay_ on the sand. These turtles,
-like all others, lay their eggs once a year on the sand, and cover them
-up carefully, leaving the cares of motherhood to the forces of Nature.
-Once hatched in this fashion, the young turtles must shift for
-themselves, and their instinct tells them that their numerous enemies
-lie in watch for their awakening to active life. The moment they break
-the shell they make as quickly as they can for the neighbouring waters,
-where they are comparatively safe.
-
-If the inhabitants of those regions lack book-learning and knowledge of
-things in which their more civilized fellow-creatures are versed, Nature
-and the life which they lead have given them a keenness of sight, of
-hearing, and of touch far beyond the average citizen of town and
-village. I often noticed of an evening, as the canoes were being tied
-and hoisted halfway out of the water, that the men walking along the
-beach would mutter to themselves, or call the attention of their fellows
-to the sand, which to me seemed smooth and uniform. Pointing to the
-ground, they would say, duck, turtle, tapir, alligator, wild-boar, deer,
-tiger, and so forth. The tracks which they saw were, so to speak, the
-visiting-cards of animals which had spent the day on the beach where our
-camp was pitched at night.
-
-When we first came in contact with a real wild Indian I experienced a
-feeling very difficult to describe.
-
-Here was a being whose appearance was identical with our own, save for
-details of colour of skin and other trivial distinctions which could not
-affect the essential organic elements; yet he awakened within us a
-curiosity akin to that with which we gaze at a wild animal in some
-zoological garden. What a deep gulf yawned between that forlorn brother
-and ourselves! The work of generations, the treasures heaped up by man
-for man during centuries of struggle and endeavour, hopes and fears,
-disappointments, traditions, ideals, conventionalities, all that
-constitutes civilization; the higher belief in a Supreme Being, the
-evolution of habits, the respect for established laws and regulations,
-the reverence for sacred things--all that world essential to us was as
-naught, absolutely non-existent, for that naked fellow-creature who
-stood before us, unprotected, lost amid the forest in a climate
-unfavourable to man. There was no one to help him, or make any effort to
-improve the natural forces within him, none to lift his soul into a
-higher and better world. Curiosity gave way to pity. The labour of the
-missionary--of the ideal missionary--became holier and greater in my
-eyes. Here was a field of promising harvest for a real worker.
-
-One clear and fragrant night, when all the camp slept, the bonfires half
-out, the river a few feet off, as I lay awake thinking of the world to
-which we belonged, so different from our present surroundings, so
-distant that it seemed a far-off cloud in the sky, something that had
-gone by, and which could never be reached again, I suddenly remembered
-the words uttered by one of our men when we landed that afternoon upon
-the beach. He had clearly enumerated a long list of animals whose tracks
-were upon the very sand covered by my body. Logic took possession of my
-brain with overpowering rapidity. The alligator, the tiger, and their
-numerous companions have visited this beach; they may again visit it
-during the night. What is to hinder them from doing so; and in that
-case, what is to protect me from their attack? Little did I care for the
-wild-boar, the tapir, or the deer--I knew they would be as scared of me
-as I was of the other animals; and so, after this attack of fright, my
-imagination worked till the sweat began to run clammy on my forehead. It
-seemed to me that from the neighbouring forest a veritable Noah's-ark of
-living, rushing, roaring, famished beasts, multiplied by my fancy, and
-numerous as the progeny of Gondelles, came upon us. I almost felt the
-hot breath and saw the glistening eyes of the tiger outside the thin
-partition of cotton of my mosquito-bar, heard the awkward shamble of the
-alligator's body, and felt the unpleasant, musky odour of the huge
-lizard an instant before it crushed my bones between its jaws. Unable to
-master myself, I sat upright, and would have yelled from dread but for
-the spectacle that met my eyes in the moonlight, flooding the
-surrounding scene. There to right and left of me snored all my
-companions; the river shone brilliantly, the breeze blew softly, no one
-stirred. This absence of fear on the part of those who were perfectly
-familiar with all the dangers of the region reassured me completely. Oh
-blessed snores and valiant snorers! My peace of mind returned, and,
-lying back upon my sandy couch, I lustily joined the tuneful choir.
-
-Community of danger constitutes the most acceptable guarantee; no man
-ever thinks of ascertaining who drives the locomotive that is to whirl
-him and hundreds of his fellow-creatures at lightning speed through
-glade and forest, over bridge and under tunnel; no man questions the
-capability of the captain responsible for the steamship and for the
-lives of thousands of his fellow-men; the most distrustful of us never
-gives a thought to these points. Why? Because we know that the driver or
-the captain, as the case may be, stakes his own life. Each humble
-boatman who listened to Csar's proud assurance that the skiff could not
-sink because it carried him and all his fortunes equalled Csar in
-self-esteem, for the lives of those poor mariners were as dear to them
-as Csar's life could be to him. The truth of my assertion that
-community of danger constitutes the acceptability of a given guarantee
-is demonstrated when, for instance, a traveller entrusting his life on a
-railway or a ship to the agent of a company advances or lends money to
-the same company. Then comes the hour of discrimination. All the
-appliances invented by that most wonderful engine of human ingenuity,
-the law of commerce, which in its numerous forms rules the world
-paramount and supreme, are brought to bear. No one's word is accepted as
-sufficient; documents, signatures, seals, formalities, numerous and
-complicated, are employed as a delicate proof of the trust that the man
-of the world ever places in the good faith of his brother before God.
-This suspicion is responsible for an enormous amount of expense and
-trouble which, were good faith more abundant or were belief in its
-existence general, might be applied to relieve misery and sorrow. If the
-action of humanity all the world over in this dreary endeavour to
-protect man from the rascality of man be justified, we are, indeed, not
-very far removed in truth and in essence from the savages of the forest,
-who seize what they need and prey upon each other according to the
-dictates of nature. If beauty be but skin-deep, civilization is not more
-profoundly ingrained, and the smallest rub reveals the primitive
-ravening beast. Yet I may be mistaken; perhaps it is not distrust which
-begets all those precautions, but something so noble that I dare not
-presume to divine, much less to understand, it.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
-Though several years have elapsed since my journey across those wild
-vast regions, the remembrance of them is most vivid and clear in my
-mind. It seems to me that everything in that period of my life,
-landscape and human beings, forest and plain, stream and cloud,
-mountains and breezes, all, all are still alive; they form part of the
-panorama or scene wherein my memory keeps them immortal, abiding for
-ever as I saw them, though unattainable to me. What was, is; what was,
-must be; so I imagine. Memory is in this respect like the artist. The
-sculptor or the painter seizes one moment of life, fashions and records
-it in marble or in bronze, in line or colour, and there it remains
-defying time, unchanging and unchangeable. The gallery of the mind, the
-vast storehouse of the past, is infinite. It keeps in its inmost
-inexhaustible recesses the living record of our life, the tremulous
-shadowy hues of early night deepening into the dark, the glory of the
-rising sun casting its veil of light upon the waves, the sensation of
-the breeze as it fans our heated brow after an anxious night, the
-thunder of the ocean or the deafening tumult of frenzied crowds in hours
-of national misfortune or universal anger, the last parting word or look
-of those who are gone before, the blithe greeting of him who comes back
-to us after years of absence and of sorrow: all these manifestations of
-life, the ebb and flow of joy and happiness, of pain and grief, stand
-individualized, so to speak, in the memory, and nothing, save the loss
-of memory itself, can change them. Nothing so dear to the heart as those
-treasures; against them time and the vicissitudes of life are
-powerless--even as the lovers and the dancers and the singers and the
-enchanted leafy forest in Keats' 'Grecian Urn.' That love will know no
-disappointment. Sweet as songs heard may be, far sweeter are those
-unheard of human ear; beautiful as are the green boughs of the forest,
-far lovelier are those whose verdure is imperishable, whose leaves will
-know no autumn; and sweeter than all melody, the unheard melody of those
-flutes, dumb and mute in the infinite harmony which man can imagine, but
-not create. Our own mind keeps that record of the past; hallowed and
-sacred should it be, for therein our sorrow may find relief, and our joy
-purity and new strength.
-
-Beautiful indeed were our days. Gliding softly over the waters, we would
-read, and there, in forced and intimate communion with Nature, would
-seek our old-time friends the historians, the poets, the humbler singers
-that had charmed, or instructed, or taught us how to live. The lessons
-of history seemed clearer and more intelligible, the puissant and
-sonorous voice of poetry sounded fitly under that blue sky in the midst
-of those forests, even as the notes of the organ seem to vibrate and
-echo as in their very home, under the fretted vault of some Gothic
-temple. The majesty of surrounding Nature lent an additional charm to
-the voice of the great ones who had delivered a message of consolation
-and of hope to mankind. We lived now in Rome, now in Greece, now in
-modern Europe, and frequently the songs of our own poets filled our
-minds with joy, as the twitter of native birds when the sun rose and the
-morning sparkled, bedewed with jewels that night had left on leaves and
-flowers.
-
-One day, when we had grown expert in bargaining with the Indians,
-shortly before sunset a solitary Indian paddled towards our camp. He had
-been attracted by the novel sight. We had learnt that within the memory
-of living man no such large convoy as ours had passed through those
-waters; groups of eight or ten men in one canoe were the largest ever
-seen--at least, the largest groups of strangers. Here was a small army,
-with two large canoes and great abundance of strange and wonderful
-equipment--boxes, trunks, weapons, cooking utensils, many men with white
-faces and marvellous strange array; indeed, enough to attract the
-attention and curiosity of any child of the forest. The canoe upon which
-the Indian stood was barely six feet in length--so narrow and shallow
-that at a distance he seemed to stand on the very mirror of the waters.
-He carried a large paddle, shaped like a huge rose-leaf somewhat blunted
-at the end, and with a very long stem. He plunged this gracefully in the
-water on either side, seeming hardly to bend or to make any effort, and
-in feathering there appeared a convex mirror of liquid glass, upon which
-the sunlight fell in prismatic hues each time that his paddle left the
-water. He drew near, and stood before us like a bronze statue. He was
-stark naked, save for a clout round his loins. On his brow was a crown
-of tiger-claws surmounted by two eagle feathers. Across his neck, hung
-by a string, was a small bag of woven fibre containing a piece of salt,
-some hooks made of bone and small harpoons which could be set on arrows,
-and two hollow reeds about an eighth of an inch in diameter and four or
-five inches long. By means of these reeds the Indians inhale through
-their nostrils an intoxicating powder, in which they delight. The man
-was young, powerfully built, about five feet ten in height, and well
-proportioned; his teeth glistening and regular; his eyes black and
-large, gleaming like live coals; he was a perfect incarnation of the
-primitive race, and the hardships and exposure of his past life had left
-no more trace on him than the flowing waters of the river on the
-swan's-down.
-
-Guided by our civilized instinct, which in these utilitarian days
-prompts man to seek in whatever meets his eye, first and foremost, not
-its beauty or the symbol which it may represent, or the tendency towards
-something higher which it may indicate, but its utility, following this
-delightful system of our latest Christian civilization, I, in common
-with my companions, at once decided to exploit that simple spirit and
-press him into our service. Being unable to bargain ourselves--which was
-lucky for him, for in our enlightened way we should have driven a harder
-bargain than our men--we entrusted the task to Leal.
-
-The Indian, also true to his instinct, immediately indicated--first by
-signs, and then by word of mouth, when he saw he was understood--that he
-craved a part of the innumerable riches before his eyes. He really did
-not ask for much; he wanted some salt, a knife, a piece of glass like a
-small mirror that he saw glittering in the hands of one of our men, and
-whatever else we might be willing to give. He was told that he could
-have all that he asked and more. He smiled broadly, and a light of joy
-came over his face. These were signs truly human, not yet trained into
-the hypocritical conventions of well-bred society. As he stretched forth
-his hand, he was told that the gift was conditional--that he must earn
-the articles he coveted, that we expected him to sit beside the other
-paddlers and help to carry us for two or three days, whereupon he would
-receive these rich gifts from our prodigal bounty.
-
-This statement seemed to our Indian interlocutor absurd, just as
-something utterly incongruous and ludicrous in business would strike the
-mind of a London banker. In his primitive mental organism the idea that
-one man should work for another was something that found no place. Those
-forests, rivers, and plains were his home; he roved free and fearless
-through them, alone or in the company of others, each one of whom
-provided for himself. A bargain--that basis of civilization, of culture,
-that great agent of progress and of human development--was something
-which he could not understand. The essence of the fact, and the fact
-itself, were beyond him. We could see the struggle between his greed and
-his love of freedom. The riches that we offered him tempted him far more
-than glittering diamonds on the counter of a jeweller tempt a vain woman
-or a burglar at bay. Yet he overcame the temptation. The glad smile
-vanished; his face darkened with a look that we could interpret as
-reproach, and possibly contempt; he silently lifted his paddle, and with
-two strokes sped his canoe into mid-stream. Without glancing backwards,
-giving now and then a tremendous stroke, he disappeared in the distance.
-The rays of the sinking sun reddened the waters of the river and the
-surrounding horizon; the Indian, upright in his canoe, seemed as if clad
-in a sheet of flame, and finally vanished as though consumed in the
-crimson glow. The sun itself in the western horizon resembled a huge
-ball of red-hot iron, as if the Cyclops and the Titans, after playing,
-had left it behind on the bosom of the endless plain, flat and still as
-the sea in a calm.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
-The course of the rivers on the _llanos_ is far from being as straight
-as the proverbial path of righteousness. They meander, wind, and turn
-about, so that when on a sharp curve one often sails almost directly
-against the main direction of the waters. The Indians take short cuts
-overland which enable them to travel much faster than the canoes. Thus
-the news of our coming preceded us by several days, and long before we
-reached the mouth of the Vichada all the tribes had heard that the
-largest expedition known in their history was on the way.
-
-For reasons which he explained to us afterwards, Leal had, without
-consulting us, informed the first Indians whom we met that ours was a
-party of missionaries. I do not suppose that he went into any further
-details. In the mind of the Indians the remembrance of missionaries
-seems to have lingered from the days when Jesuit missions were
-established on nearly all the principal rivers of the Orinoco watershed.
-From the time of the Independence there have been no regular missions
-following a consistent plan and belonging to a special organization. Now
-and then desultory attempts have been made without any appreciable
-results. But the Indians respect the missionary; possibly they also fear
-him, and, as we could observe later on from our own experience, they
-expect from him gifts not only of a spiritual, but of a material kind.
-
-The result of all this is that a missionary is more likely to be
-welcomed and assisted than any other traveller. This was what guided
-Leal in what he considered a harmless assertion--a pious fraud, in which
-the fraud is more obvious than the piety.
-
-Be it remarked, however, that neither my companions nor I had the least
-responsibility for Leal's action. When travelling along the mule-tracks
-leading to the plains, public opinion, or what under the existing
-circumstances took its place, had assigned to our expedition an
-episcopal character. This assimilation to the Church seemed to have been
-our fate. Here again we were incorporated in its fold in an official
-capacity, so to speak, without the least intention or effort on our
-part. When we learnt what Leal had done, it was too late to withdraw,
-and we resigned ourselves to our new ecclesiastical honours with proper
-humility.
-
-It is said that men may be great, some because they are born great,
-others because they achieve greatness, and others yet again because
-greatness is thrust upon them. In the present instance the clerical
-character was thrust upon us. We--at least, I can answer for
-myself--tried to live up to the new dignity, not only inwardly, but
-outwardly, assuming, as far as circumstances would permit, the sedate
-and reverent, contemplative demeanour which so well suits him who
-devotes his life to the welfare of others, seeking to guide them to
-heaven by an easy path, no matter at what cost of personal sacrifice or
-discomfort to himself.
-
-Strange, however, that this self-sacrificing mood adopted in imitation
-of true priests, who despise the comforts and joys of life, should have
-been assumed in our own spurious case for the special purpose of
-increasing those worldly comforts and material joys!
-
-We soon discovered, to our amazement, that our new position was far from
-being a sinecure.
-
-One day we were waiting for the noon-day heat to pass, having halted on
-a _poyata_, the name given to small beaches that seem to stretch like a
-tongue of sand from under the very roots of the forest into the river;
-we had fled for shelter to the coolness of the high vaulting trees, from
-whose trunks the hammocks swung invitingly. The blue heaven appeared
-like an enamelled background beyond the lace-work of the intertwined
-leaves and branches. The fires burned brightly and cheerily, their
-flames pale and discoloured in the bright glare of the sun; the pots
-simmered, and soon tempting whiffs were wafted by the lazy breeze that
-hardly stirred, welcome heralds of good things to come. The stomach
-reigns supreme just before and after a meal, which, if it be assured to
-a hungry mortal, constitutes for him the most satisfactory event in the
-immediate future, calming his anxieties or blunting the edge of care;
-and after it has been eaten, the process of digestion, which for the
-moment monopolizes the principal energies of the organism, seems to cast
-a veil over the unpleasant aspects of life, and to soften the thorns
-that beset our path.
-
-Some General of the Confederate Army in the United States, who had
-retired to his lands after the final collapse of the South, used to
-remark that one of the saddest things for an old man who had been very
-active in former years was to receive the frequent news of the death of
-former comrades and companions. 'Whenever such news reaches me,' he went
-on to say, 'I always order two pigeons for my dinner; they are so
-soothing!'
-
-In the midst of our pleasant expectations we found ourselves suddenly
-invaded by a swarm of Indians, male and female of all ages, who came
-either from the forest or in canoes. They pounced on us so swiftly that
-we were practically swamped by them in an instant. They at once began to
-beg for presents, to touch and smell any of the articles belonging to us
-that they could, and they certainly would have taken everything had it
-been possible.
-
-The men were all in the primitive attire of the proud Indian whom we had
-been unable to press into our service a few days before. The women wore
-tunics made either from coarse cotton stuffs obtained from the traders,
-or from a sort of bark, pliant and fairly soft, called _marimba_. Some
-of the women were accompanied by two or three children.
-
-With the tribe--for it was a whole tribe that had fallen upon us--came a
-man dressed in trousers--the regulation article such as you may see in
-any civilized capital--and a woollen shirt of a deep red hue. He was the
-chief of the tribe, and had donned that garb in our honour.
-
-The captain told Leal that the various mothers who had brought their
-children were anxious to have them baptized. Leal replied that the
-matter would be attended to on our return trip, arguing furthermore that
-the three reverend missionaries should not be disturbed as they lay in
-their hammocks, for though, had they been ordinary men, they might be
-thought to be asleep, yet being persons of eminent piety it was more
-probable that they were entranced in meditation. Leal backed his plea
-with a gift, a most wonderful argument which carries conviction to wild
-Indians almost as quickly as to civilized men. The chief did not insist,
-and for the moment we were left to our pseudo-religious and silent
-contemplations.
-
-Shortly after, however, an Indian mother, with one child in her arms and
-two in her wake, proved obdurate and relentless. Her thirst for the
-baptismal waters--at least, on behalf of her children if not of
-herself--must be slaked at all costs. All Leal's efforts proving
-fruitless, he ended by telling her that I was the chief missionary. Once
-recognised as a pillar of the Church, I was prepared for any sacrifice
-of self, so that on the Indian woman approaching me I got ready to
-perform whatever ceremony she might want to the best of my ability. She
-was not only prudent and cautious, but distrustful. She pulled my hat
-off, and ran her fingers swiftly through my hair. On seeing that I had
-no tonsure--her mimic was as clear as speech--she flung my hat violently
-on the ground, gesticulated and shouted, attracting the attention of all
-her companions.
-
-Here was a complication for which we had not bargained. If there were
-great advantages in our being taken for missionaries, there was also
-great danger in being exposed as sham missionaries. Something must be
-done to remedy the evil. Leal at once bethought himself of an expedient;
-he took the Indian woman towards the hammock where Alex slept in sweet
-oblivion, unconscious of what was going on around him. She at once
-dragged off his hat, and on finding a head brilliantly bald almost fell
-prostrate. Hierarchy, or what in her savage mind stood for it, evidently
-grew higher with the size of the tonsure, and here the tonsure was
-immense. Had she known the various dignities into which the Catholic
-priesthood is divided, she might have taken Alex for the Pope. Be that
-as it may, she was satisfied. Alex, on being informed, swallowed the
-pill gracefully, and prepared to do his duty.
-
-The woman brought forward her smallest child. Here again new
-difficulties ensued. We held a council of consultation as to the _modus
-operandi_. Opinions differed widely, and were supported vehemently, as
-is sure to be the case when all those discussing a given subject happen
-to be equally ignorant. Finally some sort of plan was adopted, and the
-child was baptized in accordance with a rite evolved from our own dim
-recollections, with such modifications as seemed most fit.
-
-There under the blue heaven, with the broad winding river at our feet,
-close by the dense, darkening forest that lay behind us, its branches
-overhead forming a panoply of green, studded with the gold and yellow
-and blue flowers of the numerous creepers, we performed the ceremony of
-baptism, initiating the young savage into the Church of Christ our Lord
-with a feeling of deep reverence, intensified by our own sense of
-ignorance. Let us hope that the solemnity of the act, which flashed
-before us like an unexpected revelation, compensated for any involuntary
-informality.
-
-But after the water had been poured on the babe's head, and the ceremony
-had, as we thought, come to an end, the mother would not take her child
-back. She had evidently seen other baptisms, and our christening was not
-up to her standard. She made us understand that on former occasions
-'book reading' had taken place: such was Leal's interpretation of her
-words.
-
-We had come to look upon this Indian woman as an expert critic. Through
-unpardonable neglect, which to this day I cannot explain satisfactorily,
-we had neither a breviary nor a prayer-book with us, so we laid hands on
-the next best thing, bearing in mind what a stickler for detail this
-Indian woman had proved to be. A book of poems, an anthology of Spanish
-poets, gilt-edged and finely bound, stood us in good service. Alex
-opened it at random, and read a short poem with due and careful
-elocution for the edification of the new little Christian.
-
-The ceremony had to be performed eight or ten times. After the third
-child we gave them only one stanza apiece, as our ardour was somewhat
-chilled.
-
-When all the children had been christened, the chief claimed the 'usual'
-gifts. He soon explained to us that it was customary for the
-missionaries to make presents to the parents of the children newly
-baptized. I had begun to admire the zeal of these mothers in quest of a
-higher religion for their children; this demand showed that their
-fervour was accompanied by greed, being thus of the same nature as that
-species of 'charity with claws'--the Spanish _caridad con uas_. Trifles
-were distributed amongst the mothers, and the tribe disappeared,
-rejoicing in their possessions, for to these folk the things were no
-trifles, and, let us hope, exultant in the acquisition of eight or ten
-buds destined to bloom into Christian flowers.
-
-History doth indeed repeat itself, and humanity imitates humanity
-heedless of time and space. If I remember rightly, Clovis, justly
-anxious for the conversion of his legions to Christianity, presented
-each dripping warrior after baptism with a tunic--a most valuable
-article in those days, when Manchester looms did not exist and all
-weaving was done by hand. Those pious paladins, it is said, were like
-our Indian friends of the Vichada, always ready to be rechristened on
-the same terms as before--that is to say, in exchange for a new tunic.
-Yet, for all their sameness, things do somehow change with time. In
-these two instances we have the Church as a donor, and the new proselyte
-as a receiver of presents more or less valuable. Once the conversion
-fully assured, what a change in the parts within a few generations! The
-Church gives naught; at least, it gives nothing that is of this world.
-On the contrary, it takes all it can; the people are led to heaven, the
-poorer the easier, for in the kind and capacious bosom of Mother Church
-they are to deposit all worldly goods which might hamper their flight to
-higher regions. A beautiful and wonderful evolution, and we had not far
-to go to see it in full play and force. The savages of the Colombian
-plains are still in that primitive pitiful state when they have to be
-bribed, so to say, into the fold of the Church; many of the civilized
-people in the towns and cities obey and respect that Church which holds
-sway supreme over them in life and in death, guiding, controlling,
-saving them. Happy the nations where the chosen and appointed servants
-of the Most High, disciplined into some sort of priesthood or other,
-undertake the pleasing task of saving their reluctant fellow-men at the
-latter's expense, but with the sure and certain faith of those who know
-that they are working for justice and for the happiness of their
-fellows, though these may choose to deny it. Happy, thrice happy, lands
-where the invasion of diabolical modern ideas has been baffled, and the
-good old doctrine of abject submission still rules!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-Whenever we started afresh in the morning, or after any temporary halt,
-the man at the prow of the canoe would call out, '_Vaya con Dios_,' and
-the man on the stern, who steered with a paddle far larger than the
-others, would reply, '_y con la Virgen_' ('God go with us,' 'and the
-Virgin,' respectively). The fair Queen of Heaven, being thus
-commemorated, piety was wedded to chivalry.
-
-The days followed each other in seemingly endless succession, like the
-windings of the river. Familiarity with the ever-varying aspects of
-Nature begot a sense of monotony and weariness. The forests and the
-prairies, dawn and sunset, the whole marvellous landscape, passed
-unheeded. We longed to reach the main artery; the Orinoco was our Mecca,
-apparently unattainable. Fishing and hunting had lost zest, and become
-simple drudgery, indispensable to renew our provender, as in the long
-journey nearly all our stores were exhausted.
-
-Raoul and Leal frequently shot at the alligators, which, singly, in
-couples, or in shoals, basked in the sun in a sort of gluttonous
-lethargy, with hanging tongues and half-closed eyes. The huge saurians,
-when hit, would turn over and make for the water, except on rare
-occasions when the bullet entered below the shoulder-blade, this being a
-mortal wound.
-
-We would sit listening to the even stroke of the paddles on the sides of
-the canoe and the drowsy sing-song of the men.
-
-Frequently, towards sundown, we heard the deep note of tigers in the
-forest, and always the confused uproar of a thousand animals, frogs,
-crickets, birds, ushering in the night.
-
-Besides alligators and wild-boar, the only other large animals which we
-frequently saw were the harmless tapirs.
-
-Snakes are not abundant on the Vichada, yet it was on the shores of that
-river that we came to quite close quarters with a water-snake of the boa
-constrictor species. The reptile was found coiled not far from our
-halting-place. Raoul at once fired his fowling-piece at short range,
-blinding and wounding it. He then discharged the five bullets of his
-revolver into the snake, and the men completed the work, beating it with
-their paddles. When stretched out, it measured some 16 feet in length,
-and was of corresponding thickness.
-
-These snakes, though not poisonous, are dangerous if hungry. They lurk
-at the drinking-places, and when a young calf, deer, or any other small
-animal comes within reach, they coil themselves round it and strangle
-it. They devour their prey slowly, and then fall into a sleep, which is
-said to last for several days.
-
-In all probability, the snake we had killed must have been at the end of
-one of these periods. Much to our astonishment, notwithstanding bullets
-and blows, the snake began to move in the direction of our hammocks. Had
-this not been seen in time, it might possibly have coiled itself around
-some unwary sleeper. More blows were administered, and this time the
-animal seemed quite dead. However, it managed to roll into the river,
-and on striking the water appeared to revive.
-
-This was our only meeting face to face with a denizen of these forests
-and rivers, and I can truly say we longed for no closer acquaintance
-with them.
-
-For obvious reasons of prudence, we soon made up our minds never to
-pitch our night camp on beaches easy of access to the Indians settled
-along the shores, but during the day we would frequently halt at their
-settlements, and this enabled us to see a good deal of their mode of
-life and peculiarities.
-
-We found the tribes docile and friendly, rather inclined to be
-industrious in their way than otherwise.
-
-The Indians of the Vichada basin are the bakers, if I may so call them,
-of that great region. The bread which they prepare is made from the
-_maoc_, or _yuca_, root, which grows in plenty along the banks of
-rivers and streams. There are two kinds of _maoc_, one sweet and
-harmless, the other bitter and poisonous, yet it is from this latter
-kind that the _casabe_ is prepared. The root, varying in length from 2
-to 3 feet, with a thickness of from 1 to 3 inches, is grated on
-specially-prepared boards of very hard wood. Thus a whitish pulp is
-obtained, which is then compressed in a most primitive manner. A hollow
-cylinder, made of matting of coarse and pliant straw, varying in length
-from 4 to 6, and sometimes 8, feet, and in diameter from 5 inches
-upwards, is filled with the pulp, sausage-wise. The cylinder is then
-hung from the branch of a tree, or a beam conveniently upraised on a
-frame; it is then stretched and twisted from below. The juice of the
-pulp flows through the mesh of the matting. When all the juice has been
-extracted, the pulp is emptied into large wooden basins, and is soaked
-in water, which is run off, the operation being repeated several times.
-The poisonous element, soluble in water, is thus eliminated, and the
-pulp is ready. It is then spread on a slab of stone, thin and perfectly
-even, called _budare_, which stands over a fire. The _casabe_ is soon
-baked, generally in round cakes from 12 to 18 inches in diameter, and
-from half an inch to an inch in thickness. After baking it is stored in
-special baskets, called _mapires_, where it can be kept for months, as
-it stands all weathers and is impervious to moisture. It has the taste
-and the consistency of sawdust, and hunger must be very keen for any
-novice to relish the food. Yet it is most nutritious, and after a while
-replaces biscuit and bread, especially when these are not to be found!
-Not only the Indians, but even the white men, or those who call
-themselves civilized in that vast region, use _casabe_ exclusively.
-Wheat flour is soon spoiled in that hot, damp atmosphere, where there
-are no facilities for protecting it against moisture and vermin, and
-though corn might be abundantly produced, there are no mills to grind
-the meal. Population is so scarce, and the few inhabitants are so far
-apart, that it would not pay to set up the necessary machinery. Nature
-seems to overwhelm man, who drifts back easily into primitive conditions
-of being.
-
-The Indians also prepare _maoc_ flour. The method is the same as in the
-case of _casabe_, only that before baking the pulp is allowed to ferment
-to a certain degree; after that it is baked and reduced to powder. This
-powder, mixed with water, makes an acid, refreshing drink. If sugar or
-molasses be available, they are added.
-
-As I have said before, the Vichada Indians are expert weavers of
-hammocks, and carvers or makers of canoes. They fell a large tree, and,
-after months of labour, produce very fine canoes. The canoes, the
-hammocks, and the _casabe_ and _maoc_ are sold to traders who realize
-large profits. A pair of trousers and a hat to the captain of a tribe
-are deemed a good price for a small canoe. Such articles as a cutlass,
-or an axe, are most highly prized by the Indians, and are paid for
-accordingly. It is pitiful to learn how these poor savages are cheated,
-when not robbed outright, by the pseudo-Christians who come in contact
-with them.
-
-They also manufacture torches from resinous substances extracted from
-the forests. Some of these substances are excellent for caulking
-purposes, and, as they are found in great abundance, should constitute
-an important article of trade. A torch made from _peraman_ about 3 to 4
-feet in length, lighted as night set in, would burn with a brilliant
-yellow flame, and throw a strong glare over the camp in the small hours
-when the bonfires had been reduced to embers.
-
-We had been on the Vichada about twenty-five days, when one of us
-developed symptoms of fever, and as these increased within the next
-twenty-four hours, we looked about for some convenient spot where we
-might rest for a few days, lest the attack might become really serious.
-It was our intention to build up some sort of hut--a comparatively easy
-matter, as some of our men were old hands at that kind of work.
-Fortunately for us, however, we met coming from the mouth of the Vichada
-a Venezuelan _maoc_ trader, who was sailing to one of the Vichada
-affluents, where he expected to receive a load of _maoc_ and _casabe_.
-The man's name was Valiente. He had three canoes and ten men with him.
-We were delighted to meet him, as it had been impossible for us to
-gather correct information from the Indians.
-
-He told us that we were still two or three days' journey from the
-Orinoco, advised us not to put up at any of the beaches, but to push on
-to within a few hours of the mouth of the Vichada, where, on the left
-bank, we would find an abandoned _caney_ that had been built by
-cattle-ranchers some years previously. He had just been there. It was
-possible, he added, that we might find some Indians in possession, in
-which case we should enforce the right of the white man and drive them
-out. At any rate, the _caney_ was on high ground, the forests around
-were clear, and we should find it far more comfortable than anywhere
-else in that neighbourhood.
-
-Following his advice, we hurried on as fast as we could, promising to
-wait for him at Santa Catalina, that being the name of the place.
-Valiente thought that he would start back in six or eight days.
-
-In due course we reached Santa Catalina. On the high bluff, about 300
-yards from the shore, we saw the welcome outlines of a _caney_; it
-showed unmistakable signs of having been built by white men. We could
-see from the river that it was inhabited. This was not so pleasant, but
-we had made up our minds that we would take possession of the _caney_
-with or without the consent of its occupants. If soft words proved
-insufficient, we were bound to appeal to the last argument of Kings and
-of men at bay--force.
-
-I really did not feel inclined to violence; peaceful means and
-diplomatic parleying seemed to me preferable, but as we had no choice,
-following the practice sanctioned by experience, of preparing for war if
-you want to insure peace, we decided to make a great display of force,
-even as the Great Powers, with their military and naval manoeuvres--a
-show of teeth and claws to overawe the occupants of the _caney_.
-
-We moored on the bank near by. Notwithstanding my appearance, which, as
-I have chronicled in these pages, had warranted the belief in others
-that I belonged to the holiest of human professions, I was told off to
-ascertain whether we should occupy the premises peacefully or by force.
-I donned a red shirt, suspended from a broad leather belt a most
-murderous-looking cutlass and a six-shooter, cocked my hat sideways in a
-desperado fashion, and, full of ardour, advanced, flanked on either side
-by Leal and one of our men, each of whom carried a rifle and the
-inevitable _machete_. Verily, we looked like a wandering arsenal!
-
-Remembering that the actor's success is said to be greater the more he
-lives up to his part, I endeavoured to look as fierce as possible, and
-tried to call to mind scenes of dauntless courage, assaults of
-fortresses, heroic deeds from my historical repertory. I must have
-succeeded, for I felt uncommonly brave, particularly as there seemed to
-be no danger warranting our preparations.
-
-Unfortunately, I happen to be afflicted with myopia, which at a certain
-distance blurs the outline of objects large or small.
-
-As we continued to advance I could distinguish that someone was coming
-towards us. My courage evaporated; I felt sure that this must be some
-hostile Indian intent on hindering our access to the longed-for _caney_.
-I would fain have turned tail, but vanity, which is the source of
-nine-tenths of the displays of human courage, pricked me on. My ears
-awaited the wild whoop of the advancing Indian, and my eyes were
-prepared to witness the onslaught of his ferocious braves from the
-neighbouring bushes. Yet the die was cast, and forward we went.
-
-Imagine my surprise when, from the approaching figure, still indistinct
-and vague to my short-sighted eyes, a greeting of the utmost courtesy in
-the purest Castilian rang forth in the air of the clear afternoon. I
-shall never forget it. Those words in my native tongue, uttered in the
-midst of that wilderness, 500 leagues from the nearest town or civilized
-settlement, conjured up in one moment cherished memories of a distant
-world.
-
-Greatly relieved, I put aside my weapons of assault and destruction,
-which, to speak the truth, were most inconvenient to walk in.
-
-I knew before, and am more convinced than ever since that day, that I am
-not compounded of the clay of heroes: in which I am like the rest of the
-world. Peace and peaceful avocations are much more in my line. I love
-heroes--military ones especially--in books, in pictures, or in statues;
-as every-day companions, I believe--not having met any heroes in the
-flesh--that they must be unbearable. They really owe it to themselves to
-get killed or to die the moment they have attained their honours. They
-are sure to be ruined if left to the vulgarizing influences of daily
-life, mixing with the rest of humanity in every-day toil and strife. You
-cannot have your bust or portrait in Parliament or Assembly, your niche
-in the cathedral or in public hall, and your equestrian statue with your
-horse eternally lifting his fore-legs for the edification of coming
-generations, and at the same time insist on walking about the streets in
-the guise of a commonplace mortal! If you live in bronze and marble, if
-your name fills half a column of the encyclopdia, and appears as a
-noble example in the books in which children are taught to consider
-brutal violence the highest evolution of human intellect and action, you
-cannot ask your humble companions on earth to put up with you in their
-midst. Heroes should find their places, and stick to them, for their own
-greater glory and the comfort of their fellow-men.
-
-The gentleman whom we met was named Aponte, and came from Caracas, the
-capital of Venezuela. He had been appointed to the governorship of the
-Amazon Territory. After spending several years in its capital, San
-Carlos, he became afflicted with cataract. People told him that the
-Vichada Indians cured cataract with the juice of certain herbs, which
-they kept secret. He had arrived at Santa Catalina about ten days before
-us, accompanied by his sister and a young Corsican who had been in his
-employ at San Carlos. An Indian woman from one of the tribes had taken
-him in charge, and made daily applications of some milky juice extracted
-from plants, and, strange to say, he found relief. I have since heard
-that he is completely cured.
-
-An occulist, who travelled through those regions two or three years
-later, investigated the truth of these alleged cures, and found them to
-be authentic. He could not, however, induce the Indians to tell him what
-they use. This knowledge of the virtue of plants amongst the Indians is
-found in nearly all tropical lands. Quinine, to which humanity owes so
-much, was also an Indian secret, and was discovered by a well-known
-combination of circumstances. Towards the middle of the eighteenth
-century, in one of the Peruvian States, the Indians were treated very
-cruelly by their masters. The daughter of the house won the love of the
-Indian slaves by her kindness and charity. It had been noticed that no
-Indians died from malarial and other fevers, which proved fatal to the
-white men, but what means they employed could not be learned either by
-threats or entreaties.
-
-The daughter of the cruel master was taken ill. Her nurse, an Indian
-woman, gave her some concoction which saved her life, but would not
-reveal the secret for years. On her deathbed she told her young mistress
-what plant it was that the Indians employed against fever. Thus the
-_cinchona_, or Peruvian bark, was discovered. In the Choco regions in
-Colombia, which teem with snakes, the Indians know not only the plants
-that cure the bite and counteract the poison, but those which confer
-immunity. They also have a combination of substances forming a sort of
-paste, which, when applied to the wounds and ulcers of man or animal,
-however sore they may be, exercise a healing and immediate action.
-
-I had an uncle, Dr. Triana, well known to European botanists, and
-especially to collectors of orchids, to several varieties of which his
-name is linked (the numerous varieties of _Catleya trianensis_ are named
-after him). He lived for a long time in the Choco region, and brought
-back large quantities of this paste, which he used with success in cases
-of wounds and ulcers, both in Europe and America, but he could never
-persuade the Indians to tell him its exact composition.
-
-The young Corsican whom we found with Mr. Aponte was a sort of
-globe-trotter, jack-of-all-trades, hail-fellow-well-met with everybody.
-He was an explorer, a dentist, could serve as barber if required, had
-acted as clerk to Mr. Aponte, had with him a fairly well-stocked
-medicine-chest, and proved to be a first-rate cook. He either knew
-something of medicine or made up for ignorance by his daring. At any
-rate, he took our sick companion in hand, administered to him some of
-his drugs, and in two or three days restored him to perfect health. This
-was a great blessing. Thus disappeared from our horizon the only ominous
-cloud which darkened it during those days of so much sunlight and
-freedom. Those who know not what tropical fevers are can form no idea of
-the dread that their presence inspires when one sees them stealthily
-gaining ground. At times they act slowly, and give one a chance of
-struggling against them, but often they develop with lightning rapidity,
-and a man in full health and in the bloom of life is cut down suddenly
-in a few days or in a few hours.
-
-Figarella was the name of the Corsican 'doctor' who enlivened the few
-days we spent at Santa Catalina with his songs, his tales of Corsica,
-the narrative of his adventures, true and fanciful, in all parts of the
-world, and who managed to prepare sumptuous dinners with turtle eggs,
-wild-boar meat, fresh fish, and other ingredients, picked up the Lord
-only knows where. I often had qualms that he must be drawing too freely
-on his medicine-chest, but the dishes proved palatable, and as we
-survived from day to day we have nothing but thanks and gratitude to the
-friend whom we met in the midst of those wilds, with whom our lives came
-in contact for a few days, who then remained behind to work out his own
-destiny, as we ours, even as two ships that sight each other for a
-moment in mid-ocean and then both disappear.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-Friend Valiente turned up at Santa Catalina, his canoes laden with
-_maoc_ and _casabe_, two days after our arrival.
-
-Though the ranch had been abandoned for some time, stray cattle, more or
-less wild, roamed about the neighbourhood. Leal and Valiente soon
-lassoed a fine heifer, which, slaughtered without delay, replenished our
-commissariat. We celebrated a banquet like that held on New Year's Day
-at San Pedro del Tua. We still had a little coffee, but of rum, which
-had then formed such an attraction, only the fragrant memory remained.
-Its place was supplied with what was left of our last demijohn of
-aniseed _aguardiente_.
-
-As Valiente intended following the same route, we decided to wait for
-him. He knew that part of the Vichada and the Orinoco well. There were
-several small rapids which it was not advisable to cross without a
-pilot.
-
-Two days after leaving Santa Catalina we struck the Orinoco, with a
-feeling of boundless joy. It seemed to us as if we had reached the open
-ocean, and the air itself appeared purer, more charged with invigorating
-oxygen.
-
-After a short spin from the mouth of the Vichada, we reached Maipures,
-where Venezuelan authorities were stationed. Knowing that Venezuelans,
-as a rule, are inclined to be less reverent and respectful towards the
-Church and its servants than the average Colombian, we abandoned our
-ecclesiastical character, dropping it, as Elias dropped his mantle upon
-earth, on the waters of the Vichada, where it had done us such good
-service.
-
-It was indispensable that we should find a pilot for the rapids. It
-seems that in former days the Venezuelan Government kept two or three
-pilots at Maipures, but we found to our sorrow that they had disappeared
-long since. However, not far from Maipures we were told that we should
-find a man named Gatio, one of the best pilots on the river. We at once
-started in quest of him, and found him in the thick of the forest about
-a mile from the shore. He was gathering tonga beans, and had formed a
-little camp, accompanied by his family, which consisted of his wife, two
-children, a boy and girl of fourteen and twelve respectively, and two
-smaller children of five and six. He agreed to take us across the
-rapids, provided we would wait at Maipures until he could pack his beans
-and gather some india-rubber extracted by himself. As there was no help
-for it, we agreed to wait. Maipures turned out to be nothing but a group
-of some fifteen or twenty tumble-down, rickety houses, inhabited by
-about a score of people, amongst them the prefect or political
-representative of the Government. He received us most cordially, and
-placed one of the buildings at our service. I believe both Valiente and
-Leal gave him to understand that we were high and mighty personages
-representing the Colombian Government on a tour of inspection through
-the lands awarded to Colombia by a recent decision in a case of
-arbitration between the two republics, handed down by the Queen of
-Spain. Maipures, where the functionary in question was supreme, came
-within the new jurisdiction, and possibly the belief that we might
-exercise some influence in maintaining him in his important office may
-have had to do with his courtesy and goodwill towards us. It was lucky,
-however, that such an impression was created. Shortly after our arrival
-he informed us that the Governor of the Amazon territory had just
-communicated to him orders to prevent all travellers on the river from
-ascending or descending the stream--in a word, to keep them as prisoners
-at Maipures. On reading the Governor's note to us, he argued, 'This
-cannot apply to you, for, being Colombians, you are outside the
-Governor's jurisdiction.' Here, again, as when conferring ecclesiastical
-dignity upon us, Leal had acted with prudence and foresight.
-
-At Maipures we felt, as we never felt before or after during the
-journey, the presence of the numerous insects, and noticed that these
-winged creatures worked with method and discipline. The _puyon_ sounded
-the charge shortly after sunset, attacking without haste and without
-rest during the whole night. At dawn it would retire to camp, sated with
-our gore. The post of honour was taken by the sand-flies, which would
-remain on duty during the earlier part of the forenoon. In their turn
-they were replaced by some other arm of the service during the hot hours
-of the day, and so on till nightfall, when the _puyon_, refreshed and
-eager, would again fall upon his prey. There is no greater regularity in
-the change of guards at a fortress than is observed by these insects in
-their war upon men and animals.
-
-The mosquito-net was the only real protection. Some relief is obtained
-by filling the room with smoke from smouldering horse or cattle manure,
-but the nauseous smell and the ammonia fumes made the remedy worse than
-the evil. We also feared to share the fate of herrings and other fish
-subject to the process, and preferred the seclusion of our
-mosquito-bars.
-
-These, however, were all minor troubles, mentioned here as a matter of
-record. From our temporary abode we could hear the distant thunder of
-the rapids, as of batteries of cannon in a great artillery duel. The
-waters of the Orinoco, suddenly twisted into a narrow bed, wrestle with
-the boulders of granite scattered in the channel, which they have frayed
-through the very heart of the huge basaltic mountains.
-
-Life in those regions, from what we gathered, is as wild, as untamed,
-and irresponsible as the rivers or forests, and as the animals that roam
-in them. Violence and force are the only law, greed is the sole guiding
-principle, amongst men. The functionaries in most cases are only
-authorized robbers and slayers. The Indians, being the most helpless
-victims, are plundered and murdered, as best suits the fancy of those
-representatives of organized Governments, whose crimes remain hidden
-behind the dense veil of interminable forests.
-
-When news of any of these misdeeds does chance to reach the official
-ear, the facts are so distorted on the one hand, and there is so little
-desire to investigate on the other, that no redress is ever obtained.
-
-Whilst at Maipures there came in a man from San Carlos, the capital of
-one of the Amazon territories. He told a gruesome story. The Governor of
-that province, whom he represented as a prototype of the official
-robbers just mentioned, had exasperated his companions by his
-all-absorbing greed. The Governor seized all the tonga beans and
-india-rubber extracted by the poor Indians, who were forced to work
-without any pay, unfed, whip-driven. His companions, who expected a
-share in the plunder, conspired to murder him. He was known to be
-fearless and an admirable shot. One night, however, his house was
-surrounded by a score or so of his followers; a regular siege ensued;
-the young Governor kept his assailants at bay for several hours. He was
-accompanied by a young Spanish ballet-dancer, who had followed his
-fortunes undaunted by the dangers of that wild land. She would reload
-the guns whilst he scanned the ground from the only window of the room.
-One of the assailants crept upon the roof of the house and shot him from
-behind. He died in a few hours. The canoes laden with all kinds of
-produce despatched by him--not down the Orinoco, for he feared they
-might be seized on the long journey through Venezuelan territory, but
-through the Casiquiare to the Amazon--were said to be worth 40,000 or
-50,000. Even if not accurate in all its details, which I repeat from
-the statement of the new arrival at Maipures, this instance gives an
-idea of the conditions that prevail in those localities.
-
-True to his word, Gatio turned up at Maipures on the third day, and we
-continued our journey at once.
-
-The rapids of the Orinoco break the open current of the river for a
-distance of some forty or fifty miles. The Maipures rapids are from five
-to six miles in length. The river then continues its quiet flow for
-about twenty or twenty-five miles down to the rapids of Atures; thence
-it flows to the ocean without any further obstacle of importance.
-
-Gatio had his own canoe of a special type, much larger than ours, very
-deep, heavy, capacious, and comfortable. It was the real home of his
-family.
-
-I asked him why he did not settle somewhere on the banks of those
-rivers. He told me that both on the Orinoco and on the affluents there
-were numberless spots on high ground, free from all floods, abundant in
-game, within easy reach of good fishing, healthy and cool, where he
-would fain settle. 'But we poor wretches,' he added, 'have no rights.
-When we least expect it, up turns a fine gentleman sent by some
-Government or other with a few soldiers; they lift our cattle and steal
-our chickens, destroy what they do not take away, and compel us to
-accompany them, paddling their canoes or serving them as they may want
-without any pay. Whenever I hear,' he went on to say, 'that white men in
-authority are coming along the river, I start immediately in my canoe
-through the _caos_ as far inland as I can. The wild Indians and the
-savages are kind and generous; it is the whites and the whites in
-authority who are to be dreaded.'
-
-Gatio was himself a full-blooded Indian, but, having been brought up on
-some settlement, he considered himself a civilized man, and in truth it
-was strange to see how he practised the highest virtues of an honest
-man. He loved his wife and family tenderly; he worked day and night for
-their welfare. He longed for a better lot for his children, the eldest
-of whom 'studied' at the city of San Fernando de Atabapo, the only city
-which he knew of by personal experience. As it consists of eighty or a
-hundred thatch-roofed houses, one may well imagine what the word 'city'
-implied in his case; yet his thoughts were constantly centred on the
-learning which that child was storing to the greater honour and
-happiness of his wandering family. Reading and writing formed the
-curriculum of that university, possibly because they marked the limit of
-the teacher's attainments; but let us be ashamed of mocking the humble
-annals of so good a man.
-
-I cannot forbear mentioning an incident, a parallel to which it would be
-difficult to find amongst nominally civilized folk. One of our men who
-had accompanied us from San Pedro de Arimena, knowing our plight and our
-dependence on Gatio, took him aside, informing him that we had plenty
-of gold, and that as one of us was ill, and we desired to reach the open
-river as soon as possible, it would be easy for him to name his price.
-He suggested that Gatio should charge one or two thousand dollars for
-the job, which we would be bound to pay. Gatio not only did not improve
-that wonderful opportunity, but he forbore from telling us of the advice
-given to him. He charged us 100 dollars, a moderate price for the work,
-and it was only when on the other side of the rapids that Leal learned
-the incident from the other men.
-
-Here was a test which not many men brought up in the midst of civilized
-life could have withstood.
-
-Gatio and his family will ever remain in my mind as a bright, cheerful
-group. Alas for them, lost in those solitudes amongst wild beasts and
-wild Indians, and subject to the voracity of the white men, who become
-more ferocious than the worst tiger when their unbridled greed has no
-responsibility and no punishment to dread!
-
-We had three canoes (including Gatio's) to take down. We were obliged
-to empty them completely. The men carried everything on their backs
-along the shore, whilst the canoes shot the rapids.
-
-When I saw Gatio on the first rapids, I believed him to be bent on
-suicide. At that point the river, cut and divided by the rocks, left a
-narrow channel of about 300 feet in length close in to the shore. Thus
-far the canoes had been dragged by the current and held by means of
-ropes. On reaching the channel, Gatio manned the canoe with four men at
-the prow, and sat at the stern. The canoe, still tied by the rope, which
-was held by four men, was kept back as much as possible from the
-current, which increased in speed at every inch. At the end of the
-channel the whole river poured its foaming volume into a huge, cup-like
-basin, studded with rocks, where the water seethed as if boiling. From
-the basin the river flowed on placidly for several miles. This was the
-end of the first rapids.
-
-Halfway down the channel the men let go the ropes, and the canoe, with
-its crew, seemed like a huge black feather upon a sea of foam, and the
-whole length of the channel, white and frothy, appeared like the arched
-neck of a gigantic horse curved to drink from the waters below. The
-waters, before entering the basin, formed a small cataract shooting over
-the protruding ledge. The canoe fell into the basin, and seemed about to
-be dashed against a rock that stood in its way. On again striking the
-waters, Gatio gave the word of command, and the four men began to
-paddle steadily and with great force, as if to increase the impetus.
-Gatio remained quiet and motionless in his place, holding his paddle
-out of the water ready to strike. At a given moment he uplifted it,
-thrust it deeply into the waves, and moved it dexterously, so that the
-canoe turned as if on a pivot, and quietly glided along the rock upon
-which it would have been dashed into a thousand pieces.
-
-Gatio explained to me that it was necessary for the men to paddle so as
-to give the canoe her own share in the impetus, and make it more
-responsive to his steering.
-
-Though he assured me that there was no danger, and though the journey
-along the shore was tiresome and slow, I did not venture to accompany
-him when shooting the other rapids before reaching the open river.
-
-The Orinoco has drilled an open passage-way through a spur of the
-mountains at Maipures. The struggle between the waters and the rocks
-must have lasted centuries.
-
-'Here shalt thou halt,' said the rock.
-
-'Further will I go,' replied the river.
-
-Like the spoils of battle on a stricken field, the shattered rocks stud
-the current, which sweeps roaring and foaming around and over them. They
-resemble the ruins in the breach of a battered bastion. The river is the
-victor, but, as will happen when two great forces counteract each other,
-the result is a compromise, and the course of the stream is deviated.
-The difference of level from the beginning to the end of the rapids is
-in itself not sufficient to cause the violence with which the waters
-run. It arises from the sudden compression of the powerful volume of
-waters into a narrow space. The waters rush through the openings made in
-the rock with a deafening sound, torn by the remnants of pillars in the
-bed through which they pass. They fill the air with the tumult of their
-advance; one would say an army was entering a conquered city, quivering
-with the rapture of triumph, lifting up the thunder of battle, Titanic
-bugle-calls, and the pans of victory. After each one of these narrow
-breaches in the wall of granite the river plunges into deep basins,
-where the foaming waters soon sink into their former quiet flow. The
-soldiers have crossed the first entrenchments, and collect their forces
-before the next assault. Soon the margins on either side begin to hem
-in, the waters stir more rapidly, and soon again the mad rush, the
-desperate plunge, the wild, roaring, irresistible onslaught, and again
-through the very heart of the mountain into the next basin. Finally,
-after storming the last redoubt, the river, like a lion freed from the
-toils which imprisoned him, leaps upon the bosom of the plain, bounding
-forward in solemn flow towards the ocean. The clear tropical sun
-reflects itself on its ever-moving bosom, even as the clouds and the
-forests, the mountains and the birds on wing. The wandering mirror keeps
-on its course, being, as Longfellow has it, like unto the life of a good
-man 'darkened by shadows of earth, but reflecting an image of heaven.'
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
-We spent ten days in covering the distance from the upper to beyond the
-lower rapids, walking whenever it was impossible to use the canoes,
-which were drifted by the current or shot over the rapids. The delay was
-due chiefly to the loading and unloading of the canoes, and the
-necessarily slow transportation of packages, bundles, and sundry
-articles along the shore.
-
-The banks of the river on either side along the whole length of the
-rapids are high and rocky, sometimes extending for a mile or two in
-flat, grass-covered, wavy meadows, and then rising in small hills,
-abrupt and ragged on the very edge of the water. This is specially the
-case in the narrow part of the gorges. The grass in the small
-meadow-like plains is the same as on the shores of the Meta, and the
-whole aspect of the region, bare of large forests, is that of a field in
-a civilized country.
-
-A few days after leaving Maipures we noticed, to our joy, the absence of
-mosquitoes and other such tormentors. They seemed to have been blown
-away by the wind, which had freer scope in the more open stretches along
-the main river.
-
-We missed the soft couch of the sand beaches to which we had become
-accustomed, the thin layer of sand or earth being powerless to soften
-the bed-rock on which we now had to stretch ourselves, but the flight of
-the mosquitoes and their companions more than made up for this.
-
-Our commissariat had dwindled to utter meagreness; we had neither sugar
-nor coffee, and _casabe_ was our only bread. The last drops of
-_aguardiente_ had been drained at Santa Catalina. At Maipures we had
-obtained a drink which they called white rum--in truth, pure alcohol,
-which we had to drown in three times the quantity of water before we
-swallowed it. Our cigars, cigarettes and tobacco were all gone; they
-were part and parcel of an enchanted past--smoke wafted heavenward like
-so many of our hopes and illusions. We had obtained native tobacco, with
-which we made cigars or rolled cigarettes out of newspaper clippings.
-Thus we consumed many a literary article or political effusion which it
-would have been utterly impossible to utilize in any other way. Corn-cob
-pipes also came in handily.
-
-Game, furred or feathered, was not to be found on the shores of the
-rapids; we had to rely principally on fishing, which was most abundant
-in the quieter pools and basins. We ate all sorts of fish, some of
-admirable quality, especially the _morrocoto_, far superior to the
-French sole or the American shad, blue fish, or Spanish mackerel. If
-Marguery could meet with it, his immense renown would increase tenfold,
-as with this fish at his disposal he would be certain to evolve what
-from a culinary point of view would amount to an epic poem of the most
-sublime order. Such, at least, was my opinion when eating that fish,
-with my imagination duly fired by a voracious appetite and a lack of
-material condiments which gave rise to dreams worthy of Lucullus in
-exile.
-
-Rice and salt we had in plenty; butter, oil, and lard were unknown
-quantities. Had we been in Lent, necessity would have enabled us very
-easily to observe the ordinance of the Roman Church with regard to
-abstinence from meat. We thought of this, and although we were not sure
-of our dates, we at once decided to offer up our enforced diet in a
-truly Catholic spirit in atonement for some of our many sins! May our
-offering prove acceptable!
-
-We did not go to sleep as readily on our new hard beds as on the sand.
-The clearness of the air and freedom from insects also contributed to
-long watches, which we spent in listening to the far-off roar of the
-river pealing incessantly through the night air, whilst Gatio would
-tell us about the life of men and beasts in those territories. The voice
-of the river seemed like the distant bass of a powerful orchestra, all
-the high notes of which had been lost in space.
-
-Gatio was familiar with the rivers that flow into the Orinoco above its
-confluence with the Vichada, and the numerous _caos_ which intersect
-that region were so well known to him that on one occasion, when flying
-from some Governor on his way to the upper territories who was anxious
-to obtain his services as a guide, Gatio had managed to lose himself in
-such an intricate maze of _caos_ and water-ways, and, finally, in a
-small lagoon, unknown to all except the wild Indians, that the Governor
-had given up the chase in despair. He had travelled on the Casiquiare
-and the Rio Negro, and had visited the Upper Amazon. According to him,
-the Upper Orinoco and its affluents are as abundant in india-rubber
-forests as the Amazon and its tributaries, the Putumayo, the Napo and
-the Yarabi. The gum or india-rubber is identical in quality with that of
-the best species of Para. In some places the trees grow so closely that
-a man may extract from twenty to forty pounds of india-rubber a day.
-Besides large virgin areas rich in india-rubber forests, in other parts
-_piazaba_ palm forests stretch for hundreds of acres at a time. This
-_piazaba_ is used for matting, broom-making, and twisting of ropes and
-cables. It is perfectly impervious to moisture, and is even said to
-improve instead of rotting in water. Not far from where we were in one
-of the _caos_, the _piazaba_ forest followed the water-course for a
-distance of, Gatio said, 'twenty twists.' An odd system of measuring,
-but the only one at his command. 'Twenty twists' might be five or twenty
-miles, according to the size of the curves. These forests further
-contained infinite abundance of sarsaparilla, tonga bean, _peraman_ and
-_caraa_, the resinous substances used for caulking and torch-making.
-Gatio himself exploited those sources of wealth as far as his own
-personal means and limitations would allow him. He stated his
-willingness at any time to guide us to the spots where rubber, tonga
-bean, and so forth, could be found, adding that he knew we would treat
-him well, but that he would never consent to act as a guide to others,
-especially to the white men in official positions who now and then
-appeared along the river. These he held in special abhorrence, and no
-doubt their doings justified his feelings.
-
-Gatio's statements as to the wealth of the Orinoco were perfectly
-truthful. It seems strange that such vast sources of wealth should
-remain practically unexploited. The rapids of the Orinoco act as a
-barrier, before which traders and explorers have come to a standstill.
-Some sixty or seventy years ago cart-roads existed on the shores along
-the rapids; these were built by the missionaries, and parts of them are
-still intact. Vegetation being weak on the hard soil of those banks, it
-would be easy to re-establish them. The great obstacle, however, is to
-be found in the numerous affluents which fall into the Orinoco along the
-rapids. The missionaries had large pontoon-like rafts on which they
-transported their carts from one side to the other. Were this primitive
-service started once more, the flow of natural products extracted from
-the forests would soon establish itself from the Upper to the Lower
-Orinoco.
-
-One day, having left our canoes behind, we arrived at the shores of the
-Cantaniapo, a clear stream flowing into the Orinoco between two
-stretches of rapids. No tree shaded us from the fierce glare of the sun.
-The waters murmured most invitingly on the pebbles of the beach. On the
-other side was a sort of shed, a vestige of former splendour. A small
-canoe was moored alongside, tied with a _piazaba_ rope to the trunk of a
-neighbouring tree. So near, and yet so far! We should have to wait,
-perhaps, broiling in the sun for hours, till our canoes arrived. Whilst
-we discussed the arduous architectural problem of building a tent with
-such articles as coats, india-rubber waterproof sheets, and so on, a
-noise as of a body falling into the water drew our attention to the
-river. Leal, holding his _machete_ between his teeth, was swimming
-_llanero_ fashion--that is to say, throwing each arm out of the water in
-succession, and covering a distance equal to the length of his body at
-every stroke. The peril, potentially speaking, was extreme; one never
-knows whether the alligators and other inhabitants of those waters may
-or may not be at hand. Yet Leal did not seem to care. Fortunately, he
-soon landed on the opposite shore, jumped into the canoe, cut the rope
-and paddled back. On our remonstrating with him, he argued that the
-danger was slight; alligators hate noise, and he had taken care to be as
-noisy as possible.
-
-'Furthermore,' he added, 'I had my _machete_ with me.'
-
-We stopped that night under the shed. Gatio came in due time. We
-particularly wished to bathe in the transparent waters of that river,
-not as Leal had done, but in our usual prudent way, standing on the
-shore far from all possible danger.
-
-The next morning we saw the only living tiger which met our eyes during
-that long trip. Early, before striking the camp, the shout went
-forth--'A tiger! A tiger!' There, at a distance of about 150 feet from
-us, on a small protruding ledge which plunged into the river, forming a
-sort of natural drinking-place, stood a beautiful specimen of the native
-tiger. The wind, which, as Leal told us, blew from the land, carried the
-scent in the wrong direction, and this explained the tiger's visit. On
-hearing the shout, Leal sprang up and seized one of the rifles. The
-tiger looked towards our group and turned tail, bolting in the direction
-whence he had come, behind a clump of bushes. Leal followed him. We soon
-heard a shot, and after a few minutes Leal returned, disgusted. He had
-only wounded the animal. I argued with him that we were most thankful to
-the lord of the forest for his abrupt courtesy in leaving the field
-entirely to us, as, had he felt inclined to enter into closer relations,
-we might have found it awkward, to say the least.
-
-Valiente had come with Gatio. Our belongings seemed to him, as they had
-previously seemed to Leal, an abnormal accumulation of wealth. We had
-kept with us, not knowing whether they might again be required, our
-riding-saddles. My own was large, comfortable, and soft, a work of art
-in its way. Valiente seemed to admire it. The remarks which he made
-deserve to be noted here.
-
-'This saddle is certainly very fine and comfortable; but how do you
-manage when crossing a river? Do you not find it very heavy on your
-head?'
-
-I could not understand what he meant, until I remembered that the
-_llaneros_, when swimming across a river, generally carry their saddles
-on their heads to keep them dry. At first I thought Valiente was
-'pulling my leg.' A mere glance at my person should suffice to persuade
-anyone that not even the furious onslaught of a regiment of Cossacks
-would induce me in any circumstances to plunge into a river where there
-was a chance of meeting alligators and such-like; I was still less
-likely to venture on such feats with the additional burden of a heavy
-saddle on my head. However, Valiente was perfectly in earnest, and meant
-no harm; so I assured him with perfect calm that I had never noticed on
-any occasion, either in or out of the water, that the saddle was a heavy
-one.
-
-'Possibly,' I added, 'it is a question of habit.'
-
-'May be,' he said, 'but it would be a long time before I got used to it.
-Look at my saddle!' he went on to say; 'it only weighs a fourth of
-yours. Still, I should like to try yours, not for real hard
-work--branding, lassoing, or rounding up cattle--but just to prance
-round the town on a good horse and charm the girls. That's about what
-it's fit for!'
-
-That day, marked in the calendar of our memory as the 'tiger day,' our
-supper consisted of boiled rice and _casabe_. Somehow or other there had
-been no fishing. Yet we did not grumble; custom had taught us to be
-easily satisfied. We learned from Gatio that within twelve miles from
-us the Atures ruins were to be found. Behind the thick forest which
-separates it from the river stands a short range of high cliffs. They
-are the last spur of the chain through which the Orinoco has drilled its
-way. At a height of 600 to 700 metres on the vertical wall, so straight
-and smooth that it seems to have been polished all over by the hand of
-man, there appear, carved in the very substance of the rock, a huge
-alligator and two human figures, standing near its head and tail
-respectively. All are of colossal dimensions. According to the
-measurements of other travellers provided with the required instruments,
-the length of the alligator exceeds 500 feet, and the human figures are
-of proportionate size. It is difficult to understand what sort of
-scaffolding was used to carry out this work at such a height, no support
-or traces of support of any kind in the rock being apparent; what
-instruments were used for the carving, and what purpose the whole work
-served: all this is very perplexing.
-
-Footprints of human endeavour, thoughts of past generations entirely
-lost to our minds, left there in the midst of the forest, marking the
-passage of men who must have been powerful at a period so remote that
-only these traces remain. What more eloquent proof of the nothingness,
-the vanity, of our own ephemeral individual life!
-
-The mere magnitude of the work carried out demonstrates that in those
-regions, totally deserted to-day, where Nature has reasserted her
-absolute sway, and where the wanderer has to fight for every inch of
-ground in the jungle and the thicket, there must once have been
-multitudes of men educated in certain arts--arts which in their turn
-must have been links in a chain of sequence indispensable to their own
-existence, as isolated effort in one direction would be
-incomprehensible. Nothing of those myriads of men survives beyond this
-dumb expression of their thoughts and aspirations.
-
-Were those figures carved on that huge wall, on the virgin rock of the
-mountains, hundreds or thousands of years ago? Who knows? Who can tell?
-
-With the rapidity inherent to human thought, my mind sped to the
-pyramids of Egypt, the ruins of Babylon and Nineveh, the buried cities
-of Ceylon, the excavated temples and palaces in Yucatan and elsewhere,
-wherever vestiges of vanished generations are found.
-
-That sculpture on the rock on the shores of the Orinoco brought to my
-mind the dying lion cut into the granite on the banks of the Lake of
-Lucerne, as a symbol of respect and admiration to the loyalty and
-steadfastness of the compatriots of William Tell, who died for a cause
-upon which judgment has been passed in the minds of men and in the pages
-of history. I could not help thinking that perhaps when Macaulay's
-famous New Zealander shall stand upon the broken arches of London Bridge
-to gaze at the ruins of St. Paul's, when England and London shall have
-crumbled into potsherds, so in years to come some native of these
-Orinoco regions, then populous and civilized, may sail on the cool
-waters of Lucerne and interrogate the mute rock, anxious to know the
-allegory embodied in that dying lion holding in its claws the shield
-which bears the three secular lilies of old France. Even as the rock was
-mute to us, so shall the rock again be mute to him who thousands of
-years hence may question Thorwaldsen's sculpture. The efforts of man are
-powerless against time and oblivion, even though they choose the
-largest, the most lasting manifestations of Nature for their pedestal.
-
-Time passes grimly on. The endeavours of pride, of flattery, of
-gratitude, the emblems of glory, all become dumb and meaningless.
-Egyptian hieroglyphics, figures and signs carved in monoliths or
-pyramids or in the rock of the mountains, after the lapse of what, to
-the world, is but an instant, all become confused, vague, and
-undefinable. The seeker and the student find all those attempts to
-perpetuate the memory or the aspirations of men, now on the burning
-sands of the desert, now decked in the foliage and wealth of Nature,
-aggressively reasserting her empire, now in the naked summits of the
-uplifted mountains--yea, the seeker finds them all; but he knows not
-whether they be expressions of human pride anxious to survive the life
-of the body, or whether they be witnesses of servile flattery paying
-tribute to the mighty, or the grateful offering of nations to their
-heroes and their benefactors, or the emblem of some dim forgotten
-religion, whose very rites are as unintelligible to living men as is the
-mystic power which once gave them force.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-With the accession of Gatio and his family and Valiente and his men,
-our numbers had gradually increased, and the camp at night had quite a
-lively aspect. The men would tell their adventures, and conversation
-frequently turned on local topics. We had gradually drifted into
-practical indifference concerning the doings of that distant world to
-which we belonged, and towards which we were moving. Newspapers,
-letters, telegrams, the multifarious scraps of gossip, the bursts of
-curiosity which fill so great a part in the life of modern man, had
-totally disappeared as daily elements in our own. To tell the truth, I
-did not miss them greatly. I have always thought that the daily
-newspapers are thieves of time, and cannot but approve the system of a
-certain friend of mine, an Englishman, who, residing in New York, had no
-other source of information for the world's news than the weekly edition
-of the _Times_. He was dependent on it even for the news of American
-life and politics.
-
-He argued that the ups and downs of a given event were of little
-interest to him.
-
-'All that one need know,' he said, 'is the upshot, the crystallized
-fact, without wasting valuable time in the slow developments which, at
-times, are pure inventions of the editor--"padding," as it is called. I
-am a little behind-hand at times,' he remarked, 'but at the end of the
-year I make it up, balance the account, and start afresh.'
-
-Certainly if all the attention given to local news of no importance, or
-to descriptions of fires, crimes, and sundry topics which never change
-in essence and vary solely as regards names and secondary details, were
-devoted to studying something useful, the average mind of the great
-newspaper-reading nations would not have been degraded to the depths
-revealed by a glance at a collection of the newspapers and reading
-matter on the bookstalls of any railway-station in France, England, or
-the United States, where the flood of trash and sensationalism swamps
-and carries away with it public intelligence, or what stands for it.
-
-Gautier used to complain of the curse of the daily press.
-
-'Formerly,' he said, 'every human being brayed in his own original
-asinine way. Now we only get variations on the leaders in their
-respective newspapers!'
-
-The great French writer expressed the simple truth in a pointed way. The
-cheap press, like cheap liquor, is a public calamity.
-
-Our men poured forth personal impressions of Nature. The world varies in
-size and in beauty in proportion to the eye and the mind that
-contemplate it. In Leal's and Valiente's conversation especially there
-was something like the voice of the forest and the murmuring waters.
-They had lived to some purpose in those deserts, and to them cities,
-railways, palaces, sea-going ships, and all the other methods of modern
-locomotion--material civilization, in fact--were as wonderful as the
-beauties and splendours of Eastern tales are to us.
-
-Talking about tigers, Leal told us that they roamed all over those
-plains, especially on the banks of the Meta and the Orinoco, where the
-forests intersect breeding and grazing plains. The cattle-ranchers must
-be ever on the watch, and from instinct and experience the cattle
-acquire a natural spirit of defence without which the losses would be
-far heavier than at present.
-
-Whenever the cattle scent the approach of the tiger, they crowd
-together, the young calves in the centre, the cows and young heifers
-covering them behind their bodies, and the bulls pacing around and
-outside the group like sentinels before a tent. There is no exaggeration
-in this tale. Leal assured us that he had himself seen these
-preparations on more than one occasion.
-
-The tiger, whose daring and ferocity are multiplied tenfold by hunger,
-frequently attacks the group: then ensues a life and death struggle. The
-tiger tries to jump upon the bull sideways or from behind, whilst the
-bull strives to face the tiger constantly. As the latter is far more
-agile and can leap from a long distance, he frequently lands upon the
-bull, sometimes breaking his spine with the blow. If he misses, the bull
-gores him. Occasionally both animals die, the tiger in its
-death-struggle tearing the bull's neck open with its claws.
-
-'More than once,' said Leal, 'have I found the two enemies dead in a
-pool of blood side by side.'
-
-The tigers also crouch in the bushes close to the drinking-places, and
-jump upon the animals as they lower their heads into the water. They rip
-open the necks of their victims, drag them into the jungle, and there
-devour them.
-
-The hunters know that a sated tiger is far less daring than a hungry
-one, and they frequently place a calf or some other easy prey within his
-reach. After his meal he is hunted down, but Leal added that this is not
-considered fair play amongst thoroughbred _llaneros_; it is a trick
-unworthy of a real sportsman.
-
-The tigers live exclusively upon other animals. They prefer cattle, and
-have a special predilection for donkeys and mules; they are gourmets.
-The choicest morsel to their taste seems to be the fat neck of donkeys
-and mules; they have, too, a pretty taste in turtles. They can crush the
-back of the younger turtles not yet fully developed. These awkward
-amphibians rush, if their ponderous movements can be so described, into
-the water for fear of the tiger. There he is powerless to harm them.
-
-The alligator rivals the tiger in voracity and fierceness. They are
-sworn enemies, and attack each other whenever they meet. The odds are on
-the tiger's side if the struggle be on land, and in favour of the
-alligator if the pair meet in the water. The tiger seeks to turn the
-alligator over on his back, or to get at the body towards the stomach,
-where the softer skin can be penetrated by the tiger's claws, which
-disembowel his enemy. The alligator defends himself by striking terrific
-blows with his tail, and seeks to scrunch the tiger between his
-formidable jaws. Fights between them, Leal said, are frequently seen on
-the beaches, and are a fascinating though ghastly spectacle.
-
-The tigers frequently cross rivers infested with alligators, and display
-a really marvellous cunning in avoiding their enemy in his own element.
-The tiger will stand on the beach at a given point of the river, and
-there roar with all his might for an hour or so on end. The alligators,
-in the hope of getting at him, congregate in the water at that
-particular point. When the members of the assembly thus convened have,
-so far as the tiger can judge, met at the appointed place, he starts
-up-stream along the banks as rapidly as possible, and crosses two or
-three miles higher up. There are two details to be noted: first, the
-stratagem by which the tiger misleads his enemies; and, second, his
-choice of a crossing-place, so that the alligator would have to swim
-against the current to get at him.
-
-Both Leal and Valiente had the true cattle-breeder's love for cattle,
-which to them are man's best friends.
-
-'They give us milk and meat and cheese,' Leal would say; 'they help us
-to cultivate the ground, and their very presence drives away fevers,
-mosquitoes, and miasmas. We and the cattle are allies against the boas,
-the tigers, the snakes, and all the beasts without which these lands
-would be a real paradise.'
-
-The tales of our friends sounded most wonderful in Fermin's ears. He was
-a townsman, accustomed to bricks and mortar; furthermore, he was
-naturally sceptical as to all that he heard, and felt rather small at
-seeing our men's familiarity with things and manifestations of Nature
-which to him were so strange and new.
-
-Fermin came from the city of Medellin, where he had spent most of his
-life. It is a typical old Spanish town of the central tropical belt. It
-nestles amongst the hills, 100 miles from the left bank of the Magdalena
-River, at a height of about 4,500 feet. The ground around is
-mountainous. The valley is small and beautiful, with numberless streams
-coursing down the hills, and luxuriant vegetation in perpetual bloom.
-
-Prior to this journey, Fermin's travels had never taken him beyond his
-own province. Like all Colombians, he had been a soldier at some period
-of his life, a 'volunteer' of the type described in a telegram (very
-well known in Colombia) which a candid or witty--the distinction is at
-times difficult--mayor sent to a colleague in a neighbouring town:
-'Herewith I send a hundred volunteers; kindly return the ropes!' Having
-joined the army in this wise, it is not strange that Fermin left it as
-soon as he could. His military career was no longer and no more glorious
-than Coleridge's.
-
-Continental Europeans are wont to grow amusingly solemn and censorious
-when they hear of the system still obtaining in many parts of Spanish
-America for the formation of armies which are chiefly engaged in the
-civil wars that devastate those countries from time to time; this system
-is nothing more nor less than the press-gang method practised all over
-Europe not so long ago. But between this press-gang, which suddenly
-compels a man to join the ranks destined to fight, and the conscription,
-which forces him into the army whether he likes it or not, I can only
-see a difference of detail, but none in essence. Individual liberty is
-as much violated in the one case as in the other. In both cases the
-weak, the helpless, and the poor are the prey of the more cunning and
-more powerful, and as for the causes at stake, whatever the name or
-pretext may be, if the whole question is sifted, greed and ambition
-masquerading under some conventional high-sounding name will be found to
-be the real and essential motors. Militarism is a form of exploitation
-of mankind which adds human blood to the ingredients productive of gold
-and power to others; it is nothing but an engine of plunder and of
-pride, the more disgusting on account of its sleek hypocrisy. Your
-money-lender frankly tells you that he will charge you three, four, or
-five per cent. per month, and despoil you of house and home if you
-cannot pay; this, though cruel, is frank and open and above-board. But
-your advocate of militarism will despoil you like the cosmopolite Jew,
-telling you that glory shall be yours, that patriotism and the holy
-traditions of religion, the dynasty, the empire, or the nation, as the
-case may be, are at stake, and that it is necessary for you to risk your
-skin in consequence. With such baubles and clownish maunderings men have
-been led on, and are still being led on, to cut each other's throats for
-the personal benefit and satisfaction of their leaders, who give them a
-bit of ribbon or stamped metal if they survive and have luck. Meanwhile
-the exploiters sit safe on their office chairs, pocket the shekels, and
-chuckle at the pack of fools, the smug middle-class flunkies, and the
-dirty, bamboozled millions, the cannon fodder, fit only for bayonet and
-shrapnel.
-
-After leaving the army, Fermin, who by trade was a journeyman tailor,
-had joined the remnants of a wrecked theatrical company, a group of
-strollers travelling through the towns and villages of his province, and
-giving performances from the modern and the ancient Spanish repertory,
-to the enjoyment and the edification of the natives.
-
-He had been in my service for over a year, proving himself admirable as
-a valet, and certainly very plastic, for during the journey he had been
-by turns muleteer, amateur paddler, fisherman, hunter and cook.
-
-The people of his province, a hardy mountaineer race, so prolific that
-population doubles itself every twenty-eight years, are known all over
-Spanish America for their readiness at repartee, the frequent metaphors
-that brighten their daily speech, and a knack of humorous exaggeration.
-
-Fermin, referring to one of the men whose idleness he criticised, said,
-'That fellow is so lazy that he cannot even carry a greeting!' and
-talking of the wonderful climbing ability of a certain mule, he said
-that, if it could only find the way, it would reach the gates of heaven
-and bray in the ears of St. Peter!
-
-One evening, during a lull in the conversation, Fermin, who had quietly
-listened to tales of fierce tigers, chivalrous bulls, alligators, and
-many other natives of forest or stream, burst forth, saying that he also
-knew of some wonderful beasts; but I prefer to quote his words as nearly
-as possible.
-
-'The truth is,' said he, 'that before starting on this trip I knew
-nothing about tigers, alligators, boas, and so forth, except from
-picture-books. I had even thought that people lied a great deal about
-those animals, but sight has now convinced me of their existence. I have
-no doubt they are to be found somewhere in my native province, but it is
-not about them that I am going to talk. I will tell you something which
-will show that we, too, have wonderful animals in our part of the
-country.
-
-'Some years ago I was the first lover in a theatrical company which,
-though modest in its pretensions, scored great success wherever it
-played. One night, in the mining region near the Cauca River, we were
-forced to sleep in the very shed where we had performed the comic opera
-entitled "The Children of Captain Grant," a most popular seafaring tale
-set to music.
-
-'Mosquitoes were as abundant and aggressive as anywhere in the world,
-but they seemed to me to have far stronger lungs than those of these
-localities. Anyhow, there was a specially sustained high-sounding ring
-in their little trumpets, so that they formed a sort of orchestra
-beneath the moon.
-
-'One of the lady artistes held the doctrine that life was sacred in all
-its manifestations; that man has no right to kill any animal, however
-small it may be, so she did not kill the mosquitoes that swarmed around
-her, but tried to blow them away with her fan. However, as some of them
-alighted on her forehead and on her hands, she would take them carefully
-between thumb and forefinger and place them on the side of a basin half
-filled with water, moistening their wings so that they stuck and
-remained harmless for the time being.
-
-'The smokers amongst us--all the men, in fact--after lighting their
-cigars or cigarettes, threw their wooden matches into the basin, a
-necessary precaution lest the thatch-roofed shed might catch fire.
-
-'In the earlier part of the night the mosquitoes made sleep almost
-impossible, and there we lay on the ground or upon canvas stretchers
-snoozing and tossing about, waiting for the morning. As night advanced,
-with the arrival of a welcome breeze, they seemed to diminish in
-numbers. I began to doze, but was awakened by one of my companions who
-called my attention to the echo of distant music, sweet and low, a
-harmony of lutes and soft recorders, whose sounds were wafted on the
-wings of the night air. We went out of the shed, and the sounds ceased.
-On returning to it we heard the melody again. This was a mystery. Nearly
-all our companions were asleep. We were determined to ascertain whence
-the music came, and, on investigation, found that the blessed
-mosquitoes, placed by the charitable and humane artiste on the sides of
-the basin, had contrived to build a raft with the fag-ends of matches,
-on which, waiting for their wings to dry completely, they were whiling
-the night away gaily singing the most popular ditty in our operetta,
-descriptive of the joys of life on the ocean wave!
-
-'This will show you,' Fermin added, 'that, though we have neither
-tigers, nor boas, nor turtles, nor fighting bulls, nor alligators, in
-our province, our mosquitoes beat all yours in talent and ability!'
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Not far from the Atures rapids, we stopped at Puerto Real, a short curve
-in the river where the waters penetrate into a sort of bay justifying
-the name of 'port,' but with no other title to it, for no human
-habitation, not even the humblest hut, exists on either shore. Here the
-canoes were laden permanently, as the river flowed straight to the
-ocean, free from all rapids except at a few narrow places where the
-current is swifter. These, however, did not call for the precautions of
-the past days.
-
-Leal considered his task at an end. We were on the open Orinoco in the
-Republic of Venezuela, and in the hands of a guide as careful and expert
-as Gatio. This led Leal to return. In vain did we seek to persuade him
-to accompany us, to enter Colombia by the Magdalena River, thence to
-Bogot, and then by the road we had followed to San Pedro del Tua. He
-would not abandon his companions, and decided to go back by the
-identical route we had followed. We deeply felt parting from that noble
-companion whose quiet, unobtrusive courage, whose skilled prudence and
-ready intelligence, had not only contributed greatly to our comfort
-during the ninety odd days that he had been with us, but had doubtless
-saved our lives on more than one occasion.
-
-As a proof of the extent and value of his services, I will quote a
-letter received many months after in Europe, when, in the midst of
-modern civilization, the events and occurrences of my journey through
-the tropical regions of South America seemed more like a dream than a
-reality. Alex, who had returned to Bogot, wrote as follows:
-
-
-'I have just received a letter from Leal, dated from his home at San
-Pedro del Tua. You will remember that he left us with fourteen of our
-men, to return by the Vichada and the Meta. On the very day of their
-departure, whilst they were ascending the rapids, and we proceeded on
-our journey down-stream, only a few hours after bidding us farewell, one
-of the two canoes, carrying seven men, struck the trunk of a tree lying
-under the water, and capsized. The men were all good swimmers, and soon
-overtook the canoe, which was drifting with the stream. After a good
-deal of trouble, they succeeded in turning it over. Whilst they were
-getting back into it, they were attacked by two enormous alligators
-which sought to overturn the canoe, striking it furiously with their
-tails. One of the sailors was struck on the head and stunned, losing his
-grip, and before he could be pulled in the other alligator cut his body
-in two, as if with a saw, crushing him between its jaws, so that the man
-was actually devoured in the very presence of his companions.'
-
-
-On reading these tragic details, I felt a cold shiver run through me,
-like a man who sees lightning strike an object close to him, or feels a
-murderous bullet whizz past his head. A retrospective fear seized upon
-me at the thought of the many nights spent on the lonely beaches, and
-the numberless times that our canoes had struck submerged rocks or
-trunks of trees. Surely a kind Providence had watched over us during
-that long journey. 'The child's heart within the man's' revived in me,
-with the faith in God learnt from the lips of my mother, and my soul
-went to her who, during those long, anxious days, had prayed night and
-day to Him above for the safety of her absent son.
-
-Greatly diminished in numbers, we continued downwards, hoping to strike
-some camp of tonga-bean-gatherers, the harvest season having just begun.
-
-If the Meta had seemed large and mighty to us, the Orinoco bore the
-aspect of an inland sea. The breezes and the hurricanes blow upon its
-billows and dash them into surf on the bank; the trade-winds--our old
-friends of the Meta--reappeared on the Orinoco, only far stronger than
-before. One would say that they spend their force in the long journey,
-and are somewhat weary in the upper regions. It is impossible to make
-any progress in the teeth of the trade-wind. With a stern or a side wind
-the canoes hoist their sails and travel with the speed of birds on the
-wing. The great force of the wind is generally felt during the middle
-hours of the day; it lulls in the morning and afternoon.
-
-Far more frequently than on the Meta we were forced to wait for hours on
-the sandy desert beaches, or close in to the shore covered with jungle,
-waiting, waiting for the wind to sink. The worst feature of these
-breezes is that they raise a great quantity of sand to a height varying
-from 2 to 3 feet.
-
-Cooking becomes impossible, as the wind blows the fire out, scattering
-the embers and the logs, and unless rocks or trees be available on which
-to sit at a certain height, one is compelled to stand, as it is
-impossible to breathe the air, which is impregnated with sand. At such
-times we were compelled to make our meals of _casabe_ dipped in water,
-and drink more freely of the white rum which took the place of warmer
-food and drink. Once we were kept thus imprisoned for nearly thirty
-hours; our helplessness against the elements exercised a most depressing
-influence.
-
-The tonga bean, called in Spanish _zarrapia_, constitutes a most
-important article of trade, and is obtained in large quantities on the
-shore of the Orinoco and of many of its affluents below the rapids. It
-is said to abound also in the Upper Orinoco, but there it is seldom
-gathered.
-
-The tonga-tree is large and leafy, very similar to the mango-tree. The
-branches, which spread over an area of 20, 30, or 40 feet, are covered
-with thick foliage, and the yield of fruit is enormous. The fruit
-resembles the mango in shape and appearance. Under a sweet pulp, quite
-palatable, is found an oval nut, identical with that of the mango, and
-inside this nut, which has the consistency of a walnut, is encased a
-small elongated bean of a pink colour. It soon turns dark red when
-exposed to air and sun. The trees shed the fruit in the months of
-February and March; the men gather it from the ground, clean off the
-pulp, and break the nut with stones. This must be carefully done to
-avoid breaking the bean, which is then placed in the sun on dry,
-untanned hides, and after two or three days packed in bags ready for
-transportation.
-
-The tonga bean is chiefly used in perfumery, and is a very good
-substitute for vanilla.
-
-We were told that the exports averaged, at the prices then ranging, a
-yearly output of 100,000 to 150,000. I understand that the price has
-fallen considerably of late years, but as the gathering costs very
-little, and the transportation, owing to the numerous waterways, is
-cheap, there must still be great profits in the business.
-
-Traders flock from the different parts of the river to certain
-well-known camps, from which they branch off into the forests, bringing
-back the bean for sale to the camps. Although the Venezuelan Government
-has more than once granted special privileges and monopolies to
-individuals and companies for the exploitation of the tonga bean, its
-gathering is practically free, as it would be next to impossible to
-watch over such vast uninhabited areas where men can easily conceal
-themselves in the forests.
-
-Our progress was far slower than before, as we generally lost half a day
-waiting for the breeze to fall. This was owing principally to the size
-of our canoes, too small for navigation in a high wind.
-
-In due time we came upon the first camp, a most welcome sight to our
-eyes; a whole village of tents stood pitched on the bank of the river,
-and upwards of twenty or thirty canoes were moored along the shore.
-Amongst them we saw a small one-masted schooner, which raised its
-graceful lines above the surrounding small craft. We gazed upon it with
-covetous eyes, and decided to make every possible effort to acquire it,
-if it could be had for love or money.
-
-We did not attract any attention at first; the people in the camp
-thought that we were tonga-bean-gatherers like themselves, coming from
-some point above; but they showed great interest and courtesy on hearing
-that we came not only from beyond the rapids, but from the upper
-affluents of the Orinoco. We soon closed a bargain for the schooner,
-into which we transferred our belongings, and the next day the three
-small sails were let loose to the very breeze that, during the past few
-days, had nailed us to the shores.
-
-Besides the schooner, we obtained a supply of provisions, though not as
-much as we wished. The traders had only what they needed, and were loath
-to part with them, especially as we were going towards the centres of
-supply.
-
-In the course of a day or two we stopped at a large flat island, some
-twelve miles in length, as we were told, and varying from two to four
-miles in breadth; this is known as the Beach of Lard (_Playa de la
-Manteca_). This island is the laying-place of hundreds of thousands of
-turtles, which come to it every year in the laying season. The island
-belongs to the Government, who place a small detachment of soldiers to
-watch over it. The traders buy the right of working a given section of
-the ground. They dig out the eggs, from which the oil is extracted. It
-is used for cooking, and is a substitute for lard and butter--hence the
-name of the beach.
-
-The turtles swarm in myriads, and are forced by those coming up behind
-them to go further into the island. After laying their eggs they seek
-the water, but are so numerous that it is necessary for the soldiers and
-traders to keep a pathway open, otherwise many of them could not get
-back to the river.
-
-It is a marvel to see countless acres of ground covered with turtles as
-thick as the stones of a pavement; and the fact might be incredible if
-it were not vouched for by so many travellers.
-
-A turtle lays, according to its size and age, from fifty to three or
-four hundred eggs. The men--traders or Government agents--are free to
-take as many turtles as they like; the eggs are the only article of
-barter upon which a price is set.
-
-Some idea of the number of turtles laying eggs on the beach may be
-gathered from the reckoning of a French traveller who investigated the
-subject.
-
-The oil extracted from the eggs is gathered in demijohns holding on an
-average seven gallons each, and the average yield of a good year is
-about ten thousand demijohns. Each demijohn requires from four to five
-thousand eggs; ten thousand demijohns represent from four to five
-millions, which means that there must be from four to five hundred
-thousand turtles. The tale seems extravagant.
-
-It is needless to say that we took in as large a supply of turtles and
-of eggs as we could carry. The sailors of the schooner were delighted at
-the prospect of turtle meat and turtle eggs _ad libitum_. The eggs are
-boiled in salt water, and keep for a practically indefinite period.
-
-The capacity for eating these eggs shown by the natives of those regions
-seems to be unlimited. I could not understand, looking at the size of
-the men and at the young mountain of turtle eggs before which they sat,
-and which disappeared after a period of sustained assimilation, how it
-was possible that they did not swell outwardly or explode. Here was a
-case in which the envelope was, to all purposes and appearances, smaller
-than the contents assimilated--a problem for some sapient naturalist to
-investigate whenever he may chance to stray into those remote regions.
-
-It is said that the turtle yields seven kinds of meat, and that in the
-hands of a good cook it is transfigured into calf's head, veal, tender
-loin steak, chicken, venison, pork, and (naturally) turtle meat. Be that
-as it may, notwithstanding the uncouth and, to some, repulsive
-appearance of the animal, it is evident that the various parts of its
-body are not only palatable, but may be disguised to imitate the
-varieties mentioned, a peculiarity which in its turn works inversely, as
-in the well-known case of mock-turtle soup.
-
-The turtles we bought were placed on their backs, which seems to be the
-universal method of keeping them all the world over. There in the bottom
-of our schooner the poor beasts had ample opportunity to watch the
-flight of clouds by day and the grouping of the constellations by night.
-I fear, however, that they did not improve their time with the study
-either of atmospherical changes or of astronomical wonders.
-
-Fermin rapidly learnt how to cook and prepare turtles in the various
-native ways, to which he added devices of his own, reminiscent of the
-preparation of other meats and dishes in his native province.
-
-The change of diet was most welcome at first, but after the fourth or
-fifth day the very name of turtle was revolting. Fermin was told that,
-if nothing else but turtle was to be found, we preferred to fall back on
-boiled rice and _casabe_. Relying, however, on his ability and the
-protean plasticity of turtle meat, he insisted on serving some of it as
-wild-boar flesh, and only upon a formal threat of shooting, or being
-left tied to the trunk of a tree along the shore, like a new Andromache,
-did he cease his attempts to deceive our palates. Thus, notwithstanding
-the plentiful supply of turtles and turtle eggs, we drifted back to the
-diet of _casabe_, boiled fish and boiled rice.
-
-We had hoped to strike some cattle-farm, but we scanned the horizon in
-vain. The plains and the forests rolled before our eyes, an interminable
-blank for our purposes.
-
-Finally, as everything happens at last, our expectation was gratified;
-near the confluence of our old friend the Meta with the Orinoco, we came
-upon a cattle-ranch where we obtained corn, molasses, eggs, lard,
-cheese, coffee, and the whole side of a recently slaughtered heifer.
-
-I can readily understand that persons of a delicate taste, should they
-happen to read these awkwardly penned lines, must feel disgusted at the
-recurrence of such vulgar and material details. Their amazement will
-certainly be great, for in all probability they will be surrounded by
-all the comforts and the luxury of civilized life. There is no harsher
-censor of the misdeeds or faults arising out of somebody else's hunger
-than the drowsy philosopher who passes judgment in a comfortable
-armchair after a plentiful meal; his untempted rectitude makes him the
-austerest critic of failings and weaknesses in others. However, the
-opinion of those immaculate beings, with their hot-house virtue, safe
-from wind and wet behind glass panes, receives precisely the attention
-it deserves.
-
-Still, I admit that, after having crossed those regions, it were better
-if I could describe what I saw in a series of pen-pictures which would
-unroll before the reader in sequence or harmonious groups the numerous
-sublime aspects of Nature; it were far better that, even as the essence
-retains the perfume of the flower, the written word should convey to
-other minds the deep impression left upon my own by the mysterious
-murmuring forest, the invisible wind whose breath so often cooled my
-forehead, the constant throb of the wandering waves pent within their
-narrow channels, the infinite azure of the sky, and the numberless
-sounds and rumours, now soft, now deafening, which fill the air in that
-world still free from the burden of civilization, living the life of
-untrodden Nature, a link in the endless chain of existence ravening on
-death, with the great drama of being made manifest in a thousand diverse
-shapes.
-
-Happy were I could I seize one single note from that vast symphony,
-capture it, and fix it with my words! Vain wishes!
-
-We passed from those solitudes, leaving no more trace behind us than the
-clouds in the sky, and although the impression of the greatness and the
-majesty of Nature sank deeply into my heart, so that at times my soul,
-returning to the days of the past, loses itself in the depths of the
-forests and the summits of the mountains, follows the course of the
-rivers, or bathes itself in the pure atmosphere of the free and
-boundless plain, whenever I seek to utter my inmost feelings, so that
-others may feel and understand with me, only the faintest shadow of my
-thought falls on the blank page. The gift of seeing and of feeling, and
-of creating what we have felt and seen so that others in their turn may
-feel a similar impression, has been given by the Almighty only to those
-few chosen artists and men of genius who throw upon the work which they
-create 'the light that never was on land or sea.' I must perforce limit
-myself to the humble narrative of our daily life. I have no higher
-ambition in writing these pages, and I shall be fortunate if I meet with
-readers who understand my motive.
-
-The schooner took us down to La Urbana (a settlement with urban
-pretensions); it boasts some _adobe_ houses covered with tiles, and a
-small church. Here we abandoned the schooner, and were obliged to take
-to a far smaller canoe--large enough, however, for navigation on the
-Orinoco--in which we proceeded to Caicara, where we expected to meet the
-steamers plying between Ciudad Bolivar and the Apure River.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-The journey from La Urbana to Caicara passed off without any incident.
-On jumping ashore at this latter point we hoped that we were leaving our
-canoes for good, and that the rest of the journey to Ciudad Bolivar
-would take place by steam.
-
-The people received us very kindly, and, though the town was far from
-modern or rich, we enjoyed some comforts that we had lacked during the
-long journey which lay behind us.
-
-Though eight weeks had passed since the news of the death of the
-Governor of San Carlos had reached Maipures, nothing was known about it
-at Caicara. This will give an idea of the abandonment in which those
-vast territories are left by those under whose political authority they
-live. Grave international complications with the neighbouring States
-might arise from disturbances like that at San Carlos, and yet the news
-had only come down by mere chance, brought by travellers who had no
-personal interest in it.
-
-Finding that there was no certainty as to the steamers likely to touch
-at Caicara, we reluctantly decided to take again to the slow and sure
-method of canoeing, rather than wait for him who had not promised to
-come, and thus we proceeded on our journey in the same canoes that we
-had imagined we were abandoning once for all two days before. A feeling
-of discontent began to possess us. It was not that we were dissatisfied
-with the kind of life, nor that we had become over-sensitive to the
-privations inherent to it, nor that we complained of being plain squires
-compelled to adopt the practices of knight-errants, such as not eating
-off linen, nor sleeping on comfortable couches, nor under roof of house
-or mansion; no, our great longing arose at the thought of those far away
-in the civilized world, to whom our long silence must necessarily be a
-source of anxiety. For the rest, however, the life we were leading had
-become a sort of second nature, and we found it by no means
-disagreeable. We ate with healthy appetites, and when night came,
-stretched on our matting, we heedlessly let the wind fold its wings or
-shriek into madness, whilst the river either murmured gently along like
-a stream across the green meadow or lashed into fury like a lion.
-
-We rowed or sailed as the river and the wind permitted, gaining ground
-without the loss of an available minute, with the tenacity of one who
-has a given task to accomplish, and wants to perform it with the least
-possible delay. One night, shortly after halting, a shudder of delight
-ran through us on hearing one of the men exclaim, 'Steamer coming!' We
-turned in the direction pointed out by him, but saw nothing. However, we
-had learnt by that time to trust to the keener senses of the natives.
-Shortly afterwards, with ear to ground, we heard, or thought we heard, a
-far-off indistinct vibration as of the paddles of a steamer striking the
-water. The sound soon became unmistakable. Here was an unexpected
-redemption. From sheer joy we ceased the preparations for our evening
-meal. To attract the attention of those on board the steamer the
-bonfires were piled up high, and, to leave no possible loophole to
-adverse fate, Alex and four of the men sailed into mid-stream, so as to
-be quite close to the craft. Soon it loomed majestic and welcome to our
-eyes. The pennant of whitish smoke rose in the still blue night, and
-floated as a signal of welcome. The boat advanced steadily; we could see
-the people on board. That rather undersized vessel was to us, for the
-moment, the great in fact, the only--steamer in the world. We fired our
-revolvers. Alex and his men bawled themselves hoarse. No sign of
-recognition came from the steamer as she ploughed on swiftly,
-relentlessly, disdainfully, soon to be lost in the distance. This was
-wanton cruelty, and, as we thought at the time, a sin against human
-nature. Our feelings were not such as might be commended to the
-attention and imitation of Sunday-school children! Our language was
-decidedly 'unfit for publication.' According to the reckoning of our
-men, which events proved accurate, we should require twelve days more to
-reach Ciudad Bolivar, whilst the steamer, sailing day and night as it
-could, even against the breeze, would cover the distance in forty-eight
-or sixty hours. It is well that we possessed no magic powers enabling us
-to destroy, as if with a thunder-bolt, for in that case the steamer
-would not have reached its destination. So it generally happens in life
-when the action of others foils our little plans or obstructs our way.
-Looking solely to our own side of the question, we are apt to make no
-allowance, and attribute to utter perversity what from the standpoint of
-the other side may be perfectly reasonable. As revolutions are frequent
-in those latitudes, and as steamers had on several occasions been seized
-by parties of men ambushed on the shore, the captain of the steamer
-probably thought that prudence and caution were his safest guides. He
-may have believed that, besides the small group which he saw in the
-canoe and on the shore, a formidable host might be lurking in the
-forest, and under those circumstances his behaviour is perfectly
-intelligible.
-
-As we approached the end of our journey, our impatience and anxiety grew
-keener. Up to that time we had never lost our equanimity, and now, when
-we could reckon with a fair degree of accuracy the date of our arrival
-at Ciudad Bolivar, the smallest obstacle or detention irritated us
-beyond measure. Yet all things end. On April 20 we arrived at a small
-outlying village three hours from Ciudad Bolivar.
-
-Our approach to a civilized community awakened slumbering feelings of
-vanity, and for the first time during many months we bethought ourselves
-of our appearance. I had an authentic mane on my head; our beards were
-thick and bushy as the jungle on the banks of the river. Such clothes as
-we had could hardly have passed muster under the eyes of the most
-lenient critic. Most of those that we possessed at starting had been
-left behind amongst the Indians, in payment of work, and what little
-remained had not been improved by the moisture of the climate. On taking
-stock, I soon found that my dress coat and trousers--evolved by some
-London artist--were the only decent clothes left to me; yet I could not
-screw up courage to don them, as I feared that if, after several months'
-journey through the wildest regions of South America, I jumped ashore at
-noonday on the banks of the Orinoco in a swallow-tail, the authorities
-would probably provide me with free board and lodging in some cool
-lunatic asylum! We consoled ourselves with the thought that we were
-clean, and thus near to godliness, and that we could soon replace our
-patched and tattered clothes at Ciudad Bolivar.
-
-I have forgotten to mention our visit to the cattle estates of General
-Crespo, at that time President of Venezuela, a typical son of the
-_llanos_. These estates had a frontage of twenty-five leagues along the
-river, and extend Heaven only knows how far into the interior. The
-manager, or _major-domo_, told us that the herds on those estates
-numbered upwards of 200,000 head of cattle. The figure appears
-fantastic, but the fact that at that time 1,500 three-year-old bullocks
-were exported monthly to the neighbouring West India Island, principally
-Trinidad, may serve as a basis for calculation.
-
-On that eventful 20th of April the breeze blew tantalizingly against us,
-yet we would not be detained, and decided to advance in its very teeth.
-The men jumped ashore and pulled the canoes with ropes. The city, built
-as upon a terrace, soon appeared in the distance, its white, red-roofed
-houses standing out under the clear sky like dabs of paint upon a blue
-canvas. Behind the town the hill continued to rise, and opposite the
-city the river itself, encased into a narrow space, is only one-third of
-a mile broad. It was a delight to look once more on houses, towers and
-churches, and other signs of civilized life. The sight was an
-enchantment after the eternal panorama of forest, mountain, plain and
-river. We had a feeling akin to that of Columbus and his companions when
-the watch shouted 'Land! land!' We could echo those words in their full
-significance. The struggle was at an end; river, forest, rapids, fevers,
-wild beasts, poisonous snakes, savages, and all the obstacles that lay
-behind us, were over, leaving no further trace than the dust along the
-roads or the foam of the waves on the sands. Thanks to the Divine
-protection, we had reached the end of an adventurous journey full of
-possibilities of mishap and of danger, and all that had taken place was
-simply as a memory in our minds.
-
-We attracted great attention on landing, and were soon installed in one
-of the good hotels of the towns. We stared with something like
-wonderment at mirrors, tables, sofas, as at so many good old friends
-from whom we had been long separated. In us, primitive man had very soon
-reasserted full sway, and we had to make some effort to return to the
-habits and customs of civilized life. As soon as we could, we placed
-ourselves in the hands of a barber in the town. He had been told of our
-great store of luggage, and, inquisitive as all men of his profession
-are, on hearing one of us humming for very joy under his razor and
-shears, asked (I know not whether in innocence or banter): 'How many of
-you are in the company, and what opera are you going to begin with?' To
-this I replied: 'We are not an opera company, but a circus, and our
-performances will begin shortly; we are on the look-out for a clown.' He
-did not proceed with his cross-examination.
-
-Ciudad Bolivar is famous in the annals of Venezuelan and Colombian
-history. It bears the name of the emancipator of those regions. Formerly
-it was called Angostura, which means 'the Narrows.' In 1819 one of the
-first Colombian Congresses was held at that city, and its deliberations,
-which soon crystallized into action, brought about the expulsion of the
-Spaniards after a daring and sanguinary series of campaigns. The very
-men who sat at Ciudad Bolivar, 300 miles from the shores of the
-Atlantic, ended their military campaign on the plateau of Ayacucho in
-1824, having marched thousands of leagues across plain and forests,
-snow-capped mountains, precipices, jungle, fighting for every inch of
-ground against the stubborn soldiers of Spain in one of the most heroic
-and tenacious struggles on both sides that are to be found in the annals
-of history.
-
-The river, as I have stated before, narrows after its long pilgrimage,
-and, even as a regiment which closes its ranks, rolls its waves in
-denser array opposite the city. No sooner does it reach the outside
-limits than it broadens again, and, after running through fertile plains
-and swampy valleys for a distance of 600 kilometres, reaches the sea.
-The normal depth opposite Ciudad Bolivar is 120 metres. During the rainy
-season the level rises from 10 to 20 metres.
-
-Verily the Orinoco is a living, wandering sea of fresh water gathered
-from the northern plains of South America, which forms the tribute of
-those lands to the Atlantic Ocean. We had just followed it in its
-pilgrimage for a long part of its course. We had known it in tempest and
-in calm; we had watched the dawn gilding its throbbing waters or the
-twilight covering them with flickering shadows; we had listened to the
-whispering of the winds and the roar of the hurricane along its shores;
-we had seen the monsters which roam in its waters, admired the river's
-Titanic sport, dashing in the rapids, or its majestic quiet in the deep
-basins of granite where the current seems to rest before leaping in a
-wild onslaught through the caons; and now we saw it majestically unroll
-before our eyes in the august pageant of its last procession to the
-ocean. We could not but think that, if that great artery of palpitating
-life which vibrates through the centre of the continent had stood us in
-such good service, its possibilities for the development of those vast
-unknown territories, when once appreciated by humanity, were practically
-unlimited. To our mind's eye, prophetic with desire, the vast solitudes
-we had left behind became resonant glad with the presence of myriads of
-men; the forests were cleared, the plains tilled, and a happy and
-prosperous nation, the outcome of the present struggling democracies
-that own those lands, increased by swarms of immigrants from distant
-overcrowded countries, reared its cities and towns along the banks of
-the river which, in its immutable, defiant majesty and power, still
-rolled to the sea, serving men, but remaining a bond of union, a mighty
-link between the Cordilleras and the ocean.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-I have thus far sought to give an idea of my personal impressions during
-a journey most memorable to me; and I am aware that I bring no new or
-useful contribution from a scientific point of view. We had no
-instruments of observation, not even an ordinary every-day compass,
-enabling us to fix the cardinal points with certainty. Furthermore, had
-we possessed more complicated instruments, we were too ignorant to use
-them. Let these remarks be borne in mind should errors of appreciation
-be noticed, as certainly they exist, in this disjointed narrative.
-
-We wandered on with the definite aim of reaching the Atlantic Ocean.
-Beyond that we did not venture to scrutinize too deeply the mysterious
-and wonderful manifestations of Nature, but took them as they appeared
-to our limited means of vision and understanding, and sought nothing
-beyond.
-
-However, before closing these pages, assuming that some kind reader's
-patience may have enabled him to accompany me thus far, it may not be
-amiss to give some accurate data which I take from the admirable
-monograph entitled 'South America: an Outline of its Physical
-Geography,' published in the _Geographical Journal_ of April, 1901, by
-Colonel George Earl Church, a book which might be called 'South America
-in a Nutshell,' wonderfully accurate and concise, and worthy of the
-highest praise.
-
-The total length of the Orinoco is about 1,500 miles, but if measured by
-its Guaviari branch it is several hundred miles longer. It reaches its
-maximum height in August. To its point of junction with the Guaviare it
-takes a north-west course. Ninety miles before its union with that
-stream it receives its principal eastern affluent, the Ventuario. From
-the Guaviare it runs north nearly as far as the Apure, where it suddenly
-turns east. Between the Guaviare and the Meta the course of the river is
-obstructed by the Maipures Rapids, which extend for a length of four
-miles, with a total fall of about 40 feet. Below this the Atures Rapids
-cover a distance of about six miles, falling about 30 feet. Navigation
-is then free for about 700 miles, as far as the rapids of Cariben,
-within six miles of the mouth of the Meta. The river at this point is
-about a mile wide. Its course continues to the north, and at the mouth
-of the Apure it is two miles wide in the dry season, and about seven
-when in flood. At Cariben it rises 32 feet; but at the Angostura, or
-'Narrows,' 372 miles from the sea, it has risen to 60 feet. It enters
-the sea by its main trunk, the Boca Grande. About 100 miles above its
-mouth it throws off a branch northward to the Gulf of Paria, also 100
-miles in length. Six other considerable arms find their way to the ocean
-across a vast delta about 7,000 square miles in area. The Boca Grande is
-the deepest and main navigable entrance at all seasons, the muddy bar
-usually maintaining a depth of 16 feet. The basin of the Orinoco covers
-an area of 364,500 square miles.
-
-The principal affluents flowing from the Andean slopes are the Apure,
-the Arauca, the Meta, and the Guaviare.
-
-The Apure is 695 miles long, of which 564 are navigable. The Apure in
-its turn receives numerous tributaries, some of which are navigable for
-short distances.
-
-The Arauca, the Meta and the Guaviare, are also navigable.
-
-The Casiquiare Canal unites the upper Orinoco with the Rio Negro branch
-of the Amazon. It is about 300 miles long, with an average depth of 30
-feet, and has a strong current in the direction of the Negro. The list
-of affluents of the Orinoco and of its tributaries would be a very long
-one, and would serve no useful purpose here.
-
-Evidently the Orinoco and the Orinoco system, with their innumerable
-ramifications in all directions, form a basis for the easy exploitation
-of the vast sources of natural wealth which exist in the immense
-territory through which their waters flow.
-
-That territory lies within the borders of the Republics of Colombia and
-Venezuela. Up to the present neither nation has seriously attempted to
-utilize the valuable elements so bountifully offered by Nature. In the
-matter of navigation, ocean-going steamers sail frequently as far as
-Ciudad Bolivar. From this latter point river steamers ply once or twice
-a month up the Orinoco, turning into the Apure as far as San Fernando de
-Apure, and during the tonga-bean harvest follow the course of the main
-river generally as far as the Caura, where the harvesters established
-their central camps a good many years ago. An effort was made to
-establish navigation on the Orinoco and its affluents above the rapids,
-and also to run small steamers in the navigable part between the Atures
-and Maipures rapids; but the French company, which held a charter
-practically placing the whole region at its disposal, failed of its
-object, after spending a considerable amount of money. During our
-journey, in several places we could see, rotting in the sun, the
-remnants of broken-down steamers, which appeared uncanny objects in
-those surroundings. The rapids, acting as a barrier, have deterred
-traders and explorers. The upper part of the Orinoco is the most
-abundant in natural wealth. As I have had occasion to note in these
-pages, india-rubber, _piazaba_, tonga bean, resinous and medicinal
-plants, are found in practically unlimited quantities along the shores
-of all the rivers above the rapids, and the small proportion which is
-gathered is generally shipped through the Rio Negro by way of the
-Amazon, as traders prefer that long and tedious journey to the
-difficulties of the Orinoco Rapids.
-
-Yet to give life to the Orinoco, to establish a stream of natural
-products down its waters, and to facilitate the opening of the forests
-and mountains beyond the rapids, it would not be necessary to carry out
-work of a very stupendous nature, beyond the resources of the peoples
-and the nations most interested in the work. A cursory glance at the
-elements of the problem reveals the possibility of carrying out a plan,
-the general outlines of which might be the following:
-
-A line of steamers should be established plying at least twice a month
-between Ciudad Bolivar and the highest accessible point for navigation
-below the Atures Rapids.
-
-The old road along the rapids, which extended from that highest point of
-navigation to beyond Maipures where the river is again free and open,
-should be reconstructed. A railway could be built along either shore,
-the ground being mostly level and hard. It would not be necessary to
-undertake great engineering works, and the road-bed itself would require
-neither deep cuttings nor terracing, nor expensive culverts and works of
-drainage, and the few bridges required, being of short span, would not
-run into high figures.
-
-Steam navigation should also be established beyond the rapids on the
-rivers forming the upper basin. This could be done at first by means of
-small steam-launches such as are used in the affluents of the Amazon
-River, but the service should be carried out faithfully and
-periodically, even though at first freight and passengers were lacking.
-People in Spanish America are generally very sceptical as to these
-enterprises, but once a feeling of confidence was created, explorers
-would flock both from Colombia and from Venezuela, as they would know
-that they would have an outlet for whatever products they might gather.
-
-The Indians on the Vichada, and even those on the Meta, would supply
-abundant labour, and the exports of natural products would soon furnish
-all the freight that might be desired to make the whole arrangement of
-steamers above and below the rapids, and the railway along the same, a
-paying concern.
-
-A line of steamers should also follow the course of the Meta River as
-far as La Cruz, a port situated about ninety miles from Bogot, thus
-tapping the import and export trade of the most thickly-populated region
-of Colombia, the inhabitants of which in the three provinces of
-Santander, Boyac, and Cundinamarca, are over 1,500,000 in number.
-
-Supposing four steamers to be needed for navigation on the lower river
-and on the Meta, to be bought at Ciudad Bolivar at a cost of 10,000
-each, 40,000 would be required under this head. Taking the length of
-the railway at 60 kilometres, including the bridges, at a cost of 2,000
-per kilometre, 120,000 would be required for the railway; and supposing
-that ten small steam-launches of twenty to thirty tons burden were
-started for the rivers on the upper basin, 20,000 would be required--in
-all, 180,000 for the whole undertaking.
-
-The preceding figures are not imaginative, and might, perhaps, be
-reduced in actual practice. If it has been possible to raise the capital
-required for the construction of a railway of upwards of 200 kilometres
-in length along the shores of the Congo, where climate, distance, and
-natives combine to establish far more serious obstacles than exist on
-the Orinoco, should it not be possible to find the capital for the
-establishment of modern means of transportation in a region which offers
-far brighter and surer prospects than the Congo? Let it be remembered
-that from Colombia and from Venezuela civilized white, coloured and
-Indian labour could be found in abundance, and that Europeans engaged in
-the undertaking, and provided with steamers, could in two days, if on
-the Meta, reach the high and healthy plateaus of Bogot and find
-themselves in a civilized community where they would lack none of the
-luxuries or comforts of their own land; and that in the Lower Orinoco
-they would have Ciudad Bolivar, to which the same remarks, barring the
-advantage of climate, may be applied. The two Governments of Colombia
-and Venezuela, equally interested in the development of the Orinoco
-basin, might unite their efforts and guarantee in a form satisfactory to
-European capitalists the paltry yearly amount required to pay the
-service of interest and sinking fund on the 180,000. Taking the
-interest at 6, with a sinking fund of 1 per cent., 12,600 yearly would
-be required--that is to say, 6,300 for each Government. I know that at
-the present moment such a task would be well-nigh impossible, but I also
-know that if a sincere effort were made, notwithstanding the universal
-feeling of distrust, it would be possible to create securities specially
-applicable to this purpose, which would satisfy the most exacting
-capitalist.
-
-In the midst of the daily turmoil and agitation and sanguinary struggle
-which constitutes the life of those democracies, these problems, urgent
-and vital as they are, pass unheeded; and the more the pity, for in
-their solution lies the basis of a permanent peace. Prosperity begets
-abhorrence of internal revolutions. The development of Mexico is a case
-in point, from which Colombia and Venezuela might take heed. Woe to them
-if they do not! The world begins to sicken at the very mention of the
-constant strife which converts into a positive hell those regions where
-Nature has shown herself prodigal beyond measure in all her gifts. Not
-only the valley of the Orinoco, with its boundless prairies, its dense
-forests, and its innumerable affluents, but the uplands of the Andine
-regions and the plains extending in Venezuela towards the North Atlantic
-or Caribbean Sea, and in Colombia to the Pacific Ocean, are coveted by
-nations where humanity is overcrowded by races which would fain
-establish colonies in those regions. The development of humanity cannot
-be stayed; the human wave, even as the stream of water contained by a
-dyke, will sooner or later break through the walls that imprison it and
-flood the surrounding country. It were well for men animated by real
-patriotism in Colombia and in Venezuela to ponder over these
-possibilities, so that the two nations might themselves open the
-flood-gates for immigration without delay, so that the new-comers would
-prove a fresh source of strength and power, helping to build up on the
-basis of the now existing nations free and mighty commonwealths, rather
-than as conquerors, who (whether they come from the North as wolves in
-sheep's clothing under cover of the Monroe doctrine, or from across the
-ocean, driven by necessity stronger than all political conventionality)
-would come as masters.
-
-Now is our accepted time. The moments are counted during which the
-danger may be averted and the inevitable turned to account; but, alas!
-feuds and errors deep-rooted in medieval soil, luxuriant in this our
-twentieth century, darken the minds of men, influence their judgment,
-turn away their activity from the real aims that would lead their
-nations to greatness, and force them into barbarous struggles which the
-world regards with amazement and brands as crimes against mankind.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
-After a week in Ciudad Bolivar, we bethought ourselves of continuing the
-journey to the sea. Civilization had reclaimed us for her own, and
-rigged in European attire, such as befits the tropics, with all the
-social conventionalities once again paramount in our mind, we set forth
-on that, the last stage of the journey. We had been, not a nine days'
-but a nine hours' wonder in the historical town which rears its houses
-and churches alongside the narrows of the majestic stream. Early in the
-afternoon of a dazzling tropical day, cloudless, blue and hazy from the
-very brilliancy of the air, we stepped into the large steamboat that was
-to carry us to the neighbouring British island of Trinidad, once also a
-Spanish possession. The usual events accompanying the departure of all
-steamers from the shore repeated themselves: clanging of chains,
-shouting of orders, groans of the huge structure, shrill whistles, and
-that trepidation, the dawn as it were of motion, something like a
-hesitation of things inert apparently unwilling to be set in motion,
-which is the life of matter inanimate; then the steady throbbing of the
-machinery, the stroke of the paddles, splash, splash, until regularity
-and monotony are attained, and the ship, wheeled into midstream after
-describing a broad arc, set the prow eastward with the current to the
-ocean.
-
-We looked at the town as it dwindled indistinct, seeming to sink into
-the vast azure of the horizon, swallowed in the scintillating folds of
-the blue distance. We sat on the deck as if in a trance. Shortly after
-starting, wild Nature reasserted her sway, and the small oasis built by
-the hand of man in the heart of the untamed region, seemed to us who
-knew how unmeasurable were those forests and those plains, like a tiny
-nest perched on the branches of a lofty and over-spreading _ceiba_. A
-feeling of superiority over our fellow-passengers unconsciously filled
-our breasts. For were we not boon companions, fellow-travellers, tried
-and trusted comrades of those rushing waters? Had we not shared their
-pilgrimage for days and days, in calm and in storm, in sunshine and in
-darkness? Had we not slept on their bosom or travelled upon it for
-countless hours, till the secret of their mystery and the joy of their
-wandering had penetrated into our very soul? What knew they, the other
-travellers of a few hours, of the intimate life of those waters which we
-had watched, gathering their strength from all the points of the
-compass, swelling the current of the central stream, mingling their life
-with it, now as rivulets, now as rivers, now placid in the embrace, now
-plunging, foaming, as if loath to loose their identity? Yea, verily, we
-were comrades, fellow-pilgrims, with the splendid travelling sea, there
-on its final march to the boundless deep.
-
-Forest and plain, marsh, morass, jungle, succeeded one another in
-interminable procession, and the setting sun now broke its ray on the
-low-lying hills, now reverberated on the far-off marshes on either side
-of the current, tinging them with a crimson glow. Towards sunset the
-whistle of the steamer frightened a flock of flamingoes gathered to
-roost, as is their wont when the shadows of evening approach. The whole
-flock sought refuge in flight, and their widespread wings, as they rose
-before us, seemed like a huge transparent pink curtain lifted before our
-very eyes, rising higher and higher until it vanished in space.
-
-Night fell upon the scene. First the stars and then the moon kindled
-their beacon fires, dispelling darkness into a semi-obscurity fraught
-with mystery, embalmed with the effluvia from the forest and the river.
-We felt like a shadow crossing the wilderness. The littleness of self,
-the insignificance of the human being, became overwhelming.
-
-What could it matter if that daring shell with its human freight were
-dashed to pieces against a submerged tree and swallowed in the waves?
-Nature, impassible, would take no notice of the event; in far-off homes
-sorrow would fill the loving hearts. The river would be looked upon as a
-grave, wondrous vast, where a dear one had found his rest, but the river
-itself would suffer no change, and our world of hopes, ambitions,
-infinite longings, would leave no more trace than the smallest bubble of
-the floating foam.
-
-And thus the morrow came. With the light of day the circle of the
-horizon broadened; we were out at sea, no trace of land was visible. The
-waves tossed the struggling craft tenderly, gliding under its keel, the
-wind caressed the flying pennants on the mastheads and seemed to whisper
-promises of freedom as it rustled through the rigging. The mighty river
-had disappeared, paying its tribute, like a human being to the grave, to
-Father Ocean. And the long journey which lay behind us was nothing more
-than a dream in our memory, for things dreamt and things lived do so
-intermingle their identity in our minds that the attempt to disentangle
-their threads were useless. And so we drifted into the broad,
-unmeasurable expanse of waters which seemed to palpitate and tremble as
-with the touch of life under the glorious rays of the morning sun.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
- BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---In the text versions only, italicized text is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
---Corrected a few palpable typographical errors.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Down the Orinoco in a Canoe, by S. Prez Triana
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-
-Project Gutenberg's Down the Orinoco in a Canoe, by S. Pérez Triana
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Down the Orinoco in a Canoe
-
-Author: S. Pérez Triana
-
-Release Date: November 20, 2015 [EBook #50506]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DOWN THE ORINOCO IN A CANOE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img class="nc" id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Down the Orinoco in a Canoe" width="500" height="755" />
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="map1">
-<img src="images/map_lr.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="542" />
-<p class="center">MAP SHOWING THE ORINOCO AND ITS TRIBUTARIES<br /><a class="ab" href="images/map_hr.jpg">High-resolution Map</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>Down the Orinoco
-<br />in a Canoe</h1>
-<p class="center">By
-<br /><span class="larger">S. P&eacute;rez Triana</span></p>
-<p class="center">With an Introduction by
-<br /><span class="large">R. B. Cunninghame Graham</span></p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&lsquo;Que ejcura que ejt&aacute; la Noche!</p>
-<p class="t0">La Noche! que ejcura ejt&aacute;!</p>
-<p class="t0">Asi de ejcura ej la ausencia ...</p>
-<p class="t0">Bog&aacute;, Negrito, bog&aacute;,</p>
-<p class="t2">Bog&aacute;!&rsquo;</p>
-<p class="lr"><span class="sc">Candelario Obeso</span></p>
-</div>
-<p class="tbcenter">New York
-<br />Thomas Y. Crowell &amp; Co.
-<br />Publishers
-<br />1902</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_v">v</div>
-<h2 id="c1">PREFACE</h2>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="book">&lsquo;Climas pas&eacute;, mud&eacute; constelaciones, golfos inavegables, navegando.&rsquo;&mdash;<span class="sc">Ercilla</span>:
-<i>La Araucana</i>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>To read a book to which a friend has asked you
-to write a preface is an unusual&mdash;nay, even a
-pedantic&mdash;thing to do. It is customary for a
-preface-monger to look contemptuously at the
-unopened bundle of his friend&rsquo;s proofs, and then
-to sit down and overflow you his opinions upon
-things created, and those which the creator has
-left in chaos. I plead guilty at once to eccentricity,
-which is worse than the sin of witchcraft,
-for witchcraft at one time may have exposed
-one to the chance of the stake; but eccentricity
-at all times has placed one outside the pale of
-all right-thinking men. To wear a different hat,
-waistcoat, or collar, from those affected by the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_vi">vi</span>
-Apollos who perambulate our streets, to cut your
-hair too short, to wear it by the twentieth fraction
-of an inch too long, is <i>scandalum magnatum</i>, and
-not to be endured. So in confessing that I have
-read &lsquo;Down the Orinoco in a Canoe,&rsquo; not only in
-the original Spanish in which it first appeared,
-but in its English dress, is to condemn myself
-out of my own mouth, to be set down a pedant,
-perhaps a palterer with the truth, and at the best
-a man so wedded to old customs that I might
-almost be a Socialist.</p>
-<p>It is undoubtedly a far cry to Bogot&aacute;. Personally,
-more by good fortune than by any
-effort of my own, I know with some degree of
-certainty where the place is, and that it is not
-built upon the sea. My grandfather was called
-upon to mediate between Bolivar and General
-Paez, and I believe acquitted himself to the
-complete dissatisfaction of them both. Such is
-the mediator&rsquo;s meed.</p>
-<p>The general public, of whom (or which) I
-wish to speak with all respect, is generally,
-I take it, in the position of the American
-<span class="pb" id="Page_vii">vii</span>
-Secretary of State to whom an office-seeker
-came with a request to be appointed the United
-States Vice-Consul for the town of Bogot&aacute;.
-The request was duly granted, and as the
-future Consul left the room the Secretary
-turned to the author of this book, and said:
-&lsquo;Triany, where in thunder is Bogoter, any
-way?&rsquo; Still, Bogot&aacute; to-day is, without doubt,
-the greatest literary centre south of Panama.
-Putting aside the floods of titubating verse
-which, like a mental dysentery, afflict all members
-of the Spanish-speaking race, in Bogot&aacute;
-more serious literary work is done during a
-month than in the rest of the republics in a
-year. The President himself, Don Jos&eacute; Manuel
-Marroquin, during the intervals of peace&mdash;which
-in the past have now and then prevailed
-in the republic over which he rules&mdash;has found
-the time to write a book, &lsquo;El Moro,&rsquo; in which
-he draws the adventures of a horse. The book
-is written not without literary skill, contains
-much lore of horsemanship, and is a veritable
-mine of local customs; and for the moral of it&mdash;and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_viii">viii</span>
-surely Presidents, though not anointed,
-as are Kings, must have a moral in all they
-write, they do and say&mdash;it is enough to make a
-man incontinently go out and pawn his spurs.</p>
-<p>Thus, Bogot&aacute;, set in its plateau in Columbian
-wilds, is in a way a kind of Chibcha Athens.
-There all men write, and poets rave and
-madden through the land, and only wholesome
-necessary revolutions keep their number down.
-Still, in the crowd of versifiers one or two, such
-as Obeso, the negro poet, who, being denied all
-access to the lady of his love&mdash;the colour line
-being strictly drawn in Bogot&aacute;, as well befits a
-democratic government&mdash;brought out a paper
-once a week, entitled <i>Lectura para ti</i>, have
-written verse above the average of Spanish
-rhyme. Others, again, as Gregorio Gutierrez
-Gonzalez and Samuel Uribe Velazquez have
-written well on local matters, and Juan de Dios
-Carasquilla has produced a novel called &lsquo;Frutos
-de mi Tierra,&rsquo; far better than the average
-&lsquo;epoch-making&rsquo; work of circulating library and
-press.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_ix">ix</div>
-<p>P&eacute;rez Triana, son of an ex-President, and
-speaking English and Spanish with equal
-fluency, is a true son of Bogot&aacute;, and writes
-as easily as other people talk.</p>
-<p>His book occurred in this wise. The usual
-biennial revolution having placed his enemies
-in power, he found it requisite to leave
-the country with all speed. The seaports
-being watched, he then determined, like Fray
-Gaspar de Carbajal, to launch his boat upon the
-Orinoco, and, that the parallel should be exact,
-write an account of all he saw upon the way.
-Few books of travel which I have come across
-contain less details of the traveller himself.
-Strangely enough, he rescued no one single-handed
-from great odds. His strength and
-valour, and his fertility of brain in times of
-peril, together with his patience, far exceeding
-that of Indian fakirs, are not obtruded on
-the bewildered reader, as is usual in like
-cases.</p>
-<p>Though armed, and carrying on one occasion
-so much lethal stuff as to resemble, as he says
-<span class="pb" id="Page_x">x</span>
-himself, a &lsquo;wandering arsenal,&rsquo; he yet slew no
-one, nor did he have those love adventures
-which happen readily to men in foreign lands
-from whom a kitchen wench would turn in
-scorn in their own native town: nothing of
-empire and little of patriotism is there in his
-book. In fact, he says that those who are his
-countrymen are those who have the same ideals
-as himself&mdash;a cursed theory which, if it once
-obtained, would soon abolish Custom-houses,
-and render armies useless, make navies all to be
-sold for scrap iron, and would leave hundreds
-of patriotic sweaters without a platitude. What
-chiefly seems to have appealed to this unusual
-traveller was the strangeness and beauty of the
-long reaches on the interminable waterways,
-the brightness of the moon, the thousand noises
-of the desert night, the brilliant birds, kaleidoscopic
-fish, and the enchantment of a world
-remote from all that to a really well-constituted
-modern mind makes life endurable. At times,
-although I tremble as I write, it seems to me
-he doubts of things which we all take on trust,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_xi">xi</span>
-such as the Stock Exchange. Even the army
-is not sacred to this democrat, sprung from a
-shameless State in which there is no King, and
-which, consequently, can never hope to contemplate
-a Coronation show, for he retails a
-joke current in Columbia, but which, I think,
-if duly followed up, might be encountered in
-Menander, or, at the least, in Aristophanes.
-A Columbian Mayor of a town sent to the
-President a hundred volunteers, with a request
-that all the ropes should be returned. Jokes
-such as these cannot be helpful to a State; in
-fact, a joke at all is to a serious man a rank
-impertinence, and if an author wishes to obtain
-a place within the ranks of Anglo-Saxon
-literature, he should not joke at all, or, if he
-does, joke about fat or thin men, bald heads or
-sea-sickness, or on some subject which the
-great public mind has set apart for wit. However,
-as a member of the Latin race, it cannot
-reasonably be expected of him that at one
-bound he should attain unto the fulness of our
-Anglo-Saxon grace.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xii">xii</div>
-<p>The careful reader of this book may possibly
-be struck with the different point of view from
-which a Latin looks at many questions which
-to an Englishman are set immovably as the
-foundations of the world, embedded in the
-putty of our prejudice.</p>
-<p>For instance, on arriving at the open plains
-after a tedious journey across mountain ranges
-and through forest paths, the thing that interests
-the author most is that the land in the
-Columbian <i>llanos</i> is not held in many instances
-by individuals, but that so scant is population
-that it is open to all those who choose
-to take it up. This does not strike him as
-a folly or as affording room for speculation,
-but simply as a fact which, on the whole,
-he seems rather to approve of, but without
-enthusiasm, looking upon the matter as a
-curious generality, but not inclining to refine
-or to reduce it to any theory in particular.
-A state of mind almost impossible for Saxons
-(Anglo or Celtic), who, as a general rule, seem
-quite incapable of looking at a proposition as
-<span class="pb" id="Page_xiii">xiii</span>
-a whole, but must reduce it to its component
-parts.</p>
-<p>The voyage in itself was memorable, for no
-one of the party seems to have been the least
-the kind of man who generally ventures upon
-journeys of the sort, and furthermore because,
-since the first conquerors went down the river
-with the faith that in their case, if rightly used,
-might have smoothed out all the mountain
-ranges in the world, no one except a stray
-adventurer, or india-rubber trader, has followed
-in their steps. Leal, the jaguar-hunter, who
-slew his tigers as I have seen them slain in
-Paraguay, on foot, with a forked stick in one
-hand and in the other a bamboo lance; the
-Indian guide Gati&ntilde;o; and the young Venezuelan
-Governor of a State, who, shut up in his house,
-fought to the death, his mistress, an ex-ballet
-dancer, handing him up loaded guns, are to the
-full as striking characters as I have met in any
-book of travels outside the types that crowd
-the pages of the &lsquo;Conquistadores&rsquo; of America.
-The naked Indian in his canoe, before whose
-<span class="pb" id="Page_xiv">xiv</span>
-eyes the immeasurable wealth of powder,
-looking-glasses, a red flannel shirt, and other
-treasures, rich and rare to him, were spread,
-who yet had strength of mind to scorn them
-all rather than pledge his liberty for two days&rsquo;
-paddling, is the kind of Indian that merits such
-a chronicler as he has found. Long may he
-paddle on the <i>ca&ntilde;os</i> and the <i>aguapeys</i>, and die,
-still crowned with feathers and with liberty,
-as did his fathers, by some forgotten beach or
-by some <i>morichal</i>, where parrots chatter and
-toucans flit through the leaves, and hummingbirds
-hover like bees above the tropic flowers.</p>
-<p>What most delights me in the book is that
-the author had no settled plan by means of
-which he strove to square the circle of the globe.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;We wandered,&rsquo; as he says, &lsquo;with the definite
-aim of reaching the Atlantic Ocean. Beyond
-that we did not venture to probe too deeply
-the mysterious and wonderful manifestations of
-Nature, but took them as they appeared to our
-limited means of vision and understanding, and
-sought nothing beyond.&rsquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_xv">xv</div>
-<p>A charming way to travel, and a wise, and if
-not profitable to commerce, yet to literature,
-for books writ in the fashion of this brief
-record of a trip through the great waterways
-of Venezuelan and Columbian wilds, although
-perhaps not &lsquo;epoch-making,&rsquo; yet live and
-flourish when the smart travellers&rsquo; tales, bristling
-with paltry facts and futile figures, which for
-a season were sea-serpents in the press, have
-long been pulped to make the soles of ammunition
-boots.</p>
-<p><span class="lr">R. B. CUNNINGHAME GRAHAM.</span></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<h1 title="">DOWN THE ORINOCO
-<br />IN A CANOE</h1>
-<h2 id="c2">CHAPTER I</h2>
-<p>The hour was about ten one evening in
-December, which in equatorial Andine latitudes
-is a month of clear skies, cold winds,
-and starry nights. The moon shone brilliantly,
-casting upon the ground shadows as clear as
-those caused by a strong electric light. Truly,
-the local poet who said that such nights as
-these might serve as days in other lands was
-right.</p>
-<p>We came out&mdash;three of us, Alex, Fermin
-and I&mdash;through an old Spanish gateway, a
-rectangular structure of <i>adobes</i>, or sun-burnt
-bricks, capped with a slanting roof of tiles,
-dark-reddish and moss-covered, with a swinging
-gate of cross wooden beams, held together by
-iron bolts. This was the gateway of the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_2">2</span>
-<i>hacienda</i> of Boita, about thirty miles north of
-the city of Bogot&aacute;, in the South American
-Republic of Colombia. We passed into the
-open road, and turned our horses and our
-minds northwards.</p>
-<p>From south to north, as far as eyes could
-see, stretched the road, an old Spanish causeway,
-bordered on either side by low-lying stone
-fences, in front of which were ditches filled
-with water and covered with vegetation.</p>
-<p>The ground was hard with the consistency of
-baked clay. As no rain had fallen for weeks,
-the dust was thick, and the horses&rsquo; hoofs rang
-like hammer-strokes upon muffled or broken
-brass. We let the reins hang loose, and the
-horses, knowing their way, started at a brisk
-canter. Wrapped in thought and in our
-<i>ponchos</i>, we journeyed on.</p>
-<p>No sound was audible; we seemed to be
-travelling through a deserted or dead world;
-the neighbouring meadows, black beneath the
-moon, contrasted with the grayish white line of
-the broad causeway. Now and then the solitary
-houses, some close to the road, some far back,
-loomed up with the magic-lantern effects of
-moonlight, and their white walls seemed like
-<span class="pb" id="Page_3">3</span>
-huge tombstones in that lonely cemetery.
-Sometimes we crossed bridges, under which
-the water lay motionless, as though enchanted
-by the universal stillness; only a gentle breeze,
-causing ripples on the neighbouring pools, made
-them glitter and revealed their presence. A
-cow or a stray heifer would poise its head
-across the stone fence and watch us with
-wondering moist eyes, whilst two tiny columns
-of condensed breath rose from its nostrils.</p>
-<p>Beyond, black and frowning, misshapen and
-mysterious, the huge boulders of the Andes
-raised their vague outlines, forming a sort of
-irregular circle, in some directions quite close
-to us, in others lost in the darkness which the
-moon and the stars were too remote to overcome.
-Indeed, that other local poet was also
-right in thinking that under the brilliant moon
-those mountains looked like huge sepulchres,
-wherein are stored the ashes of dead worlds
-upon which judgment had been passed.</p>
-<p>And so we journeyed on.</p>
-<p>Many travellers have observed that whenever
-a voyage of a certain nature is undertaken&mdash;one
-that for some reason or other differs
-from the ordinary transference of one&rsquo;s self elsewhere,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_4">4</span>
-when through circumstances beyond our
-control we know that the moment of starting
-necessarily marks an epoch in our lives, even
-as the beginning of a descent or an ascent from
-the summit or the foot of a mountain necessarily
-marks a change in our motions&mdash;our
-thoughts fly backwards, and not only cover
-the immediate time and space behind us, but,
-once started, plunge, so to speak, with the
-rapidity inherent to them, into the deepest
-recesses of our memory, so that, as our bodies
-are carried forward, our minds revisit old
-scenes, we hold converse with old friends,
-and the old-time world seems to live and throb
-again within our hearts.</p>
-<p>Unheeding the clatter of the horses&rsquo; hoofs,
-which was the only perceptible noise, my mind
-flew across the few leagues that separated me
-from my dear quaint old native town, cradled
-there to the south at the foot of two hills, each
-crowned by a tiny church. I saw its streets
-meeting at right angles, its two streams,
-dubbed rivers, parched with thirst, crawling
-under the ancient arched Spanish bridges, its
-low houses, with their enclosing <i>patios</i> planted
-with roses and flowers that bloom all the year
-<span class="pb" id="Page_5">5</span>
-round, with fountains murmuring in the midst,
-and creepers covering the columns and the
-ceilings of the open corridors, and then climbing
-out of sight; the numerous churches, each
-one with its familiar legend; the convents&mdash;solid,
-spacious&mdash;turned into barracks or public
-offices or colleges; the still old cells desecrated,
-their dividing walls torn down so as to convert
-the space into large halls, and, ruthless iconoclasm
-having carried away the statues of the
-saints, no other trace of religion left but a stone
-cross, or a carved saint&rsquo;s face set too high above
-ground to be reached by irreverent hands.</p>
-<p>Yes, there was the little Church of Holy
-Humility&mdash;El Humilladero&mdash;an <i>adobe</i> structure,
-a mere hut, yet reverenced beyond words
-as being, so tradition said, the first church built
-in the land. And not far from it the Church of
-la Tercera and its convent, about which gruesome
-tales were told. Its monks never slept
-on mattresses, and, as they felt death approaching,
-would have themselves placed upon the
-ground to die close to their Mother Earth; and
-one of them, it was said, for some misdeameanour
-or possibly greater fault, had committed suicide,
-and wandered headless&mdash;people had seen him&mdash;on
-<span class="pb" id="Page_6">6</span>
-dark and stormy nights through the
-neighbouring street of the Arch, as it was
-called, though of the arch nothing but the
-memory remained. And close to that convent
-of la Tercera was the other one of the jolly
-Franciscan Fathers, four beautiful <i>patios</i> surrounded
-with broad cloisters, into which opened
-over 600 cells, each provided, besides the
-sitting and sleeping room, with a snug kitchen,
-old Moorish style, an open hearth for charcoal
-fire, on which meats were roasted and earthenware
-saucepans simmered and purred all day
-long, extracting the juice from beef, mutton,
-plantains, ma&ntilde;oc, green corn, potatoes, and the
-other numerous vegetables of that region,
-forming a most substantial broth, a peculiarly
-rich <i>pot-au-feu</i> which enabled the reverend
-monks to recruit their strength and spirits after
-the pious labours of the day; and with this
-came, it is said, a copious supply of that beer,
-<i>chicha</i>, brewed from molasses and Indian corn,
-strong and delicious&mdash;to those who like it.
-These reverend monks, it is said, owned broad
-lands and numerous herds, and each had a
-lay brother who looked after the material wants
-of his superior, and received daily rations
-<span class="pb" id="Page_7">7</span>
-sufficient for ten or twenty men, so that a
-great part of them was sold by the monks
-to the profane outside the cloister walls. As
-the lay brother looked after all these worldly
-interests, he enabled the monk to devote his
-whole time and attention to finding a smooth
-path to heaven, not only for himself, but for as
-many others of his fellow-creatures as he met.</p>
-<p>But though of good cheer, they were not
-lacking in piety, nor were they unable to withstand
-temptation. Their church was beautiful,
-all full of gilt columns, carved woodwork,
-niches with statues of saints displaying rich
-silks and gems and gold embroidery.</p>
-<p>And though many of these things had
-disappeared in my day, and of the monks only
-a few more vital spirits survived, downcast and
-forlorn, lamenting the good old times, yet
-enough remained to give an idea of the happier
-age.</p>
-<p>A proof of the virtue of the monks was
-visible at the entrance of the church looking on
-the main street, where the Evil One himself
-had branded it, so to say, for the greater glory
-of God and the renown of the convent.</p>
-<p>It was whispered that Father Antonio,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_8">8</span>
-who combined profane accomplishments with
-spiritual insight, skilled in playing the guitar,
-not averse to a song or two, fond of cards for a
-friendly quiet game with the Father Superior
-and two or three other plump, kind-hearted
-brethren, where small sums were staked merely
-to give zest to the game, discovered to his
-horror one night that the Evil One, possibly in
-memory of his namesake (the monk&rsquo;s, not the
-Evil One&rsquo;s), had decided to tempt his virtue,
-and appeared in his cell in the guise of a
-beautiful damsel.</p>
-<p>Alas! the Evil One had reckoned without
-his host. Holy water was poured upon him,
-the cross with the Redeemer nailed on it
-which lay handy was taken up by Antonio, so
-that Beelzebub in his fright jumped out of the
-window with such force that his cloven foot left
-its imprint upon the granite slab outside the
-church, and this imprint I saw myself in my very
-young years. Although many people continue
-to see it, I have grown so short-sighted that,
-strive as I may, the stone now appears untouched
-and like the others. But then these
-things will happen, and they certainly should
-not lead us to doubt so pious a tradition.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<p>And so all the old memories of the town kept
-passing before me. I saw a living panorama,
-silent, bathed in mysterious light, moving
-slowly in the background of the mind, large,
-infinite in its magnitude, with space in it for
-men and buildings and mountains and rivers
-and broad plains and leafy forests, and, what is
-more, with space in it for Time, the boundless
-Time that contains all and everything.</p>
-<p>Schooldays, holidays spent in the neighbouring
-towns and villages which lie in the warmer
-valleys, my first voyage to a certain distance,
-and then across the ocean&mdash;life, in fact, with its
-ebb and flow under various suns and in
-different continents&mdash;all came back; but it were
-out of place to give my reflections on them here.</p>
-<p>Then, pausing for one moment as a bird alights
-on the mast of a ship before launching forth
-into mid-ocean, my mind rested for an instant
-on the old cemetery where so many loved ones
-slumbered. Alas! when we leave the graves of
-those whom we have loved, not knowing when
-we shall again kneel upon the sod that covers
-them, we feel that death itself has not severed
-the link that bound us to those who were blood
-of our blood and bone of our bone.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<h2 id="c3">CHAPTER II</h2>
-<p>A little geography may not be amiss here.
-A glance at the map will show that the city of
-Bogot&aacute; is situated upon a vast plateau, at an
-altitude of about 8,500 feet above sea-level,
-4 degrees from the equator, and 75 degrees
-to the west of Greenwich. Its position in
-the continent is central. It is perched like a
-nest high up in the mountains. To reach the
-ocean, and thus the outer world, the inhabitants
-of Bogot&aacute; are even now still compelled to have
-recourse to quite primitive methods; true, there
-are some apologies for railways starting northward,
-southward and westward, but in some
-cases their impetus ends as soon as they
-reach the end of the plain, and in others long
-before attaining that distance. Once the
-railway journey finished&mdash;which does not exceed
-two or three hours on any of the lines&mdash;the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span>
-traveller has to content himself with the
-ancient and slow method of riding, mostly mule
-riding. The ground is so broken and the roads
-are so bad that horses could not cross them as
-safely as that thoughtful, meditative, and much-maligned
-animal the mule. After covering a
-distance of some ninety to one hundred miles
-westward, the traveller reaches the town of
-Honda, which lies on the Magdalena River.
-Here steam-boats are to be found, stern-wheeled,
-shallow-bottomed, drawing no more than from
-2&frac12; to 3 feet, in which, within four or five days,
-he makes the journey down to the sea-coast.</p>
-<p>The map of the country would seem to show
-that the easiest way from the capital to the
-ocean would be towards the Pacific, and as the
-crow flies such is the case; but between Bogot&aacute;
-and the Pacific Ocean the Andes, at some
-period of their youth, must have frolicked and
-gambolled amongst themselves and lost their
-way home, so that they now form the most
-rugged country imaginable. Geographers,
-with that thirst for classification that afflicts&mdash;or
-should I rather say animates?&mdash;men of science,
-speak of two or three chains of mountains.
-The average man, however, who has to travel
-<span class="pb" id="Page_12">12</span>
-over that country, conceives his task as corresponding
-to a start made from one end of a huge
-comb, following the developments of it from the
-root to the point of each tooth until Providence
-and Nature take pity on him, and land him, so
-to speak, on the sea-shore.</p>
-<p>Bogot&aacute; is no thoroughfare. When you get
-there, there you are, and if you go there, it is
-because you were bent on it; it is not like
-other towns that may be on the road to somewhere
-else, so that travellers may chance to
-find themselves there.</p>
-<p>The plateau of Bogot&aacute; proper was formerly&mdash;no
-one knows how many centuries or thousands
-of years ago&mdash;a lake of about eighty square
-miles encased between the surrounding mountains.
-The waters of the lake broke through
-the barrier of mountains towards the south,
-draining it, and leaving the plateau dry, save
-for some small lakes that dot it here and there,
-and a few rivers of no great importance. I
-could not help thinking that this immense
-lake thus held aloft upon that mighty pedestal
-at such an altitude formed a sort of gigantic
-goblet such as is rarely seen under the sun.
-The river that marks the course through which
-<span class="pb" id="Page_13">13</span>
-the waters are supposed to have been drained
-drags its sluggish waves meandering in many
-turns and twists from north to south along the
-plain, and gives a sudden leap of 750 feet
-through the open gap on the mountain-side,
-forming those magnificent waterfalls called the
-Tequendama. The river plunges headlong, as
-if to make up for its previous semi-stagnant
-condition; it disappears between two mighty
-walls of stone, polished as if chiselled by the
-hand of man; it roars with a deafening sound;
-its waters appear, as they curl over the abyss,
-white as the wool of a lamb, and their consistency
-conveys the impression of wool rather
-than that of snow. The morning sun plays
-upon the mass of waters, and crowns it with a
-halo of rainbows varying in size. On the
-borders of the river, at the place where the
-cataract springs, are to be seen evergreens and
-pine-trees, and other such plants belonging to
-the temperate or cold zones; down below,
-where the water falls, and the river reappears
-like a dying stream following its course in the
-lower valley, palm-trees and tropical vegetation
-are to be seen, and birds of variegated plumage,
-parrots, cockatoos, parroquets and others, fly
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-like living arrows from the sunlight, and plunge
-into the mist with piercing shrieks amidst the
-deafening roar of the cataract.</p>
-<p>As we journeyed on in the cool night air, it
-seemed to me that the whole country&mdash;north,
-south, east and west&mdash;lay at my feet, and to the
-mind&rsquo;s eye it appeared with its vast interminable
-plains to the east crossed by numberless rivers,
-the mountain region to the north on the western
-side of the Magdalena Valley, the broad plains
-in the Lower Magdalena, and the rugged
-mountainous district of Antioquia on the
-western side of the river, and then mountains
-and more mountains towards the Pacific Ocean.</p>
-<p>Surely, if a journey in these days presents
-such difficulties, the first journey undertaken by
-the conquerors who discovered the plateau
-of Bogot&aacute;, may be held for a feat worthy of
-those men who, whatever their faults, were
-brave among the bravest.</p>
-<p>Towards the east of the Magdalena River, on
-the coast of the Atlantic, the city of Santa
-Marta had been founded somewhere in 1530.
-News of the vast empire alleged to exist in the
-interior of the country had reached the founders
-of the town, and they soon decided to conquer
-<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
-that region about which such marvels were told.
-In the month of August, 1536, an expedition
-of 700 soldiers, infantry, and 80 horse left
-Santa Marta to penetrate into the heart of the
-continent, confident in their courage, and
-lusting for gold and adventure. This part of
-the expedition marched by land, and 200 more
-men journeyed in boats along the river
-Magdalena.</p>
-<p>A full narrative of their adventures would be
-long. They met foes large and small, from
-poisonous reptiles and the numerous insects
-which made life a burden, to tigers and
-alligators: add to these fevers and illnesses
-absolutely unknown to them. It is said that
-one man, whilst sleeping in camp with all his
-companions, was snatched from his hammock
-by a famished tiger. At times the rank and
-file seemed ripe for mutiny, but the captain was
-a man of iron. His name was Gonzalo Jim&eacute;nez
-de Quesada. Though himself sore smitten by
-some disease peculiar to the locality, he kept the
-lead, and dragged the rest in his train. Praise
-is likewise due to the chaplain of the expedition,
-Domingo de las Casas, who stoutly supported
-the commander. This friar was a kinsman of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_16">16</span>
-that other friar Bartolom&eacute; de las Casas, whose
-unwearying efforts in behalf of the native races
-won for him the well-deserved name of &lsquo;Protector
-of the Indians.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>After a while the boats and the shores of the
-great river were abandoned, and the men found
-themselves in a mountainous country where the
-temperature became more tolerable and pleasant
-as they climbed higher. Finally, their eyes
-beheld the Empire of the Chibchas. What a
-joy&mdash;after toil and suffering which had lasted
-over seventeen months, when only 160 of the
-original expedition were left&mdash;to gaze upon a
-land where cultivated fields were seen in all
-directions, and the hearth-smoke rising from
-the houses to heaven! This was the land of
-the Chibchas, who formed an empire second
-only to that of the Incas of Peru and the
-Aztecs of Mexico. They had a religion&mdash;by
-no means a bad one as religions went amongst
-the American aborigines&mdash;they had their code
-of laws, their division of time, their rules
-and codes in all matters appertaining to
-family life and administration of government;
-they tilled the soil, they believed in the immortality
-of the soul, they reverenced their
-<span class="pb" id="Page_17">17</span>
-dead, and practised barter according to well-defined
-laws.</p>
-<p>The thousands and thousands of soldiers
-which the Zipa or King of the Chibchas could
-bring against the Spaniards were overawed
-rather than overcome by force. The greater
-sagacity of the Spaniards, coupled with their
-courage, soon made them masters of the land.
-Jim&eacute;nez de Quesada founded the city of Bogot&aacute;
-in 1537. He chose a spot on the plains which
-suited him&mdash;where the city now stands&mdash;and,
-clad in full armour, surrounded by his companions
-and by a large crowd of Indians,
-plucked some grass from the ground, and,
-unsheathing his sword, declared that he took
-possession of the land for the greater glory of
-God as the property of his King and master,
-Charles V. of Spain. Then turning, with a
-fierce glance, to those who surrounded him, he
-challenged one and all to single combat should
-they dare to dispute his action. Naturally, no
-dispute arose, and so the title was acquired.
-They had their own peculiar ways, those old
-Spanish conquerors! A similar method was
-followed by Nu&ntilde;ez de Balboa, when, in the
-name of his King and master, he took possession
-<span class="pb" id="Page_18">18</span>
-of the Pacific Ocean with whatever lands
-and islands might border on it, stepping into
-the waters clad in full armour, holding the flag
-of Spain in his left hand, and his trusty Toledo
-blade&mdash;<i>la de Juanes</i>&mdash;in his right.</p>
-<p>To speak of this conquest of the Chibcha
-Empire recalls the fact that the land of Bogot&aacute;
-was really the land of El Dorado. <i>El Dorado</i>
-in Spanish means the gilt one, the man covered
-with gold, and all chroniclers and historians of
-the early period are agreed as to the origin of
-the tradition.</p>
-<p>The King of the Chibchas, amongst whom
-power and property passed by law of inheritance
-from uncle to nephew, was called the
-Zipa. His power as a monarch was absolute,
-but to attain the dignity of what we should
-nowadays call Crown Prince, and to become
-in due course King, it was not enough to be a
-nephew, or even to be the right nephew. The
-prospective heir to the throne had to qualify
-himself by passing through an ordeal which
-Princes of other nations and other times would
-certainly find most obnoxious. He had to live
-in a cave for six years, fasting the whole time,
-with limited rations, barely enough to sustain
-<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
-life. No meat or salt were to be eaten during
-the whole time. He must see no one, with the
-exception of his male servants, nor was he even
-allowed to gaze upon the sun. Only after sunset
-and before sunrise might he issue from his
-cave. After this ordeal he was qualified, but
-should he have so much as cast his eyes upon
-a woman during that period, his rights to
-the throne were lost. The consecration, so to
-speak, of the Zipa took the form of a most
-elaborate ceremony. The prospective Zipa
-would betake himself&mdash;being carried upon a
-special sort of frame so arranged that twenty
-men standing under it could lift it upon their
-shoulders&mdash;to one of the five sacred lakes that
-still exist in the plateau, generally to the lake
-of Guatavita. There, stripped naked, his body
-was smeared with a resinous substance, upon
-which gold-dust was sprinkled in large quantities.
-Naturally, after this process the man
-appeared like unto a very statue of gold. Two
-other high dignitaries or chiefs, called Caciques,
-as nude as the Zipa, would go with him upon a
-raft of twisted reeds and slowly paddle into the
-centre of the lake. All round the shore was a
-dense crowd, burning a species of aromatic herb
-<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span>
-which produced clouds of smoke. On every
-hand was heard the sound of music, or, rather,
-of noises representing the music customary
-at all ceremonies. On the raft, at the feet of
-the Zipa, lay a huge pile of gold and emeralds.
-Each of his companions, too, had gold and
-emeralds, wherewith to propitiate the god in
-whose honour the ceremony was performed.
-One of the chiefs in the raft would raise a
-white flag and wave it. The noise on the
-shores became deafening, whilst the gilded
-Zipa threw into the lake all the gold and all
-the emeralds; then his companions would
-follow his example. When all the gold and
-emeralds on the raft had been cast into the
-lake, the people ashore also made their offerings
-of gold. Thus, after six years&rsquo; fasting, the
-Zipa was (so to put it) anointed or qualified for
-kingship. On reaching the land the period of
-abstinence came to an end, and now that the
-Zipa was full-fledged Crown Prince, or Zipa
-(if his predecessor should have chanced to die),
-his first act was to get gloriously drunk.</p>
-<p>From the early days of the conquest, efforts
-were made to drain the five lakes, from which
-numerous samples of gold idols and roughly-worked
-<span class="pb" id="Page_21">21</span>
-gold have been recovered. Even recently
-a company was formed in England for
-that purpose. The tradition in this case being
-so universal, it seems rational to assume that
-vast treasures must lie at the bottom of these
-lakes, because the Chibchas were an ancient
-race, and their ceremonies must have been
-repeated during centuries. The country also
-is rich in emeralds and in gold&mdash;hence the
-belief in the large amount of treasure to be
-obtained from those lakes whose waters look so
-placid.</p>
-<p>Some years ago in Bogot&aacute; an enthusiast,
-who sought to form a company for the purpose
-of draining one of the lakes, carried about with
-him a few samples of gold, idols and suchlike,
-which, so he said, had been brought to light
-by a man whom he named, a good diver, who
-plunged five times into the lake, and after
-each plunge brought up one of the specimens
-exhibited. He argued thus: The bottom of
-the lake must be practically studded with gold,
-since Mr. X. succeeded each time. There are
-millions in the lake, and all that is needed is a
-little money to drain it.</p>
-<p>The argument seemed so strong, and the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_22">22</span>
-gold gleamed so bright in his hands, that he
-obtained numerous subscribers, until he had the
-misfortune to come across one of those sceptics
-impervious to reason, who, after listening to
-him, replied: &lsquo;Yes, I have no doubt that there
-must be millions in the lake, since X. at each
-plunge brought out a bit of gold like those you
-show me; but what I cannot for the life of me
-understand is why he is not still plunging&mdash;it
-seems so easy!&rsquo; The tale went round the
-town, and the lake was not drained, nor has
-it been up to the present.</p>
-<p>This gilding of the man is the germ of the
-legend of El Dorado, which has cost so
-much blood, and in search of which so
-many thousands and thousands of men have
-wandered during past centuries in all possible
-directions on their bootless quest.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<h2 id="c4">CHAPTER III</h2>
-<p>Returning to the lake, and now gathering the
-information furnished by geology, whose silent
-annals are so carefully and truthfully recorded
-(being as they are beyond reach of man&rsquo;s
-little contentions and petty adjustments), we
-find that the original lake covered an area of
-about seventy-five square miles, and attained
-great depths. Its placid waters, beating possibly
-for centuries against the environing rocks, have
-left their marks, from which it may be seen
-that in some places the depth was 120 feet, and
-in others 180.</p>
-<p>We cannot fix the date of the break in the
-mountains which allowed the drain to occur.
-So far man has not succeeded in grasping with
-invariable accuracy the chronology of the admirable
-geological archives to which we have
-referred, and in matters of this kind a discrepancy
-of a few hundred years more or less is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_24">24</span>
-accepted as a trifle scarcely worth mentioning.
-And possibly this may be right. For man&rsquo;s
-passage through life is so short that his conception
-of time cannot be applied to Nature,
-whose evolutions, though apparently protracted
-and very slow to see, in truth are sure to
-develop themselves harmoniously in every way,
-as to time inclusive.</p>
-<p>But no matter how far back the draining of
-the great lake may have taken place, it had
-left its memory and impression, not only on
-the mountains and the rocks, but also in the
-minds of men. The legend ran thus: At one
-time there came among the Chibchas a man
-differing in aspect from the inhabitants of the
-plateau, a man from the East, the land where
-the sun rises, and from the low plains where
-the mighty rivers speed to the ocean. He had
-taught them the arts of peace, the cultivation
-of the soil, the division of time; he had established
-their laws, the precepts by which their
-life was to be guided, their form of government;
-in one word, he had been their apostle
-and legislator. His name was Bochica or
-Zuhe. He resembled in aspect the Europeans
-who invaded the country under Quesada.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
-<p>It is asserted by a pious Spanish Bishop, who
-in the middle of the seventeenth century wrote
-the history of the discovery and conquest of
-the Chibcha kingdom, that the said Bochica was
-none other than the Apostle St. Bartholomew,
-as to whose final work and preachings there is
-(not to overstate the case) some obscurity. The
-good old Bishop states that, as the Christian
-faith, according to the Divine decree, was to
-be preached in every corner of the earth, it
-must have also been preached amongst the
-Chibchas, and that, as nothing was known with
-certainty about the final whereabouts of the
-Apostle Bartholomew, and he was not unlike
-the description made of Bochica by the Chibchas
-(which, by-the-by, was such that it might
-have fitted any white man with a long blonde
-beard), it is evident that the saint must have
-visited those Andine regions. Furthermore,
-he adds, there is a stone on one of the mountains,
-situated between the plateau of Bogot&aacute;
-and the eastern plains, which bears the footprints
-of the saint. This, to many people, is
-decisive, and I, for my part, am not going
-to gainsay it, since it serves two important
-ends. It explains the saint&rsquo;s whereabouts in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_26">26</span>
-a most creditable and appropriate fashion, and
-it puts a definite end to all doubts concerning
-Bochica&rsquo;s identity. We cannot be too grateful
-to those who thus afford pleasant explanations
-of matters which would otherwise be intricate and
-difficult, perhaps even impossible, of solution.</p>
-<p>The legend went on to say that the god of
-the Chibchas (Chibchacum), becoming irate at
-their excesses and vices, flooded the plain where
-they lived, by turning into it several neighbouring
-rivers. The inhabitants, or such of
-them as were not drowned, took refuge on the
-neighbouring mountain-tops, where, animated
-by that fervour and love of the Deity which
-takes possession of every true believer when
-he finds himself thoroughly cornered, they
-prayed abundantly to the Bochica, whose precepts
-they had utterly forgotten. He, of course,
-took pity on them, and, appearing amidst them
-on the mountain-top one afternoon in all the
-glory of the setting sun, which covered him
-as with a sort of royal mantle, he dashed his
-golden sceptre against the mighty granite wall
-of the nearest mountain, which opened at the
-blow into the gap through which the waters
-poured, draining the lake, and leaving as a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-memorial of his power and his love for his chosen
-people those waterfalls whose thunder goes up
-like a perennial hymn to heaven high above
-the trees that crown the mountain-tops, and
-whose sprays are as incense for ever, wreathing
-on high at the foot of a stupendous altar.</p>
-<p>The cataract takes two leaps, first striking
-a protruding ledge at a distance of about
-75 feet from the starting-point, a sort of
-spring-board from which the other mighty
-leap is taken. Close to the shore, at a
-distance of about 6 feet, on the very brim
-of the abyss, there is a rock about 10 feet
-square, which, when the waters are low, breaks
-the river, and appears like a sinking island in
-the mass of foaming waters. The rock is
-slippery, being covered with moss, which the
-waters and the mists keep constantly wet.
-Bolivar, the soldier to whose tenacity and
-genius Colombia and four other South American
-republics owe their political independence, once
-visited the cataracts, and stood on the very
-edge of the abyss; glancing fitfully at the
-small round island of stone that stood in the
-very centre of the waters, fascinated by the
-danger, he jumped, booted and spurred as he
-<span class="pb" id="Page_28">28</span>
-was, upon the stone, thus standing in the
-very vortex of the boiling current. After remaining
-there for a few minutes he jumped
-back. The tale is interesting, for few men
-indeed have the courage and nerve required,
-once upon the rock, not to fall from it and
-disappear in a shroud fit for any man, however
-great.</p>
-<p>After the little scene of the foundation of
-Bogot&aacute;, in what later on became the public
-square of the city, Quesada devoted himself
-to establishing a government. I cannot help
-thinking that challenges like that which he
-flung down for the purpose of establishing
-the right of property are, to say the least,
-peculiar. True it is that no one contradicted,
-and, according to the old proverb, silence gives
-consent. A comfortable little tag this, especially
-when you can gag the other side! And
-a most serviceable maxim to burglars, conquerors,
-and, in fact, all such as practise the
-art of invading somebody else&rsquo;s premises, and
-taking violent possession of the premises and
-all that may be found on them. What I cannot
-for the life of me understand is, how it is that,
-the process being identical in essence, so many
-<span class="pb" id="Page_29">29</span>
-worthy men and so many worthy nations punish
-the misunderstood burglar, and bestow honours,
-praise, and, so far as it lies in their power,
-glory, upon the conqueror. It seems a pity that
-the gentle moralists who act in this puzzling
-fashion have not found time to indicate the
-point, in the process of acquiring somebody
-else&rsquo;s property by violence and bloodshed, when
-the vastness of the undertaking transfigures
-crime into virtue. The average man would
-hold it for a boon if those competent to do
-it were to fix the limit, just as in chemistry
-a freezing or a boiling point is marked by a
-certain number of degrees of heat. What a
-blessing it would be for the rest of us poor
-mortals, who find ourselves beset by many
-doubts, and who through ignorance are prone
-to fall into grave errors! but as these hopes
-are certainly beyond fulfilment, and are possibly
-out of place, it is better to drop them.</p>
-<p>Quesada, after vanquishing the Chibchas and
-becoming lord of the land, did not have it all
-his own way. The fame of El Dorado existed
-all over the continent. Though peopled by
-numerous tribes, mostly hostile to each other,
-some knowledge of the power of the Chibcha
-<span class="pb" id="Page_30">30</span>
-Empire, covering over 5,000 square miles and
-including a population estimated at over a
-million and a half of inhabitants, had in the
-course of centuries slowly permeated to very
-remote parts of what is now known as South
-America. In the land of Quito, situated below
-the equator, it is said that the conquerors who
-had invaded it heard from an Indian of the
-wonderful El Dorado. The Indian&rsquo;s tale must
-have been enhanced with all the charms invented
-by a vivid imagination, playing safely
-at a distance. This set many of the conquerors
-on the road to Bogot&aacute;. Don Sebastian de
-Belalc&aacute;zar, who had entered the continent by
-the Pacific, led his troops&mdash;not over 200
-in number at the end of the journey&mdash;to the
-Bogot&aacute; plateau, thus making a march of
-several hundred leagues across forest and
-mountains, attracted by the renown of the land
-of El Dorado. Another expedition which had
-entered the continent by the north-east coast
-of the Atlantic, and had wandered along the
-Orinoco Valley for over two years, eventually
-found itself near the plateau, and entered it,
-so that, shortly after his arrival into the country
-and his conquest of it, Quesada found himself
-<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
-confronted with two powerful rivals. For the
-moment there was great danger that the
-conquerors might come to blows amongst
-themselves, but Quesada&rsquo;s political ability
-matched his military gifts, and arrangements
-were soon made by which the three expeditions
-were merged into one, gold and emeralds
-distributed amongst the soldiers, numerous
-offices created, taxes established, the Indians
-and their belongings distributed amongst the
-Christian conquerors, and the reign of civilization
-established to the greater glory of God,
-and that of his beloved monarch, the King of
-all the Spains.</p>
-<p>One detail deserves mention as an instance
-of tenacious though unpretending heroism.
-The men who had come along the Orinoco
-had wandered for many weary months, and at
-times had been on the point of starvation,
-so that all their leather equipment had been
-devoured. With the expedition marched a
-friar who carried with him a fine Spanish cock
-and four hens. During that long journey,
-which cost the lives of so many men, the
-murderous attempts made against this feathered
-family were past counting; yet the useful birds
-<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
-were saved, and formed the basis of an innumerable
-progeny in the land of Colombia.
-The incident seems trivial, but, if well weighed,
-the friar&rsquo;s sustained effort against others, and
-doubtless against himself, to save the precious
-germ, deserves the highest praise.</p>
-<p>After months of hunger, when the plenty
-found on the plateau had restored equanimity
-to the hearts of the conquerors, they must have
-felt how much they owed to the good friar,
-who, even if his sermons&mdash;about which I know
-nothing&mdash;may not have been of the best, had
-left behind him the hens to lay the egg so dear
-to civilized man, and the chanticleer to sing the
-praises of the Almighty and to remind everyone
-in this instance of the humble beings who serve
-Him and their fellow-creatures in such a practical
-way.</p>
-<p>It is not at all strange that the Spanish
-conquerors swallowed the wonderful tales of
-incalculable treasure to be found in different
-parts of the continent which they had just
-discovered. Columbus himself, in his second
-voyage, landed at Veraguas on the mainland,
-and reaped a most bountiful harvest of gold.
-Never before in the history of Spanish wars
-<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
-had such booty fallen to the lot of the common
-soldier as in that instance. Other expeditions
-in various parts of the continent were equally
-fortunate, so that they supported the belief that
-gold was inexhaustible. The ostensible object
-of the conquest was the conversion of the
-infidels to the true faith; officially the Government
-of the Metropolis proclaimed first and
-foremost its intense desire to save the souls
-of so many million men who groped in the
-darkness of heathenism. Doubtless many of
-the conquerors really thought that they were
-doing the work of God, but the great majority
-of them were certainly moved by more worldly
-ends and attractions.</p>
-<p>The Indians, on their side, not only in
-Colombia but everywhere else, received the
-Spaniards in a friendly and hospitable way.
-Some warlike tribes there were, but it does
-not appear that their hostilities against the
-Spaniards began before these had shown their
-cruel greed and insatiable thirst for gold. The
-precious metals and jewels that had been accumulated
-amongst the tribes in the course of
-many generations were given freely to the
-Spaniards, who, believing that greater treasures
-<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
-were kept back from them, did not hesitate
-to recur to the cruellest methods of extortion,
-burning, pillaging, killing, and destroying everything
-in their way.</p>
-<p>After a struggle which did not last long, the
-Indians&mdash;even those of riper civilization and
-better organized&mdash;were completely subdued,
-and the sway of the Spaniard established all
-over the land, whose former lords became the
-slaves of the conquerors.</p>
-<p>Those who know the Indian of to-day in
-certain parts of the South American continent
-can hardly understand how at one time that
-same race possessed the qualities indispensable
-to the civilization which it had attained at the
-time of the Spanish conquest. Boiling the
-whole thing down to hard facts, we find that
-the Spaniards discovered a land wherein they
-found a people with civilization inferior to that
-of the old world; that this people, divided and
-subdivided in many tribes, received the conquerors
-hospitably, treated them generously,
-and in their ignorance considered them as
-superior beings; that they gave over to the
-Spaniards all the gold and treasures which the
-latter coveted, and that it would have been
-<span class="pb" id="Page_35">35</span>
-feasible for those superior beings to establish
-the civilization and the religion which they
-longed to propagate amongst the infidels, by
-methods worthy of the Christian faith which
-they professed. Instead of this, violence and
-bloodshed were the only methods employed,
-not to civilize, but to despoil the natives; and
-the right of force, brutal and sanguinary, was
-the law of the land. To this and its accompaniments
-the poets lifted up p&aelig;ans of praise,
-the Church gave its blessing, history its acceptance,
-and, barring a handful of the just, no one
-gave a thought to the oppressed and helpless
-Indians whose sole crime was they were weaker
-than their aggressors.</p>
-<p>Let us be thankful for what we have.
-Quintana, the great Spanish lyrical poet, pondering
-on these misdeeds and crimes, exclaims
-that they were crimes of the epoch, not of
-Spain. Fortunately it is, as we like to think,
-our privilege to live in an epoch when such
-things are impossible, when the mere thirst
-for gold, or its equivalent, cannot impel powerful
-nations to forget right and justice and to proclaim
-hypocritically that in so doing they are
-fulfilling the law of Him who said, &lsquo;Love ye
-<span class="pb" id="Page_36">36</span>
-one another,&rsquo; and proclaimed charity amongst
-men as the supreme rule of life. Nowadays
-such wrongs as those perpetrated by the Spanish
-conquerors could not happen. Wars we have,
-and violence and destruction, and malcontents
-complain of them, saying that the same old
-burglarious spirit of brutal greed is the real
-cause of those wars; but those malcontents
-should not be (and, in fact, are not) listened
-to. I myself do not understand or pretend to
-explain where the justice of many wars comes
-in, but certainly they must be waged for good
-and honest ends, because the great and the
-powerful say that the ends are good and
-honest, that civilization and Christianity are
-served thereby; and it must be so since they
-say it, for they, like Brutus, are &lsquo;honourable
-men.&rsquo; Let us be thankful, then, that we live
-in an age of justice and universal fairness
-amongst men!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<h2 id="c5">CHAPTER IV</h2>
-<p>But let us go back to our subject.</p>
-<p>All this time we journeyed on. The stars
-had kept their watch above our heads, and
-the moon, as if passing in review the various
-quarters of heaven, had been moving from west
-to east, and was very high on the horizon.
-We were chilled through after the night&rsquo;s ride,
-longing to arrive at some wayside inn or <i>venta</i>
-where we might get something warm. The
-dawn was heralded in the far east by a broad
-streak of light, which grew rapidly, covering
-that side of the horizon like a fan, and soon
-bursting into glorious daylight. In equatorial
-regions there is hardly any dawn or
-twilight; in those latitudes there is no prelude
-of semi-obscurity that either waxes into day
-or wanes slowly into the dark, like the note
-of the lute, falling into silence so faintly and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_38">38</span>
-softly that none can tell the exact moment
-when it dies. At evening the sun sinks to
-the verge of the horizon, and disappears like
-a luminous orb dropped into empty space, and
-darkness sets in almost immediately. In the
-mountainous lands his last rays crown the
-highest peaks with a halo of glory, when
-darkness has settled over the valleys and
-mountain flanks. The moment the sun sets
-the stars assert their empire, and they are
-more numerous to the eye than anywhere
-else in the world. As for the moon, I have
-already spoken of its brilliancy. Another
-phenomenon connected with it is worthy of
-notice in our special case. During the various
-months of the trip which I am now describing,
-it seems to me that we had a full moon every
-night. I know that this is not quite in accordance
-with the established rules, or what in
-modern parlance is sometimes called the
-schedule of time for lunar service, but I am
-narrating my impressions, and, according to
-them, such is the fact. I should suggest that,
-as everything in Spanish lands is more or less
-topsy-turvy at times, the rules applicable to the
-moon in well-regulated countries do not hold
-<span class="pb" id="Page_39">39</span>
-good there, but I remember just in time that
-these irregularities apply solely to things human
-that happen &lsquo;tiles downwards,&rsquo; as the Spaniards
-say, and cannot, therefore, affect the phenomena
-of Nature. As an explanation must be found
-for my permanent moon, an acceptable compromise
-would be that the ordinary moon did
-duty on its appointed nights, leaving the others&mdash;during
-which we wandered over mountain,
-through valley and forest, and on the waters of
-the silent rivers&mdash;to be illuminated for our own
-special benefit by some deputy moon, for
-whose services we were then, and still are,
-most grateful.</p>
-<p>As to the topsy-turviness of things Spanish
-and Spanish-American, the story is told that
-Santiago, the patron saint of Spain, being
-admitted into the presence of God, asked and
-obtained for the land of Spain and for its people
-all sorts of blessings: marvellous fertility for the
-soil, natural wealth of all kinds in the mountains
-and the forests, abundance of fish in the rivers
-and of birds in the air; courage, sobriety, and
-all the manly virtues for men; beauty, grace,
-loveliness, for the women. All this was granted,
-but, on the point of leaving, the saint, it is said,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
-asked from God that he would also grant Spain
-a good government. The request was denied,
-as then, it is said, the Lord remarked, the
-angels would abandon heaven and flock to
-Spain. The story has lost none of its point
-even at the present day.</p>
-<p>With the morning we reached the longed-for
-<i>venta</i>, a square, thatch-roofed hut, which stood
-by the roadside quite close to the mountain-range
-which we had reached after crossing the
-whole breadth of the plateau. Outside stood
-several pack-horses and mules, tied to the
-columns and waiting for their loads. Under
-the roof the space was divided into three
-rooms, one of them provided with a counter
-and shelves running along the sides of the
-walls, whereon bottles of various sizes and
-contents were exhibited, and where <i>chicha</i>, the
-national drink, was served to thirsty travellers.
-The middle room was what might be called
-the sitting, waiting, sleeping, and dining room
-all in one, and the other was the kitchen. The
-fire was built on the ground, several logs
-burning brightly in the open air, filling the
-room with smoke and heat, On three stones&mdash;the
-traditional stones of the first hearth&mdash;a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_41">41</span>
-saucepan was seen in full boil. In the parlour
-we saw several <i>peones</i>, or labourers, from the
-highlands on their way to the coffee estates to
-help in the harvest. Behind the counter, the
-<i>ventera</i>, barmaid and landlady all in one,
-buxom and wreathed in smiles, was already
-filling either the <i>totuma</i>, a large bowl cut
-from a gourd, containing about a quart of
-<i>chicha</i>, or the small glass of native whisky
-(<i>aguardiente</i>).</p>
-<p>We jumped from our horses and entered the
-so-called sitting-room, envying the men who
-slept deep and strong as virtue on the bare
-ground. In a few minutes Fermin had brought
-from our saddle-bags the copper kettle used
-for making chocolate, and the paste for the
-preparation of that delicious drink. Within
-twenty minutes of our arrival we had before
-us the steaming cups of chocolate which had
-been boiled three times, in accordance with the
-orthodox principle which lays it down that this
-must be done if it is to be rightly done; it
-was well beaten and covered with that foam
-peculiar to chocolate brewed in hot water, which
-looks at you with its thousand eyes or bubbles
-that burst as the liquor is imbibed. Never
-<span class="pb" id="Page_42">42</span>
-was a cup of chocolate more welcome. The
-night seemed to have been interminable now
-that it lay behind. We would fain have
-stretched ourselves on the ground with the
-labourers, but to reach our destination that day
-it was necessary to lose no time; so after an
-hour&rsquo;s rest, during which our horses had had
-their <i>pienso</i> of fodder, we started again, now
-over more broken country, leaving the plain
-behind us, climbing and descending the road
-which was still available for carts and wheeled
-vehicles of all sorts.</p>
-<p>And thus we advanced, seeing the sunrise
-darting its slanting rays, which were quite
-pleasant to feel in the early morning, until they
-became perpendicular, hot, and almost unbearable
-in the dusty road.</p>
-<p>The horses, after the long journey, slackened
-their pace, and we looked upon surrounding
-Nature with weary eyes and that emptiness of
-feeling in the brain, that consciousness of a
-void somewhere, which always follow nights
-passed absolutely without sleep.</p>
-<p>Towards four in the afternoon, after seventeen
-hours&rsquo; steady ride, interrupted only by the
-short stay at the roadside <i>venta</i>, we reached
-<span class="pb" id="Page_43">43</span>
-the <i>hacienda</i> of Gambita, where one of our
-companions, Raoul, who had started ahead to
-prepare everything for the longer journey,
-was waiting for us. He came up quite briskly
-along the road, joyful at our arrival, full of
-spirits, and most anxious that the journey
-should be continued. He might well feel thus,
-as he had not passed a sleepless night on
-horseback like a knight-errant over field and
-moor. The desire for sleep and rest was
-overpowering&mdash;all else lacked interest for us;
-so that, alighting from our horses, we walked
-into the house, and, finding convenient sofas,
-stretched ourselves and slept. Like Dante
-after listening to the sorrowful tale of Francesca,
-we fell as a dead body falls, which goes
-to prove that identical effects may arise from
-totally different causes. Towards ten at night
-Raoul waked us. The supper waiting for us
-was quickly despatched, and our mules were
-saddled and ready.</p>
-<p>As I have said before, mules are far preferable
-to horses when travelling on the mountain-paths,
-which are called roads in the Andes.
-The old Shakespearian query, &lsquo;What&rsquo;s in a
-name?&rsquo; and the answer that a rose would
-<span class="pb" id="Page_44">44</span>
-smell as sweet even if called by another name,
-demonstrates the elasticity of words. To the
-average Englishman a road is a well-defined
-means of communication with or without rails,
-but offering all sorts of advantages for comfortable
-locomotion. Roads in the Andes at
-times are such as to invite the formation of
-legends. It is said that an American diplomatist,
-visiting a South American republic,
-alighted from the river steamer which had
-borne him far inland by the respective river,
-and was shown the mountain-road which he had
-to follow to reach the capital&mdash;a yellowish or
-reddish streak like a gash in the mountain,
-lying on its side like a rope carelessly thrown
-from the summit towards the base, following
-the sinuosities of the ground&mdash;and straightway
-remarked, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m off home; this road is only fit
-for birds.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>On such roads the mule is the best friend of
-man. Had Richard III. found himself in the
-plight we all know of in some such locality,
-the generous offer of bartering his kingdom
-(which, by-the-by, at that moment was a
-minus quantity to him) would have made for
-a mule instead of for a horse, and although the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_45">45</span>
-phrase&mdash;&lsquo;A mule! a mule! my kingdom for
-a mule!&rsquo;&mdash;sounds comical (for these are questions
-of habit), probably the stock phrase would
-bring down the house with laughter. If the
-camel is called the ship of the desert, the
-mule deserves the title of the balloon of the
-mountains.</p>
-<p>A friend of mine, knowing of my intended
-trip, had sent me his favourite mule, and well
-did the animal deserve the praises that its
-owner bestowed upon it; patient, sure-footed,
-collected, it carried me by precipice, ravine,
-ascended paths only fit for ants as lightly and
-carefully as if no weight were on its back. At
-the mud ditches which intersected the roads,
-and at times reached the proportions of miniature
-lakes, often treacherously deep, it would
-halt, looking at the waters with its big, ball-shaped,
-moist eyes, and no hint of mine,
-whether given with spur or whip, could disturb
-its equanimity. At the right moment, heedless
-of my meddling, it would jump or ford or slide
-as circumstances required. At the beginning
-of our companionship, during those long days,
-I began by endeavouring to have a mind of
-my own as to the part of the road to be selected.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_46">46</span>
-I soon saw that my efforts were useless, for
-that wisdom of the mule which men call
-stubbornness was invincible. And, frankly,
-it was lucky that I soon gained this conviction,
-as certainly the mule knew far better than I
-what should be done.</p>
-<p>How strange all this sounds in this land of
-railroads, automobiles, omnibuses, and wheeled
-conveyances of every sort! yet there is more
-genuine travelling, more real travelling, in
-going from one place to another on the back
-of a mule than in being cooped for hours or
-days in a railway compartment whirled along
-at lightning speed. What does one learn about
-the country, what does one see of its beauty
-or of its peculiarities, in this latter case? It
-may be transportation, it may be locomotion,
-but it is not travelling.</p>
-<p>If I were a man of ample means, I would
-certainly endow that splendid beast which
-carried me during so many days, or provide a
-pension for it, so that it might spend the
-remainder of its life in the enjoyment of
-meadows ever green, luscious with rich grass
-and sweet with the waters of rippling streams.</p>
-<p>From Gambita on, our cavalcade had something
-<span class="pb" id="Page_47">47</span>
-of the aspect of a caravan. There were
-Alex, Raoul, and myself, besides our servant
-Fermin, four muleteers, and ten or twelve mules
-laden with our luggage, tents, provisions, arms,
-and so forth. This mob of travellers was so
-unusual that the simple folks in the villages
-through which we passed said that his lordship
-the Archbishop was no doubt on a tour. On
-hearing this, and finding that the people began
-to kneel by the roadside, rather than shatter
-their illusion, I&mdash;knowing that I was the most
-episcopal-looking of our crowd&mdash;decided to
-give my blessing, which I did with due unction
-to the kneeling maidens and matrons along the
-roadside.</p>
-<p>From Gambita we shaped our course eastward.
-It was our intention to reach the
-Atlantic through the Orinoco River. We were
-seeking one of the many affluents of the river
-Meta, which is itself one of the largest tributaries
-of the Orinoco. The affluents of the Meta
-start on the eastern slope of the mountains
-which form the plateau of Bogot&aacute;.</p>
-<p>After three days&rsquo; ride from Gambita, we
-reached the estate of a friend near the town
-of Miraflores, where we had to prepare ourselves
-<span class="pb" id="Page_48">48</span>
-for the last stage of the land journey
-which would carry us through the dense forests
-bordering the lower eastern slope of the
-Cordilleras, and constituting a sort of fringe
-around the endless plains that extend for
-thousands of miles from the foot of the Cordilleras
-to the ocean. Across these plains flow
-the mighty rivers, their numerous affluents, and
-the countless <i>ca&ntilde;os</i>, or natural canals connecting
-the rivers amongst themselves, and thus forming
-a perfect network of natural waterways.</p>
-<p>At Miraflores we stopped for twenty-four
-hours to recruit our forces and prepare everything,
-not only for the last stage of the land
-journey, but for the long canoe voyage that lay
-before us.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<h2 id="c6">CHAPTER V</h2>
-<p>From Miraflores on, the descent was continuous.
-Before penetrating into the forest, we skirted
-the mountain for a good many miles. The
-road, barely 4 or 5 feet in width, had been cut
-out of the rock, like the cornice of a temple.
-On the one side we had the bluff of the
-mountain, and on the other a precipice of
-hundreds, and even thousands, of feet in depth.
-The inclination at times was so steep that at
-a distance the line of the road on the mountain
-seemed almost vertical, and the file of mules
-with riders or with loads on their backs
-appeared like so many flies on a wall.</p>
-<p>Up to the time that we reached Miraflores,
-we had followed what in Colombia are called,
-according to the loyal tradition still living on
-the lips, if not in the hearts, of the people,
-&lsquo;royal roads,&rsquo; or <i>caminos reales</i>. These royal
-<span class="pb" id="Page_50">50</span>
-roads are paths along the mountain slopes, said
-to follow the old Indian trails, and the Indians
-had a peculiar way of selecting their paths or
-trails. They seem to have been impervious to
-fatigue, and Franklin&rsquo;s adage, now accepted
-the world over, that time is money, did not
-obtain with them, for they had no money and
-abundant time. When an Indian wanted to
-cross a range of mountains, instead of selecting
-the lowest summit, he fixed his eye on the
-highest peak, and over it would wend his way.
-The explanation given is that thus he accomplished
-two ends&mdash;crossing the range and
-placing himself in a position to see the widest
-possible horizon. Be that as it may, the
-Spaniards who settled in the colonies accepted
-the precedent, and the result is a most
-wearisome and unpleasant one in the present
-day.</p>
-<p>But if as far as Miraflores we had the so-called
-&lsquo;royal roads,&rsquo; from thence on in an
-easterly direction towards the plain we lacked
-even these apologies for roads. From Miraflores
-towards the <i>llanos</i>, along the slope of the
-Cordilleras, extends an intricate forest in its
-primeval state. We had to fight our way
-<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
-through the under-brush amongst the trunks
-of the huge trees, and at times really battling
-for each foot that we advanced. However, our
-guides, who were expert cattle-drivers&mdash;large
-quantities of cattle being driven through these
-forests from the plains to the uplands&mdash;knew
-the forest so well that the obstacles were
-reduced to their minimum.</p>
-<p>We rode in Indian file, the chief of the
-guides ahead of the line cutting with his cutlass,
-or <i>machete</i>, the branches and overhanging
-boughs, thorns, reeds, creepers, and the like,
-that might strike us in the face as we rode
-under them. Next to him followed two <i>peones</i>,
-who cleared the ground, if necessary, from
-fallen branches or stones against which our
-mules might stumble. At first this slow mode
-of travel was most interesting. The light
-scarcely filtered through the dense mass of
-leaves, so that we felt as if we stood constantly
-behind some cathedral stained-glass window.
-The air was full of the peculiar fragrance of
-tropical flowers and plants; the orchids swung
-high above our heads like lamps from the vaults
-of a temple, and the huge trunks of the trees,
-covered with creepers studded with multi-coloured
-<span class="pb" id="Page_52">52</span>
-flowers, appeared like the festooned
-columns of a temple on a feast-day.</p>
-<p>However, there were certain drawbacks: the
-ground was so wet and spongy that the feet of
-the animals sank into it, and progress was
-accordingly very slow. Now and then we
-would come to a halt, owing to a huge boulder
-of rock or large trunk of a tree barring the
-passage absolutely. It was then necessary for
-the guides to seek the best way of overcoming
-the obstacle. Frequently we had to alight
-from our mules, as it was dangerous to ride
-them in many places. The guides and the
-muleteers walked on the uneven ground&mdash;now
-stony, and now slippery&mdash;with the agility of
-deer, sure-footed and unconscious of the difficulty.
-I had to invent a means of advancing:
-I placed myself between two of the guides,
-hooking one arm to a guide&rsquo;s on each side, and
-thus, though frequently stumbling, I never fell,
-but it may be readily understood that this mode
-of progression was neither comfortable nor
-rapid.</p>
-<p>Another inconvenience was found in the
-thorny bushes, prickly plants, and trees which
-it was dangerous to approach, such as the <i>palo</i>
-<span class="pb" id="Page_53">53</span>
-<i>santo</i>, so called because it is frequented by a
-kind of ant of that name, whose bite is most
-painful and induces a slight fever.</p>
-<p>On the second day the guide who was ahead
-fired his gun, and, on our asking him for the
-cause, said:</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Only a rattle-snake!&rsquo;</p>
-<p>As a matter of fact, he had killed a large
-specimen, said to be seven years old, as shown
-by the seven rattles that were taken from its
-tail. These things did not help to make the
-ride through the intricate forest more pleasant.
-We longed to see the open sky, which we could
-only discern through the veil or network of
-leaves and branches, and, by a phenomenon of
-sympathy between the lungs and the eyes, it
-seemed to us that we lacked air to breathe.
-Now and then we would come to a clearing,
-but we soon plunged again into the thick of it,
-and felt like wanderers gone astray in an interminable
-labyrinth or maze of tall trees, moist
-foliage, and tepid atmosphere.</p>
-<p>The guides told us from the start that it
-would take from four to five days to reach the
-end of the forest. On the fifth day, towards
-noon, almost suddenly we came upon the open
-<span class="pb" id="Page_54">54</span>
-plain. Our hearts leaped for very joy, and we
-hailed the vast green motionless solitude, that
-extended far into the horizon before our eyes
-like a frozen sea, with a shout of joy. The
-trees of the forest stood as in battle-line in front
-of the endless plain; the sun darted its rays,
-which shimmered in the countless ribbons,
-some broader than others, of the silver streams
-sluggishly dragging their waves along the
-bosom of the unending prairie. Copses of
-<i>moriches</i>, an exceptionally graceful species of
-palm, dotted the plains in all directions. They
-seemed as though planted by the hand of man
-to hide behind them a castle, or some old feudal
-structure, which our imagination reared complete,
-full-fledged, with its walls, its roof, its
-turrets, and its legends. The site looked as if
-prepared for a large city about to be built, and
-waiting only for the arrival of its architects and
-inhabitants, even as the white page tarries for
-him that is to inscribe upon it a living and
-immortal thought.</p>
-<p>To continue our journey on the <i>llanos</i>, the
-assistance of the guides was even more necessary
-than in the thick of the forest. To
-attempt travelling on the <i>llanos</i> without expert
-<span class="pb" id="Page_55">55</span>
-guides would be like seeking to cross the sea
-without a compass.</p>
-<p>Once in the <i>llanos</i>, we came within a few
-hours to the hamlet of San Pedro, a cattle-trading
-station consisting of a few thatch-roofed
-houses, almost deserted except during
-the various weeks of the year specially fixed
-for traders and breeders to meet. Here we
-were at last at the end of the first stage of our
-journey. It was New Year&rsquo;s Day. Behind
-us lay the maze of forest, the meandering trails
-and paths, the sheer mountains, the cold fertile
-plateau, the native city, and the dead year.
-Before us we had the unlimited plain, the
-wandering rivers, and there, beyond all, like a
-promise, tossing, heaving, roaring, the sea,
-vast, immeasurable, the open roadway to the
-shores of other lands, some of them free, some
-of them perhaps hospitable, all girdled by the
-ever-beating waves which now die moaning on
-the sands, now dash their fury into foam on the
-rocks of the shore.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<h2 id="c7">CHAPTER VI</h2>
-<p>Before parting from our friends the mules, it
-may not be amiss to speak of the equipment
-for man and beast which obtains in Colombian
-Andine regions. The saddle used&mdash;sometimes
-native, sometimes European&mdash;offers nothing
-striking in its composition, only that it is
-provided with a crupper which must be very
-strong&mdash;strong as a braced strap&mdash;since in the
-steep ascents or descents the girth alone would
-be insufficient. The men wear leggings or
-<i>zamorros</i>, which, in fact, are rather seatless
-trousers than leggings, 2 feet wide, held together
-by a strap across the loins, the outside
-consisting of tanned hide with the hair on it,
-and the inside of soft leather. They have the
-advantage of being very easily put on and
-slipped off when the rider alights. The
-stirrups are a large shoe wherein the whole
-<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
-foot is encased, made of copper or brass. At
-first those unfamiliar with the roads find them
-awkward, bulky, and heavy, but one soon
-learns that they are an indispensable protection,
-a sort of armour or shield against the
-stones, trees, and sundry other obstacles which
-the rider&rsquo;s foot is bound to strike. The <i>poncho</i>,
-which is a rectangular piece of woven cotton
-cloth about 5 to 6 feet long by 3 to 3&frac12; feet
-broad, with a slit in the centre, is worn by
-all riders, and a similar piece of india-rubber
-cloth, only somewhat larger, is carried strapped
-to the back of the saddle to be used when rain
-comes on. The real native accoutrement, in
-which the saddle differs, having a pommel and
-being high-seated in the back, is not complete
-without the lasso, made of twisted raw hide, kept
-soft and pliable by the frequent use of tallow,
-which is rubbed into it. The expert herdsman
-can throw the lasso a long distance, either across
-the neck of the horses or right over the horns
-of the cattle; their aim is unerring. They
-fasten the lasso to the pommel of the saddle,
-and turn their horses backwards so that they
-may better withstand the pull of the lassoed
-animal. Spurs in Colombia are frequently
-<span class="pb" id="Page_58">58</span>
-worn, especially when you ride somebody else&rsquo;s
-hired mule or horse. The spurs are more
-formidable in appearance than harmful in
-reality; the rollocks, instead of being small
-with little pinlike pricks as in Europe, are
-huge in size, about 3 inches in diameter, and
-each prick about 1&frac12; inches; they make a great
-rattle on the slightest provocation, but are less
-painful to the animal than the little European
-spurs. Apropos of this, I remember the case
-of an individual who, finding the Colombian
-spurs too heavy, only wore one, arguing that if
-he managed to make one side of his mule get
-along, the other side would be sure to follow,
-and hence only one spur was needed.</p>
-<p>On arriving at the wayside <i>venta</i>, or inn&mdash;and
-Heaven only knows how elastic a man&rsquo;s
-conscience must be to bestow the name of inn
-upon many of these <i>ventas</i>&mdash;the first care of
-an experienced traveller is to see to the welfare
-of his mules and horses. If available, Indian
-corn, brown sugar of the species called <i>panela</i>,
-which is uncrystallized solidified molasses, and
-the best grass that can be got in the neighbourhood,
-are given to the animals. If there
-happens to be an enclosure, the mules and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
-horses are let loose in it, so that they may rest
-more comfortably; but these enclosures are
-very frequently a delusion and a snare, as inexperienced
-travellers find when, on rising
-early in the morning the next day, they are
-told that the animals have jumped over the
-fence or broken through, or in some other way
-disappeared, whereupon the muleteers, with the
-boys and men available in the locality pressed
-into the service for the occasion, scour the
-mountains and the neighbouring forests in
-search of the missing animals, the search
-lasting at times four and five hours, during
-which the traveller frets, foams, and possibly,
-if he be quite natural and unspoiled by convention,
-swears.</p>
-<p>But notwithstanding these drawbacks, there
-is a special charm about this mode of travelling.
-In the morning about four the traveller arises
-from his not too soft couch. The first breakfast
-is at once prepared, and whilst it is being
-cooked the <i>ma&ntilde;anas</i>, or morning greeting, is
-indulged in, consisting of a little whisky,
-brandy, <i>aguardiente</i>, rum, or whatever spirits
-happen to be available. The hour, even in
-the hot lands, is cool. The stars still shine
-<span class="pb" id="Page_60">60</span>
-brightly in the heavens, and, were it not for the
-testimony of one&rsquo;s watch, one would believe
-one&rsquo;s self still in the middle of the night. The
-mules are brought forward, given their morning
-rations, the luggage is strapped on the &lsquo;cargo&rsquo;
-mules, as they are called, and the others are
-saddled, and if all goes well, towards five or
-half-past, the journey begins.</p>
-<p>There is a characteristic odour in the temperate
-and low lands of the tropics at that
-special hour of morning, and the dawn is
-announced by a hum in the ear, which, whilst
-it is still dark, is not of birds, but of the
-thousand insects that inhabit the forest. Finally,
-when the sun bursts forth in all his glory, a hymn
-seems to start in all directions, and the mountains
-vibrate with echoes of universal animation
-from the grass and the bushes, the running
-streams, and the nests in the branches of the
-trees laden with life. In the cool air of the
-morning the mind is quite alert, and the climbing
-and descending, the fording of rivers, the
-crossing of ravines and precipices, the slow
-ascent of the sun in the horizon, the fresh
-stirring of the breeze in the leaves, the reverberation
-of the light on the drops of fresh dew
-<span class="pb" id="Page_61">61</span>
-still hanging from the boughs and dotting the
-many-coloured flowers&mdash;all these things induce
-such a feeling of communion with Nature that
-one feels one&rsquo;s self an integral part of the large,
-immense, palpitating life that throbs in every
-direction, and the conception of immortality
-seems to crystallize, so to speak, in the mind
-of the traveller; but, of course, familiarity breeds
-contempt, and things beautiful, though they are
-a joy for ever, might tire Keats himself through
-repetition, so that at times travelling in this
-wise often seems slow, and one longs for some
-other means of locomotion. Yet I cannot help
-thinking with regret of the days when one will
-ask for a ticket&mdash;railway, &lsquo;tube,&rsquo; balloon, or
-whatever it may be&mdash;from any place on earth
-to any other place. When that day arrives,
-men will be transported more rapidly from one
-place to another, but the real traveller will have
-disappeared, as the knight-errant disappeared,
-as the gentleman is being driven out from the
-world in these days when all things are bought
-and sold, and kindness and generosity are
-becoming empty words or obsolete relics of
-a past that very few understand, and fewer
-still care to imitate.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<p>On the very outskirts of the forest, within
-half an hour&rsquo;s ride from the long file of trees,
-we came upon a group of thatch-roofed structures
-which form the so-called town or hamlet
-of San Pedro del Tua, a meeting-place, as I
-have said before, for herdsmen and dealers,
-deserted at the present season; the only persons
-who had remained were those whose poverty&mdash;heavier
-than any anchor&mdash;had kept them on
-the spot away from the Christmas and New
-Year&rsquo;s festivities that were being celebrated in
-all the towns and villages of the neighbouring
-region. Our first care was to find a roof under
-which to pass the night. We inquired for the
-man in power, namely, the <i>correjidor</i>, a sort of
-justice of the peace, mayor, sheriff, all in one,
-an official to be found in hamlets or villages
-like that which we had just reached. It was
-not hard to find him, since there were only
-fifteen persons in the place. We had a letter
-of introduction to him, which made things
-easier. He immediately took us to the best
-house in the place, which happened to belong
-to him. He asked us what good winds had
-wafted us thither, and whither we went. As
-we did not care, until having felt our ground
-<span class="pb" id="Page_63">63</span>
-a little more, to state frankly that we wanted
-to cross into the neighbouring republic of Venezuela,
-one of us&mdash;the most audacious if not the
-best liar of the lot&mdash;calmly stated that we had
-come to the <i>llanos</i> for the purpose of selecting
-and purchasing some land, as we intended to
-go into the cattle-breeding business, and possibly
-into some agricultural pursuit or other.
-The <i>correjidor</i> said nothing, but an ironical
-smile seemed to flit across his lips. When we
-had become more familiar with things and
-customs in the plains, we understood why he
-had not replied, and the cause of his almost
-imperceptible smile. To purchase land in the
-<i>llanos</i> would be tantamount to buying salt water
-in the midst of the ocean! People &lsquo;squat&rsquo;
-wherever they like in those endless plains that
-belong to him who exploits them. The cattle,
-horses, sheep, are the elements of value to which
-ownership is attached, but the grazing lands
-belong to one and all, and as matters stand
-now, given the scarcity of population and its
-slow increase, such will be the condition of
-affairs for many a long year to come.</p>
-<p>Once inside the house that the <i>correjidor</i> had
-placed at our disposal, and feeling more at ease
-<span class="pb" id="Page_64">64</span>
-with him, we told him of our intention to go to
-Venezuela, and asked for his assistance. His
-name was Leal, which means loyal; its sound
-had in it the clink of a good omen, and later
-events proved that he deserved it. He told us
-that our undertaking was by no means an easy
-one, nor one that could be accomplished without
-the assistance of expert and intelligent
-guides. He added that he knew the various
-ways to penetrate from Colombia into Venezuela,
-and that if we would accept his services
-he would accompany us. I need not state that
-the offer was accepted with alacrity.</p>
-<p>In the short journey from the skirt of the
-forest to the hamlet of San Pedro del Tua
-across the <i>llano</i> itself, we had time to remark
-that its aspect, once in contact with it, was
-quite different from the beautiful velvety green
-waving in the sunlight, soft and thick, that we
-had seen from a distance. The ground was
-covered with a coarse grass varying in height
-and colour, we were told, according to the
-season of the year. A great many small pathways
-seemed to cross it in all directions, formed
-by the cropping of the grass and the animals
-that moved to and fro on the plains. We
-<span class="pb" id="Page_65">65</span>
-crossed various <i>ca&ntilde;os</i>, which are natural canals,
-uniting the larger rivers. As we were at the
-beginning of the dry season, these canals were
-low, and we forded them without any difficulty,
-but in winter&mdash;that is to say, in the rainy season&mdash;they
-attain the dimension of large rivers, and
-travelling in the <i>llanos</i> on horseback then
-becomes most difficult. We came frequently
-upon copses of the <i>moriche</i> palms already
-described. In the centre of these copses one
-always finds a cool natural basin of water,
-which is preferred by the natives as being the
-healthiest and the sweetest of the locality&mdash;<i>agua
-de morichal</i>. There must be something
-in it, for the cattle also prefer this water to that
-of the rivers and <i>ca&ntilde;os</i>.</p>
-<p>To our inexperienced eye the <i>llanos</i> bore no
-landmark which might serve as a guide to our
-movements. After a copse of <i>moriche</i> palms
-came another one, and then another one, and
-no sooner was one <i>ca&ntilde;o</i> crossed than another
-took its place, so that without guides it would
-have been impossible for us to know whether
-we were moving in the right direction.</p>
-<p>Leal advised us to lose no time, as the
-journey we had before us was a long one.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_66">66</span>
-Now that we were close to the beginning of
-our canoe journey on the rivers, we at once set
-to counting the belongings we had brought at
-such great expense and trouble from the high
-plateau of Bogot&aacute;, which seemed ever so far
-away when with the mind&rsquo;s eye we beheld it
-perched like an eagle&rsquo;s nest high up on the
-summit of those mountains that it had taken
-us about eighteen days to descend. As every
-inch of ground that we had left behind had
-been, so to say, felt by us, the distance appeared
-enormous, and the old city and the plateau
-seemed more like the remembrance of a dream
-than of a reality. We drew up our inventory,
-and found that we were the happy possessors
-of about eight cases, 50 pounds in weight
-each, containing preserved meats, vegetables,
-and food of all kinds in boxes, jars, tins, and
-so forth. Next came about six large jugs or
-demijohns of native fire-water, or <i>aguardiente</i>,
-a most useful and indispensable beverage in
-those latitudes, and about half a ton of salt,
-a most precious article in that region. We
-were going across the plains where there are
-neither salt-water fountains nor salt-bearing
-rock deposits, and we knew that as an article
-<span class="pb" id="Page_67">67</span>
-of barter, salt went far beyond anything else
-that we might possess, hence the large quantity
-which we carried. Our arsenal consisted of
-four fowling-pieces, six Remington and two
-Spencer rifles, plenty of ammunition, cartridges,
-gunpowder, one dozen cutlasses, or <i>machetes</i>,
-and four revolvers. We also had a box with
-books, our trunks with clothing, rugs, mosquito-nets,
-waterproof sheets, a medicine-chest, and
-two guitars of the native Colombian type; but
-what rendered us most important and steady
-service during the whole of that journey was
-a certain wicker basket, 1 yard long, &frac34; of a
-yard wide, and 10 inches in height, which
-contained a complete assortment of cooking
-utensils and table-ware for six persons&mdash;plates,
-corkscrews, can-openers, frying-pans, and all
-that one could wish to prepare as sumptuous
-a meal as mortal man could desire in those vast
-solitudes. The saucepans, six in number, fitted
-one inside of the other, nest-wise; they were
-copper-bottomed, and proved of inestimable
-value. The tumblers and cups were also
-nested&mdash;pewter ware with porcelain inside.
-Everything was complete, compact, and so
-solid that, after the long journey with its vicissitudes,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_68">68</span>
-the wicker basket and its contents,
-though looking somewhat the worse for wear,
-were perfectly serviceable.</p>
-<p>Leal, a man of simple habits, who had never
-been in a town of more than 4,000 or 5,000
-inhabitants, on looking at that display of superfluous
-articles, argued that we were altogether
-too rich, and that our movements would be
-greatly facilitated were we to dispense with,
-say, two-thirds of what lay before him on the
-ground. We pleaded that since the worst had
-been accomplished, namely, the transportation
-across land, roads, and mountain trails, we
-might as well keep what we had, and only
-abandon it when forced to do so. Leal nodded
-his head, as one who sees that it is useless
-to argue, and nothing more was said on the
-subject.</p>
-<p>Everything was prepared on that New Year&rsquo;s
-Day to start on the next day for the neighbouring
-cattle-farm of Santa Rosa del Tua,
-situated on the river Tua, one of the affluents
-of the Meta, which itself is one of the most
-important tributaries of the mighty Orinoco.
-These arrangements and decisions once arrived
-at, it was deemed prudent to celebrate our
-<span class="pb" id="Page_69">69</span>
-arrival into the place, and the arrival on the
-scene of life of the New Year, by a banquet
-worthy of the double occasion.</p>
-<p>A heifer was slaughtered. Leal brought upon
-the scene, in front of the house where we were
-stopping, the whole side of the animal trimmed
-and prepared for roasting; he had passed
-through it, skewer-wise, a long thin pole of
-some special wood hard and difficult to burn.
-A huge bonfire was lit on the ground, and
-Leal fixed the lower end of the skewer quite
-close to the fire, holding the side of the heifer
-now right over the flame, now at a certain
-distance, turning and twisting it with consummate
-skill. The air was soon scented with that
-odour of roast meat which so deliciously tickles
-the nostrils of him who has an empty stomach.
-Looking at Leal doing the roasting, I realized
-Brillat-Savarin&rsquo;s dictum: <i>On devient cuisinier,
-on na&icirc;t rotisseur</i>. Leal, if not a born poet, was
-a born roaster. Soon the meat was ready; our
-plates, forks, and knives not being sufficient
-for the crowd, we preferred not to bring them
-forth. Large leaves, green, fresh, and shiny,
-cut from the neighbouring banana and plantain
-trees, were laid on the ground both as a cover
-<span class="pb" id="Page_70">70</span>
-and as dishes. Leal unsheathed from his belt
-a long, thin shining knife as sharp as a razor,
-and with wonderful dexterity cut the huge
-joint, separating the ribs, so that everyone
-could have a bone with a large portion of hot,
-steaming, newly-broiled meat. Bread was not
-forthcoming, but there was an abundance of
-baked and roasted green plantains, crisp and
-mealy, which did service for the best bread;
-at least, so we thought. As for meat, never
-in my life do I remember having enjoyed such
-a delicious morsel: so the banquet consisted
-of meat and roasted plantains <i>&agrave; discretion</i>. A
-bottle of rum which belonged to our stock, and
-which I had forgotten in the inventory given
-above, went round the guests of that primitive
-board, warming our hearts into conviviality and
-good-humour. Finally came the big bowls of
-coffee, prepared according to the local fashion,
-which deserves to be described. The coffee is
-roasted and ground in the usual way, but these
-operations are only carried out just before the
-liquor is brewed. In a large saucepan cold
-water, sweetened to the taste with black sugar,
-is placed over the fire, and the necessary amount
-of ground coffee is thrown into it before it gets
-<span class="pb" id="Page_71">71</span>
-warm. The heating should not be too rapid;
-when the first bubbles indicate that the boiling-point
-is about to be reached, the saucepan is
-withdrawn from the fire, and a spoonful of cold
-water dashed upon the surface of the hot
-liquor almost in ebullition. This precipitates
-the roasted coffee to the bottom, and gives a
-most delicious beverage, which, though not as
-strong as the coffee distilled according to other
-methods, retains all the aroma and flavour of
-the grain. The method is a very good one in
-localities where delicate coffee-machines cannot
-be easily procured, and it is in truth nothing
-more or less than the method of preparing
-Turkish coffee, with less fuss than is required
-for the Oriental variety.</p>
-<p>We had soon grown, in that very first day of
-our encounter with him, to like Leal and to
-wonder at his intimate knowledge of the plains,
-the forests, and the rivers of that vast region.
-He was not a Colombian; he had been born
-on the shores of the river Gaurico, one of the
-affluents of the Orinoco. From boyhood he
-had thus come into daily contact with the
-mighty rivers and the deep and mysterious
-forests that cover their shores. His plan was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_72">72</span>
-that we should first follow the river Tua down
-to the Meta. On arriving at this latter river,
-we should have to find larger canoes, which
-would enable us to reach the Orinoco. Once
-on the Orinoco we would arrive at the settlement
-called Urbana, where we were sure to
-obtain larger craft in which to go as far as
-Caicara. Here we might wait for the steamers
-that go to Ciudad Bolivar. As to the time required
-for this journey, Leal said that, barring
-unforeseen obstacles, fifty days might suffice
-for us to reach Ciudad Bolivar. The only
-inhabited places which we would come across
-were first San Pedro del Arrastradero, then
-Orocue, and finally San Rafael, the last
-Colombian settlements where troops were
-stationed, and on inquiry Leal stated that on
-the river Meta it was necessary to follow the
-only channel that existed, so that it would be
-indispensable for us to touch at the various
-towns he had named, as there was no lateral
-<i>ca&ntilde;os</i> by which we might avoid them, should
-we want to do so, as was the case in other
-parts of the plains, where one might either
-follow the main stream or some <i>ca&ntilde;o</i> or tributary.
-If we wanted to take another river route,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_73">73</span>
-we might, on reaching San Pedro del Arrastradero,
-walk a short distance of about a mile
-to the <i>ca&ntilde;o</i> called Caracarate, which would take
-us to the river Muco, an affluent of the Vichada,
-almost as large as the Meta River, and flowing
-into the Orinoco. But, said Leal, if we follow
-the Vichada instead of arriving on the Orinoco
-below the rapids, we shall strike that river
-above the rapids, and these alone will entail
-more trouble and difficulty and require more
-time than any other part of the river. For
-the moment no decision was taken. The question
-was left open to be solved as might be
-most convenient at an opportune moment.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_74">74</div>
-<h2 id="c8">CHAPTER VII</h2>
-<p>Early next morning, January 2, we started
-from the village, and, after a short ride across
-the plain, reached the river Tua, at the house
-of a small cattle-ranch called Santa Rosa
-del Tua.</p>
-<p>The owner of the premises welcomed us
-most hospitably, and, to our joy, placed at our
-disposal two small canoes. No others were to
-be found there at the moment. However,
-they were large enough to carry us and our
-belongings, and accordingly we made ready for
-an early start next day.</p>
-<p>The houses&mdash;or what serve for houses in
-the <i>llanos</i>&mdash;are built on the most primitive
-architectural principles. Poles, varying in
-thickness and in length, according to the proportions
-of the desired structure, are sunk into
-the ground at convenient distances, following
-<span class="pb" id="Page_75">75</span>
-the lines either of a perfect square or of a rectangle.
-Cross-beams are nailed or tied to the
-vertical poles at the required height; in the
-latter case the vertical poles are grooved, so as
-to give additional support. From the cross-beams
-on either side other beams are thrown,
-slanting so as to meet in the centre, thus
-forming the basis of the roof, which is again
-covered with reeds, upon which are placed
-several layers of palm-leaves, fastened by
-means of thin ropes to the slanting beams and
-poles; and thus the roof is completed. This
-finishes the house for use during the dry season.</p>
-<p>During the wet season the sides are covered
-in the same fashion as the roof. The palm-leaf
-most used is that of the <i>moriche</i>, which abounds
-in the <i>llanos</i>.</p>
-<p>When lying in the hammock during the dry
-season one feels the breath of the breeze as it
-blows across the plain, and may see the stars
-twinkling in the deep blue dome of heaven, like
-far-off tapers. The <i>llaneros</i>, or inhabitants of
-the plains, prefer to sleep in the open air, even
-without palm-leaf roofing above their heads. It
-is as though they felt imprisoned indoors, and
-pined for the ampler ether.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<p>Here we had thus reached the last stage
-of our land journey. The real voyage was
-about to begin.</p>
-<p>The reader who has followed me thus far
-will have gathered that there were three of us
-in this expedition&mdash;Alex, Raoul, and myself.
-With us came our servant Fermin, who
-adapted himself to the most urgent requirements,
-being now muleteer, now valet, now
-cook. Leal had engaged the services of several
-<i>peones</i> to paddle the canoes when we reached
-the Tua River; these numbered seventeen, so
-that, including Leal and ourselves, we formed a
-group of twenty-two men. The canoes were so
-small that we were packed like herrings, but, as
-it was impossible to obtain others, we had to
-make the best of them.</p>
-<p>Raoul was a sportsman: more than once
-he had taken up arms against the harmless
-ducks that swarm at certain seasons of the year
-in the lakes studding the plateau of Bogot&aacute;. I
-had no personal knowledge of his powers, but,
-with the modesty and truthfulness characteristic
-of all hunters and fishermen, he carefully impressed
-upon us that he was a dead shot, and
-that when a bird, hare, or any furred or
-<span class="pb" id="Page_77">77</span>
-feathered creature, came within range of his gun
-its doom was certain.</p>
-<p>Immediately upon our arrival at the river
-Tua, the shores of which are covered with a
-dense forest, he called our attention to the
-numberless birds to be seen, and as soon as he
-could manage it he left us, accompanied by one
-of the men, and was speedily lost to sight
-amongst the trees. Shortly afterwards the
-report of his gun reached us with such frequency
-that one might think he was wasting
-powder for mere love of smoke. By-and-by
-he returned, bringing with him about sixteen
-different birds of various sizes and kinds,
-sufficient to feed the whole expedition for one
-or two days. He was on the point of starting
-on another murderous excursion, when we
-remonstrated against the wanton destruction
-of animal life. Leal quietly observed that if
-Raoul thus continued wasting powder and shot
-he would soon exhaust our store of those indispensable
-articles, the lack of which might entail
-most serious consequences later on. On hearing
-this we held what might be called a council of
-war, at which it was decided that no more birds
-or game were to be shot than were absolutely
-<span class="pb" id="Page_78">78</span>
-indispensable. We were influenced not so
-much by a feeling of humanity or love for the
-birds as by the fact that a long journey lay
-before us, that the loss of a canoe, the flooding
-of a river, or illness, or any accident that might
-befall us, would detain us for much longer than
-we had bargained. Raoul reluctantly listened
-to all these reasons, but, acknowledging their
-force, agreed to comply with them.</p>
-<p>Our descent of the river Tua began next day.
-The waters were very shallow, owing to the
-dry season, and, as our men could not use their
-paddles, they punted the canoes down-stream.
-We were often detained by palisades which
-obstructed the current. These were formed
-by trunks uprooted from the shores by the river
-in its flood, and then jettisoned in the bed of
-the stream. In the dry season they stood forth
-like small islands, and gathered round them all
-the floating d&eacute;bris of the river. These palisades,
-with which we met very often, gave us a
-deal of trouble. We often had to jump out of
-the canoes and either drag or push them, as
-they would stick to the sandy bottom, and
-punting failed to make them budge. We took
-to this task cheerfully, and found it tolerable
-<span class="pb" id="Page_79">79</span>
-sport, until one of our men was stung by a
-peculiar sort of fish, black and round, called
-<i>raya</i>. This lies hidden in the sand, and, when
-touched or trodden upon, stings, darting its
-harpoon into the ankle or the calf, leaving
-its point in the wound, a most painful one,
-which continues to smart for several days.
-The man, who was stung in our presence,
-cried and moaned like a child, so intense was
-the pain. After this we were decidedly chary
-of lending a hand in dragging or pushing the
-canoes, and&mdash;I must confess it to our shame&mdash;we
-would wade booted to the shore and wait
-till they had been got afloat again, rather than
-take the chances of being stung in our turn.</p>
-<p>We had started at about six in the morning;
-towards five in the afternoon Leal began to
-cast his eyes about in search of a nice, dry,
-sandy beach upon which to pitch our camp for
-the night. So far we had always found some
-house or hut to sleep in; now, for the first
-time, we were faced by the necessity of camping
-in the open air without any roof whatever
-above our heads. We experienced a peculiar
-sensation of unwarranted fear&mdash;a dread arising,
-doubtless, from the force of habit in the civilized
-<span class="pb" id="Page_80">80</span>
-man, naturally averse to imitating the birds and
-the beasts, which sleep under God&rsquo;s heaven
-and run all risks; but whatever our feelings,
-we were forced to accept the inevitable.</p>
-<p>As soon as a satisfactory strip of beach was
-found, we jumped ashore. The canoes were
-dragged halfway out of the water, and tied
-with stout ropes to neighbouring trees to prevent
-their being carried away in case of an
-unexpected flood&mdash;by no means an impossible
-contingency. The men took out the mats
-upon which we were to sleep, and as there
-were swarms of the mosquitoes, sand-flies, and
-numerous insects which make life a burden in
-the early hours of the night on the shores of
-these rivers, the mosquito-bars, made of cotton
-cloth, were rigged up over the mats.</p>
-<p>Fermin, who had been promoted to the rank
-of private cook for Alex, Raoul, and myself,
-prepared our supper, making use of the saucepans
-and sundry implements contained in our
-travelling basket. To prepare their meals, the
-men used a huge iron pot, which was soon
-tilted over a large fire.</p>
-<p>We were four days on the river Tua punting
-or paddling, according to the depth of water.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_81">81</span>
-When we reached the river Meta, we had
-already arranged the daily routine best suited
-to our requirements, and I might as well, once
-for all, describe it.</p>
-<p>Our acting chief, Leal, ever watchful and
-alert, wakened us at about three in the morning.
-Every man had his appointed task: two of
-them prepared the indispensable coffee in the
-fashion of the land; others folded up the mats,
-the mosquito-bars, and whatever else might
-have been landed. Alex, Raoul, and I would
-in the meantime stand on the river brink,
-whilst two of the men poured upon us small
-cataracts of water drawn from the river in the
-<i>coyabras</i> or <i>totumas</i> cut from native gourds,
-which form an indispensable part of the
-domestic arrangements in the <i>llanos</i>. It would
-have been sheer madness to bathe in the river,
-with its <i>rayas</i>, or water-snakes, or perhaps
-some shy, dissembling alligator in quest of a
-tasty morsel.</p>
-<p>Sandy beaches are the best places for camping
-on the shores of tropical rivers. They are
-dry, clean, soft, and perfectly free from snakes,
-scorpions, tarantulas, and all such obnoxious
-creatures, which are more likely to be found
-<span class="pb" id="Page_82">82</span>
-amongst the high luxuriant grass and the leafy
-trees.</p>
-<p>Between four and five, as soon as it was
-ready, every man drank a large goblet of
-coffee and a small glass of aniseed <i>aguardiente</i>,
-which is said to be a specific against malaria.
-The men&rsquo;s faith in the virtue of the distilled
-spirit was astounding; they never failed to
-take it, and would even ask for more, lest the
-quantity given were not enough to protect
-them from the dreaded illness. Though the
-merits of quinine are more universally acknowledged,
-it did not seem to be as acceptable, nor
-to be coveted with equal greediness.</p>
-<p>We generally started at about five in the
-morning, paddling steadily till about eleven,
-when we landed as soon as we found a suitable
-spot, if possible shaded with trees. Here we
-would hang the hammocks, prepare the midday
-repast, and wait until three, letting the
-hottest hours of the day pass by. At this
-time the sun seemed to dart real rays of fire
-upon the burnished waters, whose reflection
-dazzled and blinded our eyes.</p>
-<p>About three in the afternoon we would start
-again for two or three hours more, until a convenient
-<span class="pb" id="Page_83">83</span>
-beach was found; once there, the camp
-was formed without delay, the canoes tied
-up, the mats spread, and in a few minutes
-two huge bonfires, made of driftwood, sent
-their glad flames flickering in the night air.
-After supper we crept under the mosquito-bars,
-and waited for Leal to call us in the
-morning.</p>
-<p>The seasons in the plains, as is well known,
-are sharply divided into dry and rainy. The
-first lasts from May to November, and the
-second from November to May. During the
-wet season it rains from eighteen to twenty
-hours out of the twenty-four; showers are not
-frequent during the dry season, but they fall
-now and then.</p>
-<p>The third or fourth night that we spent on
-the banks of the Tua, I was awakened by
-feeling a moist sheet over my face, and at once
-realized that the heavy rain had beaten down
-the mosquito-bar. There was nothing for it
-but to cover myself with the waterproof
-<i>poncho</i>, sitting up for greater convenience, and
-disengaging myself from the fallen mosquito-net.
-There we all sat helpless under the
-dense cataract. The beach, slanting towards
-<span class="pb" id="Page_84">84</span>
-the river, bore with it the waters from the
-higher ground, and as my body made an indenture
-in the sand, I felt on either side a
-rushing stream. Fortunately, the shower was
-soon over, the bonfires were heaped with
-driftwood and blazed forth joyously. Coffee
-was specially prepared for the occasion, and we
-sat in the genial warmth of the flames until the
-sun burst forth on the horizon. That morning
-we did not start as early as usual: the tents
-and covers were spread in the sun, and after an
-hour or so were again dry and soft. Then
-we started on our journey, leaving behind
-us the discomforts of the night. The rain
-seemed to have gladdened the forest, and
-brightened the trees and bushes into a livelier
-green. During the journey we underwent a
-similar experience upon two or three other
-occasions.</p>
-<p>As for food, we had a comfortable supply,
-and hardly a day passed without our having
-either some fine bird, or at times a larger piece
-of game in the shape of a species of wild-boar,
-fairly plentiful in that locality, the flesh of which
-is quite agreeable after one learns to eat it.
-Besides game, we also had plenty of fish. All
-<span class="pb" id="Page_85">85</span>
-this without counting the salt meat and tinned
-provisions. The birds most abundant were
-ducks of various descriptions, wild turkeys, and
-a beautiful bird of fine dark-bluish plumage,
-similar to a wild turkey, called <i>paujil</i> by the
-natives, the meat of which greatly resembles
-that of the pheasant.</p>
-<p>At about this stage of the journey an incident
-took place which shows how even the humblest
-tasks in life require a certain degree of ability
-and experience. One day on the river Tua,
-Raoul&mdash;who, as I have said, was a great
-hunter before the Lord, and had no more
-esteem than most men for the milder arts&mdash;had
-brought down a beautiful duck of exceptional
-size, and of the kind known as &lsquo;royal duck.&rsquo;
-Not satisfied with his triumph as a Nimrod, he
-took it into his head to cook the bird himself
-and rival the achievements of Vattel or Car&ecirc;me.
-He invited me to help him in his undertaking.
-My culinary attainments being purely of a
-theoretical kind, I promised him my moral
-support and hearty co-operation in the shape
-of advice. We invited Alex to share our
-wonderful supper, to which he replied that,
-being aware of the perils most incident to the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_86">86</span>
-efforts of inexperienced cooks, however enthusiastic
-they might be, he preferred the men&rsquo;s
-supper, which, though humbler, was far more
-to be depended on. Heedless of this taunt,
-Raoul went on with his work. A pot filled
-with water was placed over the fire, and as
-soon as it was boiling the bird was plunged
-into it. In due course Raoul began to pluck
-valiantly; feathers black and bluish fell from
-his hand numerous as flakes of snow in a winter
-storm. When he began to tire after a while,
-I took the bird in hand, and continued the
-task, the feathers falling like dry leaves in the
-autumnal forest. After half an hour of steady
-work, when the ground was literally covered
-with black feathers, that blessed bird seemed
-untouched. We were beginning to feel anxious
-and hungry, and the tempting whiffs from the
-large iron pot, where the men were stirring
-their stew, stung our nostrils in a tantalizing
-fashion. However, it was now a question of
-pride and self-esteem, and we were bound to
-cook the bird at any cost. By-and-by Alex,
-holding a steaming plate in his hand, came
-to us and invited us to eat. Raoul rejected
-the offer, and though I was most anxious to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_87">87</span>
-accept it, I felt bound in loyalty to stand
-by him. We told Alex that we wanted to
-reserve the fulness of our appetite for our
-delicious bird, to which Alex replied that by
-the time that bird was ready we should certainly
-be hungry enough to devour it, leaving the
-bones quite clean. Raoul and I took turns at
-plucking the duck, which at last seemed to
-yield, showing a few whitish specks here and
-there devoid of all feathery covering. Seeing
-our plight, Fermin, who had stood by, not
-being called upon to help, seized the bird,
-declaring that we had allowed it to become
-chilled, and that the perfect plucking of it
-was well-nigh impossible. However, he undertook
-the job most courageously, and finally,
-taking advantage of the shades of night, which
-facilitated a compromise, we dropped that
-royal duck into the boiling water and pretended
-to enjoy our supper, such as it was,
-when ready. How much we ate is a question
-as to which I need not go into detail here, but
-I must own that in lying down upon my mat
-under the mosquito-bar I felt famished. From
-that day onwards both Raoul and I decided
-to forego all interference in matters culinary,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_88">88</span>
-beyond occasional advice. I have no doubt that,
-had Fermin or one of the men undertaken the
-task, we should not only have had our supper
-much sooner, but a dish fit for any man&rsquo;s
-palate.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_89">89</div>
-<h2 id="c9">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-<p>On the fourth day, about two hours&rsquo; sail from
-the confluence of the Tua with the Meta River,
-we stopped at a large cattle-ranch called Santa
-Barbara. The owner invited us to a dinner&mdash;the
-inevitable dishes of the <i>llano</i>: meat roasted
-over a bonfire, plaintains and coffee.</p>
-<p>The ranch consisted, we were told, of about
-10,000 head of cattle, and was typical of the
-ranches to be found on the <i>llanos</i> of Colombia
-and Venezuela.</p>
-<p>Here, in the person of what might be called
-the sub-manager, whose name was Secundino,
-we came face to face with a real tiger-hunter.</p>
-<p>After dinner I asked Secundino how men
-fleeted the time away in that lonely region
-beyond the din of civilized life. His statements
-corroborated what I had heard before,
-that there is no ownership of land in the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_90">90</span>
-<i>llanos</i>; the herds graze freely over the plains,
-the animals being practically wild, and kept
-together by the presence amongst them of a
-few tame cattle which, being accustomed to
-the presence of man, will remain in the neighbourhood
-of the houses or <i>caneyes</i>. Another
-great attraction to the cattle is the salt which
-is strewn upon large slabs of stone or flat
-boards. By these two devices, thousands of
-animals are kept within a comparatively short
-distance of the ranch.</p>
-<p>To enable each ranch-owner to brand the
-cattle belonging to him, <i>rodeos</i> or round-ups
-are held two or three times during the year.
-These <i>rodeos</i> are gatherings of the herds. The
-men ride out in all directions from the ranch,
-and drive the cattle towards the <i>corrales</i>. In
-this task they are greatly helped by the presence
-of the tame animals, which are easily led or
-driven as required, and are always followed by
-the others.</p>
-<p>Once in the <i>corrales</i>, the branding begins.
-A red-hot iron is used, shaped either to form
-one or two letters or some special sign which
-constitutes the trade or hall mark, so to speak,
-of the respective ranch. The animals are
-<span class="pb" id="Page_91">91</span>
-forced to pass through a long, narrow enclosure
-between two fences, and are branded as they
-go by; but with animals that give a great deal
-of trouble a different method is followed. This
-consists in starting the bull, heifer, or cow, as
-the case may be, on the run. A man on horseback
-follows, and when both the horse and the
-bull have attained sufficient impetus, the man
-seizes the bull by the tail, and with a sudden
-twist turns it over on its side, jumping at once
-from his horse to pass the tail under the bull&rsquo;s
-leg; this compresses certain muscles, prevents
-all motion, and leaves the fallen animal helpless.
-The branding is then done without any
-difficulty, either on the fore or the hind quarters.</p>
-<p>Secundino told us that this way of throwing
-the cattle down was not confined to the branding
-season, but that it formed a frequent sport
-amongst herdsmen in the plains, as it required
-great skill to accomplish it. Another sport in
-which he and his friends indulged, and which
-he described with great zest, was riding wild
-bulls. The process consists first in throwing
-the bull to the ground, whereupon a thick rope
-is tied as a girdle, only that it is placed quite
-close to the withers and right under the forelegs
-<span class="pb" id="Page_92">92</span>
-of the animal. All this time the bull has
-been held on the ground, bellowing and panting
-for sheer rage; as soon as the rope is ready,
-the intending rider stands by the side of the
-animal with his two hands stuck between the
-rope and the skin, on either side of the spine,
-and the moment the bull is let loose and stands
-on its feet the man leaps on its back. Then
-follows a wonderful struggle: the beast, unaccustomed
-to any burden, rears and plunges,
-springs backwards and forwards with great
-violence; the man, always spurred, increases
-the fury of the animal by pricking its sides.
-His two arms, like bars of iron, stand rigid,
-and man and bullock seem as though made
-of one piece. At last the bull is exhausted, and
-sullenly acknowledges the superior force of the
-rider; but it takes rare courage and strength
-to accomplish this feat.</p>
-<p>After describing these and other pastimes,
-Secundino quietly added:</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Whenever my work leaves me time, I kill
-tigers.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>He said this unpretentiously, yet with a
-certain air of self-consciousness that must have
-brought the shadow of a doubting smile to my
-<span class="pb" id="Page_93">93</span>
-lips. Secundino saw this, and, without appearing
-to take notice of it, invited us outside the house,
-and showed us, at a certain distance from it,
-lying on the ground, ten tigers&rsquo; skulls, some
-of which bore traces of having been recently
-cleansed from skin and flesh.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;You see,&rsquo; he added, &lsquo;that I have some proofs
-of my tiger-killing!&rsquo;</p>
-<p>He told us that the tigers were the worst
-enemies of the cattle-farmer.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Other animals,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;will take just
-what they want, but the tiger is fierce, cruel,
-and kills for the sake of killing. If he should
-happen to get into an enclosure containing
-twenty or thirty young calves, he will kill them
-all, and take one away with him. We are at
-open and constant warfare with the tigers,&rsquo; he
-added, &lsquo;and there is no truce between us.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>The <i>llaneros</i> usually kill tigers by spearing
-them. Referring to this, Secundino said that
-doubtless it was more dangerous than shooting
-the beast down at long range with a Winchester
-or a Remington rifle; &lsquo;but,&rsquo; he went on to say,
-&lsquo;powder and lead are expensive, cartridges are
-difficult to obtain, and when once exhausted
-your weapon is no better than a broomstick.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_94">94</span>
-The spear, however, is always ready, and never
-fails you. When I go out tiger-hunting I take
-my dogs, who follow the scent and guide me.
-I carry with me, besides the spears, a muzzle-loader,
-in case of emergency. The moment
-the dogs see the tiger they give cry; the beast
-seeks higher ground, and the fight with the
-dogs begins at once. The tiger is afraid even
-of a cur. The dogs that we have here are
-well trained, and though at times they are
-killed by the tiger, that seldom happens. I
-follow my dogs, keeping the animal well in
-sight, with my spear ready, and at the right
-moment dash forward and plunge it into his
-breast. If the blow is a good one, that ends
-it. Now and then it is necessary to fire the
-rifle into him; but this is a great pity, owing
-to the waste of lead and gunpowder.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>I am trying to repeat here word by word
-Secundino&rsquo;s quiet statement. It sounds fanciful
-and exaggerated, but all those who have
-travelled over the plains of either Venezuela or
-Colombia will have heard that such is the
-commonest mode of tiger-killing amongst the
-<i>llaneros</i>. The tiger of these latitudes, however,
-is not the same as the tiger of India and other
-<span class="pb" id="Page_95">95</span>
-parts of Asia. It is smaller, but not less
-ferocious; it is spotted, and not striped. The
-spear used is very long, made of very hard
-wood, and has a most murderous appearance.</p>
-<p>Secundino, after telling me of his short way
-with tigers, asked me to handle the weapon,
-and generously gave me some instructions as to
-the exact poise to be adopted for striking a
-blow, explaining to me how dangerous it might
-be were I to forget the rules which he could
-recommend from experience. To begin with, I
-could hardly lift the spear, and, then, there was
-practically no chance of my ever going to seek
-a tiger in his lair. Secundino, however, was
-profoundly in earnest, and, rather than disabuse
-him or hurt his feelings, I solemnly promised
-him that I would never kill tigers otherwise
-than in strict conformity with his advice, and
-that at the first opportunity I would practise
-throwing the spear and poising my body, so as
-to make sure.</p>
-<p>Towards evening, as we were about leaving,
-when I was already seated in the canoe, whilst
-Leal was still ashore, I overheard these words
-passing between him and Secundino:</p>
-<p>&lsquo;How far are you going, Friend Leal?&rsquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_96">96</div>
-<p>&lsquo;Down to the Orinoco, to accompany these
-gentlemen.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&lsquo;How are you coming back, by land or by
-water?&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&lsquo;I do not know yet&mdash;that depends.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Well, all right; if you come this way, I
-should like you to tackle a horse that we have
-here, which no one seems able to ride, and
-which I dare not tackle myself.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Never you mind,&rsquo; answered Leal; &lsquo;I will see
-to it when I return.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>Here was a revelation. Leal&rsquo;s prowess grew
-in our estimation. This guide of ours was called
-upon to break in a horse which Secundino, the
-tiger-hunter, whose title to the name, if devoid
-of diplomas or academic signatures, was vouched
-for by the ten tiger-skulls which we had seen,
-would not dare to ride himself!</p>
-<p>On we went towards the Meta River, leaving
-our friends on the shore shouting to us messages
-of good speed. We soon noticed that our canoe,
-being lighter in draft, had left the other far
-behind it.</p>
-<p>It darkened much earlier than we expected,
-and to our great regret we saw that the second
-canoe could not catch us up, which was annoying,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_97">97</span>
-as supper, beds, and everything else, with the
-exception of a demijohn of aniseed <i>aguardiente</i>,
-were in it. We landed at the first beach that
-we struck, hoping against hope that the
-stragglers might overtake us.</p>
-<p>Time had passed so agreeably at Santa
-Barbara, listening to Secundino&rsquo;s tales, that
-we had not noticed how late it was. It seemed
-to us, furthermore, that darkness had set in
-earlier than usual. On hearing some remark
-to that effect, Fermin observed that the sun had
-set for us that day earlier than usual. He laid
-stress upon the words &lsquo;for us,&rsquo; and, on being
-asked what he meant thereby, said that the
-darkness had been caused by a cloud which
-had interposed itself between us and the setting
-sun, thus bringing night earlier than usual.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;What nonsense are you talking about?&rsquo; said
-Raoul. &lsquo;There is no cloud in the matter; we
-went on talking and talking, and forgot the time.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&lsquo;No, sir,&rsquo; Fermin said, without moving a
-muscle; &lsquo;I know what I am talking about.
-The cloud was formed by the feathers of that
-bird which we tried to pluck yesterday; they
-are so many that they darken the light of
-the sun!&rsquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
-<p>Up to this day I cannot say what happened.
-I do not know if we mistook the hour of the
-day and were overtaken by night, or if, in
-truth, as Fermin asserted, the wrathful ghost
-of the mishandled duck spread its black feathers
-above our heads, thus forming a mantle like the
-mantle of arrows which the Spartan warriors
-asked the Persian invaders to fire at them, so
-that they might fight in the shade. This problem,
-which contains historical, astronomical
-and atmospherical elements, will remain for
-ever as dark and mysterious as the feathers of
-the dead bird.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_99">99</div>
-<h2 id="c10">CHAPTER IX</h2>
-<p>Night soon asserted her sway. The blue vault
-of heaven, alive with innumerable stars, was clear
-and diaphanous; no cloud was to be seen. The
-evening noises died away, and the dead silence
-was only broken now and then by a vague
-rumour wafted mysteriously through space&mdash;the
-wash of waters on the shore, or possibly
-the lisp of forests by the river. We gave up
-all hope of the other canoe arriving that night,
-and faced the inevitable&mdash;no supper, no beds.
-As in our own canoe we carried a demijohn
-of <i>aguardiente</i>, one or two generous draughts
-were our only supper. We were not hampered
-by excess of riches or of comforts; as to the
-selection of our beds, the whole extent of the
-beach was equally sandy and soft; but, having
-slept for many nights on the shores of the Tua,
-and knowing that we were at its confluence
-<span class="pb" id="Page_100">100</span>
-with the Meta, for the sake of a change&mdash;a
-distinction without a difference&mdash;we stretched
-ourselves full length on the side of the beach
-looking to the Meta River.</p>
-<p>The water-course, practically unknown to
-civilization, appeared to me as I lay there like
-a wandering giant lost amidst the forests and
-the plains of an unknown continent. The
-surface of the waters sparkled in the starlight
-like hammered steel. My thoughts followed
-the luminous ripples until they were lost to
-sight in the darkness of the opposite shore,
-or, wandering onwards with the flow, melted
-into the horizon. Whither went those waters?
-Whence came they? What were their evolutions,
-changes, and transformations? Idle questions!
-Flow of life or flow of wave, who but
-He that creates all things can know its source
-and its finality? Idle cavillings indeed!</p>
-<p>Suddenly, as drowsiness had begun to seize
-me, a wonderful phenomenon took place. There
-from the midst of the waters arose an indistinct
-yet mighty figure; high it stood amidst the
-waters which parted, forming a sort of royal
-mantle upon its shoulders; it gazed upon me
-with the sublime placidity of the still seas,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_101">101</span>
-the high mountains, the unending plains, the
-primeval forests, and all the manifestations of
-Nature, great and serene in their power and
-majesty. And the figure spoke:</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Listen to me, O pilgrim, lost in these vast
-solitudes; listen to the voice of the wandering
-streams! We rivers bring life to forest and
-valley; we are children of the mountains, heralds
-of continents, benefactors of man. My current,
-powerful and mighty though it seems, is but
-a tiny thread of the many streams that, mingled
-and interwoven, so to say, go to form the main
-artery of whirling, heaving water called the
-Orinoco. From north and south, from east
-and west, we all flow along the bosom of the
-plains, after having gathered unto ourselves the
-playful streamlets, the murmuring brooks that
-swell into torrents and dash down the mountain-sides,
-filling the hills and the intervening valleys
-with life and joy. They come from the highest
-slopes&mdash;nay, from the topmost peaks crowned
-with everlasting snow, the sources of our life;
-down they rush, and after innumerable turns
-and twists, after forming now cataracts, now
-placid lakes, reach the plain, and in their course
-they broaden the large streams which in turn
-<span class="pb" id="Page_102">102</span>
-merge with others in the huge basin, and form
-the vast artery that drains the surface of a great
-part of the continent, and bears its tribute to
-the Atlantic Ocean. Yea, verily indeed, we
-rivers are as twin brothers of Time; the hours
-pass and pass, ceaseless as our waves; they
-flow into Eternity, we into the bosom of the
-great deep. This land, the land of your birth
-and of mine, to-day an unknown quantity in
-the history of the world, is a destined site of
-a mighty empire. The whole continent of South
-America is the reserve store for the future
-generations of millions of men yet unborn.
-Hither they will come from all parts of the
-world: on the surface of the globe no more
-favourable spot exists for the home of mankind.
-Along the coast of the Pacific Ocean runs the
-mighty backbone of the Cordillera like a bulwark,
-high, immense, stately; above it, like the towers
-and turrets in the walls of a fortified city, rise
-the hundred snow-capped peaks that look east
-and west, now on the ocean, now on the ever-spreading
-undulating plains, and south and north
-to the line of mountains extending for thousands
-of miles.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;In the very heart of the tropical zone, where
-<span class="pb" id="Page_103">103</span>
-the equatorial sun darts his burning rays, are
-the plateaus of the Andes, hundreds of square
-miles in extent, with all the climates and the
-multitudinous products of the temperate zone.
-In the heart and bowels of the mountains are
-the precious metals coveted by man&rsquo;s avarice
-and vanity, those forming the supreme goal
-of his endeavours; and the useful&mdash;indeed, the
-truly precious&mdash;metals, coal, iron, copper, lead,
-and all others that are known to man, exist in
-a profusion well-nigh illimitable. The trade-winds,
-whose wings have swept across the whole
-width of the Atlantic Ocean, laden with moisture,
-do not stop their flight when the sea of moving
-waters ceases and the sea of waving grass begins.
-Across the plains, over the tree-tops of the
-primeval forests, shaking the plumage of the
-palm-trees, ascending the slopes of the hills,
-higher, still higher, into the mountains, and
-finally up to the loftiest peaks, those winds
-speed their course, and there the last drops of
-moisture are wrung from them by that immeasurable
-barrier raised by the hand of God;
-their force seems to be spent, and, like birds
-that have reached their native forest, they fold
-their wings and are still. The moisture thus
-<span class="pb" id="Page_104">104</span>
-gathered and thus deposited forms the thousand
-currents of water that descend from the heights
-at the easternmost end of the continent, and
-convert themselves into the largest and most
-imposing water systems in the world. Thus
-is formed the Orinoco system, which irrigates
-the vast plains of Colombia and Venezuela.
-Further south, created by a similar concurrence
-of circumstances and conditions, the Amazon
-system drags the volume of its wandering sea
-across long, interminable leagues of Brazilian
-forest and plain. Its many streams start in
-their pilgrimage from the interior of Colombia,
-of Ecuador, of Peru, and of Bolivia, and these
-two systems of water-ways, which intersect such
-an immense extent of land thousands of miles
-from the mouth of the main artery that plunges
-into the sea, are connected by a natural canal,
-the Casiquiare River, so that the traveller might
-enter either river, follow its course deep into
-the heart of the continent, cross by water to
-the other, and then reappear on the ocean,
-always in the same boat.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;If the wealth of the mountains is boundless
-and virgin, if on the slopes and on the plateaus
-and the neighbouring valleys all the agricultural
-<span class="pb" id="Page_105">105</span>
-products useful to man may be grown&mdash;and
-the forests teem with wealth that belongs
-to him who first takes it&mdash;if the rocks likewise
-cover or bear immense deposits of all the
-metals and minerals useful to man, the lowlands
-and the plains offer grazing-ground for
-untold herds of cattle and horses, and further
-to the south beyond the Amazon, running
-southward, not eastward like the Orinoco and
-the Amazon, the Parana unrolls its waves,
-which, after leaving the tropic, enter the
-southern temperate zone, irrigating for untold
-miles the endless pampas of Argentina and
-Uruguay. In very truth, this continent is the
-Promised Land.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;In your pilgrimage along the waters of the
-Orinoco, you will see all the wonders of tropical
-Nature. Now the forests will stand on either
-bank close along the shores in serried file, and
-moving mirrors of the waters will reflect the
-murmuring tops of the trees, noisy and full of
-life as the winds sweep by in their flight, or
-else the frowning rock, bare and rugged, will
-stand forth from the current like the wall of a
-medieval castle. Now the trees will open a
-gap through which, as from under a triumphal
-<span class="pb" id="Page_106">106</span>
-arch, the current of a river, a wanderer from
-the mysterious and unknown depths of the
-neighbouring forests, pours forth into the main
-stream and mingles with the passing waters,
-joining his fate to theirs, even as the High
-Priest of some unknown creed might issue
-from the temple and mingle with the passing
-crowd. Some rivers that reach the main artery
-have had but a short pilgrimage, the junction
-of their many waters having taken place at no
-great distance from the main stream; others
-have had a long wandering, sometimes placid
-and serene, sometimes amidst rocks and
-boulders, with an ever frenzied and agitated
-course like the lives of men striving and
-struggling till the last great trumpet sounds.
-The course of the river will be studded with
-islands large enough for the foundation of
-empires, and before reaching the sea the river
-will extend and spread its current into a
-thousand streams, as if loth to part from the
-Mother Earth it sought to embrace more firmly
-in its grasp, and our waters will flow into the
-unplumbed deep, there to mingle with those of
-all the rivers, whether their course has been
-through lands alive with civilization, swarming
-<span class="pb" id="Page_107">107</span>
-with multitudes of men on their shores, laden
-with the memories of centuries and famous in
-history, or whether they, like us, have wandered
-through vast solitudes where Nature is still
-supreme in her primeval pride, as yet unpolluted
-by the hand of man. There we all
-meet, and to us what men call time and its
-divisions exist not, for all the transformations
-that affect mankind are as naught to us who
-form part and parcel of Nature itself, who only
-feel time after the lapse of &aelig;ons which to the
-mind of man are practically incomprehensible.
-Seek to learn the lesson of humility, to acknowledge
-the power of the Creator, who gave to
-man what we rivers and all other material
-things can never hope for&mdash;a future beyond
-this earth, higher, brighter, infinite, eternal.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>The figure seemed to sink slowly under the
-mantle of waters that had covered its shoulders;
-the sun was rising in the eastern horizon, the
-rumour of awakening Nature filled the air
-with its thousand echoes, and drifting rapidly
-towards us we saw Leal with the canoe that
-had remained behind the night before.</p>
-<p>On telling Alex, Raoul, and Fermin my
-experience, and asking in good faith what they
-<span class="pb" id="Page_108">108</span>
-had thought of the visitation, they looked
-askance at me. It seems that sleep had overpowered
-them; they had not seen the river-god
-of the Meta, and irreverently set down the
-whole occurrence to the quality of my supper
-the preceding night. It is ever thus with
-unbelievers; they will seek some material or
-vulgar explanation for that which they cannot
-understand and have not seen.</p>
-<p>That very morning, after the necessary
-arrangements and the usual morning coffee,
-we started down the Meta River. If we might
-have called the navigation on the Tua somewhat
-amphibious, navigation on the Meta,
-specially for such small craft as we possessed,
-seemed to us as on the open sea. Our first
-care was to seek larger canoes. Leal guided
-us through one of the neighbouring <i>ca&ntilde;os</i> to
-a cattle-ranch, where he expected to suit our
-requirements. This <i>ca&ntilde;o</i> chanced to be famous
-for its snakes, principally of the kind called
-<i>macaurel</i>, a dark brownish species, varying
-from 2 to 4 and 5 feet in length, and from
-&frac14; inch to 2 inches in diameter. When in repose
-they coil themselves around the branches
-of the trees, and their bite, if not cured immediately,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_109">109</span>
-is fatal. Leal shot one of the
-horrible reptiles in the body; the linking of
-the rings that take the place of vertebr&aelig; being
-thus unloosened, the coils became wider, the
-animal lost its grip and fell into the water,
-staining it with a blue-greenish reflection of a
-metallic hue. It seems that one shot of the
-smallest size is sufficient to kill these snakes,
-provided it breaks one of the rings above
-mentioned. I shuddered as we passed under
-the trees, knowing that many of these dreaded
-reptiles must be above our heads. The <i>ca&ntilde;o</i>
-in some parts was so narrow and the forest so
-dense that it was impossible to avoid the overhanging
-branches, and when I thought that we
-should have to go over the same route next
-day, disgust and a feeling of dread took possession
-of me. By the time we reached our
-destination, after a journey of eight or ten
-miles, over twenty of these creatures had been
-brought down. We obtained two large canoes,
-which seemed to us like veritable ships or
-floating palaces compared to the little craft we
-had used for so many days. We turned to the
-river Meta, and did not feel safe until we had
-left the <i>ca&ntilde;o</i> behind, and could breathe once
-<span class="pb" id="Page_110">110</span>
-more in the open air on the bosom of the large
-river, with only heaven above our heads.</p>
-<p>The Meta River, which flows entirely upon
-Colombian territory, describes large winding
-curves in its course eastward towards the
-Orinoco. Its banks are high and well defined,
-its channel fairly steadfast even in the dry
-season. This is not common, most of these
-rivers often shifting their course, to the despair
-of pilots and navigators. Both sides of the
-Meta we knew were occupied, or, rather, frequently
-visited, by various wild tribes. Now
-and then Leal would point out a part of the
-shore, stating that it belonged to some ranch,
-but how he could know was a mystery to us,
-as no visible difference existed.</p>
-<p>The temperature, though quite hot in the
-middle of the day, was agreeable, and even
-cool, in the early morning and a greater part
-of the night. The trade-wind, which blows
-steadily every day during the dry season, at
-times gathered such force that we were compelled,
-going against it as we did, to wait long
-hours for it to subside. Our canoes were not
-so arranged as to enable us to hoist sail and
-tack against the wind.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_111">111</div>
-<p>On the river Meta we observed a large
-species of fish, which, had we been at sea, we
-should have identified at once as porpoises.
-The men told us that they were called <i>bufeos</i>,
-and in reality came from the sea, having
-ascended the waters of the Orinoco for
-thousands of miles, and branched off into the
-Meta River. One of the men, illiterate like all
-his fellows, but versed in forest, mountain and
-plain lore, stated that those <i>bufeos</i> were the
-friends of man; that they loved music and song;
-that they would follow a boat or canoe whence
-the echoes of singing or of some musical instrument
-could be heard for miles and miles at a time;
-that when they were present in the water the
-alligators and all the other enemies of man
-kept away, or were driven away by the <i>bufeos</i>;
-and that whenever by chance the fishermen
-caught one of these, he would at once release
-it in remembrance of their friendship for mankind.
-These were, therefore, our old-time
-friends the porpoises.</p>
-<p>The simple tale of the man, one of our
-paddlers, who had never been in a city in
-his life nor seen any of the wonders of our
-times, to whose mind such words as civilization,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_112">112</span>
-Fatherland, and religion, as well as many others
-that form the glib vocabulary of modern man,
-were mere empty sounds or air, could not but
-set me a-thinking&mdash;first, as to the value of those
-words. Fatherland, our country, his and mine,
-yet how different the conception, and how
-those consecrated, holy words are abused by
-the tricksters, great and small, who control
-and exploit mankind for their own benefit!
-Patriotism should consist in justice and equality
-of rights and tolerance to all, whereas, in fact,
-it is but a mask for the greed and avarice
-of the strong. My countryman is he whose
-ideals are identical with mine. What makes
-another being my fellow-man and my brother
-is an identity of ideals, not a concurrence of
-geographical conditions of birth. If he who
-is born ten thousand miles away in an unknown
-climate and in a different latitude shares with
-me the love of justice and of freedom, and will
-struggle for them even as I would, why should
-we be separated by conventional distinctions
-which benefit neither him nor me nor justice
-nor freedom as ideals?</p>
-<p>I thought, are these lands and this vast
-continent still virgin in the sense that humanity
-<span class="pb" id="Page_113">113</span>
-has not exploited them? are they to be the last
-scene of the stale criminal imposture now called
-civilization? Are men to come by thousands
-and by millions to these plains and these mountains,
-and settle on the shores of these rivers,
-bringing with them their old prejudices, their
-old tyrannical conventionalities, the hatreds that
-have stained history with blood for hundreds
-and for thousands of years, rearing on these
-new lands the old iniquities, calling them
-fatherlands, baptizing their crimes with holy
-words, and murdering in the name of
-patriotism? If such is to be the future of
-these lands, far better were it that the mighty
-rivers should overflow their course and convert
-into one immense lake, twin brother of the
-neighbouring sea, the vast plains, the endless
-mysterious forest; and that the immense
-bulwark of the Andes, aflame with a thousand
-volcanoes, should make the region inhospitable
-and uninhabitable to man: for of
-iniquity there is enough, and no more should
-be created under God&rsquo;s heaven.</p>
-<p>But the tale set me also a-thinking of the
-power of tradition and the beauty of song. If
-my memory plays me no trick, Arion, homeward-bound
-<span class="pb" id="Page_114">114</span>
-from the Court of Corinth, and
-laden with gifts of a King who worshipped
-song, was seized and thrown into the sea by
-the crew, but the listening dolphins or porpoises,
-grateful for the heavenly message thus
-delivered by him, bore him ashore and saved
-his life. So, more or less, runs the classical
-tale; and here in the wilds of America, from
-the lips of an unlettered woodman, the same
-beautiful conceit, clothed in simple words, had
-rung in my ears. The power of song, the
-beauty of the legend, had filtered itself through
-hundreds of generations from the days of our
-mother Greece, the mother of art and of beauty,
-across the mountains and the years and the seas
-and the continents, and the legend and the
-allegory were alive in their pristine and essential
-characteristics in the forests of tropical
-America. This gave me hope. If the power
-of things ideal, of things that have in them the
-divine charm of undying force, overcomes time
-and distance, why should not the ideal of
-righteousness, of liberty, and of justice prevail?
-And the vast continent of South America, why
-should it not be the predestined home of a
-happy and regenerate humanity? The trade-winds
-<span class="pb" id="Page_115">115</span>
-which come from the old world and
-across the ocean are purified on the heights
-of the Cordilleras. Even so humanity in that
-pilgrimage that is bound to take place ere
-long, as the ancient world begins to overflow,
-may regenerate itself and establish liberty and
-justice in that new world. If these be dreams,
-awakening were bitter.</p>
-<p>We soon heard that it was easy to reach one
-of the affluents of the Vichada by crossing the
-plains for about a mile overland, and, all things
-considered, decided to abandon the Meta River,
-even though the journey might be longer than
-we had at first intended. Thus, on the fourth
-day of navigation down the Meta we stopped,
-and at a place known as San Pedro del Arrastradero,
-where we found quite a large settlement,
-about 150 people, we left the Meta
-behind us and at once made ready for our
-journey through the Vichada, as large as the
-Meta, we were told, and inhabited by numerous
-savage tribes. This gave additional interest to
-the journey, and we looked forward to it with
-pleasure.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_116">116</div>
-<h2 id="c11">CHAPTER X</h2>
-<p>The settlement of San Pedro del Arrastradero&mdash;or
-of Arimena, as it is also called&mdash;lies on the
-right shore of the River Meta about 150
-miles from its confluence with the Orinoco.
-Within a very short distance of the Meta at
-that point, less than a mile to the south, the
-<i>ca&ntilde;o</i> of Caracarate branches towards the Muco
-River, which, flowing to the south-east, joins the
-Vichada; the latter, of about the same volume
-as the Meta, flows south-east till it strikes the
-Orinoco above the rapids. The Meta and the
-Vichada and the Orinoco form a triangle, of
-which the last named is the base. The Vichada
-enters the main stream some fifty miles above,
-and the Meta about 200 miles below, the
-series of rapids which divide the river into
-the Lower and the Upper Orinoco.</p>
-<p>Scattered far and wide at long distances
-<span class="pb" id="Page_117">117</span>
-apart on the plain which borders the Meta are
-numerous cattle-ranches, and on its very shores
-are settlements testifying to the effort of civilized
-man. But the new region that we were
-about to enter, irrigated by the Muco, the
-Vichada, and their affluents, is absolutely wild,
-and has seldom been crossed by white men
-other than stray missionaries, or adventurous
-traders in search of cheap rubber, resinous
-substances, tonga beans, hammocks, etc. These
-the Indians exchange for trifles, or implements
-which they prize very highly: to the wild
-inhabitants an axe, a cutlass, a knife, are
-veritable treasures, distinguishing their owner
-among his fellows.</p>
-<p>The tribes along the shores of the Meta River
-were known to be mostly hostile and aggressive.
-Travellers on that river always, if possible,
-pitch their camps on islets in mid-stream for
-fear of night attacks, and even then they need
-to keep strict watch and have their arms beside
-them. It is dangerous for small expeditions to
-cross the part of the river below San Pedro del
-Arrastradero.</p>
-<p>But the tribes along the region that we were
-about to cross, though no less primitive than
-<span class="pb" id="Page_118">118</span>
-the others, are mild and easily amenable to
-civilization. They are numerous, and under
-good guidance might be advantageously employed
-in useful work, might be taught to
-gather the natural products abounding in the
-forests, and cultivate the soil systematically.
-Their present notions of agriculture are
-elementary; they only practise it on a very
-small scale, relying principally on what they
-can hunt and fish.</p>
-<p>At San Pedro we found an individual who
-for over thirty years had been in the habit of
-travelling on the Muco and the Vichada, often
-going as far as Ciudad Bolivar, near the mouth
-of the Orinoco. He had amassed a little
-fortune by trading with the Indians. He spoke
-their dialect, and practised polygamy in accordance
-with their unsophisticated rites and
-customs. It was said that he had a great
-number of children along the shores of the
-river; he could therefore recommend us to his
-family, so to speak. His name was Gondelles.
-He had often accompanied the missionaries
-who had attempted to preach the Gospel among
-the savages, and, unless Rumour was a lying
-jade, he had himself strenuously endeavoured
-<span class="pb" id="Page_119">119</span>
-to observe that Divine precept which refers to
-increasing and multiplying the human species!</p>
-<p>The Indians of this region are specially
-expert in weaving beautiful hammocks from
-fibres of the various kinds of <i>maguey</i> or <i>agave</i>
-plants, or else extracted from the leaves of the
-<i>moriche</i>. The most prized, however, are those
-made of fibre of the <i>cumare</i> palm, soft and
-pliant as silk. A large and comfortable
-hammock woven of this fibre will take up the
-smallest possible space and last longer than any
-other. These Indians are also skilled in canoe-making;
-with their primitive stone instruments,
-aided by fire, they will make admirable canoes
-of one piece, hewn from the trunk of a tree.
-These canoes at times are so large that they
-will seat from twenty to twenty-five men comfortably,
-but most of them are small craft
-easily handled, holding six or eight persons
-at most.</p>
-<p>Some of the men who had accompanied us
-thus far now refused to continue the journey.
-We were informed that it would be comparatively
-easy to replace them with Indians
-who would accompany us for four or five days
-at a trifling wage. The tribes being numerous,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_120">120</span>
-it would not be difficult to find new hands at
-each stage.</p>
-<p>The wage of our new canoe men was always
-paid in kind: a handkerchief, a pound of
-salt, an empty bottle, a strip of gaudy silk&mdash;we
-had still some London cravats&mdash;were the
-most coveted articles. The idea of equity and
-work done for value received does not exist
-amongst the Indians. We soon found that
-it was folly to give them the article agreed
-upon until the work was done; for once the
-men had received what they coveted, they would
-abandon us, stealthily leaving the camp in the
-dusk at the first landing, and sometimes even
-rushing into the jungle in broad daylight.</p>
-<p>So now with a full crew, now crippled, we
-managed to continue the journey, first for six
-days on the Muco, and then on the Vichada,
-the navigation of which proved to be much
-longer than we had expected.</p>
-<p>The general aspect of Nature on these two
-rivers differed very little from what we had
-seen on the Meta. The shores of the Muco
-are generally covered with mangroves that
-push far into the current their submerged network
-of roots and branches, of which one must
-<span class="pb" id="Page_121">121</span>
-steer clear, as they are hiding-places for snakes,
-and are apt, if struck unexpectedly, to capsize
-the canoes. These beautiful clear waters, so
-harmless, so placid, in appearance, are in truth
-full of danger. Apart from alligators and water
-snakes, they abound in a species of small fish
-called <i>caribe</i>, which attack men and animals,
-especially if they find a sore spot in the skin.
-They swarm in such quantities and are so
-voracious that a bull or a horse crossing the
-river, if attacked by these fish, may lose a leg,
-or receive such a deep wound in the body that
-death is inevitable. No less perilous is the
-electric eel, which, on being touched, gives
-a shock so strong that the man or animal receiving
-it generally falls into the stream. Even
-tigers are known to have been struck by these
-peculiar fish, and it is said that some have been
-drowned, being unable to recover themselves
-in time.</p>
-<p>During the month of January the turtles
-begin to lay their eggs. Our attention was
-called to a specially bright star in the horizon,
-which the men asserted only appeared in that
-month of the year. It was called the star of
-the <i>terecayes</i>. The <i>terecay</i> is a small species of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_122">122</span>
-turtle, and much prized, and with reason, on
-account of its exquisite flesh. On more than
-one occasion, quite unexpectedly, the canoes
-would be steered ashore, the men would jump
-on the sand and run as if guided by some well-known
-landmark. After a few yards they would
-stop, and, digging in the sand with their hands,
-would extract a nest full of <i>terecay</i> eggs, the
-contents varying from fifty to over a hundred.
-Their experienced eyes had seen the tracks of
-the <i>terecay</i> on the sand. These turtles, like all
-others, lay their eggs once a year on the sand,
-and cover them up carefully, leaving the cares
-of motherhood to the forces of Nature. Once
-hatched in this fashion, the young turtles must
-shift for themselves, and their instinct tells
-them that their numerous enemies lie in watch
-for their awakening to active life. The moment
-they break the shell they make as quickly as
-they can for the neighbouring waters, where
-they are comparatively safe.</p>
-<p>If the inhabitants of those regions lack book-learning
-and knowledge of things in which
-their more civilized fellow-creatures are versed,
-Nature and the life which they lead have given
-them a keenness of sight, of hearing, and of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_123">123</span>
-touch far beyond the average citizen of town
-and village. I often noticed of an evening, as
-the canoes were being tied and hoisted halfway
-out of the water, that the men walking along
-the beach would mutter to themselves, or call
-the attention of their fellows to the sand, which
-to me seemed smooth and uniform. Pointing
-to the ground, they would say, duck, turtle,
-tapir, alligator, wild-boar, deer, tiger, and so
-forth. The tracks which they saw were, so to
-speak, the visiting-cards of animals which had
-spent the day on the beach where our camp
-was pitched at night.</p>
-<p>When we first came in contact with a real
-wild Indian I experienced a feeling very difficult
-to describe.</p>
-<p>Here was a being whose appearance was
-identical with our own, save for details of colour
-of skin and other trivial distinctions which
-could not affect the essential organic elements;
-yet he awakened within us a curiosity akin to
-that with which we gaze at a wild animal in
-some zoological garden. What a deep gulf
-yawned between that forlorn brother and ourselves!
-The work of generations, the treasures
-heaped up by man for man during centuries of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_124">124</span>
-struggle and endeavour, hopes and fears, disappointments,
-traditions, ideals, conventionalities,
-all that constitutes civilization; the higher
-belief in a Supreme Being, the evolution of
-habits, the respect for established laws and
-regulations, the reverence for sacred things&mdash;all
-that world essential to us was as naught,
-absolutely non-existent, for that naked fellow-creature
-who stood before us, unprotected, lost
-amid the forest in a climate unfavourable to
-man. There was no one to help him, or make
-any effort to improve the natural forces within
-him, none to lift his soul into a higher and
-better world. Curiosity gave way to pity.
-The labour of the missionary&mdash;of the ideal
-missionary&mdash;became holier and greater in my
-eyes. Here was a field of promising harvest
-for a real worker.</p>
-<p>One clear and fragrant night, when all the
-camp slept, the bonfires half out, the river a few
-feet off, as I lay awake thinking of the world to
-which we belonged, so different from our present
-surroundings, so distant that it seemed a far-off
-cloud in the sky, something that had gone by,
-and which could never be reached again, I
-suddenly remembered the words uttered by one
-<span class="pb" id="Page_125">125</span>
-of our men when we landed that afternoon upon
-the beach. He had clearly enumerated a long
-list of animals whose tracks were upon the very
-sand covered by my body. Logic took possession
-of my brain with overpowering rapidity.
-The alligator, the tiger, and their numerous
-companions have visited this beach; they may
-again visit it during the night. What is to
-hinder them from doing so; and in that case,
-what is to protect me from their attack? Little
-did I care for the wild-boar, the tapir, or the
-deer&mdash;I knew they would be as scared of me as
-I was of the other animals; and so, after this
-attack of fright, my imagination worked till the
-sweat began to run clammy on my forehead.
-It seemed to me that from the neighbouring
-forest a veritable Noah&rsquo;s-ark of living, rushing,
-roaring, famished beasts, multiplied by my
-fancy, and numerous as the progeny of
-Gondelles, came upon us. I almost felt the
-hot breath and saw the glistening eyes of the
-tiger outside the thin partition of cotton of my
-mosquito-bar, heard the awkward shamble of
-the alligator&rsquo;s body, and felt the unpleasant,
-musky odour of the huge lizard an instant
-before it crushed my bones between its jaws.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_126">126</span>
-Unable to master myself, I sat upright, and
-would have yelled from dread but for the
-spectacle that met my eyes in the moonlight,
-flooding the surrounding scene. There to right
-and left of me snored all my companions; the
-river shone brilliantly, the breeze blew softly,
-no one stirred. This absence of fear on the
-part of those who were perfectly familiar with
-all the dangers of the region reassured me
-completely. Oh blessed snores and valiant
-snorers! My peace of mind returned, and,
-lying back upon my sandy couch, I lustily
-joined the tuneful choir.</p>
-<p>Community of danger constitutes the most
-acceptable guarantee; no man ever thinks of
-ascertaining who drives the locomotive that is
-to whirl him and hundreds of his fellow-creatures
-at lightning speed through glade and
-forest, over bridge and under tunnel; no man
-questions the capability of the captain responsible
-for the steamship and for the lives of
-thousands of his fellow-men; the most distrustful
-of us never gives a thought to these
-points. Why? Because we know that the
-driver or the captain, as the case may be,
-stakes his own life. Each humble boatman
-<span class="pb" id="Page_127">127</span>
-who listened to C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s proud assurance that
-the skiff could not sink because it carried him
-and all his fortunes equalled C&aelig;sar in self-esteem,
-for the lives of those poor mariners were
-as dear to them as C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s life could be to him.
-The truth of my assertion that community of
-danger constitutes the acceptability of a given
-guarantee is demonstrated when, for instance,
-a traveller entrusting his life on a railway or a
-ship to the agent of a company advances or
-lends money to the same company. Then
-comes the hour of discrimination. All the
-appliances invented by that most wonderful
-engine of human ingenuity, the law of commerce,
-which in its numerous forms rules the
-world paramount and supreme, are brought to
-bear. No one&rsquo;s word is accepted as sufficient;
-documents, signatures, seals, formalities,
-numerous and complicated, are employed as a
-delicate proof of the trust that the man of the
-world ever places in the good faith of his
-brother before God. This suspicion is responsible
-for an enormous amount of expense and
-trouble which, were good faith more abundant
-or were belief in its existence general, might
-be applied to relieve misery and sorrow. If
-<span class="pb" id="Page_128">128</span>
-the action of humanity all the world over in
-this dreary endeavour to protect man from the
-rascality of man be justified, we are, indeed,
-not very far removed in truth and in essence
-from the savages of the forest, who seize what
-they need and prey upon each other according
-to the dictates of nature. If beauty be but
-skin-deep, civilization is not more profoundly
-ingrained, and the smallest rub reveals the
-primitive ravening beast. Yet I may be mistaken;
-perhaps it is not distrust which begets
-all those precautions, but something so noble
-that I dare not presume to divine, much less
-to understand, it.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_129">129</div>
-<h2 id="c12">CHAPTER XI</h2>
-<p>Though several years have elapsed since my
-journey across those wild vast regions, the
-remembrance of them is most vivid and clear
-in my mind. It seems to me that everything
-in that period of my life, landscape and human
-beings, forest and plain, stream and cloud,
-mountains and breezes, all, all are still alive;
-they form part of the panorama or scene wherein
-my memory keeps them immortal, abiding for
-ever as I saw them, though unattainable to me.
-What was, is; what was, must be; so I imagine.
-Memory is in this respect like the artist. The
-sculptor or the painter seizes one moment of
-life, fashions and records it in marble or in
-bronze, in line or colour, and there it remains
-defying time, unchanging and unchangeable.
-The gallery of the mind, the vast storehouse
-of the past, is infinite. It keeps in its inmost
-<span class="pb" id="Page_130">130</span>
-inexhaustible recesses the living record of our
-life, the tremulous shadowy hues of early night
-deepening into the dark, the glory of the
-rising sun casting its veil of light upon the
-waves, the sensation of the breeze as it fans
-our heated brow after an anxious night, the
-thunder of the ocean or the deafening tumult
-of frenzied crowds in hours of national misfortune
-or universal anger, the last parting word
-or look of those who are gone before, the blithe
-greeting of him who comes back to us after
-years of absence and of sorrow: all these
-manifestations of life, the ebb and flow of joy
-and happiness, of pain and grief, stand individualized,
-so to speak, in the memory, and
-nothing, save the loss of memory itself, can
-change them. Nothing so dear to the heart
-as those treasures; against them time and the
-vicissitudes of life are powerless&mdash;even as the
-lovers and the dancers and the singers and
-the enchanted leafy forest in Keats&rsquo; &lsquo;Grecian
-Urn.&rsquo; That love will know no disappointment.
-Sweet as songs heard may be, far sweeter are
-those unheard of human ear; beautiful as are
-the green boughs of the forest, far lovelier
-are those whose verdure is imperishable, whose
-<span class="pb" id="Page_131">131</span>
-leaves will know no autumn; and sweeter than
-all melody, the unheard melody of those flutes,
-dumb and mute in the infinite harmony which
-man can imagine, but not create. Our own
-mind keeps that record of the past; hallowed
-and sacred should it be, for therein our sorrow
-may find relief, and our joy purity and new
-strength.</p>
-<p>Beautiful indeed were our days. Gliding
-softly over the waters, we would read, and
-there, in forced and intimate communion with
-Nature, would seek our old-time friends the
-historians, the poets, the humbler singers that
-had charmed, or instructed, or taught us how
-to live. The lessons of history seemed clearer
-and more intelligible, the puissant and sonorous
-voice of poetry sounded fitly under that blue
-sky in the midst of those forests, even as the
-notes of the organ seem to vibrate and echo
-as in their very home, under the fretted vault
-of some Gothic temple. The majesty of surrounding
-Nature lent an additional charm to the
-voice of the great ones who had delivered a
-message of consolation and of hope to mankind.
-We lived now in Rome, now in Greece, now
-in modern Europe, and frequently the songs
-<span class="pb" id="Page_132">132</span>
-of our own poets filled our minds with joy, as
-the twitter of native birds when the sun rose
-and the morning sparkled, bedewed with jewels
-that night had left on leaves and flowers.</p>
-<p>One day, when we had grown expert in
-bargaining with the Indians, shortly before
-sunset a solitary Indian paddled towards our
-camp. He had been attracted by the novel
-sight. We had learnt that within the memory
-of living man no such large convoy as ours had
-passed through those waters; groups of eight
-or ten men in one canoe were the largest ever
-seen&mdash;at least, the largest groups of strangers.
-Here was a small army, with two large canoes
-and great abundance of strange and wonderful
-equipment&mdash;boxes, trunks, weapons, cooking
-utensils, many men with white faces and
-marvellous strange array; indeed, enough to
-attract the attention and curiosity of any child
-of the forest. The canoe upon which the
-Indian stood was barely six feet in length&mdash;so
-narrow and shallow that at a distance he seemed
-to stand on the very mirror of the waters. He
-carried a large paddle, shaped like a huge rose-leaf
-somewhat blunted at the end, and with a
-very long stem. He plunged this gracefully in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_133">133</span>
-the water on either side, seeming hardly to
-bend or to make any effort, and in feathering
-there appeared a convex mirror of liquid glass,
-upon which the sunlight fell in prismatic hues
-each time that his paddle left the water. He
-drew near, and stood before us like a bronze
-statue. He was stark naked, save for a clout
-round his loins. On his brow was a crown of
-tiger-claws surmounted by two eagle feathers.
-Across his neck, hung by a string, was a small
-bag of woven fibre containing a piece of salt,
-some hooks made of bone and small harpoons
-which could be set on arrows, and two hollow
-reeds about an eighth of an inch in diameter
-and four or five inches long. By means of
-these reeds the Indians inhale through their
-nostrils an intoxicating powder, in which they
-delight. The man was young, powerfully built,
-about five feet ten in height, and well proportioned;
-his teeth glistening and regular; his
-eyes black and large, gleaming like live coals;
-he was a perfect incarnation of the primitive
-race, and the hardships and exposure of his
-past life had left no more trace on him than the
-flowing waters of the river on the swan&rsquo;s-down.</p>
-<p>Guided by our civilized instinct, which in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_134">134</span>
-these utilitarian days prompts man to seek in
-whatever meets his eye, first and foremost, not
-its beauty or the symbol which it may represent,
-or the tendency towards something higher
-which it may indicate, but its utility, following
-this delightful system of our latest Christian
-civilization, I, in common with my companions,
-at once decided to exploit that simple spirit and
-press him into our service. Being unable to
-bargain ourselves&mdash;which was lucky for him,
-for in our enlightened way we should have
-driven a harder bargain than our men&mdash;we
-entrusted the task to Leal.</p>
-<p>The Indian, also true to his instinct, immediately
-indicated&mdash;first by signs, and then
-by word of mouth, when he saw he was understood&mdash;that
-he craved a part of the innumerable
-riches before his eyes. He really did not ask
-for much; he wanted some salt, a knife, a piece
-of glass like a small mirror that he saw glittering
-in the hands of one of our men, and whatever
-else we might be willing to give. He was
-told that he could have all that he asked and
-more. He smiled broadly, and a light of joy
-came over his face. These were signs truly
-human, not yet trained into the hypocritical
-<span class="pb" id="Page_135">135</span>
-conventions of well-bred society. As he
-stretched forth his hand, he was told that the
-gift was conditional&mdash;that he must earn the
-articles he coveted, that we expected him to
-sit beside the other paddlers and help to carry
-us for two or three days, whereupon he would
-receive these rich gifts from our prodigal
-bounty.</p>
-<p>This statement seemed to our Indian interlocutor
-absurd, just as something utterly incongruous
-and ludicrous in business would
-strike the mind of a London banker. In his
-primitive mental organism the idea that one
-man should work for another was something
-that found no place. Those forests, rivers, and
-plains were his home; he roved free and fearless
-through them, alone or in the company of
-others, each one of whom provided for himself.
-A bargain&mdash;that basis of civilization, of culture,
-that great agent of progress and of human
-development&mdash;was something which he could
-not understand. The essence of the fact, and
-the fact itself, were beyond him. We could see
-the struggle between his greed and his love of
-freedom. The riches that we offered him
-tempted him far more than glittering diamonds
-<span class="pb" id="Page_136">136</span>
-on the counter of a jeweller tempt a vain
-woman or a burglar at bay. Yet he overcame
-the temptation. The glad smile vanished; his
-face darkened with a look that we could interpret
-as reproach, and possibly contempt; he silently
-lifted his paddle, and with two strokes sped his
-canoe into mid-stream. Without glancing backwards,
-giving now and then a tremendous
-stroke, he disappeared in the distance. The
-rays of the sinking sun reddened the waters
-of the river and the surrounding horizon; the
-Indian, upright in his canoe, seemed as if clad
-in a sheet of flame, and finally vanished as
-though consumed in the crimson glow. The
-sun itself in the western horizon resembled a
-huge ball of red-hot iron, as if the Cyclops and
-the Titans, after playing, had left it behind on
-the bosom of the endless plain, flat and still as
-the sea in a calm.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_137">137</div>
-<h2 id="c13">CHAPTER XII</h2>
-<p>The course of the rivers on the <i>llanos</i> is far
-from being as straight as the proverbial path
-of righteousness. They meander, wind, and
-turn about, so that when on a sharp curve one
-often sails almost directly against the main
-direction of the waters. The Indians take
-short cuts overland which enable them to
-travel much faster than the canoes. Thus the
-news of our coming preceded us by several
-days, and long before we reached the mouth
-of the Vichada all the tribes had heard that the
-largest expedition known in their history was
-on the way.</p>
-<p>For reasons which he explained to us afterwards,
-Leal had, without consulting us, informed
-the first Indians whom we met that ours was
-a party of missionaries. I do not suppose that
-he went into any further details. In the mind
-<span class="pb" id="Page_138">138</span>
-of the Indians the remembrance of missionaries
-seems to have lingered from the days when
-Jesuit missions were established on nearly all
-the principal rivers of the Orinoco watershed.
-From the time of the Independence there have
-been no regular missions following a consistent
-plan and belonging to a special organization.
-Now and then desultory attempts have been
-made without any appreciable results. But the
-Indians respect the missionary; possibly they
-also fear him, and, as we could observe later on
-from our own experience, they expect from him
-gifts not only of a spiritual, but of a material
-kind.</p>
-<p>The result of all this is that a missionary is
-more likely to be welcomed and assisted than
-any other traveller. This was what guided
-Leal in what he considered a harmless assertion&mdash;a
-pious fraud, in which the fraud is more
-obvious than the piety.</p>
-<p>Be it remarked, however, that neither my
-companions nor I had the least responsibility
-for Leal&rsquo;s action. When travelling along the
-mule-tracks leading to the plains, public opinion,
-or what under the existing circumstances took
-its place, had assigned to our expedition an
-<span class="pb" id="Page_139">139</span>
-episcopal character. This assimilation to the
-Church seemed to have been our fate. Here
-again we were incorporated in its fold in an
-official capacity, so to speak, without the least
-intention or effort on our part. When we learnt
-what Leal had done, it was too late to withdraw,
-and we resigned ourselves to our new ecclesiastical
-honours with proper humility.</p>
-<p>It is said that men may be great, some because
-they are born great, others because they achieve
-greatness, and others yet again because greatness
-is thrust upon them. In the present
-instance the clerical character was thrust upon
-us. We&mdash;at least, I can answer for myself&mdash;tried
-to live up to the new dignity, not only
-inwardly, but outwardly, assuming, as far as
-circumstances would permit, the sedate and
-reverent, contemplative demeanour which so
-well suits him who devotes his life to the
-welfare of others, seeking to guide them to
-heaven by an easy path, no matter at what
-cost of personal sacrifice or discomfort to himself.</p>
-<p>Strange, however, that this self-sacrificing
-mood adopted in imitation of true priests, who
-despise the comforts and joys of life, should
-<span class="pb" id="Page_140">140</span>
-have been assumed in our own spurious case
-for the special purpose of increasing those
-worldly comforts and material joys!</p>
-<p>We soon discovered, to our amazement, that
-our new position was far from being a sinecure.</p>
-<p>One day we were waiting for the noon-day
-heat to pass, having halted on a <i>poyata</i>, the
-name given to small beaches that seem to
-stretch like a tongue of sand from under the
-very roots of the forest into the river; we had
-fled for shelter to the coolness of the high
-vaulting trees, from whose trunks the hammocks
-swung invitingly. The blue heaven appeared
-like an enamelled background beyond the lace-work
-of the intertwined leaves and branches.
-The fires burned brightly and cheerily, their
-flames pale and discoloured in the bright glare
-of the sun; the pots simmered, and soon tempting
-whiffs were wafted by the lazy breeze that
-hardly stirred, welcome heralds of good things
-to come. The stomach reigns supreme just
-before and after a meal, which, if it be assured
-to a hungry mortal, constitutes for him the
-most satisfactory event in the immediate future,
-calming his anxieties or blunting the edge of
-care; and after it has been eaten, the process
-<span class="pb" id="Page_141">141</span>
-of digestion, which for the moment monopolizes
-the principal energies of the organism, seems
-to cast a veil over the unpleasant aspects of
-life, and to soften the thorns that beset our
-path.</p>
-<p>Some General of the Confederate Army in
-the United States, who had retired to his lands
-after the final collapse of the South, used to
-remark that one of the saddest things for an
-old man who had been very active in former
-years was to receive the frequent news of the
-death of former comrades and companions.
-&lsquo;Whenever such news reaches me,&rsquo; he went
-on to say, &lsquo;I always order two pigeons for my
-dinner; they are so soothing!&rsquo;</p>
-<p>In the midst of our pleasant expectations we
-found ourselves suddenly invaded by a swarm
-of Indians, male and female of all ages, who
-came either from the forest or in canoes. They
-pounced on us so swiftly that we were practically
-swamped by them in an instant. They at once
-began to beg for presents, to touch and smell
-any of the articles belonging to us that they
-could, and they certainly would have taken
-everything had it been possible.</p>
-<p>The men were all in the primitive attire of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_142">142</span>
-the proud Indian whom we had been unable
-to press into our service a few days before.
-The women wore tunics made either from coarse
-cotton stuffs obtained from the traders, or from
-a sort of bark, pliant and fairly soft, called
-<i>marimba</i>. Some of the women were accompanied
-by two or three children.</p>
-<p>With the tribe&mdash;for it was a whole tribe that
-had fallen upon us&mdash;came a man dressed in
-trousers&mdash;the regulation article such as you
-may see in any civilized capital&mdash;and a woollen
-shirt of a deep red hue. He was the chief of
-the tribe, and had donned that garb in our
-honour.</p>
-<p>The captain told Leal that the various
-mothers who had brought their children were
-anxious to have them baptized. Leal replied
-that the matter would be attended to on our
-return trip, arguing furthermore that the three
-reverend missionaries should not be disturbed
-as they lay in their hammocks, for though, had
-they been ordinary men, they might be thought
-to be asleep, yet being persons of eminent piety
-it was more probable that they were entranced
-in meditation. Leal backed his plea with a
-gift, a most wonderful argument which carries
-<span class="pb" id="Page_143">143</span>
-conviction to wild Indians almost as quickly as
-to civilized men. The chief did not insist, and
-for the moment we were left to our pseudo-religious
-and silent contemplations.</p>
-<p>Shortly after, however, an Indian mother,
-with one child in her arms and two in her
-wake, proved obdurate and relentless. Her
-thirst for the baptismal waters&mdash;at least, on
-behalf of her children if not of herself&mdash;must be
-slaked at all costs. All Leal&rsquo;s efforts proving
-fruitless, he ended by telling her that I was the
-chief missionary. Once recognised as a pillar
-of the Church, I was prepared for any sacrifice
-of self, so that on the Indian woman approaching
-me I got ready to perform whatever
-ceremony she might want to the best of my
-ability. She was not only prudent and cautious,
-but distrustful. She pulled my hat off, and ran
-her fingers swiftly through my hair. On seeing
-that I had no tonsure&mdash;her mimic was as clear
-as speech&mdash;she flung my hat violently on the
-ground, gesticulated and shouted, attracting
-the attention of all her companions.</p>
-<p>Here was a complication for which we had
-not bargained. If there were great advantages
-in our being taken for missionaries, there was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_144">144</span>
-also great danger in being exposed as sham
-missionaries. Something must be done to
-remedy the evil. Leal at once bethought
-himself of an expedient; he took the Indian
-woman towards the hammock where Alex
-slept in sweet oblivion, unconscious of what
-was going on around him. She at once
-dragged off his hat, and on finding a head brilliantly
-bald almost fell prostrate. Hierarchy,
-or what in her savage mind stood for it,
-evidently grew higher with the size of the
-tonsure, and here the tonsure was immense.
-Had she known the various dignities into which
-the Catholic priesthood is divided, she might
-have taken Alex for the Pope. Be that as it
-may, she was satisfied. Alex, on being informed,
-swallowed the pill gracefully, and
-prepared to do his duty.</p>
-<p>The woman brought forward her smallest
-child. Here again new difficulties ensued.
-We held a council of consultation as to the
-<i>modus operandi</i>. Opinions differed widely, and
-were supported vehemently, as is sure to be
-the case when all those discussing a given
-subject happen to be equally ignorant. Finally
-some sort of plan was adopted, and the child
-<span class="pb" id="Page_145">145</span>
-was baptized in accordance with a rite evolved
-from our own dim recollections, with such
-modifications as seemed most fit.</p>
-<p>There under the blue heaven, with the broad
-winding river at our feet, close by the dense,
-darkening forest that lay behind us, its branches
-overhead forming a panoply of green, studded
-with the gold and yellow and blue flowers of
-the numerous creepers, we performed the
-ceremony of baptism, initiating the young
-savage into the Church of Christ our Lord
-with a feeling of deep reverence, intensified by
-our own sense of ignorance. Let us hope that
-the solemnity of the act, which flashed before
-us like an unexpected revelation, compensated
-for any involuntary informality.</p>
-<p>But after the water had been poured on the
-babe&rsquo;s head, and the ceremony had, as we
-thought, come to an end, the mother would not
-take her child back. She had evidently seen
-other baptisms, and our christening was not up
-to her standard. She made us understand that on
-former occasions &lsquo;book reading&rsquo; had taken place:
-such was Leal&rsquo;s interpretation of her words.</p>
-<p>We had come to look upon this Indian
-woman as an expert critic. Through unpardonable
-<span class="pb" id="Page_146">146</span>
-neglect, which to this day I cannot
-explain satisfactorily, we had neither a breviary
-nor a prayer-book with us, so we laid hands on
-the next best thing, bearing in mind what a
-stickler for detail this Indian woman had proved
-to be. A book of poems, an anthology of
-Spanish poets, gilt-edged and finely bound,
-stood us in good service. Alex opened it at
-random, and read a short poem with due and
-careful elocution for the edification of the new
-little Christian.</p>
-<p>The ceremony had to be performed eight or
-ten times. After the third child we gave them
-only one stanza apiece, as our ardour was somewhat
-chilled.</p>
-<p>When all the children had been christened,
-the chief claimed the &lsquo;usual&rsquo; gifts. He soon
-explained to us that it was customary for the
-missionaries to make presents to the parents of
-the children newly baptized. I had begun to
-admire the zeal of these mothers in quest of a
-higher religion for their children; this demand
-showed that their fervour was accompanied by
-greed, being thus of the same nature as that
-species of &lsquo;charity with claws&rsquo;&mdash;the Spanish
-<i>caridad con u&ntilde;as</i>. Trifles were distributed
-<span class="pb" id="Page_147">147</span>
-amongst the mothers, and the tribe disappeared,
-rejoicing in their possessions, for to
-these folk the things were no trifles, and, let us
-hope, exultant in the acquisition of eight or ten
-buds destined to bloom into Christian flowers.</p>
-<p>History doth indeed repeat itself, and
-humanity imitates humanity heedless of time
-and space. If I remember rightly, Clovis,
-justly anxious for the conversion of his legions
-to Christianity, presented each dripping warrior
-after baptism with a tunic&mdash;a most valuable
-article in those days, when Manchester looms
-did not exist and all weaving was done by
-hand. Those pious paladins, it is said, were
-like our Indian friends of the Vichada, always
-ready to be rechristened on the same terms as
-before&mdash;that is to say, in exchange for a new
-tunic. Yet, for all their sameness, things do
-somehow change with time. In these two
-instances we have the Church as a donor, and
-the new proselyte as a receiver of presents
-more or less valuable. Once the conversion
-fully assured, what a change in the parts within
-a few generations! The Church gives naught;
-at least, it gives nothing that is of this world.
-On the contrary, it takes all it can; the people
-<span class="pb" id="Page_148">148</span>
-are led to heaven, the poorer the easier, for in
-the kind and capacious bosom of Mother
-Church they are to deposit all worldly goods
-which might hamper their flight to higher
-regions. A beautiful and wonderful evolution,
-and we had not far to go to see it in full play
-and force. The savages of the Colombian
-plains are still in that primitive pitiful state
-when they have to be bribed, so to say, into
-the fold of the Church; many of the civilized
-people in the towns and cities obey and respect
-that Church which holds sway supreme over
-them in life and in death, guiding, controlling,
-saving them. Happy the nations where the
-chosen and appointed servants of the Most
-High, disciplined into some sort of priesthood
-or other, undertake the pleasing task of saving
-their reluctant fellow-men at the latter&rsquo;s expense,
-but with the sure and certain faith of
-those who know that they are working for
-justice and for the happiness of their fellows,
-though these may choose to deny it. Happy,
-thrice happy, lands where the invasion of
-diabolical modern ideas has been baffled, and
-the good old doctrine of abject submission still
-rules!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_149">149</div>
-<h2 id="c14">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-<p>Whenever we started afresh in the morning, or
-after any temporary halt, the man at the prow
-of the canoe would call out, &lsquo;<i>Vaya con Dios</i>,&rsquo;
-and the man on the stern, who steered with a
-paddle far larger than the others, would reply,
-&lsquo;<i>y con la Virgen</i>&rsquo; (&lsquo;God go with us,&rsquo; &lsquo;and the
-Virgin,&rsquo; respectively). The fair Queen of
-Heaven, being thus commemorated, piety was
-wedded to chivalry.</p>
-<p>The days followed each other in seemingly
-endless succession, like the windings of the
-river. Familiarity with the ever-varying
-aspects of Nature begot a sense of monotony
-and weariness. The forests and the prairies,
-dawn and sunset, the whole marvellous landscape,
-passed unheeded. We longed to reach
-the main artery; the Orinoco was our Mecca,
-apparently unattainable. Fishing and hunting
-<span class="pb" id="Page_150">150</span>
-had lost zest, and become simple drudgery,
-indispensable to renew our provender, as in
-the long journey nearly all our stores were
-exhausted.</p>
-<p>Raoul and Leal frequently shot at the alligators,
-which, singly, in couples, or in shoals,
-basked in the sun in a sort of gluttonous
-lethargy, with hanging tongues and half-closed
-eyes. The huge saurians, when hit, would turn
-over and make for the water, except on rare
-occasions when the bullet entered below the
-shoulder-blade, this being a mortal wound.</p>
-<p>We would sit listening to the even stroke of
-the paddles on the sides of the canoe and the
-drowsy sing-song of the men.</p>
-<p>Frequently, towards sundown, we heard the
-deep note of tigers in the forest, and always the
-confused uproar of a thousand animals, frogs,
-crickets, birds, ushering in the night.</p>
-<p>Besides alligators and wild-boar, the only
-other large animals which we frequently saw
-were the harmless tapirs.</p>
-<p>Snakes are not abundant on the Vichada, yet
-it was on the shores of that river that we came
-to quite close quarters with a water-snake of
-the boa constrictor species. The reptile was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_151">151</span>
-found coiled not far from our halting-place.
-Raoul at once fired his fowling-piece at short
-range, blinding and wounding it. He then
-discharged the five bullets of his revolver into
-the snake, and the men completed the work,
-beating it with their paddles. When stretched
-out, it measured some 16 feet in length, and was
-of corresponding thickness.</p>
-<p>These snakes, though not poisonous, are
-dangerous if hungry. They lurk at the
-drinking-places, and when a young calf, deer,
-or any other small animal comes within reach,
-they coil themselves round it and strangle it.
-They devour their prey slowly, and then fall
-into a sleep, which is said to last for several days.</p>
-<p>In all probability, the snake we had killed
-must have been at the end of one of these
-periods. Much to our astonishment, notwithstanding
-bullets and blows, the snake began to
-move in the direction of our hammocks. Had
-this not been seen in time, it might possibly
-have coiled itself around some unwary sleeper.
-More blows were administered, and this time
-the animal seemed quite dead. However, it
-managed to roll into the river, and on striking
-the water appeared to revive.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_152">152</div>
-<p>This was our only meeting face to face with
-a denizen of these forests and rivers, and
-I can truly say we longed for no closer acquaintance
-with them.</p>
-<p>For obvious reasons of prudence, we soon
-made up our minds never to pitch our night
-camp on beaches easy of access to the Indians
-settled along the shores, but during the day we
-would frequently halt at their settlements, and
-this enabled us to see a good deal of their mode
-of life and peculiarities.</p>
-<p>We found the tribes docile and friendly,
-rather inclined to be industrious in their way
-than otherwise.</p>
-<p>The Indians of the Vichada basin are the
-bakers, if I may so call them, of that great
-region. The bread which they prepare is made
-from the <i>ma&ntilde;oc</i>, or <i>yuca</i>, root, which grows in
-plenty along the banks of rivers and streams.
-There are two kinds of <i>ma&ntilde;oc</i>, one sweet and
-harmless, the other bitter and poisonous, yet it
-is from this latter kind that the <i>casabe</i> is prepared.
-The root, varying in length from
-2 to 3 feet, with a thickness of from 1 to 3
-inches, is grated on specially-prepared boards
-of very hard wood. Thus a whitish pulp
-<span class="pb" id="Page_153">153</span>
-is obtained, which is then compressed in a
-most primitive manner. A hollow cylinder,
-made of matting of coarse and pliant straw,
-varying in length from 4 to 6, and sometimes
-8, feet, and in diameter from 5 inches upwards,
-is filled with the pulp, sausage-wise.
-The cylinder is then hung from the branch of
-a tree, or a beam conveniently upraised on a
-frame; it is then stretched and twisted from
-below. The juice of the pulp flows through the
-mesh of the matting. When all the juice has
-been extracted, the pulp is emptied into large
-wooden basins, and is soaked in water, which is
-run off, the operation being repeated several
-times. The poisonous element, soluble in
-water, is thus eliminated, and the pulp is
-ready. It is then spread on a slab of stone,
-thin and perfectly even, called <i>budare</i>, which
-stands over a fire. The <i>casabe</i> is soon baked,
-generally in round cakes from 12 to 18 inches
-in diameter, and from half an inch to an inch in
-thickness. After baking it is stored in special
-baskets, called <i>mapires</i>, where it can be kept for
-months, as it stands all weathers and is impervious
-to moisture. It has the taste and the
-consistency of sawdust, and hunger must be
-<span class="pb" id="Page_154">154</span>
-very keen for any novice to relish the food.
-Yet it is most nutritious, and after a while
-replaces biscuit and bread, especially when
-these are not to be found! Not only the
-Indians, but even the white men, or those
-who call themselves civilized in that vast
-region, use <i>casabe</i> exclusively. Wheat flour is
-soon spoiled in that hot, damp atmosphere,
-where there are no facilities for protecting it
-against moisture and vermin, and though corn
-might be abundantly produced, there are no
-mills to grind the meal. Population is so
-scarce, and the few inhabitants are so far
-apart, that it would not pay to set up the
-necessary machinery. Nature seems to overwhelm
-man, who drifts back easily into primitive
-conditions of being.</p>
-<p>The Indians also prepare <i>ma&ntilde;oc</i> flour. The
-method is the same as in the case of <i>casabe</i>,
-only that before baking the pulp is allowed to
-ferment to a certain degree; after that it is
-baked and reduced to powder. This powder,
-mixed with water, makes an acid, refreshing
-drink. If sugar or molasses be available, they
-are added.</p>
-<p>As I have said before, the Vichada Indians
-<span class="pb" id="Page_155">155</span>
-are expert weavers of hammocks, and carvers
-or makers of canoes. They fell a large tree,
-and, after months of labour, produce very fine
-canoes. The canoes, the hammocks, and the
-<i>casabe</i> and <i>ma&ntilde;oc</i> are sold to traders who
-realize large profits. A pair of trousers and
-a hat to the captain of a tribe are deemed a
-good price for a small canoe. Such articles as
-a cutlass, or an axe, are most highly prized by
-the Indians, and are paid for accordingly. It
-is pitiful to learn how these poor savages are
-cheated, when not robbed outright, by the
-pseudo-Christians who come in contact with
-them.</p>
-<p>They also manufacture torches from resinous
-substances extracted from the forests. Some
-of these substances are excellent for caulking
-purposes, and, as they are found in great abundance,
-should constitute an important article of
-trade. A torch made from <i>peraman</i> about
-3 to 4 feet in length, lighted as night set in,
-would burn with a brilliant yellow flame, and
-throw a strong glare over the camp in the
-small hours when the bonfires had been
-reduced to embers.</p>
-<p>We had been on the Vichada about twenty-five
-<span class="pb" id="Page_156">156</span>
-days, when one of us developed symptoms
-of fever, and as these increased within the next
-twenty-four hours, we looked about for some
-convenient spot where we might rest for a few
-days, lest the attack might become really
-serious. It was our intention to build up
-some sort of hut&mdash;a comparatively easy matter,
-as some of our men were old hands at that
-kind of work. Fortunately for us, however,
-we met coming from the mouth of the Vichada
-a Venezuelan <i>ma&ntilde;oc</i> trader, who was sailing to
-one of the Vichada affluents, where he expected
-to receive a load of <i>ma&ntilde;oc</i> and <i>casabe</i>. The
-man&rsquo;s name was Valiente. He had three
-canoes and ten men with him. We were
-delighted to meet him, as it had been impossible
-for us to gather correct information from
-the Indians.</p>
-<p>He told us that we were still two or three
-days&rsquo; journey from the Orinoco, advised us not
-to put up at any of the beaches, but to push on
-to within a few hours of the mouth of the
-Vichada, where, on the left bank, we would
-find an abandoned <i>caney</i> that had been built by
-cattle-ranchers some years previously. He had
-just been there. It was possible, he added,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_157">157</span>
-that we might find some Indians in possession,
-in which case we should enforce the right of
-the white man and drive them out. At any
-rate, the <i>caney</i> was on high ground, the forests
-around were clear, and we should find it far
-more comfortable than anywhere else in that
-neighbourhood.</p>
-<p>Following his advice, we hurried on as fast
-as we could, promising to wait for him at Santa
-Catalina, that being the name of the place.
-Valiente thought that he would start back in
-six or eight days.</p>
-<p>In due course we reached Santa Catalina.
-On the high bluff, about 300 yards from the
-shore, we saw the welcome outlines of a <i>caney</i>;
-it showed unmistakable signs of having been
-built by white men. We could see from the
-river that it was inhabited. This was not so
-pleasant, but we had made up our minds that
-we would take possession of the <i>caney</i> with or
-without the consent of its occupants. If soft
-words proved insufficient, we were bound to
-appeal to the last argument of Kings and of
-men at bay&mdash;force.</p>
-<p>I really did not feel inclined to violence;
-peaceful means and diplomatic parleying seemed
-<span class="pb" id="Page_158">158</span>
-to me preferable, but as we had no choice,
-following the practice sanctioned by experience,
-of preparing for war if you want to insure
-peace, we decided to make a great display of
-force, even as the Great Powers, with their
-military and naval man&oelig;uvres&mdash;a show of teeth
-and claws to overawe the occupants of the
-<i>caney</i>.</p>
-<p>We moored on the bank near by. Notwithstanding
-my appearance, which, as I have
-chronicled in these pages, had warranted the
-belief in others that I belonged to the holiest
-of human professions, I was told off to ascertain
-whether we should occupy the premises peacefully
-or by force. I donned a red shirt,
-suspended from a broad leather belt a most
-murderous-looking cutlass and a six-shooter,
-cocked my hat sideways in a desperado fashion,
-and, full of ardour, advanced, flanked on either
-side by Leal and one of our men, each of
-whom carried a rifle and the inevitable <i>machete</i>.
-Verily, we looked like a wandering arsenal!</p>
-<p>Remembering that the actor&rsquo;s success is said
-to be greater the more he lives up to his part,
-I endeavoured to look as fierce as possible,
-and tried to call to mind scenes of dauntless
-<span class="pb" id="Page_159">159</span>
-courage, assaults of fortresses, heroic deeds
-from my historical repertory. I must have
-succeeded, for I felt uncommonly brave, particularly
-as there seemed to be no danger
-warranting our preparations.</p>
-<p>Unfortunately, I happen to be afflicted with
-myopia, which at a certain distance blurs the
-outline of objects large or small.</p>
-<p>As we continued to advance I could distinguish
-that someone was coming towards us.
-My courage evaporated; I felt sure that this
-must be some hostile Indian intent on hindering
-our access to the longed-for <i>caney</i>. I would
-fain have turned tail, but vanity, which is the
-source of nine-tenths of the displays of human
-courage, pricked me on. My ears awaited the
-wild whoop of the advancing Indian, and my
-eyes were prepared to witness the onslaught
-of his ferocious braves from the neighbouring
-bushes. Yet the die was cast, and forward
-we went.</p>
-<p>Imagine my surprise when, from the approaching
-figure, still indistinct and vague to
-my short-sighted eyes, a greeting of the utmost
-courtesy in the purest Castilian rang forth in the
-air of the clear afternoon. I shall never forget
-<span class="pb" id="Page_160">160</span>
-it. Those words in my native tongue, uttered
-in the midst of that wilderness, 500 leagues
-from the nearest town or civilized settlement,
-conjured up in one moment cherished memories
-of a distant world.</p>
-<p>Greatly relieved, I put aside my weapons of
-assault and destruction, which, to speak the
-truth, were most inconvenient to walk in.</p>
-<p>I knew before, and am more convinced than
-ever since that day, that I am not compounded
-of the clay of heroes: in which I am like the
-rest of the world. Peace and peaceful avocations
-are much more in my line. I love heroes&mdash;military
-ones especially&mdash;in books, in pictures,
-or in statues; as every-day companions, I believe&mdash;not
-having met any heroes in the flesh&mdash;that
-they must be unbearable. They really owe it
-to themselves to get killed or to die the moment
-they have attained their honours. They are
-sure to be ruined if left to the vulgarizing
-influences of daily life, mixing with the rest of
-humanity in every-day toil and strife. You
-cannot have your bust or portrait in Parliament
-or Assembly, your niche in the cathedral or
-in public hall, and your equestrian statue with
-your horse eternally lifting his fore-legs for the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_161">161</span>
-edification of coming generations, and at the
-same time insist on walking about the streets in
-the guise of a commonplace mortal! If you live
-in bronze and marble, if your name fills half a
-column of the encyclop&aelig;dia, and appears as a
-noble example in the books in which children
-are taught to consider brutal violence the
-highest evolution of human intellect and action,
-you cannot ask your humble companions on
-earth to put up with you in their midst.
-Heroes should find their places, and stick to
-them, for their own greater glory and the
-comfort of their fellow-men.</p>
-<p>The gentleman whom we met was named
-Aponte, and came from Caracas, the capital of
-Venezuela. He had been appointed to the
-governorship of the Amazon Territory. After
-spending several years in its capital, San Carlos,
-he became afflicted with cataract. People told
-him that the Vichada Indians cured cataract
-with the juice of certain herbs, which they kept
-secret. He had arrived at Santa Catalina
-about ten days before us, accompanied by his
-sister and a young Corsican who had been in
-his employ at San Carlos. An Indian woman
-from one of the tribes had taken him in charge,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_162">162</span>
-and made daily applications of some milky juice
-extracted from plants, and, strange to say, he
-found relief. I have since heard that he is
-completely cured.</p>
-<p>An occulist, who travelled through those
-regions two or three years later, investigated
-the truth of these alleged cures, and found them
-to be authentic. He could not, however, induce
-the Indians to tell him what they use. This
-knowledge of the virtue of plants amongst the
-Indians is found in nearly all tropical lands.
-Quinine, to which humanity owes so much, was
-also an Indian secret, and was discovered by
-a well-known combination of circumstances.
-Towards the middle of the eighteenth century,
-in one of the Peruvian States, the Indians were
-treated very cruelly by their masters. The
-daughter of the house won the love of the
-Indian slaves by her kindness and charity. It
-had been noticed that no Indians died from
-malarial and other fevers, which proved fatal to
-the white men, but what means they employed
-could not be learned either by threats or
-entreaties.</p>
-<p>The daughter of the cruel master was taken
-ill. Her nurse, an Indian woman, gave her
-<span class="pb" id="Page_163">163</span>
-some concoction which saved her life, but would
-not reveal the secret for years. On her deathbed
-she told her young mistress what plant it
-was that the Indians employed against fever.
-Thus the <i>cinchona</i>, or Peruvian bark, was discovered.
-In the Choco regions in Colombia,
-which teem with snakes, the Indians know not
-only the plants that cure the bite and counteract
-the poison, but those which confer immunity.
-They also have a combination of substances
-forming a sort of paste, which, when applied to
-the wounds and ulcers of man or animal, however
-sore they may be, exercise a healing and
-immediate action.</p>
-<p>I had an uncle, Dr. Triana, well known to
-European botanists, and especially to collectors
-of orchids, to several varieties of which his
-name is linked (the numerous varieties of
-<i>Catleya trianensis</i> are named after him). He
-lived for a long time in the Choco region, and
-brought back large quantities of this paste,
-which he used with success in cases of wounds
-and ulcers, both in Europe and America, but he
-could never persuade the Indians to tell him its
-exact composition.</p>
-<p>The young Corsican whom we found with
-<span class="pb" id="Page_164">164</span>
-Mr. Aponte was a sort of globe-trotter, jack-of-all-trades,
-hail-fellow-well-met with everybody.
-He was an explorer, a dentist, could serve as
-barber if required, had acted as clerk to Mr.
-Aponte, had with him a fairly well-stocked
-medicine-chest, and proved to be a first-rate
-cook. He either knew something of medicine
-or made up for ignorance by his daring. At
-any rate, he took our sick companion in hand,
-administered to him some of his drugs, and in
-two or three days restored him to perfect health.
-This was a great blessing. Thus disappeared
-from our horizon the only ominous cloud which
-darkened it during those days of so much sunlight
-and freedom. Those who know not what
-tropical fevers are can form no idea of the dread
-that their presence inspires when one sees them
-stealthily gaining ground. At times they act
-slowly, and give one a chance of struggling
-against them, but often they develop with
-lightning rapidity, and a man in full health and
-in the bloom of life is cut down suddenly in a
-few days or in a few hours.</p>
-<p>Figarella was the name of the Corsican
-&lsquo;doctor&rsquo; who enlivened the few days we spent
-at Santa Catalina with his songs, his tales of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_165">165</span>
-Corsica, the narrative of his adventures, true
-and fanciful, in all parts of the world, and who
-managed to prepare sumptuous dinners with
-turtle eggs, wild-boar meat, fresh fish, and
-other ingredients, picked up the Lord only
-knows where. I often had qualms that he
-must be drawing too freely on his medicine-chest,
-but the dishes proved palatable, and as
-we survived from day to day we have nothing
-but thanks and gratitude to the friend whom
-we met in the midst of those wilds, with whom
-our lives came in contact for a few days, who
-then remained behind to work out his own
-destiny, as we ours, even as two ships that
-sight each other for a moment in mid-ocean
-and then both disappear.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_166">166</div>
-<h2 id="c15">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-<p>Friend Valiente turned up at Santa Catalina,
-his canoes laden with <i>ma&ntilde;oc</i> and <i>casabe</i>, two
-days after our arrival.</p>
-<p>Though the ranch had been abandoned for
-some time, stray cattle, more or less wild,
-roamed about the neighbourhood. Leal and
-Valiente soon lassoed a fine heifer, which,
-slaughtered without delay, replenished our
-commissariat. We celebrated a banquet like
-that held on New Year&rsquo;s Day at San Pedro
-del Tua. We still had a little coffee, but of
-rum, which had then formed such an attraction,
-only the fragrant memory remained. Its place
-was supplied with what was left of our last
-demijohn of aniseed <i>aguardiente</i>.</p>
-<p>As Valiente intended following the same
-route, we decided to wait for him. He knew
-that part of the Vichada and the Orinoco well.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_167">167</span>
-There were several small rapids which it was
-not advisable to cross without a pilot.</p>
-<p>Two days after leaving Santa Catalina we
-struck the Orinoco, with a feeling of boundless
-joy. It seemed to us as if we had reached the
-open ocean, and the air itself appeared purer,
-more charged with invigorating oxygen.</p>
-<p>After a short spin from the mouth of the
-Vichada, we reached Maipures, where Venezuelan
-authorities were stationed. Knowing
-that Venezuelans, as a rule, are inclined to be
-less reverent and respectful towards the Church
-and its servants than the average Colombian,
-we abandoned our ecclesiastical character, dropping
-it, as Elias dropped his mantle upon
-earth, on the waters of the Vichada, where it
-had done us such good service.</p>
-<p>It was indispensable that we should find a
-pilot for the rapids. It seems that in former
-days the Venezuelan Government kept two or
-three pilots at Maipures, but we found to our
-sorrow that they had disappeared long since.
-However, not far from Maipures we were told
-that we should find a man named Gati&ntilde;o, one
-of the best pilots on the river. We at once
-started in quest of him, and found him in the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_168">168</span>
-thick of the forest about a mile from the shore.
-He was gathering tonga beans, and had formed
-a little camp, accompanied by his family, which
-consisted of his wife, two children, a boy and
-girl of fourteen and twelve respectively, and
-two smaller children of five and six. He
-agreed to take us across the rapids, provided
-we would wait at Maipures until he could pack
-his beans and gather some india-rubber extracted
-by himself. As there was no help for
-it, we agreed to wait. Maipures turned out to
-be nothing but a group of some fifteen or
-twenty tumble-down, rickety houses, inhabited
-by about a score of people, amongst them
-the prefect or political representative of the
-Government. He received us most cordially,
-and placed one of the buildings at our
-service. I believe both Valiente and Leal
-gave him to understand that we were high and
-mighty personages representing the Colombian
-Government on a tour of inspection through
-the lands awarded to Colombia by a recent
-decision in a case of arbitration between the
-two republics, handed down by the Queen of
-Spain. Maipures, where the functionary in
-question was supreme, came within the new
-<span class="pb" id="Page_169">169</span>
-jurisdiction, and possibly the belief that we
-might exercise some influence in maintaining
-him in his important office may have had to do
-with his courtesy and goodwill towards us. It
-was lucky, however, that such an impression
-was created. Shortly after our arrival he informed
-us that the Governor of the Amazon
-territory had just communicated to him orders
-to prevent all travellers on the river from
-ascending or descending the stream&mdash;in a
-word, to keep them as prisoners at Maipures.
-On reading the Governor&rsquo;s note to us, he
-argued, &lsquo;This cannot apply to you, for, being
-Colombians, you are outside the Governor&rsquo;s
-jurisdiction.&rsquo; Here, again, as when conferring
-ecclesiastical dignity upon us, Leal had acted
-with prudence and foresight.</p>
-<p>At Maipures we felt, as we never felt before
-or after during the journey, the presence of
-the numerous insects, and noticed that these
-winged creatures worked with method and
-discipline. The <i>puyon</i> sounded the charge
-shortly after sunset, attacking without haste
-and without rest during the whole night. At
-dawn it would retire to camp, sated with our
-gore. The post of honour was taken by the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_170">170</span>
-sand-flies, which would remain on duty during
-the earlier part of the forenoon. In their turn
-they were replaced by some other arm of the
-service during the hot hours of the day, and so
-on till nightfall, when the <i>puyon</i>, refreshed and
-eager, would again fall upon his prey. There
-is no greater regularity in the change of guards
-at a fortress than is observed by these insects in
-their war upon men and animals.</p>
-<p>The mosquito-net was the only real protection.
-Some relief is obtained by filling the
-room with smoke from smouldering horse or
-cattle manure, but the nauseous smell and the
-ammonia fumes made the remedy worse than
-the evil. We also feared to share the fate of
-herrings and other fish subject to the process,
-and preferred the seclusion of our mosquito-bars.</p>
-<p>These, however, were all minor troubles,
-mentioned here as a matter of record. From
-our temporary abode we could hear the distant
-thunder of the rapids, as of batteries of cannon
-in a great artillery duel. The waters of the
-Orinoco, suddenly twisted into a narrow bed,
-wrestle with the boulders of granite scattered
-in the channel, which they have frayed through
-the very heart of the huge basaltic mountains.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_171">171</div>
-<p>Life in those regions, from what we gathered,
-is as wild, as untamed, and irresponsible as the
-rivers or forests, and as the animals that roam
-in them. Violence and force are the only law,
-greed is the sole guiding principle, amongst
-men. The functionaries in most cases are only
-authorized robbers and slayers. The Indians,
-being the most helpless victims, are plundered
-and murdered, as best suits the fancy of those representatives
-of organized Governments, whose
-crimes remain hidden behind the dense veil of
-interminable forests.</p>
-<p>When news of any of these misdeeds does
-chance to reach the official ear, the facts are
-so distorted on the one hand, and there is so
-little desire to investigate on the other, that no
-redress is ever obtained.</p>
-<p>Whilst at Maipures there came in a man
-from San Carlos, the capital of one of the
-Amazon territories. He told a gruesome story.
-The Governor of that province, whom he represented
-as a prototype of the official robbers
-just mentioned, had exasperated his companions
-by his all-absorbing greed. The Governor
-seized all the tonga beans and india-rubber extracted
-by the poor Indians, who were forced
-<span class="pb" id="Page_172">172</span>
-to work without any pay, unfed, whip-driven.
-His companions, who expected a share in the
-plunder, conspired to murder him. He was
-known to be fearless and an admirable shot.
-One night, however, his house was surrounded
-by a score or so of his followers; a regular
-siege ensued; the young Governor kept his
-assailants at bay for several hours. He was
-accompanied by a young Spanish ballet-dancer,
-who had followed his fortunes undaunted by
-the dangers of that wild land. She would reload
-the guns whilst he scanned the ground
-from the only window of the room. One of
-the assailants crept upon the roof of the house
-and shot him from behind. He died in a
-few hours. The canoes laden with all kinds
-of produce despatched by him&mdash;not down the
-Orinoco, for he feared they might be seized
-on the long journey through Venezuelan
-territory, but through the Casiquiare to the
-Amazon&mdash;were said to be worth &pound;40,000 or
-&pound;50,000. Even if not accurate in all its
-details, which I repeat from the statement of
-the new arrival at Maipures, this instance gives
-an idea of the conditions that prevail in those
-localities.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_173">173</div>
-<p>True to his word, Gati&ntilde;o turned up at
-Maipures on the third day, and we continued
-our journey at once.</p>
-<p>The rapids of the Orinoco break the open
-current of the river for a distance of some forty
-or fifty miles. The Maipures rapids are from
-five to six miles in length. The river then
-continues its quiet flow for about twenty or
-twenty-five miles down to the rapids of Atures;
-thence it flows to the ocean without any further
-obstacle of importance.</p>
-<p>Gati&ntilde;o had his own canoe of a special type,
-much larger than ours, very deep, heavy,
-capacious, and comfortable. It was the real
-home of his family.</p>
-<p>I asked him why he did not settle somewhere
-on the banks of those rivers. He told
-me that both on the Orinoco and on the
-affluents there were numberless spots on high
-ground, free from all floods, abundant in game,
-within easy reach of good fishing, healthy and
-cool, where he would fain settle. &lsquo;But we
-poor wretches,&rsquo; he added, &lsquo;have no rights.
-When we least expect it, up turns a fine
-gentleman sent by some Government or other
-with a few soldiers; they lift our cattle and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_174">174</span>
-steal our chickens, destroy what they do not
-take away, and compel us to accompany them,
-paddling their canoes or serving them as they
-may want without any pay. Whenever I hear,&rsquo;
-he went on to say, &lsquo;that white men in authority
-are coming along the river, I start immediately
-in my canoe through the <i>ca&ntilde;os</i> as far inland as
-I can. The wild Indians and the savages are
-kind and generous; it is the whites and the
-whites in authority who are to be dreaded.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>Gati&ntilde;o was himself a full-blooded Indian,
-but, having been brought up on some settlement,
-he considered himself a civilized man,
-and in truth it was strange to see how he
-practised the highest virtues of an honest man.
-He loved his wife and family tenderly; he
-worked day and night for their welfare. He
-longed for a better lot for his children, the
-eldest of whom &lsquo;studied&rsquo; at the city of San
-Fernando de Atabapo, the only city which he
-knew of by personal experience. As it consists
-of eighty or a hundred thatch-roofed houses,
-one may well imagine what the word &lsquo;city&rsquo;
-implied in his case; yet his thoughts were
-constantly centred on the learning which that
-child was storing to the greater honour and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_175">175</span>
-happiness of his wandering family. Reading
-and writing formed the curriculum of that
-university, possibly because they marked the
-limit of the teacher&rsquo;s attainments; but let us
-be ashamed of mocking the humble annals of
-so good a man.</p>
-<p>I cannot forbear mentioning an incident, a
-parallel to which it would be difficult to find
-amongst nominally civilized folk. One of our
-men who had accompanied us from San Pedro
-de Arimena, knowing our plight and our
-dependence on Gati&ntilde;o, took him aside, informing
-him that we had plenty of gold, and
-that as one of us was ill, and we desired to
-reach the open river as soon as possible, it
-would be easy for him to name his price. He
-suggested that Gati&ntilde;o should charge one or two
-thousand dollars for the job, which we would be
-bound to pay. Gati&ntilde;o not only did not improve
-that wonderful opportunity, but he forbore from
-telling us of the advice given to him. He
-charged us 100 dollars, a moderate price for the
-work, and it was only when on the other side of
-the rapids that Leal learned the incident from
-the other men.</p>
-<p>Here was a test which not many men
-<span class="pb" id="Page_176">176</span>
-brought up in the midst of civilized life could
-have withstood.</p>
-<p>Gati&ntilde;o and his family will ever remain in my
-mind as a bright, cheerful group. Alas for
-them, lost in those solitudes amongst wild
-beasts and wild Indians, and subject to the
-voracity of the white men, who become more
-ferocious than the worst tiger when their unbridled
-greed has no responsibility and no
-punishment to dread!</p>
-<p>We had three canoes (including Gati&ntilde;o&rsquo;s) to
-take down. We were obliged to empty them
-completely. The men carried everything on
-their backs along the shore, whilst the canoes
-shot the rapids.</p>
-<p>When I saw Gati&ntilde;o on the first rapids, I
-believed him to be bent on suicide. At that
-point the river, cut and divided by the rocks,
-left a narrow channel of about 300 feet in
-length close in to the shore. Thus far the
-canoes had been dragged by the current and
-held by means of ropes. On reaching the
-channel, Gati&ntilde;o manned the canoe with four
-men at the prow, and sat at the stern. The
-canoe, still tied by the rope, which was held by
-four men, was kept back as much as possible
-<span class="pb" id="Page_177">177</span>
-from the current, which increased in speed at
-every inch. At the end of the channel the
-whole river poured its foaming volume into a
-huge, cup-like basin, studded with rocks, where
-the water seethed as if boiling. From the basin
-the river flowed on placidly for several miles.
-This was the end of the first rapids.</p>
-<p>Halfway down the channel the men let go
-the ropes, and the canoe, with its crew, seemed
-like a huge black feather upon a sea of foam,
-and the whole length of the channel, white and
-frothy, appeared like the arched neck of a
-gigantic horse curved to drink from the waters
-below. The waters, before entering the basin,
-formed a small cataract shooting over the protruding
-ledge. The canoe fell into the basin,
-and seemed about to be dashed against a rock
-that stood in its way. On again striking the
-waters, Gati&ntilde;o gave the word of command, and
-the four men began to paddle steadily and
-with great force, as if to increase the impetus.
-Gati&ntilde;o remained quiet and motionless in his
-place, holding his paddle out of the water ready
-to strike. At a given moment he uplifted it,
-thrust it deeply into the waves, and moved it
-dexterously, so that the canoe turned as if on a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_178">178</span>
-pivot, and quietly glided along the rock upon
-which it would have been dashed into a thousand
-pieces.</p>
-<p>Gati&ntilde;o explained to me that it was necessary
-for the men to paddle so as to give the canoe
-her own share in the impetus, and make it more
-responsive to his steering.</p>
-<p>Though he assured me that there was no
-danger, and though the journey along the shore
-was tiresome and slow, I did not venture to
-accompany him when shooting the other rapids
-before reaching the open river.</p>
-<p>The Orinoco has drilled an open passage-way
-through a spur of the mountains at Maipures.
-The struggle between the waters and the rocks
-must have lasted centuries.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Here shalt thou halt,&rsquo; said the rock.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Further will I go,&rsquo; replied the river.</p>
-<p>Like the spoils of battle on a stricken field,
-the shattered rocks stud the current, which
-sweeps roaring and foaming around and over
-them. They resemble the ruins in the breach
-of a battered bastion. The river is the victor,
-but, as will happen when two great forces
-counteract each other, the result is a compromise,
-and the course of the stream is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_179">179</span>
-deviated. The difference of level from the
-beginning to the end of the rapids is in itself
-not sufficient to cause the violence with which
-the waters run. It arises from the sudden
-compression of the powerful volume of waters
-into a narrow space. The waters rush through
-the openings made in the rock with a deafening
-sound, torn by the remnants of pillars in the bed
-through which they pass. They fill the air with
-the tumult of their advance; one would say an
-army was entering a conquered city, quivering
-with the rapture of triumph, lifting up the
-thunder of battle, Titanic bugle-calls, and the
-p&aelig;ans of victory. After each one of these
-narrow breaches in the wall of granite the river
-plunges into deep basins, where the foaming
-waters soon sink into their former quiet flow.
-The soldiers have crossed the first entrenchments,
-and collect their forces before the next
-assault. Soon the margins on either side begin
-to hem in, the waters stir more rapidly, and
-soon again the mad rush, the desperate plunge,
-the wild, roaring, irresistible onslaught, and
-again through the very heart of the mountain
-into the next basin. Finally, after storming
-the last redoubt, the river, like a lion freed from
-<span class="pb" id="Page_180">180</span>
-the toils which imprisoned him, leaps upon the
-bosom of the plain, bounding forward in solemn
-flow towards the ocean. The clear tropical sun
-reflects itself on its ever-moving bosom, even as
-the clouds and the forests, the mountains and
-the birds on wing. The wandering mirror
-keeps on its course, being, as Longfellow has
-it, like unto the life of a good man &lsquo;darkened
-by shadows of earth, but reflecting an image of
-heaven.&rsquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_181">181</div>
-<h2 id="c16">CHAPTER XV</h2>
-<p>We spent ten days in covering the distance
-from the upper to beyond the lower rapids,
-walking whenever it was impossible to use the
-canoes, which were drifted by the current or
-shot over the rapids. The delay was due
-chiefly to the loading and unloading of the
-canoes, and the necessarily slow transportation
-of packages, bundles, and sundry articles along
-the shore.</p>
-<p>The banks of the river on either side along
-the whole length of the rapids are high and
-rocky, sometimes extending for a mile or two
-in flat, grass-covered, wavy meadows, and then
-rising in small hills, abrupt and ragged on the
-very edge of the water. This is specially the
-case in the narrow part of the gorges. The
-grass in the small meadow-like plains is the
-same as on the shores of the Meta, and the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_182">182</span>
-whole aspect of the region, bare of large forests,
-is that of a field in a civilized country.</p>
-<p>A few days after leaving Maipures we
-noticed, to our joy, the absence of mosquitoes
-and other such tormentors. They seemed to
-have been blown away by the wind, which had
-freer scope in the more open stretches along
-the main river.</p>
-<p>We missed the soft couch of the sand
-beaches to which we had become accustomed,
-the thin layer of sand or earth being powerless
-to soften the bed-rock on which we now had
-to stretch ourselves, but the flight of the
-mosquitoes and their companions more than
-made up for this.</p>
-<p>Our commissariat had dwindled to utter
-meagreness; we had neither sugar nor coffee,
-and <i>casabe</i> was our only bread. The last drops
-of <i>aguardiente</i> had been drained at Santa
-Catalina. At Maipures we had obtained a
-drink which they called white rum&mdash;in truth,
-pure alcohol, which we had to drown in three
-times the quantity of water before we swallowed
-it. Our cigars, cigarettes and tobacco were
-all gone; they were part and parcel of an
-enchanted past&mdash;smoke wafted heavenward
-<span class="pb" id="Page_183">183</span>
-like so many of our hopes and illusions. We
-had obtained native tobacco, with which we
-made cigars or rolled cigarettes out of newspaper
-clippings. Thus we consumed many
-a literary article or political effusion which it
-would have been utterly impossible to utilize
-in any other way. Corn-cob pipes also came
-in handily.</p>
-<p>Game, furred or feathered, was not to be
-found on the shores of the rapids; we had to
-rely principally on fishing, which was most
-abundant in the quieter pools and basins. We
-ate all sorts of fish, some of admirable quality,
-especially the <i>morrocoto</i>, far superior to the
-French sole or the American shad, blue fish,
-or Spanish mackerel. If Marguery could meet
-with it, his immense renown would increase
-tenfold, as with this fish at his disposal he
-would be certain to evolve what from a
-culinary point of view would amount to an
-epic poem of the most sublime order. Such,
-at least, was my opinion when eating that
-fish, with my imagination duly fired by a
-voracious appetite and a lack of material condiments
-which gave rise to dreams worthy of
-Lucullus in exile.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_184">184</div>
-<p>Rice and salt we had in plenty; butter, oil,
-and lard were unknown quantities. Had we
-been in Lent, necessity would have enabled us
-very easily to observe the ordinance of the
-Roman Church with regard to abstinence from
-meat. We thought of this, and although we
-were not sure of our dates, we at once decided
-to offer up our enforced diet in a truly Catholic
-spirit in atonement for some of our many sins!
-May our offering prove acceptable!</p>
-<p>We did not go to sleep as readily on our
-new hard beds as on the sand. The clearness
-of the air and freedom from insects also contributed
-to long watches, which we spent in
-listening to the far-off roar of the river pealing
-incessantly through the night air, whilst Gati&ntilde;o
-would tell us about the life of men and beasts
-in those territories. The voice of the river
-seemed like the distant bass of a powerful
-orchestra, all the high notes of which had been
-lost in space.</p>
-<p>Gati&ntilde;o was familiar with the rivers that flow
-into the Orinoco above its confluence with the
-Vichada, and the numerous <i>ca&ntilde;os</i> which intersect
-that region were so well known to him
-that on one occasion, when flying from some
-<span class="pb" id="Page_185">185</span>
-Governor on his way to the upper territories
-who was anxious to obtain his services as a
-guide, Gati&ntilde;o had managed to lose himself in
-such an intricate maze of <i>ca&ntilde;os</i> and water-ways,
-and, finally, in a small lagoon, unknown to all
-except the wild Indians, that the Governor
-had given up the chase in despair. He
-had travelled on the Casiquiare and the Rio
-Negro, and had visited the Upper Amazon.
-According to him, the Upper Orinoco and its
-affluents are as abundant in india-rubber forests
-as the Amazon and its tributaries, the Putumayo,
-the Napo and the Yarabi. The gum or
-india-rubber is identical in quality with that of
-the best species of Para. In some places the
-trees grow so closely that a man may extract
-from twenty to forty pounds of india-rubber a
-day. Besides large virgin areas rich in india-rubber
-forests, in other parts <i>piazaba</i> palm
-forests stretch for hundreds of acres at a time.
-This <i>piazaba</i> is used for matting, broom-making,
-and twisting of ropes and cables. It is perfectly
-impervious to moisture, and is even said
-to improve instead of rotting in water. Not
-far from where we were in one of the <i>ca&ntilde;os</i>,
-the <i>piazaba</i> forest followed the water-course for
-<span class="pb" id="Page_186">186</span>
-a distance of, Gati&ntilde;o said, &lsquo;twenty twists.&rsquo; An
-odd system of measuring, but the only one at
-his command. &lsquo;Twenty twists&rsquo; might be five
-or twenty miles, according to the size of the
-curves. These forests further contained infinite
-abundance of sarsaparilla, tonga bean, <i>peraman</i>
-and <i>cara&ntilde;a</i>, the resinous substances used for
-caulking and torch-making. Gati&ntilde;o himself
-exploited those sources of wealth as far as
-his own personal means and limitations would
-allow him. He stated his willingness at any
-time to guide us to the spots where rubber,
-tonga bean, and so forth, could be found,
-adding that he knew we would treat him
-well, but that he would never consent to act
-as a guide to others, especially to the white
-men in official positions who now and then
-appeared along the river. These he held in
-special abhorrence, and no doubt their doings
-justified his feelings.</p>
-<p>Gati&ntilde;o&rsquo;s statements as to the wealth of the
-Orinoco were perfectly truthful. It seems
-strange that such vast sources of wealth
-should remain practically unexploited. The
-rapids of the Orinoco act as a barrier, before
-which traders and explorers have come to a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_187">187</span>
-standstill. Some sixty or seventy years ago
-cart-roads existed on the shores along the
-rapids; these were built by the missionaries,
-and parts of them are still intact. Vegetation
-being weak on the hard soil of those banks, it
-would be easy to re-establish them. The
-great obstacle, however, is to be found in
-the numerous affluents which fall into the
-Orinoco along the rapids. The missionaries
-had large pontoon-like rafts on which they
-transported their carts from one side to the
-other. Were this primitive service started
-once more, the flow of natural products extracted
-from the forests would soon establish
-itself from the Upper to the Lower Orinoco.</p>
-<p>One day, having left our canoes behind, we
-arrived at the shores of the Cantaniapo, a clear
-stream flowing into the Orinoco between two
-stretches of rapids. No tree shaded us from
-the fierce glare of the sun. The waters
-murmured most invitingly on the pebbles of
-the beach. On the other side was a sort of
-shed, a vestige of former splendour. A small
-canoe was moored alongside, tied with a <i>piazaba</i>
-rope to the trunk of a neighbouring tree. So
-near, and yet so far! We should have to wait,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_188">188</span>
-perhaps, broiling in the sun for hours, till our
-canoes arrived. Whilst we discussed the
-arduous architectural problem of building a
-tent with such articles as coats, india-rubber
-waterproof sheets, and so on, a noise as of a
-body falling into the water drew our attention
-to the river. Leal, holding his <i>machete</i> between
-his teeth, was swimming <i>llanero</i> fashion&mdash;that
-is to say, throwing each arm out of the water
-in succession, and covering a distance equal to
-the length of his body at every stroke. The
-peril, potentially speaking, was extreme; one
-never knows whether the alligators and other
-inhabitants of those waters may or may not be
-at hand. Yet Leal did not seem to care.
-Fortunately, he soon landed on the opposite
-shore, jumped into the canoe, cut the rope
-and paddled back. On our remonstrating with
-him, he argued that the danger was slight;
-alligators hate noise, and he had taken care to
-be as noisy as possible.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Furthermore,&rsquo; he added, &lsquo;I had my <i>machete</i>
-with me.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>We stopped that night under the shed.
-Gati&ntilde;o came in due time. We particularly
-wished to bathe in the transparent waters of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_189">189</span>
-that river, not as Leal had done, but in our
-usual prudent way, standing on the shore far
-from all possible danger.</p>
-<p>The next morning we saw the only living
-tiger which met our eyes during that long trip.
-Early, before striking the camp, the shout went
-forth&mdash;&lsquo;A tiger! A tiger!&rsquo; There, at a distance
-of about 150 feet from us, on a small
-protruding ledge which plunged into the river,
-forming a sort of natural drinking-place, stood
-a beautiful specimen of the native tiger. The
-wind, which, as Leal told us, blew from the
-land, carried the scent in the wrong direction,
-and this explained the tiger&rsquo;s visit. On hearing
-the shout, Leal sprang up and seized one
-of the rifles. The tiger looked towards our
-group and turned tail, bolting in the direction
-whence he had come, behind a clump of bushes.
-Leal followed him. We soon heard a shot, and
-after a few minutes Leal returned, disgusted.
-He had only wounded the animal. I argued
-with him that we were most thankful to the
-lord of the forest for his abrupt courtesy in
-leaving the field entirely to us, as, had he felt
-inclined to enter into closer relations, we might
-have found it awkward, to say the least.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_190">190</div>
-<p>Valiente had come with Gati&ntilde;o. Our belongings
-seemed to him, as they had previously
-seemed to Leal, an abnormal accumulation of
-wealth. We had kept with us, not knowing
-whether they might again be required, our
-riding-saddles. My own was large, comfortable,
-and soft, a work of art in its way. Valiente
-seemed to admire it. The remarks which he
-made deserve to be noted here.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;This saddle is certainly very fine and comfortable;
-but how do you manage when crossing
-a river? Do you not find it very heavy on
-your head?&rsquo;</p>
-<p>I could not understand what he meant, until
-I remembered that the <i>llaneros</i>, when swimming
-across a river, generally carry their saddles on
-their heads to keep them dry. At first I thought
-Valiente was &lsquo;pulling my leg.&rsquo; A mere glance
-at my person should suffice to persuade anyone
-that not even the furious onslaught of a regiment
-of Cossacks would induce me in any
-circumstances to plunge into a river where
-there was a chance of meeting alligators and
-such-like; I was still less likely to venture on
-such feats with the additional burden of a heavy
-saddle on my head. However, Valiente was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_191">191</span>
-perfectly in earnest, and meant no harm; so
-I assured him with perfect calm that I had
-never noticed on any occasion, either in or
-out of the water, that the saddle was a heavy
-one.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Possibly,&rsquo; I added, &lsquo;it is a question of habit.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&lsquo;May be,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;but it would be a long
-time before I got used to it. Look at my
-saddle!&rsquo; he went on to say; &lsquo;it only weighs
-a fourth of yours. Still, I should like to try
-yours, not for real hard work&mdash;branding, lassoing,
-or rounding up cattle&mdash;but just to prance
-round the town on a good horse and charm the
-girls. That&rsquo;s about what it&rsquo;s fit for!&rsquo;</p>
-<p>That day, marked in the calendar of our
-memory as the &lsquo;tiger day,&rsquo; our supper consisted
-of boiled rice and <i>casabe</i>. Somehow or
-other there had been no fishing. Yet we did
-not grumble; custom had taught us to be easily
-satisfied. We learned from Gati&ntilde;o that within
-twelve miles from us the Atures ruins were
-to be found. Behind the thick forest which
-separates it from the river stands a short range
-of high cliffs. They are the last spur of the
-chain through which the Orinoco has drilled its
-way. At a height of 600 to 700 metres on the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_192">192</span>
-vertical wall, so straight and smooth that it
-seems to have been polished all over by the
-hand of man, there appear, carved in the very
-substance of the rock, a huge alligator and
-two human figures, standing near its head and
-tail respectively. All are of colossal dimensions.
-According to the measurements of other
-travellers provided with the required instruments,
-the length of the alligator exceeds
-500 feet, and the human figures are of proportionate
-size. It is difficult to understand
-what sort of scaffolding was used to carry out
-this work at such a height, no support or
-traces of support of any kind in the rock being
-apparent; what instruments were used for the
-carving, and what purpose the whole work
-served: all this is very perplexing.</p>
-<p>Footprints of human endeavour, thoughts of
-past generations entirely lost to our minds, left
-there in the midst of the forest, marking the
-passage of men who must have been powerful
-at a period so remote that only these traces
-remain. What more eloquent proof of the
-nothingness, the vanity, of our own ephemeral
-individual life!</p>
-<p>The mere magnitude of the work carried out
-<span class="pb" id="Page_193">193</span>
-demonstrates that in those regions, totally
-deserted to-day, where Nature has reasserted
-her absolute sway, and where the wanderer has
-to fight for every inch of ground in the jungle
-and the thicket, there must once have been
-multitudes of men educated in certain arts&mdash;arts
-which in their turn must have been links
-in a chain of sequence indispensable to their
-own existence, as isolated effort in one direction
-would be incomprehensible. Nothing of those
-myriads of men survives beyond this dumb
-expression of their thoughts and aspirations.</p>
-<p>Were those figures carved on that huge wall,
-on the virgin rock of the mountains, hundreds
-or thousands of years ago? Who knows?
-Who can tell?</p>
-<p>With the rapidity inherent to human thought,
-my mind sped to the pyramids of Egypt, the
-ruins of Babylon and Nineveh, the buried cities
-of Ceylon, the excavated temples and palaces
-in Yucatan and elsewhere, wherever vestiges
-of vanished generations are found.</p>
-<p>That sculpture on the rock on the shores of
-the Orinoco brought to my mind the dying lion
-cut into the granite on the banks of the Lake
-of Lucerne, as a symbol of respect and admiration
-<span class="pb" id="Page_194">194</span>
-to the loyalty and steadfastness of the
-compatriots of William Tell, who died for a
-cause upon which judgment has been passed
-in the minds of men and in the pages of history.
-I could not help thinking that perhaps when
-Macaulay&rsquo;s famous New Zealander shall stand
-upon the broken arches of London Bridge to
-gaze at the ruins of St. Paul&rsquo;s, when England and
-London shall have crumbled into potsherds, so
-in years to come some native of these Orinoco
-regions, then populous and civilized, may sail
-on the cool waters of Lucerne and interrogate
-the mute rock, anxious to know the allegory
-embodied in that dying lion holding in its
-claws the shield which bears the three secular
-lilies of old France. Even as the rock was
-mute to us, so shall the rock again be mute to
-him who thousands of years hence may question
-Thorwaldsen&rsquo;s sculpture. The efforts of
-man are powerless against time and oblivion,
-even though they choose the largest, the most
-lasting manifestations of Nature for their
-pedestal.</p>
-<p>Time passes grimly on. The endeavours of
-pride, of flattery, of gratitude, the emblems
-of glory, all become dumb and meaningless.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_195">195</span>
-Egyptian hieroglyphics, figures and signs
-carved in monoliths or pyramids or in the rock
-of the mountains, after the lapse of what, to the
-world, is but an instant, all become confused,
-vague, and undefinable. The seeker and the
-student find all those attempts to perpetuate the
-memory or the aspirations of men, now on the
-burning sands of the desert, now decked in the
-foliage and wealth of Nature, aggressively reasserting
-her empire, now in the naked summits
-of the uplifted mountains&mdash;yea, the seeker finds
-them all; but he knows not whether they be
-expressions of human pride anxious to survive
-the life of the body, or whether they be witnesses
-of servile flattery paying tribute to the mighty, or
-the grateful offering of nations to their heroes
-and their benefactors, or the emblem of some
-dim forgotten religion, whose very rites are as
-unintelligible to living men as is the mystic
-power which once gave them force.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_196">196</div>
-<h2 id="c17">CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-<p>With the accession of Gati&ntilde;o and his family
-and Valiente and his men, our numbers had
-gradually increased, and the camp at night had
-quite a lively aspect. The men would tell their
-adventures, and conversation frequently turned
-on local topics. We had gradually drifted into
-practical indifference concerning the doings of
-that distant world to which we belonged, and
-towards which we were moving. Newspapers,
-letters, telegrams, the multifarious scraps of
-gossip, the bursts of curiosity which fill so
-great a part in the life of modern man, had
-totally disappeared as daily elements in our
-own. To tell the truth, I did not miss
-them greatly. I have always thought that the
-daily newspapers are thieves of time, and cannot
-but approve the system of a certain friend
-of mine, an Englishman, who, residing in New
-<span class="pb" id="Page_197">197</span>
-York, had no other source of information for
-the world&rsquo;s news than the weekly edition of
-the <i>Times</i>. He was dependent on it even for
-the news of American life and politics.</p>
-<p>He argued that the ups and downs of a given
-event were of little interest to him.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;All that one need know,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;is the
-upshot, the crystallized fact, without wasting
-valuable time in the slow developments which,
-at times, are pure inventions of the editor&mdash;&ldquo;padding,&rdquo;
-as it is called. I am a little behind-hand
-at times,&rsquo; he remarked, &lsquo;but at the end of
-the year I make it up, balance the account, and
-start afresh.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>Certainly if all the attention given to local
-news of no importance, or to descriptions of fires,
-crimes, and sundry topics which never change
-in essence and vary solely as regards names
-and secondary details, were devoted to studying
-something useful, the average mind of the great
-newspaper-reading nations would not have been
-degraded to the depths revealed by a glance at a
-collection of the newspapers and reading matter
-on the bookstalls of any railway-station in
-France, England, or the United States, where
-the flood of trash and sensationalism swamps
-<span class="pb" id="Page_198">198</span>
-and carries away with it public intelligence, or
-what stands for it.</p>
-<p>Gautier used to complain of the curse of the
-daily press.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Formerly,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;every human being
-brayed in his own original asinine way. Now
-we only get variations on the leaders in their
-respective newspapers!&rsquo;</p>
-<p>The great French writer expressed the simple
-truth in a pointed way. The cheap press, like
-cheap liquor, is a public calamity.</p>
-<p>Our men poured forth personal impressions of
-Nature. The world varies in size and in beauty
-in proportion to the eye and the mind that contemplate
-it. In Leal&rsquo;s and Valiente&rsquo;s conversation
-especially there was something like the
-voice of the forest and the murmuring waters.
-They had lived to some purpose in those
-deserts, and to them cities, railways, palaces,
-sea-going ships, and all the other methods of
-modern locomotion&mdash;material civilization, in
-fact&mdash;were as wonderful as the beauties and
-splendours of Eastern tales are to us.</p>
-<p>Talking about tigers, Leal told us that they
-roamed all over those plains, especially on the
-banks of the Meta and the Orinoco, where the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_199">199</span>
-forests intersect breeding and grazing plains.
-The cattle-ranchers must be ever on the watch,
-and from instinct and experience the cattle
-acquire a natural spirit of defence without which
-the losses would be far heavier than at present.</p>
-<p>Whenever the cattle scent the approach of
-the tiger, they crowd together, the young calves
-in the centre, the cows and young heifers covering
-them behind their bodies, and the bulls
-pacing around and outside the group like
-sentinels before a tent. There is no exaggeration
-in this tale. Leal assured us that he had
-himself seen these preparations on more than
-one occasion.</p>
-<p>The tiger, whose daring and ferocity are
-multiplied tenfold by hunger, frequently attacks
-the group: then ensues a life and death struggle.
-The tiger tries to jump upon the bull sideways
-or from behind, whilst the bull strives to face the
-tiger constantly. As the latter is far more agile
-and can leap from a long distance, he frequently
-lands upon the bull, sometimes breaking his
-spine with the blow. If he misses, the bull
-gores him. Occasionally both animals die, the
-tiger in its death-struggle tearing the bull&rsquo;s
-neck open with its claws.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_200">200</div>
-<p>&lsquo;More than once,&rsquo; said Leal, &lsquo;have I found
-the two enemies dead in a pool of blood side
-by side.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>The tigers also crouch in the bushes close to
-the drinking-places, and jump upon the animals
-as they lower their heads into the water. They
-rip open the necks of their victims, drag them
-into the jungle, and there devour them.</p>
-<p>The hunters know that a sated tiger is far
-less daring than a hungry one, and they
-frequently place a calf or some other easy prey
-within his reach. After his meal he is hunted
-down, but Leal added that this is not considered
-fair play amongst thoroughbred <i>llaneros</i>; it is a
-trick unworthy of a real sportsman.</p>
-<p>The tigers live exclusively upon other animals.
-They prefer cattle, and have a special predilection
-for donkeys and mules; they are
-gourmets. The choicest morsel to their taste
-seems to be the fat neck of donkeys and mules;
-they have, too, a pretty taste in turtles. They
-can crush the back of the younger turtles not
-yet fully developed. These awkward amphibians
-rush, if their ponderous movements can
-be so described, into the water for fear of the
-tiger. There he is powerless to harm them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_201">201</div>
-<p>The alligator rivals the tiger in voracity and
-fierceness. They are sworn enemies, and
-attack each other whenever they meet. The
-odds are on the tiger&rsquo;s side if the struggle be on
-land, and in favour of the alligator if the pair
-meet in the water. The tiger seeks to turn the
-alligator over on his back, or to get at the body
-towards the stomach, where the softer skin can
-be penetrated by the tiger&rsquo;s claws, which
-disembowel his enemy. The alligator defends
-himself by striking terrific blows with his tail,
-and seeks to scrunch the tiger between his
-formidable jaws. Fights between them, Leal
-said, are frequently seen on the beaches, and
-are a fascinating though ghastly spectacle.</p>
-<p>The tigers frequently cross rivers infested
-with alligators, and display a really marvellous
-cunning in avoiding their enemy in his own
-element. The tiger will stand on the beach at
-a given point of the river, and there roar with
-all his might for an hour or so on end.
-The alligators, in the hope of getting at him,
-congregate in the water at that particular point.
-When the members of the assembly thus
-convened have, so far as the tiger can judge,
-met at the appointed place, he starts up-stream
-<span class="pb" id="Page_202">202</span>
-along the banks as rapidly as possible, and
-crosses two or three miles higher up. There
-are two details to be noted: first, the stratagem
-by which the tiger misleads his enemies; and,
-second, his choice of a crossing-place, so that the
-alligator would have to swim against the current
-to get at him.</p>
-<p>Both Leal and Valiente had the true cattle-breeder&rsquo;s
-love for cattle, which to them are
-man&rsquo;s best friends.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;They give us milk and meat and cheese,&rsquo;
-Leal would say; &lsquo;they help us to cultivate the
-ground, and their very presence drives away
-fevers, mosquitoes, and miasmas. We and the
-cattle are allies against the boas, the tigers, the
-snakes, and all the beasts without which these
-lands would be a real paradise.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>The tales of our friends sounded most
-wonderful in Fermin&rsquo;s ears. He was a townsman,
-accustomed to bricks and mortar; furthermore,
-he was naturally sceptical as to all that
-he heard, and felt rather small at seeing our
-men&rsquo;s familiarity with things and manifestations
-of Nature which to him were so strange
-and new.</p>
-<p>Fermin came from the city of Medellin, where
-<span class="pb" id="Page_203">203</span>
-he had spent most of his life. It is a typical
-old Spanish town of the central tropical belt.
-It nestles amongst the hills, 100 miles from
-the left bank of the Magdalena River, at a
-height of about 4,500 feet. The ground around
-is mountainous. The valley is small and
-beautiful, with numberless streams coursing
-down the hills, and luxuriant vegetation in
-perpetual bloom.</p>
-<p>Prior to this journey, Fermin&rsquo;s travels had
-never taken him beyond his own province.
-Like all Colombians, he had been a soldier at
-some period of his life, a &lsquo;volunteer&rsquo; of the type
-described in a telegram (very well known in
-Colombia) which a candid or witty&mdash;the distinction
-is at times difficult&mdash;mayor sent to a
-colleague in a neighbouring town: &lsquo;Herewith
-I send a hundred volunteers; kindly return the
-ropes!&rsquo; Having joined the army in this wise,
-it is not strange that Fermin left it as soon as
-he could. His military career was no longer
-and no more glorious than Coleridge&rsquo;s.</p>
-<p>Continental Europeans are wont to grow
-amusingly solemn and censorious when they
-hear of the system still obtaining in many parts
-of Spanish America for the formation of armies
-<span class="pb" id="Page_204">204</span>
-which are chiefly engaged in the civil wars that
-devastate those countries from time to time;
-this system is nothing more nor less than the
-press-gang method practised all over Europe
-not so long ago. But between this press-gang,
-which suddenly compels a man to join the ranks
-destined to fight, and the conscription, which
-forces him into the army whether he likes it or
-not, I can only see a difference of detail, but
-none in essence. Individual liberty is as much
-violated in the one case as in the other. In
-both cases the weak, the helpless, and the
-poor are the prey of the more cunning and more
-powerful, and as for the causes at stake, whatever
-the name or pretext may be, if the whole
-question is sifted, greed and ambition masquerading
-under some conventional high-sounding
-name will be found to be the real and
-essential motors. Militarism is a form of
-exploitation of mankind which adds human
-blood to the ingredients productive of gold and
-power to others; it is nothing but an engine of
-plunder and of pride, the more disgusting on
-account of its sleek hypocrisy. Your money-lender
-frankly tells you that he will charge you
-three, four, or five per cent. per month, and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_205">205</span>
-despoil you of house and home if you cannot
-pay; this, though cruel, is frank and open and
-above-board. But your advocate of militarism
-will despoil you like the cosmopolite Jew,
-telling you that glory shall be yours, that
-patriotism and the holy traditions of religion,
-the dynasty, the empire, or the nation, as the
-case may be, are at stake, and that it is necessary
-for you to risk your skin in consequence. With
-such baubles and clownish maunderings men
-have been led on, and are still being led on, to
-cut each other&rsquo;s throats for the personal benefit
-and satisfaction of their leaders, who give them
-a bit of ribbon or stamped metal if they survive
-and have luck. Meanwhile the exploiters sit
-safe on their office chairs, pocket the shekels,
-and chuckle at the pack of fools, the smug
-middle-class flunkies, and the dirty, bamboozled
-millions, the cannon fodder, fit only for bayonet
-and shrapnel.</p>
-<p>After leaving the army, Fermin, who by
-trade was a journeyman tailor, had joined the
-remnants of a wrecked theatrical company, a
-group of strollers travelling through the towns
-and villages of his province, and giving performances
-from the modern and the ancient
-<span class="pb" id="Page_206">206</span>
-Spanish repertory, to the enjoyment and the
-edification of the natives.</p>
-<p>He had been in my service for over a year,
-proving himself admirable as a valet, and
-certainly very plastic, for during the journey he
-had been by turns muleteer, amateur paddler,
-fisherman, hunter and cook.</p>
-<p>The people of his province, a hardy mountaineer
-race, so prolific that population doubles
-itself every twenty-eight years, are known all
-over Spanish America for their readiness at
-repartee, the frequent metaphors that brighten
-their daily speech, and a knack of humorous
-exaggeration.</p>
-<p>Fermin, referring to one of the men whose
-idleness he criticised, said, &lsquo;That fellow is so
-lazy that he cannot even carry a greeting!&rsquo; and
-talking of the wonderful climbing ability of
-a certain mule, he said that, if it could only find
-the way, it would reach the gates of heaven and
-bray in the ears of St. Peter!</p>
-<p>One evening, during a lull in the conversation,
-Fermin, who had quietly listened to tales
-of fierce tigers, chivalrous bulls, alligators, and
-many other natives of forest or stream, burst
-forth, saying that he also knew of some wonderful
-<span class="pb" id="Page_207">207</span>
-beasts; but I prefer to quote his words as nearly
-as possible.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;The truth is,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;that before starting
-on this trip I knew nothing about tigers, alligators,
-boas, and so forth, except from picture-books.
-I had even thought that people lied a
-great deal about those animals, but sight has
-now convinced me of their existence. I have
-no doubt they are to be found somewhere in my
-native province, but it is not about them that
-I am going to talk. I will tell you something
-which will show that we, too, have wonderful
-animals in our part of the country.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Some years ago I was the first lover in
-a theatrical company which, though modest in
-its pretensions, scored great success wherever
-it played. One night, in the mining region near
-the Cauca River, we were forced to sleep in the
-very shed where we had performed the comic
-opera entitled &ldquo;The Children of Captain Grant,&rdquo;
-a most popular seafaring tale set to music.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Mosquitoes were as abundant and aggressive
-as anywhere in the world, but they seemed to
-me to have far stronger lungs than those of
-these localities. Anyhow, there was a specially
-sustained high-sounding ring in their little
-<span class="pb" id="Page_208">208</span>
-trumpets, so that they formed a sort of orchestra
-beneath the moon.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;One of the lady artistes held the doctrine
-that life was sacred in all its manifestations;
-that man has no right to kill any animal, however
-small it may be, so she did not kill the
-mosquitoes that swarmed around her, but tried
-to blow them away with her fan. However,
-as some of them alighted on her forehead and
-on her hands, she would take them carefully
-between thumb and forefinger and place them
-on the side of a basin half filled with water,
-moistening their wings so that they stuck and
-remained harmless for the time being.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;The smokers amongst us&mdash;all the men, in
-fact&mdash;after lighting their cigars or cigarettes,
-threw their wooden matches into the basin,
-a necessary precaution lest the thatch-roofed
-shed might catch fire.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;In the earlier part of the night the mosquitoes
-made sleep almost impossible, and there
-we lay on the ground or upon canvas stretchers
-snoozing and tossing about, waiting for the morning.
-As night advanced, with the arrival of a
-welcome breeze, they seemed to diminish in
-numbers. I began to doze, but was awakened
-<span class="pb" id="Page_209">209</span>
-by one of my companions who called my attention
-to the echo of distant music, sweet and
-low, a harmony of lutes and soft recorders,
-whose sounds were wafted on the wings of
-the night air. We went out of the shed, and
-the sounds ceased. On returning to it we
-heard the melody again. This was a mystery.
-Nearly all our companions were asleep. We
-were determined to ascertain whence the music
-came, and, on investigation, found that the
-blessed mosquitoes, placed by the charitable
-and humane artiste on the sides of the basin,
-had contrived to build a raft with the fag-ends
-of matches, on which, waiting for their wings
-to dry completely, they were whiling the night
-away gaily singing the most popular ditty in
-our operetta, descriptive of the joys of life on
-the ocean wave!</p>
-<p>&lsquo;This will show you,&rsquo; Fermin added, &lsquo;that,
-though we have neither tigers, nor boas, nor
-turtles, nor fighting bulls, nor alligators, in our
-province, our mosquitoes beat all yours in talent
-and ability!&rsquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_210">210</div>
-<h2 id="c18">CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-<p>Not far from the Atures rapids, we stopped at
-Puerto Real, a short curve in the river where
-the waters penetrate into a sort of bay justifying
-the name of &lsquo;port,&rsquo; but with no other title to
-it, for no human habitation, not even the
-humblest hut, exists on either shore. Here
-the canoes were laden permanently, as the river
-flowed straight to the ocean, free from all rapids
-except at a few narrow places where the current
-is swifter. These, however, did not call for the
-precautions of the past days.</p>
-<p>Leal considered his task at an end. We
-were on the open Orinoco in the Republic
-of Venezuela, and in the hands of a guide as
-careful and expert as Gati&ntilde;o. This led Leal
-to return. In vain did we seek to persuade
-him to accompany us, to enter Colombia by the
-Magdalena River, thence to Bogot&aacute;, and then
-by the road we had followed to San Pedro del
-<span class="pb" id="Page_211">211</span>
-Tua. He would not abandon his companions,
-and decided to go back by the identical route
-we had followed. We deeply felt parting from
-that noble companion whose quiet, unobtrusive
-courage, whose skilled prudence and ready
-intelligence, had not only contributed greatly
-to our comfort during the ninety odd days that
-he had been with us, but had doubtless saved
-our lives on more than one occasion.</p>
-<p>As a proof of the extent and value of his
-services, I will quote a letter received many
-months after in Europe, when, in the midst of
-modern civilization, the events and occurrences
-of my journey through the tropical regions of
-South America seemed more like a dream than
-a reality. Alex, who had returned to Bogot&aacute;,
-wrote as follows:</p>
-<p class="tb">&lsquo;I have just received a letter from Leal,
-dated from his home at San Pedro del Tua.
-You will remember that he left us with fourteen
-of our men, to return by the Vichada and the
-Meta. On the very day of their departure,
-whilst they were ascending the rapids, and we
-proceeded on our journey down-stream, only
-a few hours after bidding us farewell, one of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_212">212</span>
-the two canoes, carrying seven men, struck the
-trunk of a tree lying under the water, and
-capsized. The men were all good swimmers,
-and soon overtook the canoe, which was drifting
-with the stream. After a good deal of trouble,
-they succeeded in turning it over. Whilst they
-were getting back into it, they were attacked
-by two enormous alligators which sought to
-overturn the canoe, striking it furiously with
-their tails. One of the sailors was struck on
-the head and stunned, losing his grip, and
-before he could be pulled in the other alligator
-cut his body in two, as if with a saw, crushing
-him between its jaws, so that the man was
-actually devoured in the very presence of his
-companions.&rsquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">On reading these tragic details, I felt a cold
-shiver run through me, like a man who sees
-lightning strike an object close to him, or feels
-a murderous bullet whizz past his head. A
-retrospective fear seized upon me at the thought
-of the many nights spent on the lonely beaches,
-and the numberless times that our canoes had
-struck submerged rocks or trunks of trees.
-Surely a kind Providence had watched over us
-<span class="pb" id="Page_213">213</span>
-during that long journey. &lsquo;The child&rsquo;s heart
-within the man&rsquo;s&rsquo; revived in me, with the faith
-in God learnt from the lips of my mother, and
-my soul went to her who, during those long,
-anxious days, had prayed night and day to Him
-above for the safety of her absent son.</p>
-<p>Greatly diminished in numbers, we continued
-downwards, hoping to strike some camp of
-tonga-bean-gatherers, the harvest season
-having just begun.</p>
-<p>If the Meta had seemed large and mighty
-to us, the Orinoco bore the aspect of an inland
-sea. The breezes and the hurricanes blow
-upon its billows and dash them into surf on
-the bank; the trade-winds&mdash;our old friends of
-the Meta&mdash;reappeared on the Orinoco, only
-far stronger than before. One would say that
-they spend their force in the long journey, and
-are somewhat weary in the upper regions. It
-is impossible to make any progress in the
-teeth of the trade-wind. With a stern or a
-side wind the canoes hoist their sails and
-travel with the speed of birds on the wing.
-The great force of the wind is generally felt
-during the middle hours of the day; it lulls in
-the morning and afternoon.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_214">214</div>
-<p>Far more frequently than on the Meta we
-were forced to wait for hours on the sandy
-desert beaches, or close in to the shore covered
-with jungle, waiting, waiting for the wind to
-sink. The worst feature of these breezes is
-that they raise a great quantity of sand to a
-height varying from 2 to 3 feet.</p>
-<p>Cooking becomes impossible, as the wind
-blows the fire out, scattering the embers
-and the logs, and unless rocks or trees be
-available on which to sit at a certain height,
-one is compelled to stand, as it is impossible
-to breathe the air, which is impregnated with
-sand. At such times we were compelled to
-make our meals of <i>casabe</i> dipped in water, and
-drink more freely of the white rum which took
-the place of warmer food and drink. Once we
-were kept thus imprisoned for nearly thirty
-hours; our helplessness against the elements
-exercised a most depressing influence.</p>
-<p>The tonga bean, called in Spanish <i>zarrapia</i>,
-constitutes a most important article of trade, and
-is obtained in large quantities on the shore of the
-Orinoco and of many of its affluents below the
-rapids. It is said to abound also in the Upper
-Orinoco, but there it is seldom gathered.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_215">215</div>
-<p>The tonga-tree is large and leafy, very
-similar to the mango-tree. The branches,
-which spread over an area of 20, 30, or 40 feet,
-are covered with thick foliage, and the yield
-of fruit is enormous. The fruit resembles the
-mango in shape and appearance. Under a
-sweet pulp, quite palatable, is found an oval
-nut, identical with that of the mango, and
-inside this nut, which has the consistency of
-a walnut, is encased a small elongated bean of
-a pink colour. It soon turns dark red when
-exposed to air and sun. The trees shed the
-fruit in the months of February and March;
-the men gather it from the ground, clean off
-the pulp, and break the nut with stones. This
-must be carefully done to avoid breaking the
-bean, which is then placed in the sun on dry,
-untanned hides, and after two or three days
-packed in bags ready for transportation.</p>
-<p>The tonga bean is chiefly used in perfumery,
-and is a very good substitute for vanilla.</p>
-<p>We were told that the exports averaged, at the
-prices then ranging, a yearly output of &pound;100,000
-to &pound;150,000. I understand that the price
-has fallen considerably of late years, but as
-the gathering costs very little, and the transportation,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_216">216</span>
-owing to the numerous waterways, is
-cheap, there must still be great profits in the
-business.</p>
-<p>Traders flock from the different parts of the
-river to certain well-known camps, from which
-they branch off into the forests, bringing back
-the bean for sale to the camps. Although the
-Venezuelan Government has more than once
-granted special privileges and monopolies to
-individuals and companies for the exploitation
-of the tonga bean, its gathering is practically
-free, as it would be next to impossible to watch
-over such vast uninhabited areas where men
-can easily conceal themselves in the forests.</p>
-<p>Our progress was far slower than before, as
-we generally lost half a day waiting for the
-breeze to fall. This was owing principally to
-the size of our canoes, too small for navigation
-in a high wind.</p>
-<p>In due time we came upon the first camp, a
-most welcome sight to our eyes; a whole village
-of tents stood pitched on the bank of the river,
-and upwards of twenty or thirty canoes were
-moored along the shore. Amongst them we
-saw a small one-masted schooner, which raised
-its graceful lines above the surrounding small
-<span class="pb" id="Page_217">217</span>
-craft. We gazed upon it with covetous eyes,
-and decided to make every possible effort to
-acquire it, if it could be had for love or money.</p>
-<p>We did not attract any attention at first;
-the people in the camp thought that we were
-tonga-bean-gatherers like themselves, coming
-from some point above; but they showed great
-interest and courtesy on hearing that we came
-not only from beyond the rapids, but from the
-upper affluents of the Orinoco. We soon
-closed a bargain for the schooner, into which
-we transferred our belongings, and the next day
-the three small sails were let loose to the very
-breeze that, during the past few days, had
-nailed us to the shores.</p>
-<p>Besides the schooner, we obtained a supply
-of provisions, though not as much as we
-wished. The traders had only what they
-needed, and were loath to part with them,
-especially as we were going towards the centres
-of supply.</p>
-<p>In the course of a day or two we stopped at
-a large flat island, some twelve miles in length,
-as we were told, and varying from two to four
-miles in breadth; this is known as the Beach of
-Lard (<i>Playa de la Manteca</i>). This island is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_218">218</span>
-the laying-place of hundreds of thousands of
-turtles, which come to it every year in the laying
-season. The island belongs to the Government,
-who place a small detachment of soldiers
-to watch over it. The traders buy the right of
-working a given section of the ground. They
-dig out the eggs, from which the oil is extracted.
-It is used for cooking, and is a substitute for
-lard and butter&mdash;hence the name of the beach.</p>
-<p>The turtles swarm in myriads, and are forced
-by those coming up behind them to go further
-into the island. After laying their eggs they
-seek the water, but are so numerous that it
-is necessary for the soldiers and traders to keep
-a pathway open, otherwise many of them could
-not get back to the river.</p>
-<p>It is a marvel to see countless acres of ground
-covered with turtles as thick as the stones of a
-pavement; and the fact might be incredible if
-it were not vouched for by so many travellers.</p>
-<p>A turtle lays, according to its size and age,
-from fifty to three or four hundred eggs. The
-men&mdash;traders or Government agents&mdash;are free
-to take as many turtles as they like; the eggs
-are the only article of barter upon which a price
-is set.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_219">219</div>
-<p>Some idea of the number of turtles laying
-eggs on the beach may be gathered from the
-reckoning of a French traveller who investigated
-the subject.</p>
-<p>The oil extracted from the eggs is gathered
-in demijohns holding on an average seven gallons
-each, and the average yield of a good year is
-about ten thousand demijohns. Each demijohn
-requires from four to five thousand eggs; ten
-thousand demijohns represent from four to five
-millions, which means that there must be from
-four to five hundred thousand turtles. The tale
-seems extravagant.</p>
-<p>It is needless to say that we took in as large
-a supply of turtles and of eggs as we could
-carry. The sailors of the schooner were delighted
-at the prospect of turtle meat and turtle eggs
-<i>ad libitum</i>. The eggs are boiled in salt water,
-and keep for a practically indefinite period.</p>
-<p>The capacity for eating these eggs shown by
-the natives of those regions seems to be unlimited.
-I could not understand, looking at the
-size of the men and at the young mountain of
-turtle eggs before which they sat, and which
-disappeared after a period of sustained assimilation,
-how it was possible that they did not
-<span class="pb" id="Page_220">220</span>
-swell outwardly or explode. Here was a case
-in which the envelope was, to all purposes and
-appearances, smaller than the contents assimilated&mdash;a
-problem for some sapient naturalist to
-investigate whenever he may chance to stray
-into those remote regions.</p>
-<p>It is said that the turtle yields seven kinds
-of meat, and that in the hands of a good cook
-it is transfigured into calf&rsquo;s head, veal, tender
-loin steak, chicken, venison, pork, and (naturally)
-turtle meat. Be that as it may, notwithstanding
-the uncouth and, to some, repulsive appearance
-of the animal, it is evident that the various parts
-of its body are not only palatable, but may be
-disguised to imitate the varieties mentioned, a
-peculiarity which in its turn works inversely, as
-in the well-known case of mock-turtle soup.</p>
-<p>The turtles we bought were placed on their
-backs, which seems to be the universal method
-of keeping them all the world over. There in
-the bottom of our schooner the poor beasts had
-ample opportunity to watch the flight of clouds
-by day and the grouping of the constellations by
-night. I fear, however, that they did not improve
-their time with the study either of atmospherical
-changes or of astronomical wonders.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_221">221</div>
-<p>Fermin rapidly learnt how to cook and prepare
-turtles in the various native ways, to which he
-added devices of his own, reminiscent of the
-preparation of other meats and dishes in his
-native province.</p>
-<p>The change of diet was most welcome at
-first, but after the fourth or fifth day the very
-name of turtle was revolting. Fermin was told
-that, if nothing else but turtle was to be found,
-we preferred to fall back on boiled rice and
-<i>casabe</i>. Relying, however, on his ability and
-the protean plasticity of turtle meat, he insisted
-on serving some of it as wild-boar flesh, and
-only upon a formal threat of shooting, or being
-left tied to the trunk of a tree along the shore,
-like a new Andromache, did he cease his attempts
-to deceive our palates. Thus, notwithstanding
-the plentiful supply of turtles and turtle eggs,
-we drifted back to the diet of <i>casabe</i>, boiled
-fish and boiled rice.</p>
-<p>We had hoped to strike some cattle-farm,
-but we scanned the horizon in vain. The
-plains and the forests rolled before our eyes,
-an interminable blank for our purposes.</p>
-<p>Finally, as everything happens at last, our
-expectation was gratified; near the confluence
-<span class="pb" id="Page_222">222</span>
-of our old friend the Meta with the Orinoco,
-we came upon a cattle-ranch where we obtained
-corn, molasses, eggs, lard, cheese, coffee, and
-the whole side of a recently slaughtered heifer.</p>
-<p>I can readily understand that persons of a
-delicate taste, should they happen to read these
-awkwardly penned lines, must feel disgusted
-at the recurrence of such vulgar and material
-details. Their amazement will certainly be
-great, for in all probability they will be surrounded
-by all the comforts and the luxury of
-civilized life. There is no harsher censor of
-the misdeeds or faults arising out of somebody
-else&rsquo;s hunger than the drowsy philosopher who
-passes judgment in a comfortable armchair after
-a plentiful meal; his untempted rectitude makes
-him the austerest critic of failings and weaknesses
-in others. However, the opinion of those
-immaculate beings, with their hot-house virtue,
-safe from wind and wet behind glass panes,
-receives precisely the attention it deserves.</p>
-<p>Still, I admit that, after having crossed those
-regions, it were better if I could describe what
-I saw in a series of pen-pictures which would
-unroll before the reader in sequence or harmonious
-groups the numerous sublime aspects
-<span class="pb" id="Page_223">223</span>
-of Nature; it were far better that, even as the
-essence retains the perfume of the flower, the
-written word should convey to other minds
-the deep impression left upon my own by the
-mysterious murmuring forest, the invisible wind
-whose breath so often cooled my forehead, the
-constant throb of the wandering waves pent
-within their narrow channels, the infinite azure
-of the sky, and the numberless sounds and
-rumours, now soft, now deafening, which fill
-the air in that world still free from the burden
-of civilization, living the life of untrodden
-Nature, a link in the endless chain of existence
-ravening on death, with the great drama of
-being made manifest in a thousand diverse
-shapes.</p>
-<p>Happy were I could I seize one single note
-from that vast symphony, capture it, and fix it
-with my words! Vain wishes!</p>
-<p>We passed from those solitudes, leaving no
-more trace behind us than the clouds in the
-sky, and although the impression of the greatness
-and the majesty of Nature sank deeply
-into my heart, so that at times my soul, returning
-to the days of the past, loses itself in the
-depths of the forests and the summits of the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_224">224</span>
-mountains, follows the course of the rivers, or
-bathes itself in the pure atmosphere of the free
-and boundless plain, whenever I seek to utter
-my inmost feelings, so that others may feel and
-understand with me, only the faintest shadow
-of my thought falls on the blank page. The
-gift of seeing and of feeling, and of creating
-what we have felt and seen so that others in
-their turn may feel a similar impression, has
-been given by the Almighty only to those few
-chosen artists and men of genius who throw
-upon the work which they create &lsquo;the light
-that never was on land or sea.&rsquo; I must perforce
-limit myself to the humble narrative of our daily
-life. I have no higher ambition in writing these
-pages, and I shall be fortunate if I meet with
-readers who understand my motive.</p>
-<p>The schooner took us down to La Urbana
-(a settlement with urban pretensions); it boasts
-some <i>adobe</i> houses covered with tiles, and a
-small church. Here we abandoned the schooner,
-and were obliged to take to a far smaller canoe&mdash;large
-enough, however, for navigation on the
-Orinoco&mdash;in which we proceeded to Caicara,
-where we expected to meet the steamers plying
-between Ciudad Bolivar and the Apure River.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_225">225</div>
-<h2 id="c19">CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-<p>The journey from La Urbana to Caicara passed
-off without any incident. On jumping ashore
-at this latter point we hoped that we were
-leaving our canoes for good, and that the rest
-of the journey to Ciudad Bolivar would take
-place by steam.</p>
-<p>The people received us very kindly, and,
-though the town was far from modern or rich,
-we enjoyed some comforts that we had lacked
-during the long journey which lay behind us.</p>
-<p>Though eight weeks had passed since the
-news of the death of the Governor of San
-Carlos had reached Maipures, nothing was
-known about it at Caicara. This will give an
-idea of the abandonment in which those vast
-territories are left by those under whose political
-authority they live. Grave international complications
-with the neighbouring States might
-<span class="pb" id="Page_226">226</span>
-arise from disturbances like that at San Carlos,
-and yet the news had only come down by
-mere chance, brought by travellers who had
-no personal interest in it.</p>
-<p>Finding that there was no certainty as to
-the steamers likely to touch at Caicara, we
-reluctantly decided to take again to the slow
-and sure method of canoeing, rather than wait
-for him who had not promised to come, and
-thus we proceeded on our journey in the same
-canoes that we had imagined we were abandoning
-once for all two days before. A feeling of
-discontent began to possess us. It was not that
-we were dissatisfied with the kind of life, nor
-that we had become over-sensitive to the privations
-inherent to it, nor that we complained of
-being plain squires compelled to adopt the
-practices of knight-errants, such as not eating
-off linen, nor sleeping on comfortable couches,
-nor under roof of house or mansion; no, our
-great longing arose at the thought of those far
-away in the civilized world, to whom our long
-silence must necessarily be a source of anxiety.
-For the rest, however, the life we were leading
-had become a sort of second nature, and we
-found it by no means disagreeable. We ate
-<span class="pb" id="Page_227">227</span>
-with healthy appetites, and when night came,
-stretched on our matting, we heedlessly let the
-wind fold its wings or shriek into madness,
-whilst the river either murmured gently along
-like a stream across the green meadow or
-lashed into fury like a lion.</p>
-<p>We rowed or sailed as the river and the
-wind permitted, gaining ground without the
-loss of an available minute, with the tenacity
-of one who has a given task to accomplish,
-and wants to perform it with the least possible
-delay. One night, shortly after halting, a
-shudder of delight ran through us on hearing
-one of the men exclaim, &lsquo;Steamer coming!&rsquo;
-We turned in the direction pointed out by him,
-but saw nothing. However, we had learnt by
-that time to trust to the keener senses of the
-natives. Shortly afterwards, with ear to ground,
-we heard, or thought we heard, a far-off indistinct
-vibration as of the paddles of a steamer
-striking the water. The sound soon became
-unmistakable. Here was an unexpected redemption.
-From sheer joy we ceased the preparations
-for our evening meal. To attract the
-attention of those on board the steamer the
-bonfires were piled up high, and, to leave no
-<span class="pb" id="Page_228">228</span>
-possible loophole to adverse fate, Alex and
-four of the men sailed into mid-stream, so as to
-be quite close to the craft. Soon it loomed
-majestic and welcome to our eyes. The pennant
-of whitish smoke rose in the still blue night,
-and floated as a signal of welcome. The boat
-advanced steadily; we could see the people on
-board. That rather undersized vessel was to
-us, for the moment, the great in fact, the only&mdash;steamer
-in the world. We fired our revolvers.
-Alex and his men bawled themselves hoarse.
-No sign of recognition came from the steamer
-as she ploughed on swiftly, relentlessly, disdainfully,
-soon to be lost in the distance. This
-was wanton cruelty, and, as we thought at the
-time, a sin against human nature. Our feelings
-were not such as might be commended to the
-attention and imitation of Sunday-school children!
-Our language was decidedly &lsquo;unfit for
-publication.&rsquo; According to the reckoning of our
-men, which events proved accurate, we should
-require twelve days more to reach Ciudad
-Bolivar, whilst the steamer, sailing day and
-night as it could, even against the breeze,
-would cover the distance in forty-eight or sixty
-hours. It is well that we possessed no magic
-<span class="pb" id="Page_229">229</span>
-powers enabling us to destroy, as if with a
-thunder-bolt, for in that case the steamer would
-not have reached its destination. So it generally
-happens in life when the action of others foils
-our little plans or obstructs our way. Looking
-solely to our own side of the question, we are
-apt to make no allowance, and attribute to utter
-perversity what from the standpoint of the
-other side may be perfectly reasonable. As
-revolutions are frequent in those latitudes, and
-as steamers had on several occasions been
-seized by parties of men ambushed on the
-shore, the captain of the steamer probably
-thought that prudence and caution were his
-safest guides. He may have believed that,
-besides the small group which he saw in the
-canoe and on the shore, a formidable host
-might be lurking in the forest, and under
-those circumstances his behaviour is perfectly
-intelligible.</p>
-<p>As we approached the end of our journey,
-our impatience and anxiety grew keener. Up
-to that time we had never lost our equanimity,
-and now, when we could reckon with a fair
-degree of accuracy the date of our arrival at
-Ciudad Bolivar, the smallest obstacle or detention
-<span class="pb" id="Page_230">230</span>
-irritated us beyond measure. Yet all
-things end. On April 20 we arrived at a
-small outlying village three hours from Ciudad
-Bolivar.</p>
-<p>Our approach to a civilized community
-awakened slumbering feelings of vanity, and
-for the first time during many months we bethought
-ourselves of our appearance. I had
-an authentic mane on my head; our beards
-were thick and bushy as the jungle on the
-banks of the river. Such clothes as we had
-could hardly have passed muster under the
-eyes of the most lenient critic. Most of those
-that we possessed at starting had been left behind
-amongst the Indians, in payment of work,
-and what little remained had not been improved
-by the moisture of the climate. On taking
-stock, I soon found that my dress coat and
-trousers&mdash;evolved by some London artist&mdash;were
-the only decent clothes left to me; yet I
-could not screw up courage to don them, as I
-feared that if, after several months&rsquo; journey
-through the wildest regions of South America,
-I jumped ashore at noonday on the banks of
-the Orinoco in a swallow-tail, the authorities
-would probably provide me with free board and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_231">231</span>
-lodging in some cool lunatic asylum! We consoled
-ourselves with the thought that we were
-clean, and thus near to godliness, and that we
-could soon replace our patched and tattered
-clothes at Ciudad Bolivar.</p>
-<p>I have forgotten to mention our visit to the
-cattle estates of General Crespo, at that time
-President of Venezuela, a typical son of the
-<i>llanos</i>. These estates had a frontage of twenty-five
-leagues along the river, and extend Heaven
-only knows how far into the interior. The
-manager, or <i>major-domo</i>, told us that the herds
-on those estates numbered upwards of 200,000
-head of cattle. The figure appears fantastic,
-but the fact that at that time 1,500 three-year-old
-bullocks were exported monthly to the neighbouring
-West India Island, principally Trinidad,
-may serve as a basis for calculation.</p>
-<p>On that eventful 20th of April the breeze blew
-tantalizingly against us, yet we would not be
-detained, and decided to advance in its very
-teeth. The men jumped ashore and pulled the
-canoes with ropes. The city, built as upon
-a terrace, soon appeared in the distance, its
-white, red-roofed houses standing out under
-the clear sky like dabs of paint upon a blue
-<span class="pb" id="Page_232">232</span>
-canvas. Behind the town the hill continued to
-rise, and opposite the city the river itself, encased
-into a narrow space, is only one-third of
-a mile broad. It was a delight to look once
-more on houses, towers and churches, and other
-signs of civilized life. The sight was an enchantment
-after the eternal panorama of forest,
-mountain, plain and river. We had a feeling
-akin to that of Columbus and his companions
-when the watch shouted &lsquo;Land! land!&rsquo; We
-could echo those words in their full significance.
-The struggle was at an end; river, forest,
-rapids, fevers, wild beasts, poisonous snakes,
-savages, and all the obstacles that lay behind
-us, were over, leaving no further trace than
-the dust along the roads or the foam of the
-waves on the sands. Thanks to the Divine
-protection, we had reached the end of an adventurous
-journey full of possibilities of mishap
-and of danger, and all that had taken place was
-simply as a memory in our minds.</p>
-<p>We attracted great attention on landing, and
-were soon installed in one of the good hotels
-of the towns. We stared with something like
-wonderment at mirrors, tables, sofas, as at so
-many good old friends from whom we had been
-<span class="pb" id="Page_233">233</span>
-long separated. In us, primitive man had very
-soon reasserted full sway, and we had to make
-some effort to return to the habits and customs
-of civilized life. As soon as we could, we
-placed ourselves in the hands of a barber in
-the town. He had been told of our great store
-of luggage, and, inquisitive as all men of his
-profession are, on hearing one of us humming
-for very joy under his razor and shears, asked
-(I know not whether in innocence or banter):
-&lsquo;How many of you are in the company, and
-what opera are you going to begin with?&rsquo;
-To this I replied: &lsquo;We are not an opera company,
-but a circus, and our performances will
-begin shortly; we are on the look-out for a
-clown.&rsquo; He did not proceed with his cross-examination.</p>
-<p>Ciudad Bolivar is famous in the annals of
-Venezuelan and Colombian history. It bears
-the name of the emancipator of those regions.
-Formerly it was called Angostura, which means
-&lsquo;the Narrows.&rsquo; In 1819 one of the first
-Colombian Congresses was held at that city,
-and its deliberations, which soon crystallized
-into action, brought about the expulsion of the
-Spaniards after a daring and sanguinary series
-<span class="pb" id="Page_234">234</span>
-of campaigns. The very men who sat at
-Ciudad Bolivar, 300 miles from the shores of
-the Atlantic, ended their military campaign on
-the plateau of Ayacucho in 1824, having
-marched thousands of leagues across plain and
-forests, snow-capped mountains, precipices,
-jungle, fighting for every inch of ground against
-the stubborn soldiers of Spain in one of the
-most heroic and tenacious struggles on both
-sides that are to be found in the annals of
-history.</p>
-<p>The river, as I have stated before, narrows
-after its long pilgrimage, and, even as a regiment
-which closes its ranks, rolls its waves in denser
-array opposite the city. No sooner does it
-reach the outside limits than it broadens again,
-and, after running through fertile plains and
-swampy valleys for a distance of 600 kilometres,
-reaches the sea. The normal depth opposite
-Ciudad Bolivar is 120 metres. During the
-rainy season the level rises from 10 to 20
-metres.</p>
-<p>Verily the Orinoco is a living, wandering sea
-of fresh water gathered from the northern plains
-of South America, which forms the tribute of
-those lands to the Atlantic Ocean. We had
-<span class="pb" id="Page_235">235</span>
-just followed it in its pilgrimage for a long part
-of its course. We had known it in tempest and
-in calm; we had watched the dawn gilding its
-throbbing waters or the twilight covering them
-with flickering shadows; we had listened to the
-whispering of the winds and the roar of the
-hurricane along its shores; we had seen the
-monsters which roam in its waters, admired the
-river&rsquo;s Titanic sport, dashing in the rapids, or
-its majestic quiet in the deep basins of granite
-where the current seems to rest before leaping
-in a wild onslaught through the ca&ntilde;ons; and
-now we saw it majestically unroll before our
-eyes in the august pageant of its last procession
-to the ocean. We could not but think that,
-if that great artery of palpitating life which
-vibrates through the centre of the continent had
-stood us in such good service, its possibilities
-for the development of those vast unknown
-territories, when once appreciated by humanity,
-were practically unlimited. To our mind&rsquo;s eye,
-prophetic with desire, the vast solitudes we had
-left behind became resonant glad with the
-presence of myriads of men; the forests were
-cleared, the plains tilled, and a happy and
-prosperous nation, the outcome of the present
-<span class="pb" id="Page_236">236</span>
-struggling democracies that own those lands,
-increased by swarms of immigrants from distant
-overcrowded countries, reared its cities and
-towns along the banks of the river which, in its
-immutable, defiant majesty and power, still
-rolled to the sea, serving men, but remaining a
-bond of union, a mighty link between the
-Cordilleras and the ocean.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_237">237</div>
-<h2 id="c20">CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-<p>I have thus far sought to give an idea of my
-personal impressions during a journey most
-memorable to me; and I am aware that I bring
-no new or useful contribution from a scientific
-point of view. We had no instruments of
-observation, not even an ordinary every-day
-compass, enabling us to fix the cardinal points
-with certainty. Furthermore, had we possessed
-more complicated instruments, we were too
-ignorant to use them. Let these remarks be
-borne in mind should errors of appreciation be
-noticed, as certainly they exist, in this disjointed
-narrative.</p>
-<p>We wandered on with the definite aim of
-reaching the Atlantic Ocean. Beyond that we
-did not venture to scrutinize too deeply the
-mysterious and wonderful manifestations of
-Nature, but took them as they appeared to our
-<span class="pb" id="Page_238">238</span>
-limited means of vision and understanding, and
-sought nothing beyond.</p>
-<p>However, before closing these pages, assuming
-that some kind reader&rsquo;s patience may have
-enabled him to accompany me thus far, it may
-not be amiss to give some accurate data which
-I take from the admirable monograph entitled
-&lsquo;South America: an Outline of its Physical
-Geography,&rsquo; published in the <i>Geographical
-Journal</i> of April, 1901, by Colonel George
-Earl Church, a book which might be called
-&lsquo;South America in a Nutshell,&rsquo; wonderfully
-accurate and concise, and worthy of the highest
-praise.</p>
-<p>The total length of the Orinoco is about 1,500
-miles, but if measured by its Guaviari branch
-it is several hundred miles longer. It reaches
-its maximum height in August. To its point of
-junction with the Guaviare it takes a north-west
-course. Ninety miles before its union with that
-stream it receives its principal eastern affluent,
-the Ventuario. From the Guaviare it runs
-north nearly as far as the Apure, where it
-suddenly turns east. Between the Guaviare
-and the Meta the course of the river is
-obstructed by the Maipures Rapids, which
-<span class="pb" id="Page_239">239</span>
-extend for a length of four miles, with a total
-fall of about 40 feet. Below this the Atures
-Rapids cover a distance of about six miles,
-falling about 30 feet. Navigation is then
-free for about 700 miles, as far as the rapids of
-Cariben, within six miles of the mouth of the
-Meta. The river at this point is about a mile
-wide. Its course continues to the north, and at
-the mouth of the Apure it is two miles wide in the
-dry season, and about seven when in flood. At
-Cariben it rises 32 feet; but at the Angostura, or
-&lsquo;Narrows,&rsquo; 372 miles from the sea, it has risen
-to 60 feet. It enters the sea by its main trunk,
-the Boca Grande. About 100 miles above its
-mouth it throws off a branch northward to the
-Gulf of Paria, also 100 miles in length. Six
-other considerable arms find their way to the
-ocean across a vast delta about 7,000 square
-miles in area. The Boca Grande is the deepest
-and main navigable entrance at all seasons, the
-muddy bar usually maintaining a depth of
-16 feet. The basin of the Orinoco covers an
-area of 364,500 square miles.</p>
-<p>The principal affluents flowing from the
-Andean slopes are the Apure, the Arauca, the
-Meta, and the Guaviare.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_240">240</div>
-<p>The Apure is 695 miles long, of which 564
-are navigable. The Apure in its turn receives
-numerous tributaries, some of which are navigable
-for short distances.</p>
-<p>The Arauca, the Meta and the Guaviare, are
-also navigable.</p>
-<p>The Casiquiare Canal unites the upper
-Orinoco with the Rio Negro branch of the
-Amazon. It is about 300 miles long, with an
-average depth of 30 feet, and has a strong
-current in the direction of the Negro. The list
-of affluents of the Orinoco and of its tributaries
-would be a very long one, and would serve no
-useful purpose here.</p>
-<p>Evidently the Orinoco and the Orinoco
-system, with their innumerable ramifications in
-all directions, form a basis for the easy exploitation
-of the vast sources of natural wealth which
-exist in the immense territory through which
-their waters flow.</p>
-<p>That territory lies within the borders of the
-Republics of Colombia and Venezuela. Up
-to the present neither nation has seriously
-attempted to utilize the valuable elements so
-bountifully offered by Nature. In the matter
-of navigation, ocean-going steamers sail frequently
-<span class="pb" id="Page_241">241</span>
-as far as Ciudad Bolivar. From this
-latter point river steamers ply once or twice
-a month up the Orinoco, turning into the Apure
-as far as San Fernando de Apure, and during
-the tonga-bean harvest follow the course of the
-main river generally as far as the Caura, where
-the harvesters established their central camps
-a good many years ago. An effort was made
-to establish navigation on the Orinoco and its
-affluents above the rapids, and also to run
-small steamers in the navigable part between
-the Atures and Maipures rapids; but the French
-company, which held a charter practically placing
-the whole region at its disposal, failed of its
-object, after spending a considerable amount of
-money. During our journey, in several places
-we could see, rotting in the sun, the remnants
-of broken-down steamers, which appeared
-uncanny objects in those surroundings. The
-rapids, acting as a barrier, have deterred traders
-and explorers. The upper part of the Orinoco
-is the most abundant in natural wealth. As
-I have had occasion to note in these pages,
-india-rubber, <i>piazaba</i>, tonga bean, resinous and
-medicinal plants, are found in practically unlimited
-quantities along the shores of all the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_242">242</span>
-rivers above the rapids, and the small proportion
-which is gathered is generally shipped
-through the Rio Negro by way of the Amazon,
-as traders prefer that long and tedious journey
-to the difficulties of the Orinoco Rapids.</p>
-<p>Yet to give life to the Orinoco, to establish
-a stream of natural products down its waters,
-and to facilitate the opening of the forests and
-mountains beyond the rapids, it would not be
-necessary to carry out work of a very stupendous
-nature, beyond the resources of the peoples and
-the nations most interested in the work. A
-cursory glance at the elements of the problem
-reveals the possibility of carrying out a plan,
-the general outlines of which might be the
-following:</p>
-<p>A line of steamers should be established
-plying at least twice a month between Ciudad
-Bolivar and the highest accessible point for
-navigation below the Atures Rapids.</p>
-<p>The old road along the rapids, which extended
-from that highest point of navigation to beyond
-Maipures where the river is again free and
-open, should be reconstructed. A railway could
-be built along either shore, the ground being
-mostly level and hard. It would not be necessary
-<span class="pb" id="Page_243">243</span>
-to undertake great engineering works, and
-the road-bed itself would require neither deep
-cuttings nor terracing, nor expensive culverts
-and works of drainage, and the few bridges
-required, being of short span, would not run
-into high figures.</p>
-<p>Steam navigation should also be established
-beyond the rapids on the rivers forming the
-upper basin. This could be done at first by
-means of small steam-launches such as are used
-in the affluents of the Amazon River, but the
-service should be carried out faithfully and
-periodically, even though at first freight and
-passengers were lacking. People in Spanish
-America are generally very sceptical as to
-these enterprises, but once a feeling of confidence
-was created, explorers would flock
-both from Colombia and from Venezuela, as
-they would know that they would have an
-outlet for whatever products they might
-gather.</p>
-<p>The Indians on the Vichada, and even those
-on the Meta, would supply abundant labour,
-and the exports of natural products would soon
-furnish all the freight that might be desired to
-make the whole arrangement of steamers above
-<span class="pb" id="Page_244">244</span>
-and below the rapids, and the railway along the
-same, a paying concern.</p>
-<p>A line of steamers should also follow the
-course of the Meta River as far as La Cruz,
-a port situated about ninety miles from Bogot&aacute;,
-thus tapping the import and export trade of the
-most thickly-populated region of Colombia, the
-inhabitants of which in the three provinces of
-Santander, Boyac&aacute;, and Cundinamarca, are over
-1,500,000 in number.</p>
-<p>Supposing four steamers to be needed for
-navigation on the lower river and on the Meta,
-to be bought at Ciudad Bolivar at a cost of
-&pound;10,000 each, &pound;40,000 would be required under
-this head. Taking the length of the railway
-at 60 kilometres, including the bridges, at a
-cost of &pound;2,000 per kilometre, &pound;120,000 would
-be required for the railway; and supposing that
-ten small steam-launches of twenty to thirty
-tons burden were started for the rivers on the
-upper basin, &pound;20,000 would be required&mdash;in all,
-&pound;180,000 for the whole undertaking.</p>
-<p>The preceding figures are not imaginative,
-and might, perhaps, be reduced in actual
-practice. If it has been possible to raise the
-capital required for the construction of a railway
-<span class="pb" id="Page_245">245</span>
-of upwards of 200 kilometres in length
-along the shores of the Congo, where climate,
-distance, and natives combine to establish far
-more serious obstacles than exist on the
-Orinoco, should it not be possible to find
-the capital for the establishment of modern
-means of transportation in a region which
-offers far brighter and surer prospects than
-the Congo? Let it be remembered that from
-Colombia and from Venezuela civilized white,
-coloured and Indian labour could be found in
-abundance, and that Europeans engaged in the
-undertaking, and provided with steamers, could
-in two days, if on the Meta, reach the high
-and healthy plateaus of Bogot&aacute; and find themselves
-in a civilized community where they
-would lack none of the luxuries or comforts
-of their own land; and that in the Lower
-Orinoco they would have Ciudad Bolivar, to
-which the same remarks, barring the advantage
-of climate, may be applied. The two Governments
-of Colombia and Venezuela, equally
-interested in the development of the Orinoco
-basin, might unite their efforts and guarantee
-in a form satisfactory to European capitalists
-the paltry yearly amount required to pay the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_246">246</span>
-service of interest and sinking fund on the
-&pound;180,000. Taking the interest at 6, with a
-sinking fund of 1 per cent., &pound;12,600 yearly
-would be required&mdash;that is to say, &pound;6,300 for
-each Government. I know that at the present
-moment such a task would be well-nigh impossible,
-but I also know that if a sincere effort
-were made, notwithstanding the universal feeling
-of distrust, it would be possible to create securities
-specially applicable to this purpose, which
-would satisfy the most exacting capitalist.</p>
-<p>In the midst of the daily turmoil and agitation
-and sanguinary struggle which constitutes the
-life of those democracies, these problems, urgent
-and vital as they are, pass unheeded; and the
-more the pity, for in their solution lies the
-basis of a permanent peace. Prosperity begets
-abhorrence of internal revolutions. The development
-of Mexico is a case in point, from
-which Colombia and Venezuela might take
-heed. Woe to them if they do not! The
-world begins to sicken at the very mention
-of the constant strife which converts into a
-positive hell those regions where Nature has
-shown herself prodigal beyond measure in all
-her gifts. Not only the valley of the Orinoco,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_247">247</span>
-with its boundless prairies, its dense forests,
-and its innumerable affluents, but the uplands
-of the Andine regions and the plains extending
-in Venezuela towards the North Atlantic or
-Caribbean Sea, and in Colombia to the Pacific
-Ocean, are coveted by nations where humanity
-is overcrowded by races which would fain
-establish colonies in those regions. The
-development of humanity cannot be stayed;
-the human wave, even as the stream of water
-contained by a dyke, will sooner or later break
-through the walls that imprison it and flood the
-surrounding country. It were well for men
-animated by real patriotism in Colombia and
-in Venezuela to ponder over these possibilities,
-so that the two nations might themselves open
-the flood-gates for immigration without delay,
-so that the new-comers would prove a fresh
-source of strength and power, helping to build
-up on the basis of the now existing nations
-free and mighty commonwealths, rather than
-as conquerors, who (whether they come from
-the North as wolves in sheep&rsquo;s clothing under
-cover of the Monroe doctrine, or from across
-the ocean, driven by necessity stronger than all
-political conventionality) would come as masters.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_248">248</div>
-<p>Now is our accepted time. The moments
-are counted during which the danger may be
-averted and the inevitable turned to account;
-but, alas! feuds and errors deep-rooted in
-medieval soil, luxuriant in this our twentieth
-century, darken the minds of men, influence
-their judgment, turn away their activity from
-the real aims that would lead their nations to
-greatness, and force them into barbarous
-struggles which the world regards with amazement
-and brands as crimes against mankind.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_249">249</div>
-<h2 id="c21">CHAPTER XX</h2>
-<p>After a week in Ciudad Bolivar, we bethought
-ourselves of continuing the journey to the
-sea. Civilization had reclaimed us for her own,
-and rigged in European attire, such as befits
-the tropics, with all the social conventionalities
-once again paramount in our mind, we set forth
-on that, the last stage of the journey. We had
-been, not a nine days&rsquo; but a nine hours&rsquo; wonder
-in the historical town which rears its houses
-and churches alongside the narrows of the
-majestic stream. Early in the afternoon of a
-dazzling tropical day, cloudless, blue and hazy
-from the very brilliancy of the air, we stepped
-into the large steamboat that was to carry
-us to the neighbouring British island of Trinidad,
-once also a Spanish possession. The
-usual events accompanying the departure of
-all steamers from the shore repeated themselves:
-<span class="pb" id="Page_250">250</span>
-clanging of chains, shouting of orders,
-groans of the huge structure, shrill whistles,
-and that trepidation, the dawn as it were of
-motion, something like a hesitation of things
-inert apparently unwilling to be set in motion,
-which is the life of matter inanimate; then the
-steady throbbing of the machinery, the stroke
-of the paddles, splash, splash, until regularity
-and monotony are attained, and the ship,
-wheeled into midstream after describing a broad
-arc, set the prow eastward with the current to
-the ocean.</p>
-<p>We looked at the town as it dwindled indistinct,
-seeming to sink into the vast azure of the
-horizon, swallowed in the scintillating folds of
-the blue distance. We sat on the deck as if in
-a trance. Shortly after starting, wild Nature
-reasserted her sway, and the small oasis built
-by the hand of man in the heart of the untamed
-region, seemed to us who knew how
-unmeasurable were those forests and those
-plains, like a tiny nest perched on the branches
-of a lofty and over-spreading <i>ceiba</i>. A feeling
-of superiority over our fellow-passengers unconsciously
-filled our breasts. For were we
-not boon companions, fellow-travellers, tried
-<span class="pb" id="Page_251">251</span>
-and trusted comrades of those rushing waters?
-Had we not shared their pilgrimage for days
-and days, in calm and in storm, in sunshine
-and in darkness? Had we not slept on their
-bosom or travelled upon it for countless hours,
-till the secret of their mystery and the joy of
-their wandering had penetrated into our very
-soul? What knew they, the other travellers
-of a few hours, of the intimate life of those
-waters which we had watched, gathering their
-strength from all the points of the compass,
-swelling the current of the central stream,
-mingling their life with it, now as rivulets, now
-as rivers, now placid in the embrace, now
-plunging, foaming, as if loath to loose their identity?
-Yea, verily, we were comrades, fellow-pilgrims,
-with the splendid travelling sea, there
-on its final march to the boundless deep.</p>
-<p>Forest and plain, marsh, morass, jungle, succeeded
-one another in interminable procession,
-and the setting sun now broke its ray on the
-low-lying hills, now reverberated on the far-off
-marshes on either side of the current, tinging
-them with a crimson glow. Towards sunset
-the whistle of the steamer frightened a flock of
-flamingoes gathered to roost, as is their wont
-<span class="pb" id="Page_252">252</span>
-when the shadows of evening approach. The
-whole flock sought refuge in flight, and their
-widespread wings, as they rose before us,
-seemed like a huge transparent pink curtain
-lifted before our very eyes, rising higher and
-higher until it vanished in space.</p>
-<p>Night fell upon the scene. First the stars
-and then the moon kindled their beacon fires,
-dispelling darkness into a semi-obscurity fraught
-with mystery, embalmed with the effluvia from
-the forest and the river. We felt like a shadow
-crossing the wilderness. The littleness of self,
-the insignificance of the human being, became
-overwhelming.</p>
-<p>What could it matter if that daring shell with
-its human freight were dashed to pieces against
-a submerged tree and swallowed in the waves?
-Nature, impassible, would take no notice of the
-event; in far-off homes sorrow would fill the
-loving hearts. The river would be looked
-upon as a grave, wondrous vast, where a dear
-one had found his rest, but the river itself
-would suffer no change, and our world of hopes,
-ambitions, infinite longings, would leave no
-more trace than the smallest bubble of the
-floating foam.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_253">253</div>
-<p>And thus the morrow came. With the light
-of day the circle of the horizon broadened; we
-were out at sea, no trace of land was visible.
-The waves tossed the struggling craft tenderly,
-gliding under its keel, the wind caressed the
-flying pennants on the mastheads and seemed
-to whisper promises of freedom as it rustled
-through the rigging. The mighty river had
-disappeared, paying its tribute, like a human
-being to the grave, to Father Ocean. And the
-long journey which lay behind us was nothing
-more than a dream in our memory, for things
-dreamt and things lived do so intermingle their
-identity in our minds that the attempt to disentangle
-their threads were useless. And so
-we drifted into the broad, unmeasurable expanse
-of waters which seemed to palpitate and
-tremble as with the touch of life under the
-glorious rays of the morning sun.</p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small">THE END</span></p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="smaller">BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD</span></p>
-<h2 id="c22">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul><li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, italicized text is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-<li>Corrected a few palpable typographical errors.</li></ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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