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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50653 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50653)
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-Project Gutenberg's Travels in the interior of Brazil, by John Mawe
-
-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: Travels in the interior of Brazil
- with notices on its climate, agriculture, commerce,
- population, mines, manners, and customs: and a particular
- account of the gold and diamond districts.
-
-Author: John Mawe
-
-Release Date: December 9, 2015 [EBook #50653]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAVELS IN THE INTERIOR OF BRAZIL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Giovanni Fini and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-—Obvious print and punctuation errors were corrected.
-
-—Superscript letter “o” has been rendered as text^o.
-
-
-
-
- TRAVELS
-
- IN THE
-
- INTERIOR OF BRAZIL;
-
- WITH NOTICES ON ITS
-
- CLIMATE, AGRICULTURE, COMMERCE, POPULATION,
- MINES, MANNERS, AND CUSTOMS:
-
- AND
-
- _A PARTICULAR ACCOUNT_
-
- OF
-
- THE GOLD AND DIAMOND DISTRICTS.
-
- INCLUDING
-
- _A VOYAGE TO THE RIO DE LA PLATA_.
-
- BY
-
- JOHN MAWE.
-
- SECOND EDITION.
-
- ILLUSTRATED WITH COLORED PLATES.
-
- London:
-
- PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN,
- PATERNOSTER ROW;
- AND SOLD BY THE AUTHOR, 149, STRAND.
-
- 1822.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_W. M’Dowall Printer, Pemberton Row Gough Square._
-
-[Illustration: PALACE & GREAT SQUARE IN RIO DE JANEIRO.]
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-SINCE the first appearance of this work, nine years have elapsed,
-during which period translations of it have been published in France,
-Sweden, Germany, and Russia, as well as in Portugal and Brazil, and
-two editions of it have been given in the United States of America.
-Encouraged by these unequivocal proofs of approbation, and by the kind
-offers of assistance from several eminent persons in Brazil, and from
-others attached to the Portuguese interests in this country, I have
-at length, and I trust not prematurely, ventured again to submit it
-to the notice of the Public. In its present form, it is divested of
-some details, which however interesting at the period of its first
-publication, have ceased to be so; and their place has been supplied by
-matter of higher and more lasting importance, collected from official
-documents relative to Brazil, and from private memoranda communicated
-by persons well acquainted with the present state of that interesting
-country. For the opportunity of making many of these improvements, I
-have to offer my grateful acknowledgments to the Conde de Funchal,
-late ambassador from Portugal at the British Court; and I have also
-to express my sincerest thanks to A. F. J. Marreco, Esq. for the
-access which he has afforded me to various authentic and valuable
-sources of information, and for his kind and judicious suggestions to
-me while preparing the present edition for the press. How far I have
-profited by these estimable advantages, will best appear from the work
-itself, which I now submit to the equitable judgment of the Public.
-Conciseness, as far as is consistent with fidelity of description, has
-been my principal aim; and I trust that the reader will not think that
-I have trespassed too much on his time, when he compares this with the
-more voluminous productions which have recently been published on the
-same subject.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- _Voyage to Cadiz and thence to the Rio de la Plata.—Adventures
- at Monte Video.—Character of the Inhabitants.—Trade.—Climate.
- —Geological Remarks.—Recent Changes.—Monte Video under the
- Portuguese.—Agriculture and Trade of the Rio de la Plata._ 1
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- _Journey to Barriga Negra.—Geology of the Country.—Limestone,
- and mode of burning it.—Horned Cattle.—Peons.—Horses.—Defective
- State of Agriculture.—Manners of the Inhabitants.—Dress.—Wild
- Animals.—Monte Video taken by the British.—My return thither._ 22
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- _Expedition against Buenos Ayres.—Account of the Population of
- the Country, and Classes which compose it._ 46
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- _Voyage to St. Catherine’s.—Description of that Island, and of
- the Coast in its Vicinity.—Arrival at Santos, and Journey thence
- to S. Paulo._ 55
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- _Description of S. Paulo.—System of Farming prevalent in its
- Neighbourhood.—Excursion to the Gold Mines of Jaraguá.—Mode of
- working them.—Return to Santos._ 92
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- _Coasting Voyage from Santos to Sapitiva, and Journey thence to
- Rio de Janeiro._ 122
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- _Description of Rio de Janeiro.—Trade.—State of Society.—Visit to
- the Prince Regent’s Farm at Santa Cruz._ 135
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- _Journey to Canta Gallo._ 157
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- _Description of Canta Gallo.—Of the Gold-washing of Santa
- Rita.—Account of the supposed Silver-Mine._ 170
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- _Permission obtained to visit the Diamond Mines.—Account of a
- pretended Diamond presented to the Prince Regent.—Journey to
- Villa Rica._ 195
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- _Origin and present State of Villa Rica.—Account of the
- Mint.—Visit to the City of Mariana.—Excursion to the Fazendas
- of Barro and Castro, belonging to His Excellency the Conde de
- Linhares._ 243
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- _Journey from Villa Rica to Tejuco, the Capital of the Diamond
- District._ 287
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- _Visit to the Diamond Works on the River Jiquitinhonha.—General
- Description of the Works.—Mode of Washing.—Return
- to Tejuco.—Visit to the Treasury.—Excursion to Rio
- Pardo.—Miscellaneous Remarks._ 311
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- _Some Account of the Districts of Minas Novas and Paracatu.—Of
- the large Diamond found in the River Abaite._ 337
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- _Observations on Tejuco and Cerro do Frio._ 349
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- _General View of Minus Geraes._ 376
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- _Brief Notices on the Capitanias of Bahia, Pernambuco, Seara,
- Maranham, Para, and Goyaz._ 391
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- _Geographical Description of the Capitania of Matto Grosso._ 407
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- _Account of the Capitania of Rio Grande._ 442
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- _General Observations on the Trade from England to Brazil._ 450
-
- _Appendix._ 473
-
- _Index._ 487
-
-
-
-
-DESCRIPTION OF THE PLATES,
-
-WITH
-
-DIRECTIONS TO THE BINDER.
-
-
- 1. View of the Square at Rio de Janeiro _to face the Title_
-
- 2. Peon catching Cattle Page 32
-
- 3. Horizontal Corn Mill and Pounding Machine[1] 190
-
- 4. Map of the Author’s Route 195
-
- 5. Topaz Mine (described p. 232) and Diamond-washing 314
-
- 6. Negroes washing for Diamonds, Gold, &c. 317
-
-
-
-
-TRAVELS,
-
-_&c. &c. &c._
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
- _Voyage to Cadiz and thence to the Rio de la Plata. Adventures at
- Monte Video.—Character of the Inhabitants.—Trade.—Climate.
- —Geological Remarks.—Recent Changes.—Monte Video under the Portugueze.
- —Agriculture and Trade at the Rio de la Plata._
-
-
-IN the year 1804, I was induced to undertake a voyage of commercial
-experiment, on a limited scale, to the Rio de la Plata. On my arrival
-at Monte Video, the ship and cargo were seized; I was thrown into
-prison, and afterwards sent into the interior, where I was detained
-until the taking of that place by the British troops under Sir Samuel
-Auchmuty. I afterwards obtained leave to accompany the army under
-General Whitelocke, which was sent against Buenos Ayres, and I rendered
-such services to the expedition, as my two years’ residence in the
-country enabled me to perform. At the termination of that expedition,
-I went to Rio de Janeiro. A letter of introduction to the Viceroy of
-Brazil, which was given me by the Portugueze Minister at London, gained
-me the notice and protection of his brother, the Condé de Linhares, who
-had then just arrived with the rest of the Court, and who recommended
-me to the Prince Regent, as a person devoted to mineralogical pursuits,
-and desirous of exploring the ample field for investigation which
-his rich and extensive territories presented. His Royal Highness was
-graciously pleased to further my views, not only by granting me letters
-to the public functionaries of the various places I wished to visit,
-but by ordering an escort of soldiers, and every other necessary
-provision for performing the journey. I had the more reason to be
-grateful for this munificent patronage, because I knew that a decree
-existed, prohibiting all foreigners from travelling in the interior of
-Brazil, and that no other Englishman had ever begun such an undertaking
-with those indispensible requisites to its success, the permission and
-sanction of the Government.
-
-Observations, made, in the course of these Travels, on the country and
-its inhabitants, constitute the main part of the volume now offered
-to the public. Whatever be their faults or their merits, they relate
-to a subject at present extremely interesting, both in a political
-and a commercial point of view; they profess to develope the physical
-resources of a colony, which, through recent changes, is likely to
-become an empire; and in part, to portray the character of a nation
-which is now the most ancient, and has ever been the most faithful,
-ally of Great Britain.
-
-As the recital of a voyage is proverbially tedious and superfluous, I
-shall forbear to trouble the reader with any detail of mine, and shall
-merely state, that, after encountering many difficulties at Cadiz, in
-consequence of the rupture with Spain, I sailed for the Plata, and
-having narrowly escaped shipwreck from a tremendous storm near the
-mouth of that river, entered the harbour of Monte Video.
-
-The hardships I experienced in reaching this ill-fated port, were a
-fit prelude to the misfortunes that awaited me there. We were bound
-for Buenos Ayres, but my captain, who in London and at Cadiz had
-assured me that he had the experience of a pilot in the Rio de la
-Plata, proved totally ignorant of its navigation, and urged this
-circumstance as his reason for putting into Monte Video. Happy should
-I have been, if this had been the only instance of his ignorance; he
-gave an ill-judged and blundering report of me to the governor, and
-the sailors affirmed that I was an Englishman, declaring at the same
-time that we had passed an English squadron under Spanish colors.
-This statement was enough to whet the avarice of the governor, who,
-notwithstanding I had served the colony, in bringing a cargo which
-was then much wanted, and every article of which had paid legal duty
-in Cadiz, ordered me to be thrown into prison. I was placed in close
-confinement on board a wretched sloop of war; and though my health
-was much impaired in consequence of exertion during the voyage, I was
-denied every comfort, except such indulgences, as the officers, who
-lived on shore, could at times clandestinely allow. Unprovided with
-letters of recommendation to any person in the town, and destitute
-of the means of making myself known, I had the mortification to see
-the property I had brought with me seized, and my papers taken away
-to be searched and examined. I was enjoined to make declarations, and
-to give evidence against myself, to men whose sole wish was to find
-a pretext for criminating me. After three or four examinations, it
-was found that I had sailed from Cadiz with a cargo of goods, marked,
-manifested, and duly registered, as Spanish; nor could any circumstance
-be discovered as a ground of accusation against me, but the strong
-suspicion that I was an Englishman, and on that account could not be
-too harshly treated. I had no lenity to expect from the governor, nor
-indeed from any of his advisers, who were, for the most part, men of
-the lowest order, refugees from Old Spain in consequence of criminal
-prosecutions. The rest of his associates were the captains and officers
-of two Spanish privateers, all Frenchmen, whose natural prejudices,
-no doubt, contributed to foment his antipathy against me. My sole
-reliance was on the consignee of the cargo, who at length arrived from
-Buenos Ayres; but, instead of clearing up the affair, he joined my
-persecutors, knowing that if he gave security he should have the cargo
-delivered to him. This favorable opportunity he failed not to embrace;
-he sold the property, and withheld the proceeds, under the pretext,
-that he could not pay them over to me while I remained a prisoner. This
-conduct to one who had depended on him for support, and who relied on
-his continually delusive promises of assistance, proved him to be one
-of those mean and spiritless beings whose station in society is mid-way
-between the simpleton and the knave.
-
-My confinement would probably have been long, but for the good services
-of a Limenian, who attended me during my illness in Cadiz, and who had
-come over in the vessel with me. He was the only person I was permitted
-to see; and he interested himself so much in my behalf, that an old
-gentlewoman, with whom he had formed an acquaintance, determined, on
-hearing my story, to procure my liberation, and never rested until she
-had procured two bondsmen to answer for my appearance when called for.
-
-The treatment I experienced, while in prison, was one of the many
-instances of oppression which disgraced the administration of the
-governor, Pasqual Ruiz Huidobro. It is well known that his political
-conduct was entirely subservient to the interests of the French,
-and that he lost no opportunity of evincing his attachment to their
-cause. As a further proof of this, I may state, that he caused all the
-captured English seamen to be confined in the prison, and, although its
-spacious court was doubly grated and guarded, he debarred them the use
-of it, and ordered them to be shut up, night and day, in a small room,
-the door of which was never opened except when victuals were given
-them. Aware of his severity, and knowing that I was the only prisoner
-at large, I was very circumspect, and strove to guard my conduct and
-discourse against artful misconstruction; but I had the misfortune
-to incur his displeasure at a moment when I least suspected it, by
-a very trivial, and certainly unintentional offence. Some written
-papers had been stuck up in various parts of the town, by order of
-Government, inviting foreign seamen to enter the service. Returning
-home at midnight from a visit, I observed one of these placards; the
-rain, which was pouring very fast, had partly detached it from the
-wall, and it was blown to and fro by the wind. Curious to examine the
-contents of a paper that had attracted the attention of many persons
-in the course of the day, I took it down and carried it home with me;
-this was observed by an old Spaniard of the name of Dias, who gloried
-much in having it in his power to injure me, though a perfect stranger
-to him, and unconscious of having done any thing to excite his malice.
-At the instance of this man an order was issued by the governor for my
-arrest; I was roused from my bed by the officers, and again hurried
-to prison. What charges were brought against me I could learn only by
-report; they were vague and indefinite, and no opportunity of answering
-them was allowed me. After a close confinement of six weeks, during
-which period my case was laid before the Viceroy of Buenos Ayres, I was
-again suffered to be at large, on payment of a fee of three hundred
-dollars. It was to the humane exertions of my advocate, seconded by
-those of the Limenian and the lady before-mentioned, that I owed this
-mitigation of my captivity, and I gratefully acknowledge that they made
-every provision in their power to render my situation comfortable.
-
-During my stay at Monte Video another adventure befel me, which had
-well nigh cost me my life; I am induced to relate it, by reason of the
-insight it gives into the character of a certain class of the people.
-I had gone on a shooting excursion to the promontory opposite Monte
-Video, with my much-valued friend Captain Collet, owner of two or three
-large American ships, and M. Godefroy, a merchant, resident in the
-town. After some hours’ sport we met a party of four Spaniards, among
-whom were Mr. Ortiga, the consignee of Captain Collet, and a person
-called Manuel d’Iago. Our friend M. Godefroy had some conversation
-with them at a short distance from us, and on his return gave us to
-understand, that d’Iago had said it would not cost him above five
-hundred dollars to send a pair of bullets through me, and that had I
-been alone he would not have scrupled to do it. For this blood-thirsty
-insinuation I was at a loss to conjecture any motive, nor knew I the
-man, except by report, which designated him as a captain of militia,
-extremely rigorous in his treatment of the unfortunate English,
-whenever his turn to mount guard at the prison subjected them to his
-authority.
-
-We pursued our diversion; he and his party meanwhile arrived at the
-Signal-house, about three miles above us, where they took refreshment.
-Some space of time afterward we observed a horse-soldier ride down
-towards us, who on approaching eyed us with a look of great suspicion.
-I had some little talk with him, having frequently seen him there
-before. He returned directly to the Guard-house, and an hour afterwards
-five _blandengues_, or horse-soldiers, sallied from the place at
-full speed, and, surrounding us, demanded our arms at the peril of
-our lives. Each of us obeyed, by surrendering his fowling-piece, M.
-Godefroy at the same time enquiring the cause of this extraordinary
-treatment; but they ordered him to be silent, and to march on along
-with us, or they would tie him on horseback. We were conducted to the
-Guard-house, and delivered (the officer being absent) to the corporal
-on guard, a fiery old Spaniard, who ordered us into an inner room,
-and placed two centinels at the door. The fellow was so stifled by
-passion, that we could not get an answer from him; at every moment he
-was drawing a long sabre which hung at his side, and venting his fury
-in the most abusive language. After a full half-hour of expostulation
-on our part, and menace on his, M. Godefroy obtained a hearing from
-him, and, declaring he was a merchant, married and actually settled in
-Monte Video, begged to know by what authority and under what pretext
-he was imprisoned. The corporal, on learning this, sent a soldier to
-the officer on guard, and while waiting his return, related that D’Iago
-had described us as Englishmen belonging to a privateer, who had landed
-with an intention to blow up the powder-magazines, kill bullocks, and
-plunder the natives. It was evident from his manner that he was very
-willing to believe this account, and that by treating us with severity
-he hoped to display his zeal for the service, and obtain promotion. M.
-Godefroy’s testimony being at length attended to, another soldier was
-dispatched to D’Iago’s party, who were not yet embarked, with notice
-that one of us affirmed himself to be a resident in Monte Video. This
-they did not contradict, but persisted in their accusations of the
-rest of our party; Mr. Ortiga denied any knowledge of Captain Collet,
-probably imagining that, in case of our conviction, he should benefit
-by the cargoes which the latter had consigned to him; and for me, whom
-they denounced as a spy, no punishment in their opinion could be too
-ignominious. On the return of the soldier, the corporal thought proper
-to release M. Godefroy, who took our boat to cross the port to Monte
-Video, with the intention of procuring an order for our liberation;
-but they had scarcely sailed, when a gust of wind arose, and as he and
-two boys he had with him could not manage the sails, they were nearly
-overset, and after considerable danger were picked up by a ship in the
-road. Meanwhile Captain Collet and I remained in strict custody, and
-at every syllable of complaint we uttered, the corporal brandished
-his sabre over our heads, roared out for the guard, and vociferated
-the most opprobrious language against the English. Thus threatened
-at every moment with assassination, we withdrew into a corner of the
-room, and quietly waited until the officer on guard arrived, when we
-were conducted in great form, between two men with drawn swords, into
-the room where he sat to receive us. Nothing could exceed my joyful
-surprise at recognizing in the officer an excellent and worthy friend,
-whom I had often visited at his farm, and who had given me repeated
-proofs of his liberal disposition and intelligent mind. His surprise
-exceeded mine; for instead of plunderers or spies, such as report had
-described us, he found an American merchant and a prisoner at large
-under bail. He was deeply grieved and ashamed at the treatment we had
-met with, liberated us immediately, mounted us on his own horses,
-and appointed a trusty person to attend us to Monte Video, where we
-arrived at eight in the evening. The disappointment of the corporal
-appeared as deep as his rage had been violent; and the recollection of
-his conduct operated on us as a warning against persons of his class,
-who rarely see an opportunity of doing mischief to a stranger, without
-a strong inclination to avail themselves of it.
-
-During the time I was at large, I had leisure to acquire some knowledge
-of Monte Video. It is a tolerably well-built town, standing on a gentle
-elevation at the extremity of a small peninsula, and is walled entirely
-round. Its population amounts to between 15,000 and 20,000 souls. The
-harbour, though shoal, and quite open to the _pamperos_, or south-west
-gales, is the best in the Rio de la Plata; it has a very soft bottom of
-deep mud. When the wind continues for some time at north-east, ships
-drawing twelve feet water are frequently a-ground for several days, so
-that the harbour cannot be called a good one for vessels above three
-hundred or four hundred tons.
-
-There are but few capital buildings; the town in general consists of
-houses of one story, paved with bricks, and provided with very poor
-convenience. In the square is a cathedral, very handsome, but awkwardly
-situated; opposite to it, is an edifice divided into a town-house, or
-_cabildo_, and a prison. The streets, having no pavement, are always
-either clouded with dust or loaded with mud, as the weather happens to
-be dry or wet. In seasons of drought the want of conduits for water is
-a serious inconvenience, the well, which principally supplies the town,
-being two miles distant.
-
-Provisions here are cheap and in great abundance. Beef in particular
-is very plentiful, and, though rarely fat or fine, makes excellent
-soup. The best parts of the meat may, indeed, be called tolerable,
-but they are by no means tender. The pork is not eatable. Such is
-the profusion of flesh-meat, that the vicinity for two miles round,
-and even the purlieus of the town itself, present filthy spectacles
-of bones and raw flesh at every step, which feed immense flocks of
-sea-gulls, and in summer breed myriads of flies, to the great annoyance
-of the inhabitants, who are obliged at table to have a servant or two
-continually employed in fanning the dishes with feathers, to drive away
-those troublesome intruders.
-
-Of the character of the inhabitants of Monte Video, I am perhaps not
-qualified to speak impartially, having been treated with unmerited
-harshness, deprived of my property, and repeatedly persecuted on
-the most groundless suspicion. These abuses, however, are solely
-chargeable on the governor and on the persons immediately under his
-influence; and I am bound in fairness to avow, that I did not perceive
-any disposition in the generality of the people to injure or oppress
-me. From individuals in the town I received all the assistance which
-disinterested benevolence could afford to a person in my critical
-situation; and were I, from the impulse of gratitude, to judge of the
-whole by a part, I should say, that the inhabitants of Monte Video,
-particularly the Creolians, are humane and well-disposed, when not
-actuated by political or religious prejudices. Their habits of life
-are much the same with those of their brethren in Old Spain, and
-seem to proceed from the same remarkable union of two opposite but
-not incompatible qualities, indolence and temperance. The ladies are
-generally affable and polite, extremely fond of dress, and very neat
-and cleanly in their persons. They adopt the English costume at home,
-but go abroad usually in black, and always covered with a large veil
-or mantle. At mass they invariably appear in black silk, bordered with
-deep fringes. They delight in conversation, for which their vivacity
-eminently qualifies them, and they are very courteous to strangers.
-
-The chief trade of Monte Video consists in hides, tallow, and dried
-beef; the two former of these articles are exported to Europe, and the
-latter is sent to the West Indies, especially to the Havannah. Coarse
-copper from Chili, in square cakes, is sometimes shipped here, as well
-as an herb called _Mate_ from Paraguay, the infusion of which is as
-common a beverage in these parts as tea is in England.
-
-Sugar, coffee, and sweetmeats, are supplied from Rio de Janeiro and
-other parts of the Brazilian coasts by small traders. Some articles
-of jewellery are also brought from thence, and the returns are made in
-dollars, hides, and tallow, which are forwarded generally to Europe.
-
-The inhabitants were by no means opulent before the English took
-the garrison, but through the misfortunes of the latter at Buenos
-Ayres, and the losses of our commercial adventurers by ill-judged and
-imprudent speculations, they were considerably enriched. The great
-prospects indulged in England, before the expedition to the Plata, of
-immense profits by trade to that river, have generally ended in ruin;
-very few, indeed, of the speculators have escaped without considerable
-loss. Property, once litigated, might be considered in a fair way for
-confiscation; and in case of its having been deposited until certain
-questions were decided, restitution was generally obtained at the
-loss of one half. It frequently happened that goods detained in the
-Custom-houses, or lodged in private stores in the river, were opened,
-and large quantities stolen. The party on whom suspicion seemed most
-reasonably to fall was the consignee, who, even with a few cargoes, was
-generally observed to get rich very rapidly. Not contented with the
-profits accruing from his commission, he seldom scrupled to take every
-advantage which possession of the property afforded him, to further
-his own interests at the expence of his correspondent. The dread of a
-legal process could be but a slight check upon him, for in the Spanish
-courts of justice, as well as in others, a native and a stranger are
-seldom upon equal terms. Other circumstances have occurred to enrich
-the inhabitants of Monte Video. It is a fact, which I afterwards
-ascertained, that the English exported thither, goods to the amount
-of a million and a half sterling, a small portion of which, on the
-restoration of the place to the Spaniards, was re-shipped for the Cape
-of Good Hope and the West Indies; the remainder was for the most part
-sacrificed at whatever price the Spaniards chose to give. As their own
-produce advanced in proportion as our’s lowered in price, those among
-them who speculated gained considerably. The holders of English goods
-sold their stock at upwards of fifty per cent. profit immediately after
-the evacuation of the place.
-
-The climate of Monte Video is humid. The weather, in the winter months
-(June, July, and August), is at times boisterous, and the air in that
-season is generally keen and piercing. In summer the serenity of the
-atmosphere is frequently interrupted by tremendous thunder-storms,
-preceded by dreadful lightning, which frequently damages the shipping,
-and followed by heavy rain, which sometimes destroys the harvest. The
-heat is troublesome, and is rendered more so to strangers by the swarms
-of mosquitoes, which it engenders in such numbers that they infest
-every apartment.
-
-The town stands on a basis of granite, the feldspar of which is for
-the most part of an opaque milk-white color, in a decomposing state;
-in some places it is found of a flesh-red color and crystallized.
-The mica is generally large and foliated, in many places imperfectly
-crystallized. It is obvious that the excessive quantity of mud in the
-harbour and throughout the banks of the river cannot have been formed
-from this stratum. The high mount on the opposite side of the bay,
-which is crowned with a Light-house, and gives name to the town, is
-principally composed of clay-slate, in laminæ perpendicular to the
-horizon. This substance appears much like basalt in texture, but its
-fracture is less conchoidal; it decomposes into an imperfect species of
-wacké, and ultimately into ferruginous clay, from beds of which water
-is observed to flow in various parts of the mountain.
-
-The vicinity of Monte Video is agreeably diversified with low gently
-sloping hills, and long valleys watered by beautiful rivulets; but the
-prospects they afford are rarely enlivened by traces of cultivation;
-few enclosures are seen except the gardens of the principal merchants.
-The same defect appears in a north-east direction from the town, where
-similar varieties of hill, valley, and water prevail, and seem to want
-only the embellishment of sylvan scenery to complete the landscape.
-Some wood, indeed, grows on the margin of the _Riachuelo_, which is
-used for the building of hovels and for fuel. There is a pleasant
-stream about ten leagues from Monte Video, called the Louza, the banks
-of which seem to invite the labor of the planter, and would certainly
-produce abundance of timber[2]. It is to be remarked that the almost
-entire want of this article here, occasions great inconvenience and
-expense: wood for mechanical purposes is extremely scarce, and planks
-are so dear that hardly one house with a boarded floor is to be found.
-
-In this vicinity the farms are of great extent; few are so small as
-six miles in length, by a league in width. Such is the scarcity of
-wood, that the land-marks, when not already designated by nature in a
-chain of hills, a rivulet, or a valley, are made by ranges of stones
-of a peculiar form. The _quintas_ (or farms owned by gentlemen),
-with the country houses built upon them, as rural retreats for their
-proprietors, resident in Monte Video, were extremely pleasant and
-agreeable; the gardens were full of fine flowers and fruits, and every
-thing about these establishments indicated so much peace, harmony,
-and good neighbourhood, as to make an impression on the mind of a
-stranger equally pleasing and indelible. But the scene, alas! has been
-changed through the intestine discords produced by a revolutionary
-war; and the colony has been reduced from a state of happiness to one
-of distress and wretchedness. The inhabitants of the interior, having
-been instigated to plunder each other until nothing remained, ranged
-themselves under the banners of the predatory chieftain Artigas, and
-formed a desperate banditti, who robbed and frequently murdered all
-they met; drove the peaceable inhabitants from their farms, plundered
-their houses, took away their cattle, reduced the rich to poverty, and
-the poor to wretchedness, almost so as to desolate this once florishing
-colony. A man, who but a few months before possessed 100,000 head of
-cattle, was driven from his estate, and obliged to purchase, at the
-price of one shilling per pound, the meat which he had formerly left in
-the slaughter-house, having killed his beasts merely for their hides;
-so that the necessaries of life which were once to be procured almost
-gratuitously, became extravagantly dear; and the horrors of approaching
-famine were superadded to those of anarchy and spoliation.
-
-Reverting to the former order of things, I could name more than fifty
-individuals of Monte Video, whose estates were from twenty to fifty
-miles in length, by ten or twenty in breadth, with cattle in such
-numbers as are almost incredible. An estate of this kind, consisting
-of a varied extent of hill, plain, and valley, is called a _fazenda_,
-as distinguished from the _quinta_, which bears a closer resemblance
-to the English farm, being a portion of land, generally selected near
-the house, for the culture of wheat, beans, Indian corn, melons, fruit
-trees, &c.
-
-The farm house is almost destitute of furniture; the couch consists of
-a raw hide, stretched and suspended, on which is placed a flock bed;
-strangers most commonly sleep on a mat, or dried hide, spread upon the
-ground.
-
-At a small distance from Monte Video, herds of deer, and flocks of
-ostriches are to be met with; the eagle is often seen, and sometimes
-the tiger. Soon after the time when the troops of Artigas drove the
-cattle from the mountain opposite, two tigers swam across the bay,
-penetrated at night into the town, and killed two or three of the
-inhabitants ere they were attacked and destroyed. They were supposed to
-have been driven by hunger in search of food.
-
-The country which was formerly so peaceable and so safe, that a
-traveller might go to almost any distance, and meet with nothing but
-hospitality, has been latterly so infested with banditti, that to
-wander a mile or two from the town exposes a man to the danger of
-being robbed and murdered; so that while anarchy and confusion prevail
-within, there is nothing but plunder and destruction without the walls
-of Monte Video. It has however fallen into the possession of the
-Portuguese, who cannot be dislodged from so strong a fortress by any
-force which their neighbours are able to bring against them. Indeed,
-the Potuguese, availing themselves of the advantages afforded by the
-disorganized state of Buenos Ayres, will, no doubt, incorporate the
-northern part of the Plata with the captaincy of Rio Grande, and thus
-extend to that distracted country the blessings of their own mild and
-beneficent government. Artigas being at length taken prisoner, public
-confidence will be restored in Monte Video, and the reign of peace and
-security be there re-established.
-
-The operation of ploughing, consists here of little more than forming a
-small furrow, by running a sharp pointed stick through the soil. There
-are no dairy farms, and scarcely is any butter or cheese made. Mining
-is unknown; and little notice is taken of the small quantity of lead
-ore which appears in limestone at Maldonado.
-
-An estate, however large, seldom contains more than from ten to twenty
-men, who are employed in domesticating cattle; and scarcely a woman
-is to be seen, except the domestic negresses. Sheep are kept solely
-for their wool, and pigs for their fat, an article much in request for
-culinary preparations. The usual mode of travelling is on horseback,
-and there are very few carriages in Monte Video.
-
-The breeding of horses is less attended to than that of cattle, as
-their hides sell at an inferior price. Herds of 500 or 1000 horses are
-not often seen in this district, though those of oxen sometimes amount
-to ten times the latter number. Cows are but seldom domesticated,
-and then very few, and it is by mere stratagem in managing the calf
-that any milk can be procured. Every kind of handicraft trade is
-ill conducted. Though the Monte Videans have hides, they procure
-their leather from Europe, as that which they make themselves is
-comparatively worthless. Their carpenters and other artisans are bad
-workmen; but I am told their barbers are men of superior skill in their
-calling, and this distinction may, perhaps, be attributed to the great
-beards of the Spaniards; the men of Paraguay having a stinted portion
-of that natural ornament. The silversmiths are of so inferior a stamp,
-that they might with greater propriety be called coppersmiths. The
-common people excel most in catching cattle, either with the noose, or
-the balls.
-
-In the neighbourhood of Buenos Ayres and Monte Video, wheat alone is
-grown. It is stored, until wanted, in hides; and when there is a great
-demand for grain in Brazil, it is sometimes exported to Rio de Janeiro.
-But of late years the inhabitants of the provinces of La Plata have
-paid less attention than ever to this branch of agriculture; and the
-supplies to Brazil have been chiefly derived from the Cape of Good
-Hope.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. II.
-
- _Journey to Barriga Negra.—Geology of the Country.—Limestone, and
- mode of burning it.—Horned Cattle.—Peons.—Horses.—Defective
- State of Agriculture.—Manners of the Inhabitants.—Dress.—Wild
- Animals.—Monte Video taken by the British.—My return thither._
-
-
-ON the arrival of General Beresford’s expedition in the river, I
-was again ordered into close confinement, but my advocate obtained
-permission for me to be sent into the interior, under a stipulation not
-to approach within forty leagues of Monte Video. This removal seemed
-for the moment to shut out all hope of obtaining my liberty, and at the
-same time threatened to expose me to fresh dangers, but I derived some
-consolation from the generous offers of shelter and protection made to
-me by a worthy Spaniard named Don Juan Martinez, whose establishment,
-not more than fifty leagues from the lake of Meni, was situated at
-the full distance prescribed in the orders respecting me. A retreat
-so remote and unfrequented offered few amusements to relieve the
-tediousness of banishment, but it at least afforded the prospect of a
-wider range for mineralogical observation, and of ampler leisure to
-attend to this my favorite pursuit.
-
-In the course of the journey thither, my attention was principally
-engaged by the wild and solitary aspect of the country. About
-twenty-five leagues north-east from Monte Video, I observed an
-irregular ridge of granite mountains, in a direction nearly north and
-south, and the country from this distance gradually assumes a rugged
-appearance. Mica is very common upon the road, and in some places
-quartz; on one hill I gathered several detached crystals of the latter
-substance. The ravines of these stony wilds and the wooded margins of
-the rivers afford shelter to many ferocious animals, such as jaguars,
-(here called tigers), lions, and ounces. Here are also great numbers
-of wild dogs which breed in the rocks, and at times make great havoc
-among the young cattle. The farms in this district, for the most part,
-include tracts of land from twenty to thirty miles in length by half
-that extent in breadth, watered by pleasing streams. Vast herds of
-cattle are bred upon them; it is calculated that each square league
-sustains one thousand five hundred or two thousand head.
-
-At the distance of about forty leagues from Monte Video, in the
-direction above mentioned, the range of hills gradually lessens and
-disappears; the country opens finely on the left, and is intersected
-by numerous rivulets. After crossing several of these we arrived
-at the head of a little brook called Polancos, which a few miles
-below, assumes the name of Barriga Negra. It there receives several
-small streams, and in the course of ten leagues is augmented by the
-confluence of some others; becoming thus a considerable river, about as
-large as the Trent at Gainsborough, it is denominated Godoy, but, on
-passing into the Portugueze territories, it changes its name to that
-of Sebollati, and flows into the Lagun Meni. Near the junction of two
-rivulets that form the Barriga Negra, stands the great lime-kiln of my
-friend, in whose house I took up my residence, and was received with
-that kindness and sincere hospitality which in an instant dispelled
-every doubt from my mind, and excited in me sentiments of gratitude
-that were every day more deeply impressed in my heart.
-
-Having become thoroughly domesticated in my new abode, I began to make
-excursions into the surrounding district and the parts beyond it. The
-country in general may be termed stony and mountainous, though its
-inequalities do not exceed those of Derbyshire. No traces of either
-volcanic or alluvial matter are to be found; the solid rock frequently
-appears on the surface, and in many places projects in masses of
-various sizes. The mountains and rocks are of granite; no veins of
-metallic substance have hitherto been discovered, but fine red and
-yellow jasper, chalcedony, and quartz, are not unfrequently found loose
-on the surface. Some fossils of the asbestos kind, and some very poor
-oxides of iron are likewise to be met with occasionally. The bases
-of many of the conical mountains are overlaid with limestone of a
-dull blue color; I found in this substance many capillary veins of
-calcareous-spar, and sometimes crystals of pyrites. In one part of the
-vicinity there is a plain about half a mile square, on the surface of
-which are found large quantities of white stone in nodules; it is of a
-very close texture and proves to be gypsum without water (Anhydrite).
-The summits of these mountains are no where calcareous, excepting those
-of one ridge, the singular appearance of which induced me to trace it
-as far as was practicable. The limestone on these summits is of a close
-compact kind, united to transparent quartz in a tabular form, standing,
-as it were, in laminæ perpendicular to the horizon, and thus presenting
-to the view a number of upright slabs, somewhat similar to the
-grave-stones in a country church-yard. This singular ridge apparently
-commences at a mountain of very unusual form, and, extending about two
-miles, in which it crosses two or three valleys, and terminates in a
-ravine of considerable depth. No vestige of calcareous crystallization
-appeared in this limestone[3]. It is singular to remark, that the
-cavities formed by the laminæ afford refuge for reptiles, particularly
-rattle-snakes; the person employed by Mr. Martinez in getting the
-stone, destroyed upwards of twenty-seven serpents of that species in
-the course of a few weeks.
-
-The limestone is loosened by the wedge and lever, and brought away
-in large slabs to the kilns, where it is broken into fragments of a
-convenient size, and burnt with wood. The kilns are very capacious,
-but so badly constructed that the process of calcination is very slow
-and tedious. The lime, when slaked, is measured, put into sacks made
-of green hides, and sent in large carts, drawn by oxen, principally to
-Colonia del Sacramento, Monte Video, and Buenos Ayres.
-
-Barriga Negra is distant about 160 miles north-east from Monte Video,
-about 120 from Maldonado, and 90 from the town of Minas. The country
-around it is mountainous, well watered, and not destitute of wood. The
-banks of the streams are thickly covered with trees, rarely, however,
-of large size, for the creeping plants, interweaving with the shoots,
-check their growth and form an impenetrable thicket. Here are numbers
-of great breeding estates, many of which are stocked with from 60,000
-to 200,000 head of cattle. These are guarded principally by men from
-Paraguay called Peons, who live in hovels built for the purpose at
-convenient distances. Ten thousand head are allotted to four or five
-Peons, whose business it is to collect them every morning and evening,
-and once or twice a month to drive them into pens, where they are kept
-for a night. The cattle by this mode of management are soon tamed; a
-ferocious or vicious beast I never saw among them. Breeding is alone
-attended to; neither butter nor cheese is made, and milk is scarcely
-known as an article of food. The constant diet of the people, morning,
-noon, and night, is beef, eaten almost always without bread, and
-frequently without salt. This habitual subsistence on strong food would
-probably engender diseases, were it not corrected by frequently taking
-an infusion of their favorite herb _Mate_, at all times of the day,
-when inclination calls for it.
-
-The dwellings of the Peons are in general very wretched, the walls
-being formed by a few upright posts interwoven with small branches of
-trees, plastered with mud inside and out, and the roof thatched with
-long grass and rushes. The door is also of wicker-work, or, in its
-stead, a green hide stretched on sticks and removable at pleasure. The
-furniture of these poor hovels consists of a few skulls of horses,
-which are made to serve for seats; and of a stretched hide to lie upon.
-The principal if not the sole cooking utensil is a spit or rod of iron,
-stuck in the ground in an oblique position, so as to incline over the
-fire. The beef when spitted is left to roast until the part next the
-fire is supposed to be done enough, then its position is altered, and
-the change is occasionally repeated, until the whole is cooked. The
-juices of the meat, by this mode of roasting, help to mend the fire,
-and indeed the people seem to think that they are fit for nothing else.
-The meat, which is naturally poor and coarse, being thus dried to
-a cake, bears little affinity to the boasted roast beef of England.
-Fuel, in some parts, is so extremely scarce that the following strange
-expedient is resorted to for a supply. As the mares in this country
-are kept solely for breeding, and are never trained to labor, they
-generally exceed, in a great degree, the due proportion; a flock of
-them is frequently killed, and their carcasses soon becoming dry, are
-used as firing, (with the exception of the hides and tails), which,
-when properly prepared, are packed for exportation.
-
-The Peons are chiefly emigrants from Paraguay[4], and it is a singular
-fact that, among the numbers that are here settled, very few women
-are to be found. A person may travel in these parts for days together
-without seeing or hearing of a single female in the course of his
-journey. To this circumstance may be attributed the total absence of
-domestic comfort in the dwellings of these wretched men, and the gloomy
-apathy observable in their dispositions and habits. It is true that the
-mistress of an estate may occasionally visit it for a few months, but
-she is obliged during her stay to live in great seclusion, on account
-of the dreadful consequences to be apprehended from being so exposed.
-
-The dexterous mode in which the Peons catch their cattle, by throwing
-a noose over them, has been frequently detailed, but certainly no
-description can do full justice to their agility. They throw with equal
-precision and effect, whether at full gallop or at rest. Their method
-of catching horses, by means of balls attached to leather thongs,
-is similar to the former but more unerring; scarcely an instance has
-been known of its failure, except in those frequent trials which are
-requisite to acquire perfect skill in the practice.
-
-They have a very singular and simple way of training mules and horses
-to draw light carts, coaches, &c. No harness is used; a saddle or pad
-is girted on, and a leather thong is fastened to the girth on one side,
-so that the animal moving forward, with his body in a rather oblique
-direction, keeps his legs clear of the apparatus which is attached
-to him, and draws with a freedom and an agility that in a stranger
-excite great surprise. A similar contrivance is used in the catching
-of cattle. The Peon fastens one end of his _lazo_[5] to the girth of
-his horse, who soon learns to place himself in such an attitude as to
-draw the ox which his rider has caught, and even, should the latter
-dismount, to keep the thong on the stretch.
-
-The horses in this country are very spirited, and perform almost
-incredible labor. They seldom work longer than a week at a time, being
-then turned out to pasture for months together. Their sole food is
-grass, and the treatment they endure from their masters is most harsh
-and unfeeling. They are frequently galloped until their generous fire
-is spent, and they drop through exhaustion and fatigue. The make of the
-bridle is alone sufficient to torture the animal, being of the heavy
-Spanish fashion. They are never shod. The girths of the saddles are of
-a curious construction; they are generally formed of shreds of green
-hide, or of the sinew of the neck; the middle part is twenty inches
-broad, and each end is terminated by an iron ring. One of these ends is
-made fast to the saddle by its ring; to the other side of the saddle is
-attached a third ring and a pliable strap, which, being passed through
-it and the girth-ring three or four times, affords the rider great
-purchase, and enables him to gird the saddle very tight, which is thus
-kept so firm in its place that a crupper is unnecessary, and indeed is
-never used.
-
-Trained horses sell here at from five to seven dollars each; horned
-cattle, in good condition, by the herd of a thousand, at two dollars
-a head; mares at three rials (1s. 6d. sterling) each. Sheep are very
-scarce and are never eaten; they are kept by some families merely for
-the sake of their wool, which is made into flocks for bedding. It is
-worthy of remark, that, in the remote parts of the interior, where
-no settlements have been made, the cattle are found of a dark brown
-color, except on a small part of the belly, which is white, but when
-they become domesticated, they produce breeds of a lighter color, with
-hides beautifully spotted and variegated. The fine herds bred in many
-parts of this district, have often tempted the Portugueze to make
-predatory incursions; and the country being accessible by fine open
-passes to the frontier, as well as to the north side of the Plata,
-these violations of territory have been carried on to a very serious
-extent. So frequent were they at one period, that it became necessary
-to appoint a military force to parade the boundaries and to defend the
-Spanish settlements against these inroads.
-
-[Illustration: PEON CATCHING CATTLE.]
-
-[Illustration: PLOUGHING FOR WHEAT.
-
-OSTRICH NEST.]
-
-In taking a general view of the country, a stranger cannot but observe,
-with regret, that while nature has been profuse in her blessings, the
-inhabitants have been neglectful in the improvement of them. Here is,
-for instance, abundance of excellent clay and plenty of wood on the
-margin of the rivers, yet it is rare to meet with an inclosure, even
-for a kitchen garden, much more so for a corn-field. They generally
-choose their grounds for tillage by the banks of a rivulet, so as to
-have one side or sometimes two sides bounded by it; the remainder is
-fenced in the most clumsy and bungling manner imaginable. Ploughing is
-performed by the help of two oxen yoked to a crooked piece of wood,
-about four inches in diameter, and pointed at the end. After the ground
-has been rooted up, the wheat is sown, without any previous attempt to
-clear it from noxious seeds. While it grows up, it is never weeded; so
-that wild oats, poppies, and other pernicious herbs, thriving among it
-in wild luxuriance, obstruct the sun’s rays and hinder it from ripening
-kindly. Indian corn, beans, melons, &c. are all treated in a similar
-way. The wheat, when ripe, is cut down with sickles, and gathered
-into heads or sheaves. A circular pen of from forty to sixty yards in
-diameter is then formed with rails and hides; in the centre of this
-enclosure is placed a quantity of about one hundred or two hundred
-quarters of wheat in the straw. The pile is so formed as to have the
-ears on the outside as much as possible. A small quantity is pulled
-down towards the circumference of the circle, and a herd of about
-twenty mares is driven in, which, being untamed, are easily frightened
-and made to gallop round. At this pace they are kept by means of whips
-for four or five hours, until the corn is trod out of the ears, and
-the straw is completely reduced. Another parcel of the sheaves is then
-pulled down, and a fresh herd of mares is let in, and this operation
-is repeated until the whole heap is reduced, and the straw is broken
-as small as chaff. In this state it is left until it blows a brisk
-gale; and then the winnowing is performed by emptying baskets of the
-mixed grain and chaff at an elevation of eight feet from the ground.
-While the chaff is borne away by the current of air, the grain falls,
-and at the close of the operation, is sewed up in green hides. In this
-state it is sent to Monte Video, where it is ground for consumption,
-or exported. It is obvious, that by the above mode of separating the
-grain, a considerable quantity must be lost by abrasion, and by mixture
-with a large portion of earth which cannot be blown away by the wind.
-
-The climate and soil are equally favorable for the growth of grapes,
-apples, peaches, and in short every species of fruit belonging to
-the temperate zone, but these are known here only as rarities. That
-inestimable root, the potatoe, would thrive abundantly, if once
-introduced; but, though much has been said in recommendation of it,
-the people remain totally averse to this or any other proposal for
-improving their means of subsistence, and seem to wish for nothing
-beyond the bare necessaries of life. Indeed the state of society among
-them weakens those ties which naturally attach men to the soil on which
-they are accustomed to subsist. The Peons, brought from Paraguay in
-their infancy, grow up to the age of manhood in a state of servitude,
-uncheered by domestic comfort; at that period they generally wander,
-in search of employment, toward the coast, where money is in greater
-plenty. There is no specie in circulation in the interior; their wages
-are paid monthly in notes on Monte Video. The men, for the most part,
-are an honest and harmless race, though quite as liable, from the
-circumstances of their condition, to acquire habits of gambling[6], as
-the higher classes of the people, numbers of whom fall victims to that
-seductive vice. The various evils hence resulting are multiplied by the
-lax administration of the laws; even in case of murder the criminal
-has little to fear if he can escape to a distance of twenty or thirty
-leagues; he there lives in obscurity, probably for the remainder of
-his life, without ever being brought to justice. I know not whether
-this want of vigilance in the magistracy be not a temptation for the
-numerous refugees who seek shelter here, such as European Spaniards,
-who have deserted from the service or have been banished for their
-crimes. These wretches, loaded with guilt, flee into the interior,
-where they seldom fail to find some one or other of their countrymen
-who is willing to give them employment, though frequently at the peril
-of his life. By the corrupt example of these refugees, the innocent
-Creole is soon initiated in vice, and becomes a prey to all those
-violent passions which are engendered and fostered by habitual idleness.
-
-The common dress of the people is such as might be expected from their
-indolence and poverty. They generally go without shoes and stockings;
-indeed as they rarely go on foot, they have seldom occasion for shoes.
-Some of them, particularly the Peons, make a kind of boots from the
-raw skins of young horses, which they frequently kill for this sole
-purpose. When the animal is dead, they cut the skin round the thigh,
-about eighteen inches above the gambrel; having stripped it, they
-stretch and dress it until it loses the hair and becomes quite white.
-The lower part, which covered the joint, forms the heel, and the
-extremity is tied or sewed up to cover the toes. These boots, when
-newly finished, are of a delicate color, and very generally admired.
-The rest of their apparel consists of a jacket, which is universally
-worn by all ranks, and a shirt and drawers made of a coarse cotton
-cloth brought from Brazil. Children run about with no dress but their
-shirts until their fifth or sixth year. Their education is very little
-attended to, and is confined to mere rudiments; a man who is able to
-read and write, is considered to have all the learning he can desire.
-
-Among the many natural advantages which this district possesses, are
-the frequent falls in the rivulets and larger streams, which might be
-converted to various mechanical purposes, if the population were more
-numerous and better instructed. Some of these streams, as was before
-stated, join the various branches of the Godoy, and flow into the lake
-Meni; those on the other side of the mountains in a northerly direction
-empty themselves principally through the Riachuelo and the St. Lucia,
-into the Plata.
-
-The want of cultivation in this vast territory may be inferred from
-the numbers and varieties of wild animals which breed upon it.
-Tigers, ounces, and lions are common. The former are heavy sluggish
-animals; their chief prey is the young cattle, which they find in such
-abundance, that they rarely attack a man. Hence little danger is to be
-apprehended from them by any person travelling on horseback[7], unless
-when inadvertently approaching the haunt of a female with young. The
-ounce has the same character, and the lion is considered less vicious
-than either. There is an animal of the pig kind, called the pig of
-the woods, (_Pecari_),[8] which has an orifice on its back, whence it
-emits a most intolerable stench when closely pursued. If on killing
-the animal, the part be instantaneously cut out, the flesh affords
-good eating, but should that operation be neglected, even for a short
-period, the taint contaminates the whole carcass. The domestic pigs are
-by no means good; they feed so much upon beef, that their flesh is very
-hard and coarse. There is an animal of the opossum kind, about the size
-of a rabbit, called a _zurilla_, the skin of which is streaked black
-and white, and is considered of some value. When attacked, it ejects a
-fetid liquor, which is of so pungent a nature, that if it falls on any
-part of the dress of its pursuers, there is no possibility of getting
-rid of the stench, but by continual exposure to the weather for some
-months. The _zurilla_ is very fond of eggs and poultry, and sometimes
-enters a house in quest of its prey; the inhabitants immediately
-hasten out and leave their unwelcome visitant in quiet possession, as
-long as she chooses to stay; well aware that the slightest attempt to
-drive her out, would expose them to an ejectment from the premises
-for ever. Eagles both of the grey and blue species, as well as other
-birds of prey, are found in great numbers. Here are also parroquets in
-immense flocks, pigeons, great red-legged partridges, small partridges,
-wild ducks, and wild turkies. Ostriches of a large species are very
-numerous; they are so fleet and active, that even when well mounted I
-could never get near them but by surprise; the stroke of their wing is
-said to be inconceivably strong.
-
-Here are considerable herds of small deer, which in this fine country
-would afford the sportsman excellent diversion; but unfortunately
-the dogs are good for nothing, as there is no attention paid to the
-preservation and improvement of the breed. The rivers produce tortoises
-and other amphibious animals, but they are chiefly noted for a variety
-of singularly ugly fish, which afford tolerable but by no means good
-eating.
-
-During a residence of six months in this remote district, as a
-prisoner at large, or in fact as a welcome guest at the house of
-a most hospitable man, my life passed away in an equable tenor,
-uninterrupted by those vicissitudes that elsewhere befel me, and
-therefore a narrative of it is little calculated to interest the
-reader. Rather than occupy his attention by relating my various hopes
-and disappointments, as the prospect of liberation became more or less
-favorable, I have chosen to present him with the result of some general
-observations on the country, made during the daily excursions which
-I enjoyed through the liberality of my friend. The longer I resided
-in his house, the greater was his kindness to me in allowing me those
-indulgences, and the more did he and his family strive to render my
-exile agreeable. An event at length occurred which at once delighted
-and distressed me; because while it afforded me hopes of immediate
-deliverance, it destroyed for a time the harmony which had so long
-subsisted between me and my protector. I allude to the taking of Monte
-Video by the British troops under Sir Samuel Auchmuty.
-
-On hearing of the surrender of the place, I solicited Mr. Martinez
-to liberate me, as I thought myself no longer a prisoner. He seemed
-much astonished at this, and gave me to understand that I continued a
-prisoner, because, not being actually at Monte Video, I was still in
-the power and under the jurisdiction of the Viceroy of Buenos Ayres.
-This worthy man’s mind was so distracted by the fall of the town, and
-by the disgrace of the Spanish arms, that he secluded himself from
-society, and avoided all communication with me. In these circumstances
-I was advised to attempt my escape, but I felt great repugnance at the
-idea of thus wounding the feelings of a man who had humanely released
-me from confinement, and had ever treated me as a brother. Averse to
-such an act of ingratitude, I intreated his amiable wife to intercede
-for me, and to suggest that, on returning to Monte Video, it might be
-in my power to be of service to him. But he rejected the proposal in
-the most vehement manner, and forbade any one to talk to him on the
-subject. I now thought that my liberty was unreasonably denied me, and
-as I saw no probability of obtaining it but through my own exertions,
-I determined at all events to make the attempt. After deliberating for
-some days, and consulting with two men who had frequently mentioned
-the subject to me, I decided on my plan of escape, and gave them six
-ounces of gold to provide horses and every thing necessary. On the
-appointed night, all was in readiness, the horses were saddled, and the
-men waiting to escort me. This moment was one of the most melancholy
-in my life; I reflected with compunction, that, while striving to
-regain my freedom, I was apparently abusing the confidence of a man of
-honor, who had done all in his power to merit my friendship. Agitated
-by these emotions, and oppressed by a sadness which the thick gloom
-of the night rendered more heavy, I was walking to and fro in the
-neighbourhood, on the spot appointed for my guides to meet me, when a
-voice, with which I was familiar, accosted me. The person was very near
-me, but owing to the extreme darkness I could not see him. He asked me
-what I was doing there. I replied, “only walking about.” “Don Juan,”
-said he “you are going to escape to-night.” I answered, “indeed I am
-not.” He replied, “you are; and the men whom you have chosen for your
-guides are to murder you, to seize your money, and to bury you in a
-ravine about a league distant. The man in whom you have most confided
-has a knife concealed in his saddle, with which he is to give you the
-fatal blow.” This so staggered me, that I was unable, at the moment,
-to make any answer. I felt confident that no one knew of my intended
-departure, except the two men and myself. On asking, “how do you know
-this?” he replied, “I overheard them talking of it.” He added, “you
-know they are both gamblers, and one of them killed two men last year.”
-Ere I had recovered my surprise, so as to speak again, the man went
-away. While meditating on the choice of evils, namely, whether to run
-the risk of being murdered and thrown into a ravine, or to abandon my
-design and remain a prisoner, one of my hired Peons came to inform
-me that the horses were waiting. I told him I had a violent pressure
-at my stomach and could not ride. He treated this very lightly, and
-urged me with great earnestness to mount at all events. Considering
-at this moment that money was of little value in comparison with my
-life and liberty, I offered to give him two ounces of gold if he
-would perform a piece of service for me, which I would explain to him
-through my room-window at midnight. He still used every argument to
-persuade me immediately to set out, but finding that I persisted in
-alleging my indisposition as an excuse, he at length acceded to my
-proposal. Having reached my chamber, I wrote to a magistrate at Monte
-Video, who, I knew, would, if he had survived the assault of the town,
-send an order for my liberation. When I had finished writing, the man
-appeared at the window according to agreement; I gave him the letter,
-charged him to convey it to Monte Video, and presenting him with two
-ounces of gold, promised him another ounce if he should bring me an
-answer. He departed unknown to any of our good family, and on the
-fifth day following, in the forenoon, returned, to my inexpressible
-joy, with a paper signed by Don Francisco Juanico, the magistrate to
-whom I had written, stating that I was free, and ought immediately to
-proceed thither. On receiving this welcome intelligence, I hastened
-to Mr. Martinez, and joyfully embracing him, gave him the paper to
-read; after examining its contents, he observed, that it was nothing
-official, but would avail me as a reasonable pretext for going away,
-to which he cordially acquiesced. He immediately ordered three Peons
-and a trusty old Creole to accompany me, with twenty-five horses, that
-we might perform the journey with greater expedition. The best dinner
-was provided which the time would allow, and while partaking of it I
-received the sincerest congratulations on my liberation from my worthy
-host and his amiable lady. I then took an affectionate leave of every
-branch of this good family, expressing my warm acknowledgments of the
-many obligations they had conferred on me. Having joined my guides, we
-each mounted a horse, and, at three in the afternoon, set off at full
-speed, driving the rest of the cattle before us. My first horse bore me
-forty miles, and I changed him at ten o’clock. The night was fine, and
-after a rapid but pleasant journey, we forded the river St. Lucia and
-halted at two in the morning, half way on the route to Monte Video. At
-the house, into the _corral_ of which our horses were driven for the
-purpose of changing them, I procured a slight repast of dried figs,
-after which we again mounted and travelled tolerably fresh until six
-in the morning, when we were again obliged to change, having proceeded
-about one hundred English miles. Our horses now began to lose their
-generous spirit, and were much distressed. As our progress became
-slower and our changes more frequent, my anxiety increased, because I
-was aware there were Spanish parties scouring the country about Monte
-Video, and stopping the passage of all provisions from the interior. To
-avoid suspicion, I rode in the dress of a Peon, with the lazo coiled
-up and hung at my saddle. At eleven o’clock the heat of the day became
-oppressive, and our horses flagged exceedingly. To add to my distress
-I had a violent hæmorrhage from the nose, and could obtain no water to
-drink or wash with, so that, through thirst and the coagulation of the
-blood, I was nearly suffocated. On arriving within six miles of Monte
-Video, our horses were nearly worn out; but no rest could be allowed
-for either them or the men. At noon we reached an English piquet-guard
-on the out-posts; after the usual questions I was conducted by a
-soldier to the officer on guard, and having explained some particulars
-to him, I rode to General Lumley’s tent, and afterwards into the town.
-
-No language can describe my emotions on beholding an English flag
-on that tower in which I had been so often confined, and, on seeing
-English soldiers in possession of a place where I had experienced so
-much injustice and oppression. The joy I felt made me forget my fatigue
-and the dangers I had passed through. I rode up to my friend’s house;
-all was barricadoed, and I feared the worst might have happened; but,
-on advancing to the window, I observed one of the ladies, who instantly
-recognized me. All the family welcomed me most cordially, and invited
-me to dinner, after which I went, in my Peon’s disguise, to visit some
-of my friends. On taking possession of Mr. Martinez’s house, I found my
-chests, &c. undisturbed, (although the town was taken by storm), and in
-the same condition as when I left them on going into the country.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. III.
-
- _Expedition against Buenos Ayres.—Account of the Population of the
- Country, and of the various Classes which compose it._
-
-
-WHEN the expedition against Buenos Ayres was ready to sail, I obtained
-General Whitelocke’s permission to go with the army, under the hope
-of recovering the property I had in that city, and offered my service
-to the commissary-general, whom I accompanied. As the details of that
-disastrous enterprise have been long before the public in an official
-form, and as my own observations on the occasion are of no general
-interest, the reader will excuse me if I forbear all mention of them,
-and confine myself to some general remarks on the colony.
-
-The population of Buenos Ayres and its immediate suburbs, exclusive of
-the country in its vicinity, has been ascertained to amount to upwards
-of sixty thousand souls. The proportion of females to males is said to
-be as four to one, but if we take into consideration that many men are
-almost daily arriving from Europe, as well as from the South American
-provinces, and that under the old government neither the militia nor
-the marine was recruited from the mass of the population, we shall
-find reason to conclude that the proportion of the sexes is not so
-unequal. In the interior, the excess of males is very great, for as
-the lands are granted in large tracts only, and but poorly cultivated,
-there is no encouragement for the laboring classes to marry and settle
-upon them. The poor are compelled to remain single, from the very bare
-resources on which they depend for subsistence, and are accustomed
-to consider the married state as fraught with heavy burthens and
-inevitable misfortunes. It is not uncommon to find estates, larger than
-an English county, with hardly more than an hundred laborers upon them,
-who subsist upon the sale of a little corn, which each is permitted to
-grow for himself, but only to such an extent as a single man can plough.
-
-The various races which compose the population are as follow:
-
-1. Legitimate Spaniards or Europeans. In Buenos Ayres there are about
-three thousand; in the interior the number is very trifling, except in
-Potosi, which, being a mining country, contains many.
-
-2. Creoles; legitimate descendants from Spaniards or Europeans.
-
-3. Mestizos, the offspring of European and Indian parents.
-
-4. Indians, almost all of whom have some mixture of Spanish blood.
-
-5. Brown mixtures of Africans and Europeans.
-
-6. Mulattos of various degrees.
-
-All these races intermix without restraint, so that it is difficult
-to define the minor gradations, or to assign limits to the
-ever-multiplying varieties. Few families are entirely exempt from
-characteristics of Indian origin, physical as well as moral. It is well
-known that in the Spanish colonies little regard is now paid to purity
-of blood; the various regulations for preserving the races distinct
-have gradually become obsolete. This may be regarded as a momentary
-evil; but may it not be conducive in the long-run to the good of
-society, by concentrating the interests of the various classes, which,
-in remaining separate, might one day endanger the stability of the
-government, as has been the case in the French colony of St. Domingo?
-
-In describing the orders of society in Buenos Ayres, it is necessary to
-premise that I mean to class them, not by degrees of birth, rank, or
-profession, but by the relative estimation in which they stand in point
-of property or public usefulness.
-
-According to this scale, the first which comes under consideration is
-the commercial class. Every person belonging to it, from the huckster
-at the corner of the street, to the opulent trader in his warehouse,
-is dignified by the appellation of merchant; yet few individuals among
-them can lay just claim to that title, as they are wanting in that
-practical knowledge so essential in commercial dealings. They are
-averse to all speculation and enterprise; the common routine of their
-business is to send orders to Spain for the articles they need, and to
-sell by retail, at an exorbitant profit; beyond this they have hardly a
-single idea, and it has been said that their great reason for opposing
-a free trade with foreign nations, is a consciousness of their own
-mercantile inexperience. The more considerable houses are almost all
-branches of some European establishment; few of the Creoles have any
-regular trade. Those among them, however, who engage in it, are much
-more liberal in their transactions than the old Spaniards, and are
-observed to make less rapid fortunes, for their manly and independent
-character makes them spurn a miserable economy, and disdain to assume
-that church-going hypocrisy which must be practised twice or thrice
-a-day by those who would enrich themselves through the patronage of the
-opulent families. Among the inferior tradesmen, those who gain most are
-the _pulperos_, the warehousemen, and the shopkeepers. The _pulperos_
-retail wine, brandy, candles, sausages, salt, bread, spices, wood,
-grease, brimstone, &c. Their shops (_pulperias_) are generally
-lounging-places for the idle and dissipated of the community. In Buenos
-Ayres there are about seven hundred of them, each more or less in the
-interest of some richer individual. The warehousemen sell earthen and
-glass ware, drugs, various articles of consumption, and some goods
-of home-manufacture, wholesale and retail. The shopkeepers amount
-to nearly six hundred in number; they sell woollen cloths, silks,
-cotton goods of all sorts, hats, and various other articles of wearing
-apparel. Many of them make considerable fortunes, those especially
-who trade to Lima, Peru, Chili, or Paraguay, by means of young men
-whom they send as agents or factors. There is another description of
-merchants, if such they may be called, who keep in the back-ground, and
-enrich themselves by monopolizing victuals, and by forestalling the
-grain brought to market from the interior, much to the injury of the
-agricultural interest.
-
-The second class of inhabitants consists of the proprietors of estates
-and houses. They are in general Creoles, for few Europeans employ
-their funds in building, or in the purchase of land, until they have
-realised a fortune to live upon, which commonly takes place when they
-are far advanced in life, so that their establishments pass immediately
-into the hands of their successors. The simple landholders derive so
-little revenue from their possessions, that they are generally in
-debt to their tradesmen; their gains are but too commonly engrossed
-by the monopolists, and having no magistrate to represent them,
-they find themselves destitute of effectual resources against wrong
-and extortion. So defective and ill-regulated are the concerns of
-agriculture in this country, that the proprietor of an estate really
-worth 20,000 dollars can scarcely subsist upon it.
-
-Under the class of landed proprietors, I may reckon the cultivators,
-here called _quinteros_ or _chacareros_, who grow wheat, maize, and
-other grain. These men are so depressed and impoverished, that,
-notwithstanding the importance of their calling, and the public
-usefulness of their labors, they are ranked among the people of least
-consequence in society.
-
-The third class is composed of handicraftsmen, such as masons,
-carpenters, tailors, and shoe-makers, who, although they work hard
-and receive great wages, seldom realize property. The journeymen are
-usually people of color; the masters for the most part Genoese, and
-universally foreigners, for the Spaniards despise these trades, and
-cannot stoop to work along with negroes or mulattos. Many of the lower
-orders derive subsistence from these and other employments of a similar
-nature; here are lime-burners, wood-cutters, tanners, curriers, &c.
-The free porters constitute a numerous body of men; they ply about the
-streets to load and unload carts, and carry burdens, but they are so
-idle and dissolute, that no man can depend on their services for a
-week together; when they have a little money, they drink and gamble,
-and when pennyless, they sometimes betake themselves to pilfering.
-These habits have long rendered them a public nuisance, but no
-corrective measures have hitherto been taken, nor does there appear, on
-the part of the higher orders, any disposition to reform them.
-
-Persons employed in public offices may be comprehended under the
-fourth class. The best situations under Government are held by native
-Spaniards; those of less emolument by Creoles; the former are regarded
-as mere sinecures, and the persons enjoying them, are considered as in
-no way serviceable to the community, except by spending their large
-salaries within it.
-
-The fifth class is the militia or soldiery. Previous to the invasion
-of the English, the officers were not much noted for military science,
-or for that ardor which leads to the acquisition of it; their chief
-ambition was to obtain commands in towns and villages, especially
-those on the Portuguese frontier, where they might enrich themselves
-by smuggling. The privates were ill-disciplined, badly dressed, and
-badly paid. The effective force which the crown of Spain maintained
-in these possessions, was one regiment of the line, which was to
-consist of 1200 men, but was reduced to less than half; one regiment
-of dragoons, amounting to 600, two of cavalry called _blandengues_,
-600 each, and one or two companies of artillery. With the exception
-of the _blandengues_, all the troops were originally sent from the
-Peninsula, but not having for the last twenty years been recruited from
-thence, their ranks were gradually filled by natives. By eminence they
-were called veterans, but they have been of late disbanded, and their
-officers have passed to the command of the new corps which were formed
-on the English invasion. The force of these corps may be estimated at
-nine thousand men.
-
-The sixth class is the clergy, in number about a thousand. The seculars
-are distinguished by their learning, honor, and probity from the
-friars, who are in general so grossly ignorant and superstitious, that
-they render no real service to the public in any way, but rather tend
-to disturb the minds of the honest and well-disposed.
-
-Every observation I was able to make, gave me a favorable idea of
-the general character of the people; they are tractable, prudent,
-and generous; and doubtless, had they been under a milder and more
-beneficent government than that of the Spaniards, they might have
-become a model to other colonies; but it is lamentable to add, that,
-in points of morality, they cannot be considered as much superior
-to the other inhabitants of America. This is attributable to the
-want of a proper system of education for youth, to the pernicious
-example afforded by the vices of the Europeans, and, in a word, to
-the prevalence of an intolerant system, which, by aiming to make men
-what they cannot be, causes them to become what they ought not to be.
-The intolerant rigor exercised by the ministers of worship as well
-as by the government, for the suppression of immorality, defeats its
-own end; it is like the unskilful practice of a physician, which,
-directed solely against the external symptoms, aggravates instead of
-removing the disease. Thus, while open profligacy is discountenanced in
-Buenos Ayres, libertinism of a more dangerous kind is connived at, if
-not tolerated; the peace of the most respectable private families is
-liable to be destroyed by votaries of seduction, who respect neither
-the purity of female virtue, nor the sacred rights of matrimony. This
-evil pervades all classes of society, and is the source of domestic
-disputes, which often lead to serious consequences.
-
-In thus attempting to describe the state of Buenos Ayres, as I found
-it in the year 1807, I have purposely avoided all discussions of
-a political nature, and have declined entering into a detail of
-the events which led to the present struggles of the people for
-independence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. IV.
-
- _Voyage to St. Catherine’s.—Description of that Island, and of the
- Coast in its Vicinity.—Arrival at Santos, and Journey thence to S.
- Paulo._
-
-
-ON my return to Monte Video, I lost no time in putting in execution
-my purposed voyage to Rio de Janeiro; and as advices had arrived,
-stating that considerable difficulty might attend the entrance of an
-English ship into that port, I bottomried a Portuguese vessel, called
-the Vencedor, and was joined by a party of gentlemen, whose business
-required them to visit the capital of Brazil.
-
-In the beginning of September 1807, we had just embarked our stock
-for this voyage, when an order for the immediate evacuation of Monte
-Video by our troops was unexpectedly issued. As it had been generally
-believed that a prolongation of the time for giving up the place had
-been agreed on, the greatest hurry and confusion prevailed in embarking
-the troops and stores, as well as the baggage of individuals. About
-mid-day the whole was on board; a signal-gun was then fired for the
-Spanish troops to enter, and about three in the afternoon we had the
-mortification to behold their flag hoisted on the ramparts of this
-important military post and commercial depôt, which the British forces
-had, a short period before, so bravely and so dearly won.
-
-Having still some purchases to make, I returned on shore, with two
-of my friends, about four o’clock, but we had soon reason to repent
-of our temerity, for on passing the mole we were noticed as enemies
-and threatened severely, so that we found it necessary to pass into
-the more private streets, in order to avoid the malignant and hostile
-taunts of those very men who had of late expressed themselves our
-friends and well-wishers. Desirous of expediting our several affairs
-as much as possible, we separated, and I was not able to rejoin my
-companions until eight in the evening. I found them in great anxiety
-for my safety; the Spaniards had fired a feu-de-joie from the citadel
-and fort St. Joseph, and were now preparing for bonfires[9] and
-illuminations, and my friends, though they did their utmost to avoid
-the riotous crowds that paraded the town, had several narrow escapes
-from being plundered and stripped by the soldiery. We all got safely
-on board by ten o’clock, congratulating each other on having happily
-avoided the dangers to which our rash confidence in the amicable
-disposition of the inhabitants had exposed us.
-
-On the 11th of September we sailed from the Rio de la Plata; the
-vessels bound for the Cape of Good Hope were then nearly out of
-sight, and as we beheld them we felt a melancholy but proud delight
-in reflecting that, after such grievous and unexpected reverses, our
-brave countrymen were once more within their wide undisputed empire,
-the ocean. After a voyage, in which nothing worth relation occurred, we
-made the island of St. Catherine’s, on the 29th, at sun-rise, and we
-were delighted with a grand and picturesque view of its conical rocks
-rising abruptly from the sea, embellished with the lofty mountains of
-Brazil, covered with wood, in the back-ground. This sublime scenery
-interested us the more from the contrast it formed with the extensive
-and woodless plains of Buenos Ayres. This island is situated in 27° 29′
-south latitude, and is separated from the continent by a strait, in
-some places not half a league wide.
-
-Entering the port of St. Catherine’s by the north, we passed several
-islands, on one of which, westward of the entrance, stood the
-respectable fort of Santa Cruz. After running a few miles in shoal
-water, we sailed into a narrow passage, guarded by two forts, which
-forms the harbour. From the anchorage, and more particularly from
-the landing-place, which is at the bottom of a verdant slope of
-about five hundred yards, the town has a most beautiful appearance,
-and the perspective is nobly crowned by its fine cathedral. The
-green is interspersed with orange-trees, and forms an agreeable
-parade. Immediately on entering the town, we discerned in its general
-appearance, and in the manners of its inhabitants, a striking
-superiority over those which we had of late visited. The houses are
-well built, have two or three stories, with boarded floors, and are
-provided with neat gardens, well stocked with excellent vegetables
-and flowers. The town consists of several streets, and may contain
-from five thousand to six thousand inhabitants. It is a free port.
-The produce of the island consists in rice, maize, mandioca, coffee
-of excellent quality, oranges, perhaps the finest in the world, and a
-variety of other fruits. Sugar and indigo are likewise produced, but
-in small quantities. A profusion of the finest flowers indicates the
-genial nature of its climate; the rose and the jessamin are in bloom
-all the year round.
-
-The surface of the island is varied with mountains, plains, and in some
-places swamps; here is found a stratum of excellent red clay, which
-is manufactured into jars, culinary vessels, large water-pots, &c.
-which are exported in considerable quantities to the Plata and to Rio
-de Janeiro. The lands capable of cultivation are under considerable
-improvement; a great extent of them was formerly covered with large
-trees, but as great quantities have of late years been cut down and
-used for ship-building, good timber may now be considered scarce. They
-grow flax here of a very fair quality, of which the fishermen make
-their lines, nets, and cordage. The sea hereabouts produces an abundant
-variety of excellent fish, and some fine prawns; so large is the supply
-to the market, that a quantity of fish[10], sufficient to dine twelve
-persons, may be had for a shilling. Meat is much the same in quality as
-at Monte Video, being rather hard and lean; its general price is about
-three halfpence per pound. Pigs, turkies, ducks, poultry, and eggs, as
-well as fine vegetables and excellent potatoes, are plentiful and cheap.
-
-The trade of this place is inconsiderable, as the produce does not
-much exceed the consumption of the inhabitants, who are in general
-far from rich. It affords an agreeable retirement to merchants who
-have discontinued business, masters of ships who have left off going
-to sea, and other persons, who, having secured an independence, seek
-only leisure to enjoy it. Few places are better calculated for such a
-purpose than this; it is enlivened by the numerous coasting-vessels
-from Bahia, Pernambuco, and other ports, bound for the Plata, which
-frequently touch here; and it is amply provided with artisans of all
-descriptions, such as tailors, shoe-makers, tin-workers, joiners,
-and smiths. The inhabitants in general are very civil and courteous
-to strangers; the ladies are handsome and very lively, their chief
-employment is making of lace, in which they display great ingenuity and
-taste.
-
-The mountains of the interior, and the rocks on the coast, are of
-granite. Close to the fort, on the left hand of the entrance to the
-harbour, is a vein of green-stone in various states of decomposition,
-which ultimately migrates into clay of a superior quality to that
-generally found in the valleys. The soil in the interior, being rather
-humid, is surprisingly fertile. It consists principally of a rich
-vegetable decomposition, on which shrubs and plants grow in great
-luxuriance. Myrtles appear in all parts, and a most beautiful variety
-of the passion-flower is found in equal abundance. Here is also a
-profusion of roses, pinks, rosemary, &c.
-
-The animals are chiefly opossums, monkeys, and armadillas; there are
-various serpents, among which is the beautiful coral snake. Of birds,
-there are cranes, hawks, parrots, of various species, humming birds and
-toucans, the latter of every variety in great numbers.
-
-The climate is serene and wholesome, its solstitial heats being
-moderated constantly by fine breezes from the south-west and
-north-east, which are the winds that generally blow here; the latter
-prevails from September to March, and the former from April to August,
-so that a voyage to the north, during one half of the year, is slow and
-tedious.
-
-The island is divided into four parishes: 1st, Nossa Senhora do
-Desterro; 2d, St. Antonio; 3d, Laguna; and 4th, Ribeiraõ. The
-divisions of the opposite part of the continent are likewise under
-the jurisdiction of the governor of St. Catherine’s, who is subject,
-in certain cases, to the captaincy of S. Paulo, and in others to the
-government of Rio de Janeiro. These divisions, are 1st, St. José; 2d,
-St. Miguel; and 3d, Nossa Senhora do Rosario; the entire population of
-the island and its dependencies amounts to about 30,000 souls.
-
-Of the fortresses which defend this island, the most considerable is
-Santa Cruz before mentioned; there are four others, Porto Groed, Ratoé,
-Estreito, and Conceição. Off the former there is safe anchorage for a
-fleet of men of war, and the harbour which it protects may be entered
-by ships of 300 tons, if not of a heavy draught of water. Ships passing
-the channel are required to send a boat on shore at Santa Cruz before
-they proceed.
-
-To the west of the island, on the opposite coast, is an almost
-inaccessible barrier of lofty mountains, thickly covered with trees and
-underwood. At a small port in the vicinity, called Piripi, which has
-a very pretty river, an immense quantity of fish is caught, dried, and
-exported. They are extremely fat, and very soon become rancid.
-
-On the continent, opposite the town of St. Catherine’s, stands the
-pleasant village of St. José, the inhabitants of which are principally
-occupied in sawing timber into planks, making bricks, and growing
-rice. The net gains of a poor family here are incredibly small, but
-the necessaries of life are cheap, and they have few incentives to
-curtail their present enjoyments for the sake of improving their future
-fortunes. Near this village is a lovely vale called Picada, thickly
-studded with white cottages, embosomed in orange-groves and plantations
-of coffee. The gently-sloping hills which enclose this spot, give a
-picturesque effect to the bold rugged scenery beyond them. This valley,
-and others contiguous to it, form the extremities of the territory
-habitable by the Portuguese, for on the land to the westward, though at
-a considerable distance, dwell the Anthropophagi, here called Bugres.
-These savages live entirely in the woods, in wretched sheds made of
-palm-branches, interwoven with bananas. Their occupation is chiefly
-hunting with bows and arrows, but they frequently employ these weapons
-in hostilities against their neighbours. A party of them will sometimes
-way-lay a Portuguese[11], whose residence is solitary; they have even
-been known to attack and destroy whole families. No regard to humanity
-seems indeed to be paid by either party in their encounters; they are
-mutually bent on a war of extermination.
-
-There is much low swampy land in the island, over which causeways,
-supported by piles, are made to a considerable extent. These lands, on
-account of their humidity, are very favorable to the growth of rice.
-The palm-trees, seen at intervals in every direction, have a very
-pleasing effect. The whole coast may be said to be almost uninhabited.
-There are, indeed, some few settlements; but families scattered at the
-distance of ten or fifteen miles from each other can scarcely be called
-a population.
-
-Our stay at St. Catherine’s was prolonged by some unforeseen
-circumstances, and we had time to make various excursions into the
-interior of the island and to the adjacent continent. On one of these
-occasions I happened to be absent, but the adventures which attended it
-being rather amusing, I am tempted to relate them in the words of one
-of my friends who formed the party. “Having hired horses and negroes
-we set out early in the morning for the river Tavarinha. The road for
-three leagues lay through thick woods, along which we passed without
-any material accident, and arrived at the end of our journey about two
-in the afternoon. We dined with Captain Leaõ, who entertained us very
-hospitably, and would have persuaded us to prolong our visit, but we
-determined to return that evening over the mountains. We travelled
-for a league through a level, well-cultivated country, clothed with
-orange-groves and coffee-plantations, and tolerably populous. At
-sun-set we arrived at the foot of the mountains, and began to ascend
-a steep and dangerous road, in the intricacies of which we were soon
-bewildered, and had great difficulty to regain the most beaten path,
-which led homewards. Night suddenly overtook us, and we had still three
-hours’ journey over the mountains, without guide or attendant, along
-a perfectly alpine road, winding on the edge of horrible precipices.
-In this part of the journey two of us, having advanced a little, the
-rest of the party were suddenly alarmed by a dreadful shriek, which
-excited great apprehension lest some one should have been precipitated
-down the gulph, but we were agreeably undeceived soon after by the
-whole of the party joining us. We now heard a noise like hammers, which
-proceeded from persons beating cotton, and in a little time arrived
-at a house, where, on enquiry, we were informed that the town was ten
-miles distant. We were proceeding, when a voice cried out in English,
-‘but will not you stop and have some grog?’ It may be easily imagined
-that to be thus suddenly hailed with one of the most familiar phrases
-of our native English, while benighted in a strange land, operated like
-an electric shock upon us; we immediately alighted at the house whence
-the voice seemed to proceed, and found a Mr. Nunney, the English
-interpreter, who furnished us with a guide; we now continued our way
-with greater confidence, and reached the town about midnight. This Mr.
-Nunney, as we afterwards learnt, receives a dollar _per diem_ during
-the stay of every English or American ship that touches at this port,
-whether his services are wanted or not, and by these means, with the
-profits of the sales of provisions which he makes to such ships, he has
-acquired a little fortune and a pretty estate. His profits, indeed, are
-exorbitant, for he charges the articles 100 per cent. higher than they
-can be procured at from any other dealer in the place.”
-
-While at the town of St. Catherine’s, we visited some of the gardens
-with which its vicinity is embellished. They are laid out with great
-taste, particularly one belonging to the vicar, another in the estate
-of the late excellent and able General Soares Coimbra, and a third
-the property of Colonel Gama. At Barragros, near the village of St.
-José, we visited a gentleman of the name of Caldwin, who collects and
-preserves insects. He showed us his grounds, which occupy a space
-of eighty-five fathoms along the beach, and extend a mile inland,
-containing orangeries, coffee, rice, and mandioca, in a fine state of
-culture. These well-watered plantations, together with a neat house
-and garden, he offered to sell for a thousand crusados (about £125
-sterling).
-
-This was not the only instance we remarked of the low value of landed
-property here. About two miles from the town of St. Catherine’s, a neat
-house, a small orangery and ground clear of brush wood, capable of
-forming a pretty plantation, was offered at 100 dollars. An excellent
-house, in one of the best situations in the environs of this town, with
-a garden of about two acres well and tastefully planted, was offered to
-be sold for £400 sterling. The building of the house must alone have
-cost that sum and it was in perfect condition. In short, money appeared
-so valuable, that a large landed estate might be purchased for a mere
-trifle.
-
-On contemplating the many natural advantages of this island, I could
-not but be struck with its importance, and was tempted to wish that it
-were annexed by treaty to the dominions of Great Britain. Emigrants
-might subsist here at a very cheap rate; and the isle is tenable
-against any force so long as we remain masters of the sea. Ships would
-trade to it from the western coast of America, and from the eastern
-coast of Africa, and in our hands it would soon become an emporium
-of commerce. It is adapted to almost every variety of produce; the
-highlands are capable of cultivation, and the plains and valleys are
-fertile even to luxuriance. The climate is humid, but its general
-temperature is moderate and salubrious. If colonized by English, the
-isle might be made a perfect paradise. Though not situated within the
-tropics, it produces indico, rice, sugar-cane, pulse, and the finest
-oranges in the world.
-
-Our excursions to the main land were not confined to the districts
-immediately within the jurisdiction of St. Catherine’s. Proceeding
-northward from St. José, we entered some fine bays, the shores of
-which were studded with houses pleasantly situated amid bananerias,
-orangeries, and plantations of rice, coffee, and mandioca. After
-having passed several well-peopled parishes, we arrived at Armação,
-a village at the extremity of a bay about nine leagues distant from
-St. José, and four leagues north of Santa Cruz. This village is a
-fishing station for whales, which were formerly very numerous on
-that coast, and in the bays that indent it. The fishery is farmed by
-government to a company under the superintendance of a _Capitao Mor_,
-and a number of inferior officers. About 150 negroes are employed on
-this station, but the number of whales now caught is not so great as
-formerly, when the average was three or four hundred in a season[12].
-Their conveniences for flinching or cutting up the fish are extensive
-and well-contrived[13]. Several fine piers project from the shore into
-eighteen to twenty feet depth of water, on which are erected capstans,
-cranes, and other requisite machinery. Hither all the fish caught on
-the coast are brought. The boiling-house, tanks, &c. are far superior
-to any thing of the kind at Greenland-dock, and indeed to all similar
-establishments in Europe. To give an idea of their magnitude, it is
-sufficient to say, that in one range there are twenty-seven very large
-boilers, and places for three more. Their tanks are vast vaults, on
-some of which a boat might be rowed with ease. We obtained a view of
-these great works through the civility of the commander of the place,
-Capitaõ Mor Jacinto Jorge dos Anjos, who lives here in a princely
-style, and possesses a very considerable property, which he diffuses
-with great public spirit and liberality. All who have visited Armação
-can bear witness to his, affability and urbanity to strangers.
-
-We crossed this peninsula by a mountainous road of four leagues to the
-Bay of dos Ganchos, commonly known by the name of Tejuco. Here land is
-of little or no value; any one may take as much as he pleases of what
-is unappropriated, provided he make a proper application for it to
-the government. We passed two sugar plantations with conveniences for
-making rum; and observed numerous huts interspersed in the vicinity.
-The contrary side of this peninsula forms the bay before named. The
-poor cottages of the people here present a curious picture of rural
-irregularity; some are built on the summit of conical mountains, the
-passage to which is frequently obstructed by clouds; others stand on
-the sides of gentle acclivities; but the greater number of them is
-situated almost in contact with the ocean, which often flows to their
-very doors. The bay is from two to three leagues across, and extends
-about the same distance inland; it is well-sheltered, and affords good
-anchorage, and fine situations for loading timber, with which the
-mountainous country around is thickly clothed, and large quantities
-of which are felled and embarked for Rio de Janeiro and the Plata.
-Canoes are made here, at a cheaper rate and in greater numbers than in
-any other part of Brazil. The inhabitants grow rice in considerable
-quantities, as well as some coffee and sugar; but such is their
-indolence and poverty that they use only hand-mills, consisting of two
-horizontal rollers, in manufacturing the latter article.
-
-Into this bay fall several streams formed by the mountain-torrents and
-springs, and two tolerable rivers, the less called Inferninho, and
-the larger Tigreno. They both flow through low swampy land, subject
-to inundation, and overgrown with mangroves and an immense variety of
-trees. The insalubrity of this tract might be corrected by clearing
-away the underwood and draining the soil, but the arduousness of such
-an undertaking might deter a more active and skilful people than this.
-In the rainy season it is inundated to a great extent, and in summer
-it is infested with terrible swarms of mosquitos and burachala flies,
-which render it almost uninhabitable. The bay of dos Ganchos is a
-most desirable place. The timber cut and shipped for Rio de Janeiro
-might form, together with some of the sugars and spirituous liquors
-made here, an advantageous article of export to the Cape of Good Hope;
-but unfortunately there exists no stimulus to this sort of commercial
-speculation. Here are no small vessels fitting out for cargoes, nor
-will any person risk the equipment of a vessel to a distant part, where
-there is so little certainty of returns. So common an enterprize as
-that practised by ship-owners, in England, of sending out vessels to
-wait for cargoes (up the Baltic for instance) is here unknown; and this
-is a sufficient proof of the low state of commerce and shipping.
-
-Along the beach of this bay I found the shell of the murex genus, which
-produces that beautiful crimson dye, so valued by the ancients. It is
-here called _purpura_, and to my great surprise, its use is in some
-degree known to the natives, one of whom shewed me some cotton fringe,
-dyed with an extract of it, though ill-prepared. The shell is about the
-size of the common whelk, and contains a fish, on whose body appears
-a vesicle full of a pale yellow, viscid, purulent substance, which
-constitutes the dye. The mode of extracting it, is to break the shell
-carefully with a hammer, so as not to crush the fish, and then let out
-the liquor in the vesicle with a lancet or other sharp instrument. I,
-for greater convenience, used a pen, and immediately wrote my initials,
-&c. on a handkerchief; the marks in half an hour after were of a
-dirty green color, and on being exposed to the air a few hours longer,
-changed to a most rich crimson. The quantity produced by each is very
-small, but quite sufficient for such an experiment. The best time for
-making it, is when the animal is in an incipient state of putrescency.
-I have not a doubt that if a sufficient quantity of them were taken,
-and the dying matter, when extracted, were liquified in a small degree
-with gum-water, a valuable article of commerce might be produced. At
-least the trial is worth making. The liquid is a perfect substantive
-dye, and of course resists the action of alkalies.
-
-On the rocks, and in greater abundance on the trunks of old trees, I
-observed a variety of lichens, some of which produced tints of several
-shades of colors. The continual decomposition of vegetables here adds
-greatly to the richness of the soil; it is not uncommon to find trees
-lying on the ground with their interior substance entirely decomposed,
-and a great diversity of plants growing on them in high luxuriance.
-Among the numerous tribes of birds that frequent this region, the
-aquatic afford good eating, as do also the smaller parrots. The woods
-are filled with monkeys; and on the banks of the rivers are found
-capivaras in considerable numbers.
-
-In coasting along this shore, it is customary for strangers to visit
-the chief person in command at every station, whatever may be his
-degree or rank; he, on being requested, will furnish guides, and afford
-every assistance in his power. I always experienced the greatest
-attention and civility from these gentlemen, and have reason to believe
-that they uniformly pay the same regard to all who visit them for
-permission to see the country.
-
-Ten leagues north of this place is the fine and capacious harbour of
-Garoupas, with its handsome town; the anchorage is equally good as
-in that of dos Ganchos. The inhabitants here pursue the same mode of
-living as their neighbours in Tejuco. They have a fine climate, and a
-soil which yields a hundred-fold for whatever is sown or planted in it,
-and is noted for its delicious fruits. The cotton of which their common
-clothes are made, is grown, spun, and woven among them; they build
-their own houses, and form their own canoes, which they are dexterous
-in managing, and prefer to boats. It may indeed be said that every man
-is more or less an artisan; but I am sorry to observe that they prefer
-ease to care and industry, and are by no means so good husbandmen
-as those of Tejuco. This bay, as far as I could observe, during my
-short visit to it, presents to the view a greater diversity of hills,
-valleys, and plains, than the one before mentioned. Both are esteemed
-fine fishing-ground during the whale-season, which is from December to
-June.
-
-From hence northward is the fine harbour of San Francisco, in the bay
-of the same name. It has three entrances defended by forts; that to the
-south is most frequented. The land here is very flat for several miles,
-and the rivers which intersect it are navigable for canoes as far as
-the base of the great chain of mountains, where a public road, begun
-at incredible labor and expense, leads over that almost impassable
-barrier. This road will soon be a work of national importance to
-Brazil, as through it the finest district in that country, and indeed
-one of the finest in the world in point of climate, the rich plain of
-Coritiva, will be connected with the ocean. The ridge of mountains is
-more than four thousand feet above the level of the sea, and there is a
-regular ascent for twenty leagues from their inland base, to Coritiva.
-On this fertile tract are fed large herds of cattle for the supply of
-Rio de Janeiro, S. Paulo, and other places; here are also bred mules
-in great numbers. Its soil and air are so genial, that olives, grapes,
-apples, peaches, and other fruits, grow to as rich a maturity as in
-Europe, though they are here almost in a wild state. It is divided into
-many parishes, but its population is small, compared with its extent; a
-circumstance rather surprising, since every necessary of life is here
-so cheap and in such great plenty. Its distance from the coast and
-from the chief towns, and the hitherto bad road, may have contributed
-to deter settlers; it is principally occupied as a breeding district,
-and supports no more inhabitants than what are barely competent to
-manage and tend the cattle, which are chiefly purchased by private
-dealers, and sometimes by commissioners from government, who come
-hither occasionally for the purpose. The road from hence to the city of
-S. Paulo, distant about 80 leagues, is tolerably inhabited, especially
-in the vicinity of Sorocaba, something more than half way, which is a
-great mart for mules and horses[14]. Near this place is a well-wooded
-country called Gorosuava, abounding with fine limestone, where a
-considerable quantity of rich iron ore is found. How deplorable is
-it that the people should yet have to learn the application of such
-valuable resources!
-
-The neighbourhood of Coritiva is watered by fine rivers, which flow
-into the Paraná. Many of the streams produce gold, particularly the Rio
-Verde; and one called the Tibigi is rich in diamonds, as the few good
-families in its vicinity have reason to remember with gratitude. More
-to the westward it is dangerous to travel, since in that direction live
-the Anthropophagi, who were driven from these boundaries a few years
-ago. The country to the north is very full of wood.
-
-From its great elevation above the level of the sea, the climate of
-Coritiva is peculiarly congenial to Europeans. Its soil is in general
-rich, and the hills are peculiarly well adapted for the grape, which
-here thrives as luxuriantly as in any part of Europe. On the low lands,
-particularly those bordering on rivers and rivulets, are woods of
-considerable extent, containing timber of enormous size, and fit for
-almost any purpose. This immense tract of land is thinly peopled; the
-few inhabitants that are scattered over it, occupy themselves chiefly
-in the rearing of cattle, which, as it requires little or no trouble,
-is almost the only business which is followed. At Sorocaba there are
-held various market days and fairs, for the sale of horses, mules, and
-horned cattle, which are attended by dealers from S. Paulo, Santos,
-and more distant parts of Brazil. From this market mules are sent to
-the Rio, and even to Villa Rica. Many smiths are employed at Sorocaba
-in making shoes for the cattle, and a considerable number of men gain
-a livelihood by training and domesticating these animals, for which
-recourse is had to very severe methods. A fine mule, which has been
-thus rendered tractable, will sell for four or five times the price of
-one not yet “civilized;” the cost of the latter, if the animal be full
-grown, and from two to three years old, will be about four dollars.
-The horses, which are usually of the same value, are in general
-handsome, with fine manes and tails, short necks, and in height about
-fourteen hands. They are trained solely to the saddle, and are not used
-as mere beasts of draught or burden.
-
-At the Rio, a good pair of carriage-mules will often sell at the
-enormous price of 150 or 200 dollars; such is the difficulty of
-rendering these animals tractable. Horses alone are used for the
-saddle, the mares being reserved for breeding.
-
-Coritiva is not reported to contain gold or diamonds, yet, both these
-valuable products are found in some parts of the district; a fact known
-to but a few persons, who have profited greatly by keeping it secret.
-This fine country, therefore, offers few attractions to the great mass
-of emigrants to Brazil, who are commonly tempted by the very name
-of the gold mines to settle in them, or are allured by the profits
-accruing from plantations of cotton, sugar, or coffee, and look with
-indifference on the pursuits of what is termed common agriculture.
-
-Although the soil of Coritiva is capable of producing the finest
-wheats, the inhabitants, for obvious reasons, persevere in cultivating
-mandioca. Wheat requires a series of preparations before it can be fit
-for food; it must be thrashed or trampled from the straw; it must be
-ground to flour, and afterwards divested of the bran, and must then
-undergo the elaborate process of panification. Mills and ovens are not
-among the first articles of convenience introduced into a territory,
-newly colonized and thinly peopled; but on the contrary, any substitute
-for the food, which they are instrumental in preparing, will be
-preferred, if it demand less care and labor. Hence the mandioca obtains
-the preference; it requires less culture than wheat, and when ripe,
-may be converted into nutritious _farinha_ in half an hour; indeed
-I have gathered, prepared, and eaten it as food in a less space of
-time. It is therefore no matter of wonder, that the inhabitants should
-continue to subsist on this aliment, and on pounded maize, rather
-than on bread made of wheat, which demands so much greater a share of
-attention and industry. Maize, or Indian corn, is grown in considerable
-quantities, for the express purpose of feeding pigs, which constitute
-a staple article for consumption. In every _fazenda_, salt pork, as
-well as fowls, is invariably to be found; and bacon is cured in large
-quantities, and sent to S. Paulo.
-
-The breeding of horned cattle, is left in a great measure to nature,
-and is much less attended to than that of mules. Few cows are
-domesticated; and the little cheese that is made, if I may judge of the
-specimens I saw at S. Paulo, is of a quality almost disgusting. I did
-not see any butter made here, and indeed the few products of the dairy
-that are obtained, are considered of no manner of importance.
-
-The inhabitants lead an easy kind of life, in a great measure free
-from the molestation of fiscal and municipal officers; they pay their
-tythes with great cheerfulness, in kind, specie being rarely seen.
-Their sole wants seemed confined to salt and iron; and it is much to
-be lamented, that from the distance of the nearest sea port, and the
-badness of the roads, these commodities are with difficulty procured.
-From the same causes, the improvements which this delightful country
-might derive from commerce have been retarded, and it is as yet very
-inadequately provided with the means of exchanging its superfluities,
-for articles of the first necessity.
-
-The chain of mountains which bounds the plain of Coritiva, is washed
-at the base by a lagoon, communicating in a direct line with the
-fine harbour of San Francisco, where many merchant-ships have been
-constructed of the finest timber.
-
-In this place, although rather in anticipation of the regular course of
-the narrative, it may not be improper to state, that, at the request
-of his Excellency the Condé de Linhares, I submitted to the Court a
-paper on the advantageous situation of Coritiva and the sea-port above
-mentioned. Among other points, I suggested that an establishment might
-there be formed for the joint purposes of rearing live-stock, and of
-salting and curing beef and pork for the royal navy; that the culture
-of wheat, and the manufacture of bread might be encouraged; and that a
-depôt might be formed at San Francisco, from whence grain with other
-articles of consumption might be shipped to any part of Brazil. Indeed
-no other part of the country offers such temptations to agriculturists;
-nor could a colony of them planted here fail to florish, if directed
-by common prudence and moderate industry. The climate is salubrious;
-the land consists of a beautiful diversity of hill, mountain, dale,
-ravine, and woodland, watered by numerous streams, which take their
-course, not toward the sea, but in an easterly direction, and flow
-into the great river Paraná. Here are beasts of burden in unlimited
-numbers, and a sea-port within two or three days’ journey. Here is land
-of the finest quality where a plough was never used; here are mules and
-horned cattle to be had on the cheapest terms; and yet the operations
-of making butter and cheese are either unknown, or are practised in
-such a slovenly manner, as to render the articles unpalatable. Here is
-the finest timber; here are fruits of every kind, except those peculiar
-to the tropical climates. What more then is wanted? An enlightened
-and industrious population to improve the blessings which nature has
-lavished on this district with so bounteous a hand. If agriculture, in
-the miserable way in which it is now practised, produces sufficient
-to exempt the people from want, what wonders might it not produce in
-Coritiva, if followed according to the improved system of Europeans!
-A numerous and industrious population would soon adopt this, and all
-the other useful arts of life; the silk worm would be propagated;
-the hidden stores of the precious products would be explored, and the
-interest of posterity might be excited by the exhibition of silk, gold,
-and diamonds, from the banks of the same river. Another luxury might
-be superadded; since, from what I have seen of the grapes grown here,
-there can be no doubt, that, where rocky lands occur, “the generous
-vine” would thrive in great abundance, and Coritiva might in no long
-period of time become the vineyard of this vast continent.
-
-The cattle at Coritiva sell at various prices; oxen, much fatter and
-in better condition than those of the Rio de la Plata or of the Rio
-Grande de S. Pedro, may be bought for about 14s. or 18s. a head. The
-horses are in general finer than those of Buenos Ayres; mules for the
-pack-saddle sell at about 40s. and those for riding at from three to
-six pounds. There is, however great fluctuation in the prices, owing to
-the occasional scarcity as well as the occasional abundance of specie.
-
-But to return from this digression to San Francisco. The chief
-occupations of the inhabitants are the cutting of timber, and other
-labors connected with ship-building. Vessels of large dimensions, and a
-number of small craft for coasters, have been built here by merchants
-of Rio de Janeiro, Bahia, and Pernambuco. When this trade is brisk,
-there is a great demand for the various classes of artisans whom it
-requires, and many negroes are employed. The wood used is so strong,
-and holds the iron so firmly, that ships built of it endure many years,
-and are in greater esteem with the Portuguese and Spaniards than
-those built in Europe. On this account, the harbour of San Francisco
-is likely to become of considerable value to Brazil; and as it is
-connected with Coritiva, the cattle of which have been found superior
-to those of Rio Grande, there is every probability, that at no distant
-period the Portuguese navy will be here supplied with salt provisions.
-This must, however, depend on the completion of the great road over the
-mountains, to which the present administration have laudably directed
-their attention, with a degree of zeal commensurate to the importance
-of the work in a national point of view.
-
-I must not omit noticing another production in this district, which
-will rise in utility and value as the port of San Francisco improves.
-Toward the north there are woods of fine large pines, exceedingly hard,
-tough, and full of resin. They constitute a singular variety of the
-genus Pinus; the boughs branch off from the upper part of the tree
-only, and have tussocks of leaves at each extremity. A tree eighty
-feet high, for instance, will appear without branches to the height of
-about fifty-five feet; the branches there extend horizontally in every
-direction, with leaves at their extremities, the lowest and largest
-to a distance of fourteen or fifteen feet from the stem, and the
-higher ones gradually diminishing in length towards the top, which ends
-in a tuft of leaves, as a crown for the whole. These trees are very
-picturesque, and indeed beautiful; they grow to a sufficient size to
-serve as masts for ships of two or three hundred tons; I was told there
-were much larger ones to be found.
-
-Resuming our voyage, we left San Francisco, and, passing the port of
-Cananea, arrived near the entrance of the harbour of Santos. The coast
-along which we sailed is low and flat, and on its verge are some poor
-fishing-huts, which rather add to the dreariness of its appearance. It
-is covered with lofty trees, which also fringe the mountainous scenery
-beyond it. Several rivers occur, of little note in geography, but
-highly advantageous to the settlers, as they pass the very doors of the
-dwellings, and afford easy means for the transport of produce from the
-interior. On nearing Santos, we passed several bold rocks, called the
-Alcatrazes, and a ledge or reef on which the sea broke furiously. The
-main land is very elevated and mountainous, so much so that the low
-grounds which extend from its base are scarcely perceptible from the
-heights next beyond them.
-
-The harbour of Santos has a safe entrance, and is very secure; it is
-a strait, having the island of S. Vicente to the left, for the extent
-of half a mile, when it takes a different direction. Here is situated
-the port, which has good anchorage, with regular soundings towards
-the shore, which shoals gradually. The currents and eddies cause some
-inconvenience, and the high land occasions much variation in the
-winds, which perplexes mariners on their entrance into the narrows,
-but as the water is not deep, and the current far from strong, a ship
-is safe the moment her anchor is let go, and by means of a boat and
-kedge she may be placed in any situation the pilot chooses. The part
-called the narrows, is defended by two forts, on passing which there
-is a kind of lagoon of three or four leagues in length, almost full
-of mangroves, terminated by the town of Santos, one of the oldest
-European settlements in Brazil. In common with S. Paulo, it owes its
-origin to the first shipwreck on the island of S. Vicente. The river
-or lagoon has three or four fathoms water and a muddy bottom. Santos
-is a place of considerable trade, being the storehouse of the great
-captaincy of S. Paulo, and the resort of many vessels trading to the
-Rio de la Plata. It is tolerably well built, and its population,
-consisting chiefly of merchants, shopkeepers, and artificers, amounts
-to six or seven thousand souls. The situation is by no means healthy,
-as the country around it is low, woody, and frequently deluged with
-rain, by reason of the high mountains in its vicinity, which impede
-the passage of the clouds. Several rivulets flowing from the foot of
-these mountains intersect the land in various directions, and unite in
-one great river a little above the town of Santos. The rice of this
-district, which is grown in great quantities, is considered the best
-in Brazil, and the bananas are equally noted.
-
-From this port the Spanish territories, as well as Rio Grande, receive
-several vessels loaded with sugar, coffee, rice, mandioca, &c. in
-return they bring chiefly hides and tallow, which are generally
-exported hence to Europe. The Portuguese send much of their produce to
-the Spanish colonies, and are generally ill paid, but the shortness
-of the voyage, and the want of other markets, tempt many young men to
-speculate, notwithstanding the heavy duties and the numberless petty
-obstacles with which their neighbours have impeded and encumbered
-this commerce. A Spaniard in his own country rarely allows even a
-shadow of justice to a Portuguese; he uses a thousand artifices for
-procrastinating the decision of a cause at issue between them, till
-the latter, when his patience is completely exhausted, finds that
-he is likely to derive nothing from the contest but immense piles
-of law-papers, frequently written on the most trivial points in
-litigation, and paid for at an exorbitant price. If he persevere after
-all this disappointment, it generally happens that another _alcalde_
-or judge is appointed, and then the business is laid on the shelf.
-The injured Portuguese, after so much waste of time and money, is
-threatened with worse consequences, and frequently is obliged to leave
-the country in ruin and disgust.
-
-As Santos is the embarking port of S. Paulo, its intercourse with that
-town is very considerable. In the course of a day several hundred
-mules frequently arrive, loaded with the produce of the country,
-and return with salt, iron, copper, earthen wares, and European
-manufactures. For the traffic of it’s immediate vicinity, it has the
-convenience of water-carriage, its river being navigable about twenty
-miles, up to Cubataõ, where an officer with a guard of soldiers is
-stationed to receive the king’s duties for the repair of the roads and
-other public purposes.
-
-The governor of Santos being subject in all cases to the governor
-of S. Paulo, we applied to him for permission to go thither, which
-was immediately granted. It was now eight in the evening, and we
-were without an asylum for the night. I had several letters of
-recommendation, not one of which procured us any civility, and we
-found that the inhabitants were far from being courteous to strangers.
-We were willing to impute this to want of convenient accommodations,
-but it may be generally observed, that along the whole coast the same
-shyness prevails, while in the interior the people vie with each other
-in acts of hospitality. Perhaps in all countries this duty is most
-practised where the occasions for its exercise most rarely occur.
-
-Being unable to procure a bed at Santos, we were obliged to engage
-a canoe to convey us up the river to Cubataõ, where we arrived at
-two in the morning, and were introduced into the guard-house for a
-lodging. The corporal being called, he accommodated us as well as he
-was able; we lay down on the softest planks we could find, and made
-pillows of our portmanteaus, but though much wearied we found ourselves
-little disposed to sleep on so uneasy a couch. At sun-rise, when we
-got up, an extraordinary and busy scene presented itself; before the
-guard-house was a large space of ground enclosed by the storehouse and
-other out-buildings, and here a hundred mules were in the act of being
-harnessed and loaded; the gentleness and tractability of these fine
-large animals pleased us much, and the expertness of their masters,
-particularly of the negroes, in placing and replacing the burdens, was
-truly surprising.
-
-From the good corporal, who was commanding officer here, we received
-every attention, and much more civility than we had reason to expect
-from having experienced the unaccommodating disposition of the people
-in Santos, in much better circumstances than himself. He procured us
-a good breakfast, and furnished us with saddle-mules for our journey,
-at the rate of ten shillings each, the distance being eight leagues.
-Having obtained a guide we mounted, and proceeded about half a mile,
-when we reached the foot of the stupendous mountains we had to
-cross. The road is good and well paved, but narrow, and, on account
-of the rugged acclivities, is cut in a zig-zag direction, with very
-frequent and abrupt turnings, continually on the ascent. The trains
-of loaded mules which we met on their way to Santos rendered the
-passage disagreeable, and at times dangerous. In many places the road
-is cut through the solid rock for several feet, in others along the
-perpendicular sides, and it leads frequently over the tops of conical
-mountains, along the edge of precipices, down which the traveller is
-liable to be thrown into an impervious thicket full thirty yards below.
-These dangerous places are secured by parapets. After ascending for an
-hour and a half, during which time we made innumerable turnings, we
-arrived at a resting place, near which, at a spot a little lower than
-the road, we found water. This place, as our guide informed us, was
-only half-way to the summit; we were astonished at the intelligence,
-as the clouds were already so far below us that they obstructed our
-prospect. During our progress hither, we observed that the mules travel
-as quick on an ascent as on level ground; they much excel the horse in
-uneven roads with sharp turnings, and still more so in bad roads.
-
-To attempt the geology of mountains so covered by vegetable matter
-would be a difficult task; the component parts of those along which
-we passed appeared to be granite, and frequently soft, crumbling,
-ferruginous sand-stone. Some picturesque streams bursting from their
-high sources form fine cascades, and in crossing the road force their
-way through many detached and round masses of granite. The woods are so
-thick in every part, except where the mules tread, that no soil can be
-seen; the branches of the trees in some places meet and form an arbor
-over the road, which shades the traveller from the heat of the sun, and
-shelters him from rain.
-
-After resting for about twenty minutes we again mounted and resumed
-our ascent. The road presented at times four or five zig-zags above
-us at one view, and gave us fresh reason for astonishment at the
-completion of a work so fraught with difficulties. The millions
-of crowns which must have been expended in clearing the woods and
-thickets in its course, and in cutting through the solid rock for a
-considerable distance, as well as in paving it through the whole extent
-of the ridge, afford no mean idea of the enterprising spirit of the
-Brazilians. Few public works, even in Europe, are superior to it; and
-if we consider that, by reason of the scanty population of the district
-through which it passes, the labor bestowed on it must have been
-purchased most dearly, we shall hardly find one in any country so well
-completed under similar disadvantages.
-
-In three hours we reached the summit, a plain of considerable extent,
-the lowest estimated height of which is six thousand feet. The
-surface is chiefly composed of quartz covered with sand. The sea,
-though distant twenty miles, seemed to us as if it washed the foot
-of the mountains; the level part of the coast and the port of Santos
-below us came not within the angle of vision. While we enjoyed this
-sublime prospect, we were refreshed by a cool breeze, which renewed
-our strength and spirits, and enabled us to pursue our journey with
-alacrity. Advancing about a mile and a half, we came to a part of the
-road which was cut several feet deep through the rock, and observed
-in this quarter many small streams, which, though contiguous to the
-sea, all flow in a south-west course to an immense distance, and,
-uniting, form the great river Correntes, which joins the Plata. This
-circumstance will sufficiently explain the form of this mighty ridge
-of mountains, namely, that the highest and steepest side fronts the
-sea, and that the other shelves more gradually and with more frequent
-outlets to the plains of the interior. This part of the road is lined
-by fine trees and large thickets on both sides. The heavy rains of the
-season (December) had damaged it in various parts; the readiest mode
-of repairing these breaks is to cut down several trees, about seven
-inches diameter, place them across, and fasten them down with hooked
-stakes. The mules which travel these rugged declivities, though far
-more hardy than horses, frequently fall victims to fatigue; we observed
-some dead by the way-side. In the course of our route we passed
-several parties of negroes and some of Indians, working at repairs
-in the road, or making new branches from it. Some of them I noticed
-with swellings in the neck, though very different from those I have
-observed in Derbyshire and other mountainous countries. In the case of
-these Indians there not only appeared that protuberance from the glands
-commonly called a wen, but lumps, of from half an inch to three inches
-in diameter, hung from it in an almost botryoidal form. Persons thus
-afflicted are called in the language of the country _papos_.
-
-After crossing several rivulets and passing a few houses we arrived at
-a tolerable inn, belonging to an officer of militia, where we were soon
-provided with plenty of milk, coffee, and fowls. It is distant sixteen
-or twenty miles from S. Paulo, and may be considered as half-way
-between that town and Santos. The owner, who was much surprised to
-see Englishmen, treated us with every civility, and procured us a
-change of saddle-mules. While they were preparing, he shewed us a
-tract of land in front of his house, tolerably well cleared, where we
-took an hour’s shooting. We then proceeded through a much more open
-country, which bore the traces of former cultivation, and seemed of
-late to have been much neglected. As we drew nearer S. Paulo, the road
-improved, and was enlivened by a greater number of habitations in its
-vicinity. We passed two convents, which had the air of convenient
-houses, and were distinguished by large crosses erected before them.
-The land was watered by several fine streams; in one part we observed a
-quarry of ferruginous grit-stone, but we had not leisure to make much
-mineralogical research. S. Paulo, although on an elevated site, is not
-observed at any great distance in this direction. In its immediate
-neighbourhood the river runs parallel to the road, which it sometimes
-partially overflows, and covers with sand. To our left we saw a
-large _estalagem_, or inn, where numbers of mules are unloaded, and
-travellers commonly pass the night. It consists of a very large shed,
-supported upon upright pieces of timber, with separate divisions for
-receiving the cargoes or burdens of the mules, each traveller occupying
-as many as his goods require; and there is a piece of ground of about
-a hundred yards in circumference, planted with small upright stakes,
-at ten or fifteen feet distance, to which the bridles of the mules are
-tied while they are fed, saddled, and loaded. These _estalagems_ are
-common in all parts of Brazil.
-
-On entering the town, although we had expected much from its being the
-capital of the district, and the residence of the governor, yet we were
-struck with the neat appearance of its houses, stuccoed in various
-colors; those in the principal streets were two or three stories high.
-Having arrived an hour or two before sun-set, we walked to the house of
-a gentleman, to whom we had a letter of recommendation; but he being
-absent, we were obliged to pass the night at the _estalagem_, where our
-mules had been put up. It was a miserable abode. The next morning we
-breakfasted with our friend, and were conducted by him to the governor,
-Brigadier General França Horta, who honored us with an invitation to
-dinner, permitted a perishable cargo of my friend’s property, which was
-lying at Santos, to be unloaded, and gave us a general welcome to his
-palace. We had the good fortune to find that two of his Excellency’s
-aides-de-camp, men of excellent character, had been educated in
-England. They assisted us in obtaining lodgings, rendered us every
-service that we stood in need of, and shewed an earnest desire to make
-our stay as agreeable as possible.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. V.
-
- _Description of S. Paulo.—System of Farming prevalent in its
- Neighbourhood.—Excursion to the Gold Mines of Jaraguá.—Mode of
- working them.—Return to Santos._
-
-
-S. PAULO is situated on a pleasing eminence of about two miles in
-extent, surrounded on three sides by low meadow land, and washed at
-the base by rivulets, which almost insulate it in rainy weather;
-it is connected with the high-land by a narrow ridge. The rivulets
-flow into a pretty large stream called the Tieté, which runs within
-a mile of the town, in a south-west direction. Over them there are
-several bridges, some of stone and others of wood, built by the late
-governor. The streets of S. Paulo, owing to its elevation (about 50
-feet above the plain), and the water which almost surrounds it, are in
-general remarkably clean; the material with which they are paved, is
-grit-stone, cemented by oxide of iron, and containing large pebbles of
-rounded quartz, approximating to the conglomerate. This pavement is an
-alluvial formation containing gold, many particles of which metal are
-found in the clinks and hollows after heavy rains, and at such seasons
-are diligently sought for by the poorer sort of people.
-
-The city was founded by the Jesuits, who were probably tempted by
-the gold mines in the vicinity, more than by the salubrity of its
-air, which, however, is not excelled by any on the whole continent of
-South America. The medium of the thermometer here is between 50 and 80
-degrees; in a morning I have observed it at 48, and even lower, though
-I was not there in the winter months. The rains are by no means heavy
-or of long continuance, and the thunder-storms are far from being
-violent. The cold in the evenings was frequently so considerable, that
-I was obliged to shut my doors and windows, put on more clothes, and
-have a pan of embers in the room, there being no chimneys.
-
-Here are several squares, and about thirteen places of religious
-worship, namely, two convents, three monasteries, and eight churches,
-the greater part of which, as well as of the whole town, is built
-of earth. The mode of erecting the walls is as follows: a frame
-is constructed of six moveable planks placed edge-wise, opposite
-each other, and secured in this position by cross pieces bolted
-with moveable pins. Earth is put in by small quantities, which the
-workmen beat with rammers, and occasionally moisten with water to
-give it consistency. Having filled the frame or trough, they remove
-it and continue the same operation till the whole shell of the
-house is completed, taking care to leave vacancies, and put in the
-window-frames, door-frames, and beams as they proceed. The mass, in
-course of time, becomes indurated, the walls are pared perfectly
-smooth inside, and take any color the owner chooses to give them; they
-are generally enriched with very ingenious devices. This species of
-structure is durable; I have seen some houses thus built that have
-lasted two hundred years, and most of them have several stories. The
-roofs are made to project two or three feet beyond the wall, in order
-to throw off the rain to a distance from the base; spouts might be a
-more effectual preservative against wet, but their use is little known
-here. They cover their houses with gutter-tiles, but though the country
-affords excellent clay and plenty of wood, very few bricks are burnt.
-
-The population of this place amounts to full fifteen thousand souls:
-perhaps nearer twenty thousand[15]; the clergy, including all ranks
-of religious orders, may be reckoned at five hundred. They are in
-general good members of society, free from that excessive bigotry
-and illiberality which is the reproach of the neighbouring colonies,
-and their example has so beneficial an effect on the rest of the
-inhabitants, that I may presume to say, no stranger will be molested
-while he acts as a gentleman, and does not insult the established
-religion. His Excellency the Bishop is a most worthy prelate, and were
-the inferior orders in his diocese to follow his steps in cultivating
-the sciences and diffusing useful information, they would command
-greater respect from their flocks, and by that means further the
-interests of the religion they profess. Priests, so ignorant, can
-hardly escape contempt.
-
-No endemial diseases at present prevail here. The small-pox formerly,
-and indeed of late, made great havoc among the inhabitants, but its
-progress has been checked by the introduction of vaccine inoculation.
-Surgeons attended at a large hall belonging to the governor, to which
-the public were invited, and the operation was performed gratis. It
-is to be hoped that the credit of this preventative will make its way
-among the people here, for they are not competent to enter into the
-merits of that controversy which injured it in Europe.
-
-Here are few manufactures of any consequence; a little coarse cotton
-is spun by the hand, and woven into cloth, which serves for a variety
-of wearing apparel, sheets, &c. They make a beautiful kind of net-work
-for hammocks, which are fringed with lace, and form an elegant piece
-of furniture, being slung low, so as to answer the purpose of sofas.
-The ladies are particularly fond of using them, especially when the
-heat of the weather disposes them to ease and indolence. The making of
-lace is a general employment for females, some of whom excel in it.
-The shopkeepers here are a numerous class, who, as in most colonial
-towns, deal in almost every thing, and sometimes make great fortunes.
-Here are few doctors, but many apothecaries; some silversmiths, whose
-articles are equally indifferent both in metal and workmanship; tailors
-and shoe-makers in great numbers; and joiners, who manufacture very
-beautiful wood, but are not so moderate in their charges as the former
-classes of tradesmen. In the out-skirts of the city live a number of
-Creolian Indians, who make earthenware for culinary purposes, large
-water-jars, and a variety of other utensils ornamented with some taste.
-The greatest proportion of the inhabitants consists in farmers and
-inferior husbandmen, who cultivate small portions of land, on which
-they breed large stocks of pigs and poultry for sale. With these the
-market is generally well supplied, and in the fruit-season is also
-stored with pines, grapes, peaches, guavas, bananas, a few apples, and
-an enormous quantity of quinces.
-
-Esculent plants are grown in great profusion and variety. Here is a
-favorite bulbous root called the _Cará_, which is equal to the best
-potatoe, and even more farinaceous than many varieties of that plant;
-it grows to about seven inches in diameter, and affords excellent
-food, either boiled or roasted. Fine cabbages, sallad-herbs, turnips,
-cauliflowers, artichokes, and potatoes are in abundance; the latter,
-though very good, are little used: the sweet potatoe is in greater
-request among the natives. Maize, beans, green-peas, and every species
-of pulse florish amazingly. Fowls are cheap, we bought some at
-three-pence and sixpence each; small pigs from one to two shillings;
-and flitches of bacon, cured after the mode of the country, at about
-two-pence per pound. Turkies, geese, and ducks are abundant, and
-reasonable in price; the latter are of the Muscovy breed, enormously
-large, some weighing ten or fourteen pounds. Here is a singular breed
-of cocks; they resemble the common English in plumage and shape, but
-they crow very loud, and continue their last note for 15 or 20 seconds.
-When their voice is good, they are much esteemed, and are sent for
-as curiosities from all parts of Brazil. The cattle are in general
-good, considering that so little attention is paid to feeding them;
-when their pastures are full of grass, they are tolerably fat, but
-when otherwise they become lean. A drove may be bought at 24s. or
-30s. a head; beef at about a penny or three-halfpence per pound. The
-curriers have a singular method of blackening cow-hides and calf-skins:
-when they have prepared them for that operation, they search for some
-mud-hole at the bottom of a ferruginous stratum, a ditch for instance;
-with the mud they cover that side of the skin required to be stained;
-and they prefer this material to the solution of copperas, probably
-with reason, as the sulphate of iron formed by the decomposed pyrites
-acts more mildly in this state than when applied in the common way.
-
-The horses are very fine, and in general docile; when well trained
-they make excellent chargers. Their size is from twelve and a half to
-fourteen and a half hands, and they vary in price from three to twelve
-pounds. Mules, as we have before observed, are considered more useful
-beasts of burden. The breed of sheep is quite unattended to, and mutton
-is rarely or never eaten. Here is a very fine and large breed of goats,
-whose milk is generally used for domestic purposes. The dogs are very
-indifferent, and of no distinct race.
-
-In my walks round the city, I had frequent opportunities of examining
-the singular succession of horizontal strata, that form the eminence
-on which it stands. They lie in the following order: first, one of red
-vegetable earth of variable depth, impregnated with oxide of iron;
-below that, sand and adventitious matter of different shades of color,
-as ochre-red, brown, and dusky yellow, together with many rounded
-pebbles, which indicate it to be of rather recent formation; it varies
-in depth from three to six feet, or perhaps to seven, and its lower
-part is uniformly yellow: under this is a bed of exceedingly fine clay
-of various colors, but for the most part purple; the white and yellow
-is the purest in quality; it is interveined with thin layers of sand in
-various directions. Then succeeds a stratum of alluvial matter, which
-is highly ferruginous; it rests on a variety of decomposed granite,
-containing hornblende, the proportion of feldspar apparently exceeding
-that of the other constituents[16]. The whole is incumbent on fine
-grained granite. The sides of the mount are steep, and in some places
-nearly perpendicular[17].
-
-The fertility of the country around S. Paulo may be inferred from the
-quantities of produce, with which, as I have stated, its market is
-supplied. About a century ago, this tract abounded with gold; and it
-was not until they had exhausted it by washing, that the inhabitants
-thought of employing themselves in husbandry. As they did so more
-from necessity than from choice, they were tardy in pursuing those
-improvements which other nations have made in this noble art, and,
-pining at the disappearance of the precious mineral, considered their
-new occupation as vile and degrading. Indeed throughout the whole of
-Brazil, the husbandmen have ever been considered as forming a class
-greatly inferior in point of respectability to the miners; and this
-prejudice will in all likelihood subsist until the country shall
-have been drained of its gold and diamonds, when the people will be
-compelled to seek in agriculture a constant and inexhaustible source of
-wealth.
-
-I shall attempt to describe the system of farming which at present
-prevails in the neighbourhood of S. Paulo. It has been elsewhere
-observed that, in this extensive empire, land is granted in large
-tracts, on proper application; and we may naturally suppose that the
-value of these tracts depends more or less on their situation. It
-therefore becomes the first object of a cultivator, to look out for
-unoccupied lands as near as possible to a large town; good roads and
-navigable rivers are the desiderata next in point of consequence which
-he attends to. When he has made choice of a situation, he applies to
-the governor of the district, who orders the proper officers to mark
-out the extent required, generally a league or a league and a half
-square, sometimes more. The cultivator then purchases as many negroes
-as he can, and commences his operations by erecting habitations for
-them and himself, which are generally miserable sheds, supported
-by four posts, and commonly called _ranchos_. His negroes are then
-directed to cut down the trees and brushwood growing on the land, to
-such an extent as he thinks they will be able to manage. This done,
-they set fire to all they have cut, as it lies on the ground. Much of
-the success of his harvest depends on this burning; if the whole be
-reduced to ashes he expects a great crop; if, through wet weather, the
-felled trees remain only half burnt, he prognosticates a bad one. When
-the ground is cleared, the negroes dibble it with their hoes, and sow
-their maize, beans, or other pulse; during the operation they cut down
-any thing very much in the way, but never think of working the soil.
-After sowing as much seed as is thought requisite, they prepare other
-ground for planting cassada, here called mandioca, the root of which
-is generally eaten as bread by all ranks in Brazil. The soil[18] for
-this purpose is rather better prepared; it is raked up in little round
-hillocks, not unlike mole-hills, about four feet asunder; into which
-are stuck cuttings from branches of the plant, about an inch thick and
-six or eight long; these soon take root, and put forth leaves, shoots,
-and buds. When enough has been planted for the entire consumption of
-the farm, the owner, if he is rich enough, prepares means for growing
-and manufacturing sugar. He first employs a carpenter to cut wood, and
-build a mill with wooden rollers for crushing the canes, by means of
-water, if a stream is at hand, if not, by the help of mules or oxen.
-While some of the negroes are assisting the carpenter, others are
-employed in preparing ground in the same way as for mandioca. Pieces of
-cane containing three or four joints, and in length about six inches,
-cut from the growing stem, are laid in the earth nearly horizontally,
-and covered with soil to the depth of about four inches. They shoot
-up rapidly, and in three months have a bushy appearance not unlike
-flags; in twelve or fifteen months more they are ready for cutting. In
-rich virgin soil it is not uncommon to see canes twelve feet high and
-astonishingly thick.
-
-The Indian corn and pulse are in general ripe in four months or
-eighteen weeks. The average return is two hundred for one; it is a bad
-harvest when it falls short of one hundred and fifty.
-
-The mandioca is rarely ready to take up in less than eighteen or twenty
-months; if the land be suitable, it then produces from six to twelve
-pounds weight per plant[19]. They grow very little indigo in this
-neighbourhood, and what they have is of indifferent quality. Their
-pumpkins are of enormous size, and small ones are sometimes served up
-as table-vegetables, but more frequently given as food to the horses.
-Melons here are scarcely palatable.
-
-In no branch of husbandry are the farmers so defective as in the
-management of cattle. No artificial grasses are cultivated, no
-enclosures are made, nor is any fodder laid up against the season
-of scarcity. The cows are never milked regularly; they seem to be
-considered rather as an incumbrance to a farm than a valuable part of
-the stock. They constantly require salt, which is given them once in
-fifteen or twenty days, in small proportions. The dairies, if such they
-may be called, are managed in so slovenly a manner, that the little
-butter which is made becomes rancid in a few days, and the cheese
-is good for nothing. In this essential department the Paulistas are
-deplorably deficient; rarely indeed is there to be seen a farm with
-one convenience belonging to it. For want of proper places in which to
-store their produce, they are obliged to lay it in promiscuous heaps;
-and it is not uncommon to see coffee, cotton, maize, and beans, thrown
-into the corners of a damp shed, and covered with a green hide. One
-half is invariably spoiled by mould and putridity, and the remainder is
-much deteriorated, through this idle and stupid negligence.
-
-They feed their pigs on Indian corn in a crude state; the time for
-confining them to fatten is at eight or ten months old; and the
-quantity consumed for the purpose is eight or ten Winchester bushels
-each. When killed, the lean is cut off the sides as clean as possible,
-the fat is cured with very little salt, and in a few days is ready
-for market. The ribs, chine-bone, and lean parts are dried for home
-consumption.
-
-The farm-houses are miserable hovels of one story, the floor neither
-paved nor boarded, and the walls and partitions formed of wicker-work,
-plastered with mud, and never under-drawn. For an idea of the kitchen,
-which ought to be the cleanest and most comfortable part of the
-dwelling, the reader may figure to himself a filthy room, with an
-uneven muddy floor, interspersed with pools of slop-water, and in
-different parts fire-places formed by three round stones to hold the
-earthen pots that are used for boiling meat; as green wood is the chief
-fuel, the place is almost always filled with smoke, which, finding no
-chimney, vents itself through the doors and other apertures, and leaves
-all within as black as soot. I regret to say that the kitchens of many
-opulent people are not in much better condition.
-
-It may well be imagined that, in a country like this, a stranger finds
-the greatest comfort and enjoyment out of doors. The gardens in S.
-Paulo, and its vicinity, are laid out with great taste, and many of
-them with curious elegance. The jasmine is every where a favorite tree,
-and in this fine climate bears flowers perennially, as does the rose.
-Carnations, pinks, passion-flowers, cockscombs, &c. grow in great
-plenty; one of their most estimable shrubs is the Palma Christi, which
-gives fruit the first year, and yields abundance of castor-oil, which
-all families possess in such quantity, that no other sort is burnt.
-
-Bees are by no means uncommon; they are easily domesticated, and, I
-believe, are perfectly harmless. Their honey is pleasant; the wax,
-particularly that generally sold, which is taken from their nests in
-old forest-trees, is very foul, but might be purified by a very simple
-process. The woods contain a great variety of animals of the monkey
-kind, and also beasts of prey, some of which have tolerably good fur.
-Among the latter may be classed a peculiar species of the otter.
-Insects are numerous, but the musquitos are not so offensively so as in
-the Rio de la Plata. The animalculum, called the niagua or jigger, is
-troublesome; it beds itself under the nails of the toes, and sometimes
-of the fingers, but it may easily be banished by extracting it and
-its bag of eggs with a needle, and filling the cavity with calomel or
-snuff, for fear any should have remained. Reptiles, I was told, were
-very numerous, but I saw few, except toads, which, in the evenings,
-crawl upon the foot-paths, and even infest the streets of the city. The
-_sorocucu_ or _jararaca_ (serpents) are said to be very dangerous.
-
-The woods produce large and durable timber, well calculated for
-building. Of their trees, all of which retain their Indian names, some
-yield very fine gums. The _jacarandá_, called in England rose-wood,
-is here very common. Many of their shrubs bear beautiful flowers,
-and are very aromatic. Among the innumerable creeping plants which
-clothe the soil of their uncleared lands, there are some distinguished
-as infallible antidotes to the bite of venomous reptiles; one in
-particular, called the _coração de Jesus_[20], is universally esteemed.
-
-Beyond the plain which nearly encircles S. Paulo, the country is
-hilly, or rather mountainous. Had the period of my stay been longer, I
-should have devoted some time to a geological tour in that district;
-but having urgent reasons to hasten my departure for Rio de Janeiro,
-I had leisure to make only one excursion of this kind. The governor
-invited me to visit the old gold-mines of Jaraguá, the first discovered
-in Brazil, which were now his property, together with a farm in their
-vicinity, distant about twenty-four miles from the city. We travelled
-along a tolerable, and in some places, fine road, in a southerly
-direction, for twelve miles, and crossed the Tieti. This river is here
-considerably larger and deeper than in the neighbourhood of S. Paulo;
-it has an excellent wooden bridge, free from toll. On its banks there
-are some situations truly enviable; fine rich virgin lands covered with
-timber, and capable of producing, not only the necessaries, but the
-luxuries of life, in a hundred-fold degree, if properly cultivated.
-It was melancholy to behold a territory, which, for its teeming soil
-and genial climate, deserves to be called a paradise, neglected and
-solitary, like that of Eden after the fall; while its infatuated
-possessors, like the offspring of Cain, hungering for gold, kept aloof
-from the rich feast which nature here spread before them.
-
-After travelling onward four leagues, we arrived at the ancient mines
-of Jaraguá, famed for the immense treasures they produced nearly two
-centuries ago, when at the ports of Santos and S, Vicente, whence the
-gold was shipped for Europe, this district was regarded as the Peru of
-Brazil. The face of the country is uneven and rather mountainous. The
-rock, where it appeared exposed, I found to be granite, and sometimes
-gneiss, containing a portion of hornblende, with mica. The soil is red,
-and remarkably ferruginous, in many places apparently of great depth.
-The gold lies, for the most part, in a stratum of rounded pebbles and
-gravel, called _cascalho_, immediately incumbent on the solid rock. In
-the valleys, where there is water, occur frequent excavations, made
-by the gold-washers, to a considerable extent, some of them fifty or a
-hundred feet wide, and eighteen or twenty deep. On many of the hills,
-where water can be collected for washing, particles of gold are found
-in the soil, scarcely deeper than the roots of the grass.
-
-The mode of working these mines, more fitly to be denominated washings,
-is simple, and may be easily explained:
-
-Suppose a loose gravel-like stratum of rounded quartzose pebbles and
-adventitious matter, incumbent on granite, and covered by earthy matter
-of variable thickness. Where water of sufficiently high level can be
-commanded, the ground is cut in steps, each twenty or thirty feet
-wide, two or three broad, and about one deep. Near the bottom a trench
-is cut to the depth of two or three feet. On each step stand six or
-eight negroes, who, as the water flows gently from above, keep the
-earth continually in motion with shovels, until the whole is reduced
-to liquid mud and washed below. The particles of gold contained in
-this earth descend to the trench, where, by reason of their specific
-gravity, they quickly precipitate. Workmen are continually employed
-at the trench to remove the stones, and clear away the surface, which
-operation is much assisted by the current of water which falls into it.
-After five days’ washing, the precipitation in the trench is carried
-to some convenient stream, to undergo a second clearance. For this
-purpose wooden bowls are provided, of a funnel shape, about two feet
-wide at the mouth, and five or six inches deep, called _gamellas_. Each
-workman standing in the stream, takes into his bowl five or six pounds
-weight of the sediment, which generally consists of heavy matter,
-such as granular oxide of iron, pyrites, ferruginous quartz, &c. and
-often precious stones. They admit certain quantities of water into the
-bowls, which they move about so dexterously, that the precious metal,
-separating from the inferior and lighter substances, settles to the
-bottom and sides of the vessel. They then rinse their bowls in a larger
-vessel of clean water, leaving the gold in it, and begin again. The
-washing of each bowlful occupies from five to eight or nine minutes;
-the gold produced is extremely variable in quantity, and in the size
-of its particles, some of which are so minute, that they float, while
-others are found as large as peas, and not unfrequently much larger.
-This operation is superintended by overseers, as the result is of
-considerable importance. When the whole is finished, the gold is placed
-upon a brass pan, over a slow fire, to be dried, and at a convenient
-time is taken to the permutation office, where it is weighed, and a
-fifth is reserved for the Prince. The remainder is smelted with muriate
-of mercury, then cast into ingots, assayed, and stamped according to
-its intrinsic value, a certificate of which is given with it; after a
-copy of that instrument has been duly entered at the mint-office, the
-ingots circulate as specie.
-
-My attention was strongly engaged by the immense debris or refuse of
-old washings, which lay in numberless heaps, and contained various
-substances that gave me strong hope of finding some interesting and
-valuable specimens of tourmalines, topazes, and other crystallizations,
-and also a rich series of rocks, which form the geognostics of the
-country. So strongly was I prepossessed with this hope, that I really
-fancied I had within my reach some of the finest mineral products of
-Brazil. Early one morning, before the sun became too hot for work, I
-set out accompanied by two or three men, with iron crows and hammers,
-whom I had engaged to assist me. We broke up immense quantities of
-quartzose and granite-like matter in various stages of decomposition,
-and others of a ferruginous kind, but after pursuing the operation for
-three whole days, until my hands could no longer wield the hammer, I
-was obliged to give up the search as fruitless; not a grain of gold
-did I find, nor anything of the nature of crystallization, except some
-miserable quartz, a little cubic and octahedral pyrites, and some very
-poor maganese! In short the substances presented so little novelty, and
-were in themselves so ordinary, that I hesitated whether I should carry
-them with me to S. Paulo. This disappointment at the first gold mines I
-had seen, not a little dejected me.
-
-In company with the Governor and his lady, I now took a survey of the
-farm; we walked and rode through extensive plantations, the productions
-of which, as well as the mode of culture pursued, were similar to
-those I have already described. Our next recreation was hunting the
-deer. Let not the reader imagine that I am going to lead him a chase
-through miles of country with a pack of hounds and a joyous company
-of horsemen; the mode of hunting in Brazil affords no such diversion.
-Three or four men go out armed with guns and attended by two or three
-dogs; the men separate and wait in some open place; meanwhile the dogs
-quest among the plantations and thickets; if they find, they drive the
-game out, which the hunters immediately shoot. The deer are small, and
-of the fallow kind; but their flesh is not esteemed.
-
-The wild animals of this district are chiefly monkeys, sloths, a
-variety of the porcupine, and opossums. These, and other predatory
-beasts, make great havoc among the poultry. Of the feathered tribe
-there are not many varieties; I shot several snipes and beautiful
-lapwings[21] with red horns on each pinion, about half an inch in
-length. Here are great numbers of parrots and parroquets.
-
-The vampire-bat, so often described by travellers, is a most formidable
-foe to the horses and mules. If he gets access to them in the night,
-he fixes on the neck-vein, above the shoulder, and sucks it to such a
-degree as to leave the animal almost covered with blood, fanning with
-his wings all the while he retains his hold, in order (as it should
-seem) to lull the pain caused by his bite.
-
-The garden has a bed of fine potatoes, which were planted three or four
-years ago by Mr. Quarten, from Gibraltar. They are suffered to grow and
-reproduce themselves from season to season, none being taken up unless
-when wanted for food. Cabbages and other vegetables for the table grow
-in abundance.
-
-This farm has the advantage of very fine timber in its neighbourhood,
-and when the improvements, begun by the governor, are completed, it
-will be well provided with water, brought from a distance of six miles,
-in sufficient quantities to wash the hills, and to work the machinery
-of a sugar-mill. On the estate were employed about fifty negroes, and
-half that number of free Indians; the latter ate at their master’s
-expense, and earned about sixpence a day; but they appeared far less
-laborious and handy than the negroes. They were clearing grounds and
-making walks in a wood, which when finished will render the place a
-most agreeable summer retreat.
-
-Among the many marks of kindness with which the governor honored me,
-I must not omit his repeated assurances, that in the event of war
-between our respective countries, which was then talked of, he would
-not detain me. After remaining here five days, which were rendered
-as agreeable as possible by the polite civilities of my host, we set
-out on our return in the order in which we came: the governor and his
-lady in a carriage drawn by four mules, his aide-de-camp and myself on
-horseback, and six dragoons in front, the guard usually attendant on
-an officer of his rank. We arrived at S. Paulo without any material
-occurrence.
-
-This city is seldom visited by foreigners. The passes to it from the
-coast are so singularly situated, that it is almost impossible to avoid
-the guards who are stationed in them, to inspect all travellers and
-merchandize passing into the interior. Soldiers of the lowest rank
-on these stations have a right to examine all strangers who present
-themselves, and to detain them and their property, unless they can
-produce passports. I and my friends in our way hither were thrice
-obliged to exhibit our licence from the governor of Santos, which was
-attested. Our appearance at S. Paulo excited considerable curiosity
-among all descriptions of people, who seemed by their manner never
-to have seen Englishmen before; the very children testified their
-astonishment, some by running away, others by counting our fingers,
-and exclaiming, that we had the same number as they. Many of the good
-citizens invited us to their houses, and sent for their friends to
-come and look at us. As the dwelling we occupied was very large, we
-were frequently entertained by crowds of young persons of both sexes,
-who came to the door to see how we ate and drank. It was gratifying to
-us to perceive that this general wonder subsided into a more social
-feeling; we met with civil treatment every where, and were frequently
-invited to dine with the inhabitants. At the public parties and balls
-of the governor we found both novelty and pleasure; novelty at being
-much more liberally received than we were in the Spanish settlements,
-and pleasure at being in much more refined and polished company.
-
-The dress of the ladies abroad, and especially at church, consists
-of a garment of black silk, with a long veil of the same material,
-trimmed with broad lace; in the cooler season black cassimere or baize.
-In the same veil they almost always appear in the streets, though it
-has been partially superseded by a long coat of coarse woollen, edged
-with velvet, gold lace, fustian, or plush, according to the rank of
-the wearer. This coat is used as a general sort of undress, at home,
-in their evening walks, and on a journey, and the ladies, whenever
-they wear it, appear in round hats. The appellation of Paulista is
-considered by all the females here as a great honor; the Paulistas
-being celebrated throughout all Brazil for their attractions, and their
-dignity of character. At table they are extremely abstemious; their
-favorite amusement is dancing, in which they display much vivacity
-and grace. At halls and other public festivals they generally appear
-in elegant white dresses, with a profusion of gold chains about their
-necks, their hair tastefully disposed and fastened with combs. Their
-conversation, at all times sprightly, seems to derive additional life
-from music. Indeed the whole range of their education appears to be
-confined to superficial accomplishments; they trouble themselves very
-little with domestic concerns, confiding whatever relates to the
-inferior departments of the household to the negro or negress cook,
-and leaving all other matters to the management of servants. Owing to
-this indifference, they are total strangers to the advantages of that
-order, neatness, and propriety, which reign in an English family; their
-time at home is mostly occupied in sewing, embroidery, and lace-making.
-Another circumstance repugnant to delicacy is, that they have no
-mantua-makers of their own sex; all articles of female dress here are
-made by tailors. An almost universal debility prevails among them,
-which is partly attributable to their abstemious living, but chiefly
-to want of exercise, and to the frequent warm-bathings in which they
-indulge. They are extremely attentive to every means of improving the
-delicacy of their persons, perhaps to the injury of their health.
-
-The men in general, especially those of the higher rank, officers, and
-others, dress superbly; in company they are very polite and attentive,
-and shew every disposition to oblige; they are great talkers and prone
-to conviviality. The lower ranks, compared with those of other colonial
-towns, are in a very advanced state of civilization. It were to be
-wished that some reform were instituted in their system of education;
-the children of slaves are brought up during their early days with
-those of their masters; they are playmates and companions, and thus a
-familiar equality is established between them, which has to be forcibly
-abolished when they arrive at that age, at which one must command and
-live at his ease, while the other must labor and obey. It has been
-said, that by thus attaching the slave to his master, in early youth,
-they ensure his future fidelity, but the custom seems fraught with many
-disadvantages, and ought at least to be so modified as to render the
-yoke of bondage less galling by the recollection of former liberty.
-
-The religious processions here are very splendid, grand, and solemn;
-they have a striking effect, by reason of the profound veneration and
-enthusiastic zeal manifested by the populace. On particular occasions
-of this kind, all the inhabitants of the city attend, and the throng
-is frequently increased by numbers of the neighbouring peasantry for
-several leagues round. The balconies of those houses, which command the
-best views of the spectacle, are crowded with ladies in their gala
-dresses, who consider the day as a kind of festival; the evening is
-generally concluded by tea and card-parties or dances.
-
-We found very little difficulty in accommodating ourselves to the
-general mode of living at S. Paulo. The bread is pretty good, and the
-butter tolerable, but rarely used except with coffee for breakfast, or
-tea in the evening. A more common breakfast is a very pleasant sort
-of beans, called _feijoens_, boiled or mixed with mandioca. Dinner,
-which is usually served up at noon or before, commonly consists of a
-quantity of greens boiled with a little fat pork or beef, a root of
-the potatoe kind, and a stewed fowl, with excellent sallad, to which
-succeeds a great variety of delicious conserves and sweetmeats. Very
-little wine is taken at meals; the usual beverage is water. On public
-occasions, or when a feast is given to a large party, the table is
-most sumptuously spread; from thirty to fifty dishes are served up at
-once, by which arrangement a succession of courses is obviated. Wine
-circulates copiously, and toasts are given during the repast, which
-usually occupies two or three hours, and is succeeded by sweetmeats,
-the pride of their tables; after coffee the company pass the evening in
-dancing, music, or cards.
-
-I may here observe, that neither in S. Paulo, nor in any other place
-which I visited, did I witness any instance of that levity in the
-females of Brazil, which some writers allege to be the leading trait
-in their character. I allude to the custom which has been said to
-prevail among them, of throwing flowers from the balconies on such of
-the passers-by, as they take a fancy to, or of presenting a flower or a
-nosegay to their favorites, as a mark of partiality. The circumstance
-which seems to have given rise to such an ill-founded conjecture is
-this: flowers are here considered an indispensable part of the female
-head-dress, and when a stranger is introduced to a lady, it is nothing
-more than an act of common courtesy for her to take one from her hair
-to present to him. This elegant compliment he is expected to return in
-the course of the visit, by selecting a flower from the profuse variety
-which adorn the garden, or the balcony, and presenting it to her.
-
-One singular custom I must not omit to notice, that of throwing
-artificial fruit, such as lemons or oranges, made very delicately of
-wax and filled with perfumed water. On the two first days of Lent,
-which are here celebrated with great festivity, persons of both sexes
-amuse themselves by throwing these balls at each other; the lady
-generally begins the game, the gentleman returns it with such spirit
-that it seldom ceases until several dozens are thrown, and both parties
-are as wet as if they had been drawn through a river. Sometimes a lady
-will dexterously drop one into the bosom of a gentleman, which will
-infallibly oblige him to change his linen, as it usually contains
-three or four ounces of cold water. On these days of carnival the
-inhabitants parade the streets in masks, and the diversion of throwing
-fruit is practised by persons of all ages. It is reckoned improper for
-men to throw at each other. The manufacture of these missiles, at such
-periods, affords no inconsiderable occupation to certain classes of
-the inhabitants; I have been informed, that in the capital of Brazil,
-many hundreds of people derive a temporary subsistence from the sale of
-them. The practice (as I can testify) is very annoying to strangers,
-and not unfrequently engenders quarrels which terminate seriously.
-
-During our stay here an unpleasant report was circulated, that the
-port of Lisbon was shut against the English, and that war was daily
-expected to be declared between the two powers. Had it not been for the
-kindness of the governor in offering to permit our departure before he
-should receive orders to the contrary, we should have felt ourselves in
-a very disagreeable predicament. But news soon arrived that his Royal
-Highness the Prince Regent had left Portugal with all the court, and
-that they were embarked for the Brazils, under the escort of a British
-squadron, dispatched by Sir Sidney Smith. This intelligence was most
-joyfully received by the Brazilians; they considered, indeed, that
-the occupation of Portugal by the French, was a disaster very likely
-to ensue, but they consoled themselves with the hope of receiving
-a Prince, in whose praise every tongue was eloquent, and to whose
-cause every heart was loyal. The Brazilian empire was considered as
-established; and the worthy bishop consecrated the auspicious era
-by ordaining daily prayers in the cathedral, to invoke, from Divine
-Providence, the safe arrival of the Royal Family. News of their having
-touched at Bahia arrived in about ten days, and was welcomed by every
-demonstration of public joy, processions, fire-works, &c. Hoping, every
-day, to hear of their arrival at Rio de Janeiro, I made all ready for
-my departure, and devoted the few remaining days to a second excursion
-to the gold-mines, and to some farewell visits among my friends in
-the vicinity of S. Paulo. The governor and many of the principal
-inhabitants gave us parting invitations, and by their urbanity rendered
-the last hours we passed with them at once delightful and melancholy.
-Some of the latter accompanied us two leagues on our way, and on
-separating testified the warmest wishes for our welfare.
-
-I never recal to mind the civilities I received at this city without
-the most grateful emotions, in which those will best sympathize who
-have known what it is to visit a remote city in a strange country,
-where, according to the narratives of preceding travellers, nothing
-prevailed but barbarism and inhospitality, and where they have been
-agreeably undeceived. It may easily be supposed that I found it
-difficult to reconcile the character of the Paulistas, such as I
-beheld it, with the strange accounts of their spurious origin, quoted
-by modern geographers. These accounts, founded on the suspicious
-testimony of the Jesuits of Paraguay, and at variance with the best
-Portuguese historians, have been of late most ably confuted by an
-enlightened member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Lisbon[22].
-He fully exposes the inconsistencies of Vaissette and Charlevoix, in
-ascribing the origin of S. Paulo to a band of refugees, composed of
-Spaniards, Portuguese, Mestiços, Mulattos, and others, who fled hither
-from various parts of Brazil, and established a free-booting republic;
-and he satisfactorily shews that the first settlers were Indians of
-Piratininga and Jesuits, and that the city, from its first foundation,
-never acknowledged any other sovereignty than that of Portugal. The
-veracity of this account is further supported by the predominant
-character of the Paulistas, who, far from inheriting the obloquy, which
-an ancestry of rogues and vagabonds would have entailed upon them,
-have long been famed throughout all Brazil for their probity, their
-industry, and the mildness of their manners[23].
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VI.
-
- _Coasting Voyage from Santos to Sapitiva, and Journey thence to Rio de
- Janeiro._
-
-
-WE left S. Paulo at ten in the morning, and took the same road to
-Santos by which we had come, there being no other, fit to travel. On
-the following day, before noon, we arrived at Cubatão, where we were
-detained by rain, until four in the afternoon. About seven we arrived
-at Santos, and as we were provided with a letter of introduction to a
-judge, and another to a merchant, we relied on a kinder welcome than
-we had met with on our first visit, the more so as we came from S.
-Paulo. We were, however, deceived. The judge received us coldly, and
-when I asked him where the person lived to whom our other letter was
-addressed, he seemed quite rejoiced at the opportunity for shewing us
-out of his house. The merchant was as frigid as the judge, and made
-us a paltry excuse. We then repaired to an apothecary, from whom we
-had experienced some acts of urbanity, and who had attended one of
-our friends, who, having left S. Paulo in a bad state of health, had
-waited here three weeks for a passage to Rio de Janeiro. After telling
-him our situation, and stating that the wet weather prevented us from
-passing the night in our canoe, he kindly offered us his shop-floor
-for a lodging, it being the only place under cover he had to spare. We
-commissioned him to offer four dollars to any of his neighbours who
-would admit us for the night, but he said it would be of no avail, as
-the people of Santos were proverbially notorious for their want of
-hospitality. The great influx of strangers and renegadoes from all
-nations into this and other towns on the coast, had completely steeled
-the hearts of the people against those claims on their good-will, which
-the inhabitants of the interior, less frequently imposed upon, are ever
-ready to acknowledge and to satisfy.
-
-Thus disappointed, we resolved not to wait at Santos for a ship, but to
-proceed to Rio de Janeiro, along the coast, in a canoe. Having hired
-one we embarked, and after rowing all night in a strait between the
-continent and the island of S. Thomas, which forms one of the passages
-to Santos from sea, we arrived by sun-rise at Bertioga, situated at the
-north end of that island. It is a village, consisting of some tolerably
-good buildings, erected for the convenience of the _Capitão Mor_ and
-his attendants, who superintend a fishing establishment here, similar
-to that near St. Catherine’s, and belonging to the same company, but
-very much inferior in extent and capacity. At both places the most
-expert of the negroes are employed in dressing whalebone, which is a
-considerable article of commerce, though smaller and less valuable
-than that of the Greenland whale. Along the coast which we passed,
-are several fine bays, where, in the best times of the fishery, large
-quantities of whales were annually caught. The buildings for boiling
-the blubber and storing the oil were conveniently situated.
-
-The fine harbour of Bertioga is well sheltered from all winds, and the
-town itself, being situated at the foot of a hill, is protected from
-the inclemencies of the weather, and is at times inconveniently warm.
-The basis of the hill is primitive granite, composed of hornblende,
-feldspar, quartz, and mica. Fine springs of water, bursting from
-various parts, give variety to the scenery, and an agreeable freshness
-to the air. Though the place bore the appearance of poverty, we
-observed no signs of want; the sea affords great plenty and variety of
-eatable fish, and the soil produces pulse, of various sorts, and rice,
-quantities of which we saw loading in boats for Santos. The people with
-whom we had to treat used us civilly, and seemed anxious to anticipate
-and to gratify all our requests. As the _Capitão Mor_ was ill, he could
-not render us any assistance in procuring a passage for St. Sebastian;
-we were therefore obliged to hire the canoe to go forward.
-
-A strong current setting in-shore detained us until midnight; we then
-took advantage of a calm which succeeded, and rowed away for a headland
-to the eastward, near which we arrived about sunrise, after a most
-laborious passage. The shore was quite solitary, with the exception
-of two very miserable huts, at which we could procure no better a
-breakfast than muscles. The face of the country is low and sandy,
-covered with underwood and groups of trees, and watered by rivulets
-from a range of mountains apparently about two leagues distant.
-
-A breeze springing up about mid-day, we again embarked, but after
-contending with both elements for four hours, we were obliged again to
-take to our oars, in order to reach Porto d’Una before sun-set, which,
-with considerable exertion, we effected. At this place we observed a
-large plantation, belonging to a religious society at Santos, who hence
-derive a great part of their maintenance. After waiting till two in
-the morning for a change either of wind or current, we got out of port
-and proceeded on our voyage to Rio de Janeiro. We rowed against the
-wind till day-light, and then found ourselves near a bluff headland
-with steep rocks, forming a good harbour for boats, called Toque Toque,
-where we arrived about nine o’clock, having passed several conical
-islands, which are not laid down in any chart that I have hitherto
-seen. Off the point of Toque Toque, extends the fine island of St.
-Sebastian; the strait between it and the main affords an excellent
-passage, and a good harbour for ships of war.
-
-The wind still blowing fresh against us, we rested awhile, and were
-amused by watching some fishermen haul their nets ashore with large
-draughts of _cavallos_ in them. These fish weigh from fifteen to
-twenty pounds each, and are caught in great numbers along this coast.
-
-Passing point Toque Toque at noon, we entered the strait of St.
-Sebastian. Its width is about two leagues; the land on both sides is
-bold and steep, and being well cultivated has a very grand and rich
-appearance. The varied foliage of the trees, and the different shades
-of verdure in the enclosures, combined with the romantic situations of
-the houses dispersed among them, presented a view worthy the ablest
-pencil; we had full leisure to enjoy it, for the wind being still
-adverse, our progress depended on the toil of our wearied boatmen.
-Several vessels, going the contrary way, passed us in full sail,
-the crews of which added to our chagrin by ironically wishing us a
-pleasant voyage. At four in the afternoon we arrived at the town of St.
-Sebastian, situated on a low tract of ground about three hundred yards
-from the beach. The inhabitants, amounting to two or three thousand,
-are an indigent and not very industrious people; they subsist chiefly
-on fish, which was the only food we could procure during the three
-days we staid among them. There are some inconsiderable plantations in
-the neighbourhood, where a little indigo is made, and some tolerably
-good tobacco is grown. This town is noted (and formerly was much more
-so) for its very large canoes scooped out of the solid timber; some of
-them I have seen of almost incredible dimensions. The civil government
-is entrusted to a _Capitão Mor_, whose authority is supported by a
-garrison of ten or fifteen soldiers under the command of an ensign.
-At the house of the latter we took up our abode, while waiting for an
-opportunity to hire a large canoe to carry us to Sapitiva, near Rio
-de Janeiro. The people with whom we had to bargain, used every petty
-means to thwart and impose upon us, and our host shewed no disposition
-to protect us against their chicanery, so that we encountered many
-vexatious delays ere we could accomplish our purpose.
-
-This place is by no means a desirable, or indeed, a tolerable residence
-for a stranger; it is exposed to all the inconveniencies peculiar to
-low and sandy situations; the hot unwholesome weather, seldom refreshed
-by a breeze, tends to multiply the immense swarms of mosquitos, which
-constitute one of the plagues of the torrid zone. The neighbouring
-island, on the contrary, being more elevated, has the advantage of a
-freer air, and is therefore less annoyed by these troublesome insects.
-It has the reputation of producing the best sugar, rum, and pulse, as
-well as the finest cattle in all Brazil, and these advantages, joined
-to its convenient situation, must render a plantation upon it highly
-valuable. In common with the opposite shore, and the rocks observable
-in various parts of the straits, the island appears to be composed of
-the same variety of granite I have before described. Near the town of
-St. Sebastian’s, I found some large pieces of green-stone, which,
-when struck, emitted a very clear sound; fragments of limestone were
-abundant on the beach, but these probably were part of some vessel’s
-ballast, which had been thrown overboard in the bay, and washed ashore.
-
-Having at length hired a canoe, we embarked for a village about five
-miles distant, called Bayro, where we arrived safe, and staid all night
-at the house of a fisherman, who undertook the charge of our navigation
-until we should arrive at Sapitiva. Bayro is a pretty but poor village,
-built near the beach, and is chiefly noted as being the place where
-most of the earthenware, used at Rio de Janeiro, is made. The clay
-appears to be formed by the decomposition of feldspar. Here is a large
-convent, well built, and finely situated, fronting the bay and near the
-sea.
-
-About nine in the morning, we embarked in our canoe, which was forty
-feet long, covered with an awning, and rowed by six men. In the
-afternoon we arrived at Porcos, a fine, bold, conical island, with good
-anchorage, but no port. Its coasts abound with excellent fish. Here
-was stationed a guard of soldiers to prevent contraband trade, and to
-give information respecting it; the officer, an ensign, made us welcome
-to all he had, and treated us with great kindness during our short
-stay. Leaving this place at two in the morning, we rowed through an
-archipelago of islets, and arrived at Porto Negro, within four leagues
-of Ilha Grande, and the morning following reached a bay in that island.
-The land is, in general, very high and irregular; in the interior it
-is well wooded, and contains some excellent iron ore, which is very
-little known. Its coasts are but partially inhabited. The strait, which
-separates it from the main land, is an excellent harbour in all its
-extent, and was the rendezvous of some English privateers during our
-war with Spain. The country, in its vicinity, is well clothed with
-large timber, and appears very fruitful, but is thinly peopled by a
-set of men, whose manners and pursuits denote them to be outcasts
-from society. In the evening we entered a fine bay, and procured some
-refreshment at a house on the beach, where we intended to pass the
-night, but a plan had been laid to rob us, and we were obliged, on
-discovering it, to re-embark before day-break, much rejoiced at having
-narrowly escaped the loss of our property and our lives. Pursuing our
-course among the many islands, with which this part of the coast is
-studded, we passed the beautiful and fertile island of Madeira, and,
-at noon, crossed two wide bays. A favorable breeze now, for the first
-time, sprung up, which lasted until we arrived at Sapitiva, and here
-ended our romantic canoe-voyage.
-
-I would strongly impress on every traveller, pursuing a similar course,
-the expediency of providing himself with a soldier commissioned to
-attend him, and to protect his person and property against the
-evil-minded persons, who prowl about the coast in search of plunder,
-and greedily seek every opportunity of securing, by fraud or force, the
-property of defenceless passengers. We had more than once occasion to
-rue the neglect of this precaution.
-
-At Sapitiva, we met with excellent accommodations. The owner of the
-house at which we put up, furnished us with a plentiful supper of
-fish, fowls, coffee, and excellent sweetmeats, which we relished
-the more from having, for eight days, subsisted wholly on fish. Our
-lodgings were tolerably comfortable, and were rendered more so by the
-earnestness with which every one in the family strove to please us.
-At sun-rise next morning, after diverting myself with shooting a few
-horned plovers on the beach, I took a survey of the romantic scenery
-around. Here are a few poor houses, and some plantations of indigo,
-sugar, and pulse. The beach is lined with fine aloes, and presents
-an interesting view of several islets in front of the bay, the most
-conspicuous of which is Madeira, before-mentioned. In another direction
-is seen that of Ilha Grande. Four leagues distant from Sapitiva is
-Santa Cruz, formerly the property of the Jesuits, and now the royal
-farm of the Prince Regent of Portugal, of which I shall have occasion,
-in the sequel, to speak more at large.
-
-After settling with our host, we hired mules to carry us to Rio de
-Janeiro, distant forty miles. Owing to the weight of our baggage, we
-travelled but slowly: this, however, we did not regret, as the fatigues
-of our coasting-voyage rendered us rather averse to violent exertion.
-Proceeding through a low sandy country, covered with wood, for about
-three leagues, we skirted the boundary of the Prince’s farm, which
-encloses some of the finest and most fertile plains in South America,
-and gives employment to upward of fifteen hundred negroes. We soon
-afterwards reached the main road, which in general is very good, but
-the lands about it are little cleared, and seem almost destitute of
-cultivators. In the course of twenty miles, we saw only one house that
-deserved the name of a plantation; the only dwellings by the way-side
-were miserable huts and dram-shops, exhibiting deplorable symptoms of
-sloth and poverty. Before sun-set we halted at a kind of inn, where our
-mules were turned out to grass, and a supper was provided for us of
-fowls, milk, and coffee. The house, though pleasantly situated on an
-eminence among orange-groves and coffee-trees, was miserably deficient
-in those conveniences which its exterior had announced. The room where
-we supped was lighted by a small poor lamp, (here being no candles,)
-and the floor was so uneven, that our table stood on only two of its
-four legs. Tired with this cheerless gloom, we ordered our beds to be
-unpacked, and retired to rest. The want of candle-light is a serious
-inconvenience to travellers in all parts of Brazil, and no one ought
-to undertake a journey without an ample provision of candles, with the
-necessary implements for using them. Snuffers are articles of luxury,
-very rarely to be met with, except as curiosities. I need not add that
-beds are an equally indispensable part of a traveller’s equipage.
-
-We resumed our journey at an early hour next day, along an excellent
-road in the middle of a valley, formed by lofty mountains. After
-travelling about three miles, we came to a house, called the _Padeira_
-(bake-house), which is reckoned half way between Sapitiva and the
-capital. From this place the road gradually becomes more enlivened by
-dwellings and plantations, (but many of the former, are wretched hovels
-erected for the sale of bacon, corn, liquors, &c.) and by numbers of
-countrymen bringing produce from every part of the south-west, even
-from the far districts of Goyazes, Coritiva, Cuyaba, S. Paulo, and
-Mato Grosso. It is not uncommon to see eight hundred or a thousand
-mules passing and repassing in the course of a day, besides numerous
-droves of fine cattle for the use of the city. Our heavy-laden and
-weary mules travelled so slowly, that we did not come within sight of
-Rio de Janeiro, until about three in the afternoon. On reaching the
-eminence, which commanded the first prospect of this fine city, our
-joyful sensations banished every feeling of fatigue. One of the party,
-who had advanced a few paces, rode back as fast as his mule could go,
-exclaiming, “the English flag.” We hastened onward, and beheld one
-of the most welcome sights that ever greeted the eyes of a traveller,
-with a remembrance of his native country—a squadron of our men of
-war at anchor in the bay, which had recently escorted the court of
-Portugal to an asylum in their own dominions, beyond the reach of their
-foes. We no longer felt uneasy at the thought of entering a large city
-inhabited by strangers; we knew that the name of Englishman would be a
-passport among them, and we anticipated something of that delight which
-is connected with the near prospect of home. I, who had for eighteen
-months lingered in exile, and beheld each setting sun close another
-day of almost hopeless captivity, enjoyed this evening-scene with
-indescribable emotion; it was here, that, for the first time since my
-landing in South America, I had just reason to promise myself a night’s
-repose in freedom, safety, and peace.
-
-We soon reached the suburbs, which are very large and pleasant, being
-agreeably interspersed with gardens and pleasure-grounds. About five
-o’clock we halted in the vicinity of Campo de Santa Anna, at an inn,
-or rather hostelry for cattle, whence, having secured our baggage in
-the miserable stall allotted to us, we sallied forth in search of the
-friends who left us at St. Catherine’s. Accustomed, as we long had
-been, to rude and solitary scenes, we were forcibly struck with the
-opulence of this city, displayed in its magnificent buildings and
-regular streets. While engaged in anxious enquiries after our friends,
-we accidentally met one of them, who, with unspeakable joy, conducted
-us to the rest; and the evening was passed most agreeably in relating
-our several encounters, and in asking and answering innumerable
-questions. Returning to our inn at midnight, we remained with our
-luggage until morning, when we carted it up to the house of our friends
-in Rua dos Pescadores.
-
-During our journey from Sapitiva to Rio de Janeiro, we had not much
-leisure for geological observation. The stratum, in the course of the
-route, appeared to be generally granite, like that before described.
-In some parts we observed large stones, approximating to green-stone,
-and in other parts we found fine clay. Nearer to the capital,
-and particularly in the environs of St. Cristovão, the Prince’s
-country-palace, the stratum has a gneiss-like appearance, and produces
-some fine specimens of feldspar. In the precincts of the city, there is
-an extensive flat, covered with mangroves, and overflowed by the tide.
-At the foot of the mountains which bound it, are quarries of granite,
-large blocks of which are raised for building purposes, as well as for
-paving the streets of the city.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VII.
-
- _Description of Rio de Janeiro.—Trade.—State of Society.—Visit to
- the Prince Regent’s Farm at Santa Cruz._
-
-
-RIO DE JANEIRO has been so often described by former travellers, that,
-were I to confine myself to the supply of what they have omitted, or
-to the correction of their mis-statements, my task would be speedily
-performed, but, as I have uniformly chosen to write freely from my own
-observation rather than follow the track of others, I shall trespass
-on the reader with a more detailed account than he might perhaps
-require. It will, however, be recollected that the period at which I
-visited this capital, being a political æra in the annals of Brazil, is
-sufficiently interesting to excuse, if not to justify me in the attempt
-to improve upon descriptions of an earlier date, though at the risk of
-a little repetition.
-
-The finest view of the city is from the harbour[24], whence its
-lofty eminence crowned with convents, and the hills in its environs,
-interspersed with villas and gardens, have a rich and magnificent
-appearance. The royal palace skirts the beach, and is seen to great
-advantage from the principal landing-place, which is within sixty
-yards of its doors. This palace, though small, is the residence of the
-Prince Regent and the royal family: the mint and the royal chapel form
-parts of the structure. Parallel with the beach runs the main street,
-consisting of noble buildings, called Rua Dereita, from which the minor
-streets branch off at right angles, and are intersected by others at
-regular distances.
-
-Some idea of the extent of the city may be formed from the population,
-which, including the negroes, (its most numerous portion,) is estimated
-at a hundred thousand souls: the dwellings, at the out-skirts, are
-generally of one story only.
-
-The numerous convents and churches are well built, and rather
-handsome; the church of Candelaria, now finished, is in a superior
-style of architecture. The streets were formerly incommoded by
-latticed balconies, which had a very heavy appearance and obstructed
-the circulation of the air, but they have been taken away by order
-of Government. The greatest nuisances now remaining are those which
-arise from the custom of persons of all ranks on horseback to ride
-on the foot-paths, and from the preposterous hanging of shop and
-house-doors, which all open outward into the street, to the great
-annoyance of foot-passengers: I may also add the frequent pools of
-stagnant water, which, from the lowness of the site, cannot without
-much labor be drained away, and which, through the heat of the weather,
-often emit the most putrid exhalations. Water for the use of the city
-flows from the hills through aqueducts, and is distributed to several
-fountains in various public places. It is to be regretted that there
-are not more of these for the supply of the inhabitants[25], numbers of
-whom live a mile distant from any of them, and are obliged to employ
-persons continually in carrying water: many of the poorer classes earn
-a living by selling it. The fountains in dry weather are frequently
-so crowded, that the carriers have to wait for hours before they can
-be supplied. The water is good, and, when kept in large jars, drinks
-cool and pleasant. The inns and public houses are almost destitute of
-accommodations, and so very uncomfortable that a stranger will not
-reside in them if he can find a friend to take him in. House-rent,
-after the arrival of the Royal Family, became equally high as in
-London, owing, it should seem, to the dearness of building materials,
-and the high price of masonry. Timber in particular is unaccountably
-scarce, considering the quantity which grows in almost every part of
-Brazil; even firewood is dear. Provisions are in general plentiful, but
-not very choice in quality: the beef is very indifferent, and indeed
-bad; the pork is better, and, if the feeding were properly attended to,
-might be rendered fine; mutton is almost unknown, as the natives will
-not eat it[26]; the poultry of every description is excellent, but it
-is very dear. Pulse and vegetables of all kinds are very abundant, and
-the fish-market is not ill supplied. Turtles are frequently caught, as
-well as a great variety of fish; there are abundance of very fine large
-prawns. The oysters and muscles, though not equal to ours, are very
-tolerable.
-
-Owing to its low situation, and the general filthiness of its streets,
-Rio de Janeiro cannot be called healthful. Improvements are now
-making which will in part remedy these evils; but other causes tend
-to increase the insalubrity of the air, and to spread contagious
-distempers, the principal of which are the large importations of
-negroes from Africa, who commonly land in a sickly state, the
-consequence of close confinement during a hot voyage. It is much to be
-regretted that the city was not originally built on the plan of those
-in the Netherlands, with canals for brigs and small vessels, which
-might then have been unloaded at the doors of the warehouses: such
-an improvement would have also greatly tended to the cleanliness and
-salubrity of the town.
-
-The police is by no means ill regulated; and, from the attention which
-has been paid to it since the arrival of the court, there is every
-hope that it will be placed on a footing equally respectable with that
-of any European capital. The prisons are loathsome, and require the
-benevolent genius of a Howard to reform them altogether. One great
-step in favor of humanity has been gained: the inquisition has been
-abolished, and with it the spirit of persecution, so that no one can
-now be offended for his theological tenets, unless he openly insult the
-established religion.
-
-This city is the chief mart of Brazil, and especially of the provinces
-of Minas Geraes, S. Paulo, Goyazes, Cuyaba, and Coritiva. The mining
-districts, being most populous, require the greatest proportion of
-consumable goods, and in return send the most valuable articles of
-commerce, hence innumerable troops of mules are continually travelling
-to and from those districts; their common burden is about three hundred
-weight each, which they carry to the almost incredible distance of 1500
-or 2000 miles. Their homeward freight consists chiefly of salt for the
-consumption of the cattle, and iron for the working of the mines, and
-goods of all descriptions.
-
-No colonial port in the world is so well situated for general commerce
-as Rio de Janeiro. It enjoys, beyond any other, an equal convenience
-of intercourse with Europe, America, Africa, the East Indies, and the
-South Sea Islands, and seems formed by nature as the grand link to
-connect the trade of those great portions of the globe. Commanding
-also, as the capital of a rich and extensive territory, resources of
-immense amount and value, it seemed to require only the presence of
-an efficient government to give it political importance, and this
-advantage it has now gained by becoming the chosen residence of the
-court of Portugal. The benefits resulting from this great event had
-but just begun to display themselves at the period to which this
-narrative refers; and the commercial relations of Rio de Janeiro,
-though considerably augmented, were still but in their germ. I shall
-proceed to state them according to the best information I was then able
-to procure.
-
-The imports hither from the River Plate, and from Rio Grande de St.
-Pedro, consist in immense quantities of dried beef, tallow, hides, and
-wheat. Those from the United States are chiefly salt provisions, flour,
-household furniture, pitch, and tar. The North Americans generally send
-cargoes of these articles on speculation, and, as the market for them
-is fluctuating and not to be depended on, they frequently take them to
-other ports. Their provisions are commonly sent to the Cape of Good
-Hope. They bring European merchandize, which they exchange for specie
-wherewith to trade to China, and also take in necessaries on their
-voyages to the South Seas.
-
-From the western coast of Africa, Rio de Janeiro imports wax, oil,
-elephant’s teeth, gum, sulphur, and some woods. The negro trade has
-been restricted to the kingdom of Angola by a decree of the Prince
-Regent, who has declared his intention of abolishing it altogether as
-soon as possible.
-
-The trade to Mozambique is trivial; but, since the capture of the Isle
-of France by the British has cleared that coast from French privateers,
-it may be expected to increase. It affords many valuable products, such
-as gold-dust, brought from the interior, ivory, of which the Prince
-monopolizes the largest sort, ebony and other fine woods, drugs, oil,
-excellent columbo-root, and an abundance of various gums, particularly
-of the gum _meni_. The whale fisheries on the coast have proved a
-source of riches to many speculators.
-
-The intercourse of this port with India, in common with Mozambique, has
-been much annoyed by the privateers of the Isle of France, and will
-therefore, in all probability, florish equally by their suppression. A
-voyage thither and back is performed with great expedition: one large
-ship of eight hundred tons sailed, loaded at Surat, and returned within
-the space of seven months. A voyage to China seldom occupies a longer
-period. The trade thither will no doubt be revived, and it is not
-improbable that this port may, at no great distance of time, become an
-entrepôt for India goods destined for Europe.
-
-Rio de Janeiro is conveniently situated for supplying a great variety
-of necessaries to the Cape of Good Hope and to New South Wales; indeed,
-of late years, English manufactures have been sold here so cheap,
-that it has been found more advantageous to ship them hence for those
-colonies than from home. Ships going on the South Sea whale-fishery
-touch here, and lay in large quantities of spirituous liquors, wine,
-sugar, coffee, tobacco, soap, and live stock.
-
-The imports from the mother-country consist chiefly in vinegar,
-hardware, coarse linen, hats, silks, wine, and oil. From Sweden some
-iron, also pitch and tar are occasionally brought: it is preferred to
-English iron, particularly for mules’ shoes, on account of its greater
-ductility.
-
-The exports consist principally of cotton, sugar, rum, coffee, rice,
-ship-timber, various fine cabinet-woods, hides, tallow, indigo, and
-coarse cotton cloths, in immense quantities, for clothing the Peons in
-the provinces of the River Plate. Among the more precious articles of
-export may be enumerated gold, in chains and other ornaments, diamonds,
-topazes of various colors, amethysts, tourmalines, (that are frequently
-sold for emeralds), chrysoberyls, aqua-marinas, and wrought jewelry.
-
-This market has been greatly overstocked with English manufactures,
-in consequence of the sanguine speculations to which our merchants
-were incited by the late emigration. The supply exceeded the demand in
-a tenfold degree, and the excess gave rise to auctions, where goods
-were sold at unprecedentedly reduced prices. In proportion as English
-merchandize lowered, that of Brazil rose in value; and so great was the
-demand for it, owing to the numerous vessels waiting for cargoes, that
-within a year after the arrival of the Prince Regent, the price of
-every article of produce was doubled. Gold quickly disappeared; for the
-monied Portuguese, perceiving the avidity and impolitic eagerness with
-which the English forced their goods upon them, cautiously withheld
-their specie, and, by the alternative of barter, got rid of their own
-produce at a very high price, and obtained our merchandize almost at
-their own valuation. The losing party in this unequal traffic, though
-they had chiefly to blame their own imprudence in engaging in it, were
-loud in their complaints and remonstrances against the Portuguese
-merchants. A treaty of commerce was concluded, by which the duties
-on English merchandize were fixed at fifteen_per cent_. while other
-nations were to pay twenty-four _per cent. ad valorem_. A judge was
-appointed to attend solely to the concerns of the English, and to
-see justice done them: he was entitled the _Juiz Conservador_ of the
-English nation. The person who now fills this important office is one
-of the most enlightened and upright of men; his official conduct, of
-which I have seen much, has secured him the respect of all parties, and
-has done credit to the choice of the Prince Regent, confirmed by the
-approval of his Excellency Lord Strangford. Further to cultivate and
-extend the interests of commerce, his Royal Highness has established a
-Board of Trade, in which are some experienced and intelligent men, to
-whose consideration every particular case, and every new regulation,
-is referred. One of the members of this Board, Dr. José da Silva
-Lisboa, has greatly distinguished himself by his zeal for the English
-nation, displayed in various publications on commerce, particularly
-in one dated May 1810, which contains a fund of solid argument on
-the principles laid down and acknowledged by our most celebrated
-statesmen and political writers. It is to be hoped that the diffusion
-of views so liberal, under the auspices of ministers, will banish that
-narrow-minded jealousy with which certain opulent individuals of the
-Brazilian capital regard the English merchants, whom they stigmatize as
-intruders; and that the general interests of commerce in this thriving
-colony will gain, through fair competition, what they have heretofore
-lost through overstocked markets.
-
-The business of the custom-house, although still shackled with many
-troublesome and tedious regulations, especially with regard to small
-articles, has been considerably simplified; and in all cases, where a
-stranger finds himself at a loss how to proceed, he is sure to have
-every difficulty explained, and every obstacle removed, by appealing
-to the judge who presides over this department. The liberality and
-disinterestedness of this excellent officer are the more generally
-felt and acknowledged, from an apprehension of the inconveniences with
-which his situation might enable him to embarrass the trade, if he were
-inclined to a more rigorous execution of the laws.
-
-In mentioning the advantages which have resulted to the English
-merchants from the liberality of the persons in office, I ought not to
-omit stating that much has been effected through the exertions of the
-British minister, who, while pursuing that conciliatory and moderate
-line of conduct, which gained him the esteem of the Prince Regent, ever
-firmly upheld the interests of his nation; and in all deliberations
-concerning them, reserved to himself the casting vote. With respect
-to individuals, it is true that he declined to be troubled on every
-trivial occasion, and scrupulously discountenanced every covert
-attempt at monopoly or peculation, from whatever quarter it came; but
-in great questions he acted with promptitude and decision; nor was he
-averse to use his influence in favor of a private individual, when
-a candid and manly appeal was made to him. Considering the peculiar
-circumstances attending his embassy, and also the jarring interests he
-had to reconcile, Lord Strangford conducted himself in a way highly
-honorable to his talents and character; and in continuing to merit the
-confidence of his own court, secured that of the Prince Regent and all
-his ministers. The treaty of commerce is a proof of the harmony which
-subsists between them, and may be regarded on our part as the most
-advantageous that, in the existing posture of affairs, could have been
-procured.
-
-The harbour is easy of entrance and egress, generally speaking, at all
-times, as there is a daily alternation of land and sea breeze, the
-former blowing until about noon, and the latter from that hour until
-sun-set. Ships find here every conveniency for repairing, heaving down,
-&c. but it is to be hoped that docks will soon be formed, which will
-render the latter troublesome and dangerous operation unnecessary.
-There is an anchorage-duty paid, which forms an item in the bill of
-port charges.
-
-Of the state of society in Rio de Janeiro, what I have to observe
-differs little from the description of the Paulistas given. The same
-habits and manners prevail at both places, allowing for some slight
-variation, caused by the greater influx of strangers to the capital.
-The Portuguese are in general rather punctilious and reserved in
-admitting a foreigner to their family parties; but having once received
-him, they are open and hospitable. The ladies are affable and courteous
-to strangers, extremely fond of dress, but less proud than those of
-other nations. In their mixed assemblies the utmost gaiety prevails,
-and is seasoned by that finished politeness for which the Portuguese
-are generally distinguished. The conversation of the best bred men,
-however, is more lively than instructive; for education is here at
-a low ebb, and comprehends a very limited course of literature and
-science. It is proper to add that, since the arrival of the court,
-measures have been adopted for effecting a thorough reform in the
-seminaries, and other institutions for public instruction; and that
-the Prince Regent, in his solicitude for the good of his subjects, has
-zealously patronized every attempt to diffuse among them a taste for
-useful knowledge. Under his auspices, the college of S. Joaquim has
-undergone considerable improvement: a lectureship on chemistry has been
-instituted, to which our countryman, Dr. Gardner, has been nominated by
-his Royal Highness; and it is to be hoped that from this appointment
-may be dated the introduction of experimental philosophy in that
-establishment.
-
-Resuming my narrative, I am bound in gratitude to state that the
-reception I met with here exceeded my most sanguine hopes, and far more
-so any individual pretensions on which I could ground them. I must
-attribute it to the letter of introduction to the Viceroy, with which
-the Portuguese minister in London honored me on my departure thence,
-and which I presented to his noble relative, the Conde de Linhares,
-minister for foreign affairs. This distinguished statesman shewed me
-every attention, and granted me every privilege I could ask, so that,
-through his kind condescension, all went well with me. I may state
-this without incurring the imputation of vanity, since it is only one
-among the numerous proofs he has given of his disposition to serve the
-English by every means in his power.
-
-A few weeks after my arrival, I solicited permission of His Excellency
-the Conde de Linhares to work an iron mine at Guaraceaba, representing
-at the same time the immense advantages which might accrue to the state
-from such an experiment, by opening its own resources for the supply of
-that useful metal. He in part assented to the proposal, but expressed
-a wish that I should previously devote a few days to an inspection
-of the Prince’s farm at Santa Cruz; and on my return make a report
-of the state in which I found it. While preparing for my journey, it
-was intimated to me as the Prince’s particular desire, that I should
-endeavour to establish a dairy on the principle of those in England,
-and direct the people in the management of it, to which I readily
-assented. Being provided with horses and a soldier to attend me, I set
-out on the journey accompanied by a gentleman named Paroissien, whose
-amiable disposition and scientific pursuits rendered him a very useful
-companion. After about fifty miles hard riding, we arrived at the farm
-about six in the evening, much fatigued. The accommodations we met
-with, fully explained to me the motive of His Royal Highness’s minister
-in enquiring into the state of his domain. Having presented my official
-letters, I was obliged to wait until ten o’clock before the slightest
-refreshment could be procured; not a dish of coffee was to be had; the
-only fare set before us was some lean beef half-boiled, certainly the
-worst I had ever tasted in Brazil. The mulatto who attended us engaged
-to have breakfast ready by seven next morning; we were in readiness at
-the hour, and though told it was coming immediately, we waited three
-hours, when just as we were ordering out the horses to Rio to avoid
-being famished, the repast was announced, with an excuse that it could
-not come sooner, because no milk could be procured.
-
-I then took a survey of the establishment and rode over the grounds.
-The house, I was informed, was once a convent of Jesuits, who possessed
-also the extensive tract of land attached to it, which they managed
-much better than their successors, if we may judge by the remains of
-their undertakings. The edifice is neither large nor grand: it is built
-in a quadrangular form, with an open court in the centre, and galleries
-inside to the first and second floors. The apartments are thirty-six in
-number, very small, having been adapted to the use of the brotherhood,
-and since their departure only in a slight degree altered and decorated
-for the reception of the Royal Family, as their summer residence. In
-front of the house, to the southward, extends one of the finest plains
-in the world, two leagues square, watered by two rivers navigable for
-small craft, and bounded by fine bold rocky scenery, embellished in
-many parts with noble forest trees. This plain is clothed with the
-richest pasture, and supports from seven to eight thousand head of
-cattle. A considerable part of it lies low, and abounds with bogs,
-which might easily be laid dry and rendered susceptible of cultivation
-by proper drainage. The park occupies in its entire extent upwards of
-one hundred square miles, a territory almost as large as some of the
-principalities of Italy, and capable, by its proximity and connection
-with the capital both by land and water, of being rendered one of
-the most productive and populous in Brazil. Under the present system
-of management it is in a progressive state of deterioration; two
-small corners, the best of the land, one about half a league square,
-and the other more than a league square, have been already, through
-disingenuous artifices, sold off, and the rest may in no long time be
-sacrificed to men whose cupidity stimulates them to depreciate its
-value, unless proper means are used to thwart their nefarious designs.
-
-The negroes on this estate, including all descriptions, amount to about
-fifteen hundred in number. They are in general a very excellent class
-of men, tractable and gentle in their dispositions, and by no means
-deficient in intellect. Great pains have been taken to enlighten them,
-they are regularly instructed in the principles of the Christian faith,
-and have prayers publicly read to them morning and evening, at the
-commencement and close of their day’s labor. Plots of ground, at their
-own choice, are assigned to each, and two days in the week, besides
-the incidental holidays, are allowed them to raise and cultivate
-produce for their own subsistence; the rest of their time and labor
-is devoted to the service of His Highness. The system of management,
-however, is so bad, that they are half-starved, almost destitute of
-clothing, and most miserably lodged; their average earnings do not
-amount to a penny per day each. A reform in the establishment might
-have been easily effected on the arrival of the Prince Regent, but it
-will now be very difficult, as the abuses have been tacitly sanctioned
-by the indifference of those whose duty and interest it was to correct
-them. In this extent of fine ground scarcely an inclosure is made; the
-cultivated lands are full of weeds, and the coffee-plantations are
-little better than a mere coppice-wood, in which the wild shrubs grow
-higher than the coffee-trees. The cattle are most deplorably neglected,
-and there is not upon the whole premises a horse fit for the meanest
-beggar to ride. Such was the state in which I found this rich and
-extensive district, which seems to have been destined by nature for the
-introduction of improvements that might produce, through the influence
-of high example, an entire change in the agricultural system of Brazil.
-
-A short time after I had taken up my residence at Santa Cruz, the
-Prince came down, and on the day succeeding his arrival honored me with
-a visit, after which I frequently rode out with His Royal Highness. He
-one day did me the honor to express a wish that I would undertake to
-govern the farm; this proposal I begged leave to decline, on the ground
-of my inability to render such an employ compatible with my other
-concerns, suggesting at the same time the superior service I could
-render by working the iron mine. Notwithstanding this, the Prince, on
-the day following, gave me a paper, containing an offer of the whole
-direction of the estate, and stating the terms. The repetition of the
-proposal not a little embarrassed me; I was aware that, by refusing,
-I might probably debar myself from the prospect of any future favor,
-yet I anticipated enough of difficulty in the undertaking to make me
-decline it at all events. This dilemma occasioned me much uneasiness,
-and in order to remove it I applied to Sir Sidney Smith, who was then
-on a visit to Santa Cruz, requesting him to explain to His Royal
-Highness the circumstances which rendered it impossible for me to
-settle in Brazil, and to tender him the offer of my services during my
-stay. After some further deliberation, however, I was induced to accept
-the appointment, by way of trial, for a few months, under the express
-stipulation that I should act without control. On entering upon my
-charge I began by making such new arrangements as appeared conducive to
-the end for which I was appointed, but I soon perceived that instead of
-being principal intendant, I had a superior, who held me accountable
-to him for my proceedings, and manifested a fixed determination to
-thwart them, as innovations on the established course of things.
-But this was not the only inconvenience; it was expected that I
-should purchase whatever was wanted on my own credit; but I quickly
-discovered, that instead of being reimbursed, according to agreement,
-I was trifled with and at length in part defrauded. The person here
-alluded to, was one the managers of the Prince’s household; he could
-not bear that a foreigner should interfere in a concern over which
-he claimed authority, and hold a situation where real services might
-induce a comparison unfavorable to those which he contented himself
-with rendering. A detail of the artifices and insults which this man
-employed to disgust me with the situation, when he found I would not
-submit to be his servile drudge, would be tedious; suffice it to say,
-that, perceiving no chance of obtaining that discretionary power, which
-alone could enable me to be essentially useful, I peremptorily refused
-to act any longer. Alarmed at this determination, he at first strove to
-overawe and then conciliate me, but I had seen too much of his conduct
-to be duped by this stratagem, or to suppose that any cordiality could
-in future subsist between us. Imagining himself armed with royal power,
-he attempted to play the tyrant, but the reception he met with quickly
-forced him to resume his natural character. I did not hesitate to send
-in my resignation, and he had the mortification to find that the means
-he had employed to embarrass and enslave me, restored me to liberty.
-
-In the letter which announced my determination to give up the employ, I
-thought proper to omit stating to His Excellency the Conde de Linhares,
-the reasons that led me to this step. Had that nobleman been apprised
-of the disagreeable circumstances in which I was placed, he would, I
-am confident, have done his utmost to remove them.
-
-On my return to Rio de Janeiro, the Prince sent for me, and desired
-me again and again to return to Santa Cruz; I contented myself with
-a simple excuse; for that was not a time, nor was I in a place to
-enter into explanations. It is well known, that a system of intrigue
-prevailed near His Royal Highness’s person, which often tended to
-counteract representations on matters of the greatest importance.
-
-In this place, I shall take leave to introduce some remarks on the
-province of Rio de Janeiro, from the pen of my friend, the Baron Von
-Langsdorff, His communication is dated November 20, 1820.
-
-“The province of Rio de Janeiro, being situated on the confines, and
-without the tropic of Capricorn, is in general, in consequence of
-that situation, less warm than the countries which lie near the line.
-The whole territory extending 90 leagues in length and 35 in breadth
-is mountainous, with the exception of the district of Goytacazes,
-usually called Campos. It is therefore naturally divided into high
-and low lands. In the latter the heat is as great as in the other
-countries between the tropics, and consequently favorable to the
-culture of coffee, sugar, cotton, indigo, cocoa, rice, and other
-colonial productions, as well as to the growth of the most valuable
-trees of India, and of its exquisite fruits and spiceries, many of
-which have been introduced with success. The mango, the tea-plant, the
-bread-fruit tree, from the islands of the Pacific, thrive well here,
-as well as the camphire of Japan, the ginger, the cardamum, and the
-casawarine of New Holland.
-
-“On the mountains, which rise to the height of three thousand English
-feet, which are covered to the summit with impenetrable virgin forests,
-and of which the smiling valleys are watered by limpid streams, the
-temperature is as various as the productions. The forests abound in
-game, and in every kind of wood for ornamental work. In the grounds
-newly cleared, the fruit-trees and plants of Europe, the peach, the
-fig, the vine, the quince, and the strawberry, are cultivated with
-surprising success.
-
-“The fruits of the country are remarkable for their variety as well
-as their abundance. Here are bananas, plantains, guyapas, onenas,
-oranges, citrons, lemons, pomegranates, many delicate species of the
-genus _Eugenia_, as the pitangas, jambas, and cromischamas; besides
-an infinite number of other plants, still in their natural state,
-which require only the industry of man to improve and add them to the
-comforts of civilized life.
-
-“In short, by its situation, its climate, and its products, indigenous
-as well as exotic, this country claims distinction as the most happy
-and naturally independent, on the face of the globe.
-
-“With regard to climate, there is no winter or summer. The heat is
-never excessive, and there is no sensible cold. The whole year appears
-a continual spring. The uninterrupted verdure, the vivid and varied
-color of the flowers which cover the highest trees of the forests,
-and which, appearing to change their form and aspect every month,
-constantly surround us with a new world, and fill the most insensible
-minds with astonishment and admiration.
-
-“Culinary vegetables and roots, as cabbages, radishes, turnips,
-cucumbers, melons, French-beans, potatoes, maize, mandioca, bananas,
-and various other products of the first necessity, may be planted
-and gathered every day of the year in the mountains as well as in
-the plain. As heat and humidity exist here in the most favorable
-proportions, it will be readily concluded that vegetation must be
-extremely rapid. Of this there are extraordinary instances. Father
-Correia, one of the principal farmers of this province, settled at
-Estrella, has sown a measure of rice, and gathered more than 500 in
-return. The writer of these remarks was astonished at seeing rice grown
-on high lands which had not been inundated. It appears to be sufficient
-that the soil be humid, and that the rains do not fail. The common
-return for maize is 120 or 130 for one. The coffee plant is easily
-cultivated, and in favorable soils begins to bear fruit at the end of
-two years and a half. It is not uncommon to find plantations of coffee
-trees, which yield from ten to fifteen pounds of coffee a year. Grafts
-from peaches form, in two years, trees from two to three inches in
-diameter, loaded with fruit. Baron Langsdorff saw orange trees loaded
-with fruit, raised within three years from seed. In the government
-nursery at Lagoa de Tristes, may be seen alleys of _mimosa lebbeck_,
-_black wood_, the seeds of which were brought from the Isle of France.
-Within three years the trees grew to the height of from twenty to
-thirty feet, and in thickness from eight to ten inches in diameter.”
-
-The description extends into a multitude of details; but enough, it is
-presumed, has been given, to afford an idea of the fine climate, the
-fertile soil, and the richly varied products of this province of Brazil.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VIII.
-
- _Journey to Canta Gallo._
-
-
-SOME time after my return from Santa Cruz, a circumstance of a singular
-nature took place, which occasioned me to undertake a journey to a
-district called Canta Gallo, distant about forty leagues from the
-capital, and one of the latest discovered in this part of Brazil. Two
-men reported that they had there found a mine of silver, and brought
-to the mint a quantity of earthy matter reduced to powder, from which
-was smelted a small ingot of that metal. This report being officially
-laid before His Excellency the Conde de Linhares, I was solicited to go
-to Canta Gallo, and investigate the business on the spot, the two men
-being ordered to meet me there. Before I proceed to relate the result
-of my inquiry, I shall briefly describe whatever I observed worthy of
-note in the course of the journey.
-
-Being provided with a passport, and also a sketch of the route, taken
-from a MS. map in the archives, I departed from Rio on the 10th
-of April, 1809, accompanied by Dr. Gardner, the gentleman already
-mentioned as lecturer on chemistry at the college of S. Joaquim. Having
-to pass to the bottom of the harbour, towards the north, we embarked
-in a small vessel, and being favored with a strong sea-breeze, ran
-down to the entrance of the fine river Macacu, which we reached after
-a five hours’ sail. The wind then dying, our boatmen took to their
-oars, and proceeding up the river, we reached a house called Villa
-Nova, where numbers of market-boats for Rio, were waiting for the
-land-wind and the turn of the tide. After taking some refreshment here,
-we rowed onward until the river became so narrow, that the vessel
-frequently touched the bank on each side, and the men were obliged to
-push her along with poles. At day-break we reached Porto das Caixas,
-a place of great resort from the interior, being the station where
-the mules discharge their loads of produce from the many plantations
-in the neighbourhood. The town consists of several poor houses, and
-of stores where goods are deposited for embarkation. The stratum
-hereabouts is primitive granite, covered with fine strong clay.
-Leaving this place, we proceeded for some distance and came to a large
-swamp, which we navigated in a canoe, with very little difficulty, and
-shortly afterwards arrived at the village of Macacu. It stands on a
-small eminence in the midst of a fine plain, watered by a considerable
-stream, over which there are two good bridges. Though almost at the
-base of the chain of the mountains that forms a barrier along the
-coast, the neighbourhood affords some fine situations; the land, in
-general, consists of a strong clay, but appears much worn out. The
-commander, Colonel Jose, to whom I introduced myself, gave me a very
-polite reception, as did also the brethren of the convent, to whom I
-paid a visit. I passed the night at the house of the _Escrivão_, a
-worthy gentleman, whose hospitality I still remember with peculiar
-gratitude, because it seemed to proceed, not from a cold sense of duty,
-but from the impulse of a warm and generous heart.
-
-On the following day, being accommodated by the colonel with a horse
-and guide, I proceeded along the winding banks of the river, which, in
-many places, present most beautiful views. Here was more cultivated
-land than I expected to see; but the sugar-plantations, and, in
-general, the low pasture-grounds, are quite neglected. We passed
-several farms belonging to convents, which, from their apparent
-condition, and the accounts we received, do little more than maintain
-the negroes and incumbents upon them. There was rarely a milch cow to
-be met with: pigs and poultry were equally scarce. The population of
-these fine valleys is deplorably thin and poor; there was a general
-sickliness in the looks of the women and children, which may be imputed
-to their miserable diet and inactive life. I ought to state that the
-manners of the people here are mild and gentle; we were every where
-treated with civility, and all our enquiries were answered with the
-most friendly marks of respect and attention.
-
-The air, as we drew nearer the mountains, was fresh and indeed cold.
-Towards evening we arrived at a farm belonging to a convent of nuns
-in Rio de Janeiro, where we were kindly accommodated for the night.
-This place is most agreeably situated, and might, under skilful and
-industrious management, be rendered a paradise. It has excellent clay,
-fine timber, a good fall of water, which forms a beautiful rivulet,
-and runs into a navigable river within one hundred yards of the house;
-a fine extent of arable land, and a still finer of pasture, which
-peculiarly qualifies it for dairy farming. It is distant only one day’s
-journey from Porto das Caixas, where there is a navigable communication
-with the metropolis. What a scene for an enterprising agriculturist!
-At present all is neglected: the house, the out-buildings, and other
-conveniences, are in a state of decay, and all the people who manage
-the land appear, in common with the animals that feed upon it, to be
-half famished.
-
-The next morning we proceeded eastward, and crossing the stream, which
-was at least sixty yards broad and full three feet deep, rode along the
-farther margin, which is rather more elevated, and presents a view of
-some fine plains, stretching from thence to the base of the mountains.
-Journeying in that direction we reached the fine plantation of Captain
-Ferreira, who received us very politely, and shewed us every attention.
-This place, bounded by the alpine ridge behind it, is the extreme point
-to which the river Macacu is navigable. It is six or seven leagues
-from the village of that name. The estate maintains about one hundred
-negroes, who are chiefly employed in raising sugar, cotton, and coffee;
-but to me the situation appeared much better calculated for growing
-grain and feeding cattle, as the weather is at times cold, the evenings
-are often attended with heavy dews, and owing to the proximity of
-the mountains, there are frequent rains, accompanied by thunder and
-lightning. Numbers of fine springs burst forth from various parts of
-the hills, and form rivulets with falls, which, as here is plenty of
-fine timber, afford every means for working machinery. The owner lives
-in opulence, and is so humane and liberal to his people, that they
-seem to revere him as a father. We were much pleased with the air of
-domestic comfort and contented industry, which we observed among them
-on visiting their dwellings in the evening. Some of the negro-children
-were at play; others of more advanced age were assisting the women to
-pick cotton; and the men were scraping and preparing mandioca. Their
-cheerfulness was not at all interrupted by our approach, nor did they
-betray any uneasy feeling of constraint in the presence of their
-superiors. In lieu of candles, which are seldom to be met with but in
-the capital, they burn oil, extracted from the bean of the palm, or
-from a small species of ground-nut, here called _meni_.
-
-About noon, on the following day, horses being provided, and a soldier
-appointed for our guide, we left the _fazenda_, accompanied by its
-hospitable owner, Captain Ferreira, who conducted us half a league on
-our way. The river, along which we passed in an easterly direction,
-bursts through vast masses of rock with great force, and in some
-parts forms considerable falls. The Captain, ere we parted, led me to
-a water-course, in which were found pieces of granite covered with
-manganese in a botryoidal form. After crossing the river twice, we
-arrived at what is called the first register, or searching-house,
-distant about two miles from the _fazenda_. This station is guarded
-by a corporal and a private soldier, who are charged with the receipt
-of various tolls, and are empowered to search passengers, in order to
-prevent the smuggling of gold-dust. After shewing my passport, I took
-leave of Captain Ferreira, who made me promise to pay him a longer
-visit on my return.
-
-We had been warned of the badness of the roads, and were by no means
-agreeably deceived in them, for we were nearly four hours in going the
-next six miles. At the close of day, after a laborious and dangerous
-passage through abrupt ravines, and along the sides of steep hills, our
-guide announced that we were in sight of the second register, where it
-was proposed that we should pass the night. On arriving we found it
-a most miserable place, inhabited by five or six soldiers under the
-command of a serjeant. This good man gave us a hearty welcome, and
-with the assistance of his comrades, cooked us a supper of fowls, and
-regaled us with whatever else their scanty store afforded. We were not
-without music to our repast, for the house is built on the edge of a
-roaring torrent, which, bursting through a ravine, has washed away
-every thing except some huge masses of rock. A bit of ground, about
-ten yards square, is all the garden these poor people have, and even
-this is much neglected, for the guards here are so often changed, that
-no one thinks of adding to the comforts and conveniences of an abode,
-which others are to enjoy.
-
-At day-break, we found that our mules had strayed into a wood
-adjoining, but as the road was stopped, we were under no apprehension
-of losing them, for the thickets on each side were impervious. This
-occurrence gave me an opportunity of seeing more of these remote
-regions; and certainly the imagination of Salvator Rosa himself never
-pictured so rude a solitude. On one side rose the great barrier of
-mountains, which we had yet to cross, covered to their summits with
-trees and underwood, without the smallest trace of cultivation; on
-the other lay the broken country, between this ridge and the plain,
-presenting the same wild features of sylvan scenery. The miserable
-hut at which we lodged, partook of the savage character of the
-neighbourhood, and seemed formed for the abode of men cut off from all
-intercourse with their fellows. On our return we were provided with a
-breakfast of coffee and eggs; as to milk there was no possibility of
-procuring any; a cow would have been considered here as an incumbrance,
-nor would any one of the six idle soldiers have given himself the
-trouble of milking her though they all had been dying of hunger.
-
-On resuming our journey, we entered on a road still more steep and
-rugged than that which we had passed. We were often obliged to dismount
-and lead our mules up almost perpendicular passes, and along fearful
-declivities. In some places, the thick foliage of the trees, and that
-of the underwood, which grew higher than our heads, sheltered us from
-the sun, and indeed scarcely admitted the light. Not a bird did we see,
-nor the trace of any living thing, except some wild hogs. We passed
-several bare granite rocks of a gneiss-like formation.
-
-In journeying to the next station, we observed nothing worthy of note,
-except a small saw-mill, worked by an overshot wheel, of very clumsy
-construction. The frame, which contains a single saw of very thick
-iron, moves in a perpendicular direction; at every stroke, a boy brings
-the timber up, by pulling a cord attached to a crank that moves the
-cylinder on which it rests. How readily, thought I, would the meanest
-Russian peasant improve this machine!
-
-We proceeded on our way up an ascent so precipitous, that we were
-obliged to walk more than ride; after two hours toiling along the side
-of a granite mountain, in which we observed some beds of fine clay,
-we reached the summit, from whence we saw the bay of Rio de Janeiro,
-the sugar-loaf mountain, and the city itself, to all appearance,
-not more than four or five leagues distant from us, though, in
-reality, more than twenty. At this elevation, which we may state to
-be at four or five thousand feet above the level of the sea, the
-air was sharp and keen; the thermometer stood at 58°. Continuing in
-a north-easterly direction, we passed two poor solitary farms, and
-entered upon a range of scenery tremendously grand, composed of bare
-abrupt conical mountains, with immense water-falls in every direction.
-At the close of the day, we arrived at a farm-house, called _Fazenda
-do Morro Queimado_, the manager of which received us hospitably,
-and accommodated us for the night. The weather was so cold, that a
-double supply of bedclothes scarcely produced sufficient warmth; in
-the morning the thermometer was at 48° Fahrenheit. After the heavy
-dew had cleared away, we took a view of the grounds, in company with
-the manager; they appeared well-suited for a grazing-farm, but the
-temperature of the atmosphere is too severe for growing the common
-produce of the country; particularly cotton, coffee, and bananas, which
-are frequently blighted. I was informed that some wheat has been grown
-here, though the people are quite unacquainted with the European method
-of farming. Indian corn, for the feed of hogs, is the staple article.
-This plantation is infested by ounces, which, at times, prey upon young
-cattle; the manager, who is a great hunter, keeps dogs, though of a
-poor race, for the express purpose of destroying them, which is thus
-practised:—When the carcass of a worried animal has been found, or
-when an ounce has been seen prowling about, the news is soon proclaimed
-among the neighbours, two or three of whom take fire-arms loaded with
-heavy slugs, and go out with the dogs in quest of the animal, who
-generally lurks in some thicket, near the carcass he has killed, and
-leaves so strong a scent, that the dogs soon find. When disturbed he
-retreats to his den, if he has one, the dogs never attempting to fasten
-on him, or even to face him, but, on the contrary, endeavouring to get
-out of his way, which is not difficult, as the ounce is heavy and slow
-of motion. If he caves, the sport is at an end, and the hunters make up
-the entrance; but he more commonly has recourse to a large tree, which
-he climbs with great facility; here his fate is generally decided,
-for the hunters get near enough to take a steady aim, and seldom fail
-to bring him down, one of them reserving his fire to dispatch him,
-if required, after he has fallen. It generally happens, that one or
-two of the dogs are killed in coming too near, for even in his dying
-struggles, a single stroke of his paw proves mortal. The skin is
-carried home as a trophy, and the neighbours meet and congratulate each
-other on the occasion.
-
-This farm, in the hands of an experienced and skilful agriculturist,
-might be managed so as to produce amazing returns. Its soil is wet,
-adapted to the growth, not only of Indian corn, but of wheat, barley,
-potatoes, &c. and it is so well irrigated, by numerous mountain
-streams, that the pastures are always luxuriant. Here are fine falls of
-water, and abundance of excellent timber, so that corn-mills might be
-erected at little more expense than what would arise from the purchase
-of mill-stones. Connected with the nun’s farm below, this establishment
-might be rendered one of the most complete and advantageous in Brazil.
-
-Leaving _Morro Queimado_ at noon, and descending on the other side of
-the ridge of mountains, we passed through an unequal tract, formed of
-hills and ravines. Onward the land appeared finer, and the timber of
-a superior growth, but there were few cultivated spots, and not many
-houses. The first extensive _fazenda_ we reached was that of Manoel
-Jose Pereira, a native of the Azores, who managed his agricultural
-concerns much better than the other farmers whom we visited. We were
-shewn a large field of Indian corn, ready for cutting; the quantity
-that had been sown was about eleven _fangas_, or bushels, and the
-produce was estimated at fifteen hundred bushels, about one hundred and
-fifty for one. This was an ordinary crop; in good years the harvest
-yields two hundred for one. The corn, as before stated, is chiefly
-consumed in the fattening of pigs; the quantity requisite for this
-purpose is six or seven bushels each, and the time, ten or twelve
-weeks. The curing of bacon is performed by cutting all the lean from
-the flitches, and sprinkling them with a very little salt. This food
-has the peculiar effect of giving greater solidity to the fat, which of
-itself is not liable to putrefaction.
-
-Though the owner of this farm has occupied it not more than five years,
-and has had only the assistance of his two sons, and six negroes, he
-has brought it into a very fair state of cultivation. In his coffee
-plantation we observed five thousand trees in full bearing, and the
-rest of his grounds were in an equally prosperous condition. His
-expenses, indeed, are light, and the only difficulties he has had to
-contend with, have been the bad roads, which are now much amended. The
-example of this man, it is to be hoped, will stimulate the emulation of
-his neighbours; for it has fully shewn the unbounded liberality with
-which nature here crowns the labors of the agriculturist.
-
-On our way hence to the place of our destination, we passed through
-some forests of fine full-grown trees; one, which had fallen, I had
-the curiosity to measure; it was full seventy-six inches in diameter,
-at the thick end, and above twenty-five yards in length. Such a piece
-of timber I had never before seen. Within about three miles from
-Canta Gallo, we arrived at an excellent farm belonging to the _Senhor
-Tenente_, or treasurer of the district, who treated us very hospitably,
-and invited us to visit him on our return. Our reception at Canta Gallo
-was highly gratifying; the Governor, and all the principal inhabitants,
-overjoyed to see Englishmen in these remote parts, treated us with
-great cordiality and friendship; a dinner was provided, at which they
-testified to us the great respect they entertained for our nation, as
-being the great ally of a Prince whom they adored.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. IX.
-
- _Description of Canta Gallo.—Of the Gold-washing of Santa
- Rita.—Account of the supposed Silver-Mine._
-
-
-CANTA GALLO, though so near the seat of government, was not known
-until about twenty years ago. It is situated in the midst of a
-fine well-wooded country, abounding in springs, and intersected by
-narrow valleys and ravines. The bottoms of some of these ravines
-formerly contained gold, which was accidentally discovered by some
-_grimpeiros_[27] from Minas Geraes, in the course of their searches
-about the great river Paraiba, and the Rio Pumba. The richness of these
-beds of gold, and the fertility of the circumjacent country, attracted
-numbers of adventurers, who placed themselves under the direction of
-an able chieftain, named Mão de Luva, on account of his having lost
-one hand, and his wearing a stuffed glove in its place. The band soon
-amounted to two or three hundred persons, who washed every part in the
-neighbourhood worth washing, before they were discovered. Being very
-determined men, they lived free of control, and bade defiance to the
-laws. It was not until about three years after their first settlement,
-that the existing government was apprised of them; when, alarmed at the
-report of their numbers, which was doubtless exaggerated, they sent out
-spies to discover their rendezvous. This, after much time and great
-difficulty, was effected; the spies, in wandering through the solitary
-woods and fastnesses in the neighbourhood, were attracted toward the
-place, by the crowing of a cock:—hence the name of Canta Gallo, which
-was subsequently given to it. They introduced themselves as smugglers,
-who wished to belong to the fraternity, and after living there some
-time, found means to give information to government, at Rio de Janeiro,
-who issued proclamations, offering pardon if the whole body would
-surrender. This measure was ineffectual; the _grimpeiros_ were well
-provided with fire-arms, and determined to defend themselves as long
-as any gold could be found. In a year or two afterwards, the washings
-began to fail, and thus the great bond of interest which united them
-being loosened, some deserted the place, and the rest became less
-vigilant in taking measures for their defence. The government seized
-this favorable opportunity for reducing them; a considerable force was
-assembled in the vicinity, with orders to make an attack at a certain
-fixed day, which was known to be celebrated by the _grimpeiros_ as a
-festival in honor of some saint. At the expected time, while they were
-engaged at a great banqueting, and too much occupied with their wine
-to think of their arms, which had been laid aside, (the flints having
-been secretly taken out), about a hundred soldiers rushed in among
-them; those who were sober enough flew to their arms, exclaiming, “We
-are sold! we are betrayed! treason! treason!” The contest was short;
-the soldiers seized the ringleaders, who were either sent to Africa,
-or imprisoned for life; of the rest, some were taken prisoners, others
-fled, but were pursued for years afterwards, and a few fell in the
-attack.
-
-The Government, having thus become masters of this territory, and
-imagining it to be as rich in gold as when the _grimpeiros_ first
-settled there, issued many injudicious regulations, oppressed the
-natives beyond example, built registers in various parts, to prevent
-contraband, and filled the whole neighbourhood with guards. The
-numerous settlers, whom the supposed richness of the place afterwards
-attracted, soon found that the cream had been skimmed by the smugglers,
-and by degrees turned their attention to agriculture, a less precarious
-source of subsistence than mining. So little gold is at present found,
-that His Highness’s fifth scarcely pays the officers and soldiers
-appointed to receive it. There are some situations alike favorable to
-mining and farming; with a small capital, a man may here turn both
-pursuits to account, if he can bring himself to conform to the customs
-of the place. The land is strong and good; its various inequalities
-present spots adapted to the growth of almost every description of
-produce. In the valleys, and on the sides of the mountains, the soil,
-in some parts, consists of strong clay, but more generally of a fine,
-rich, vegetable mould. The rock, or solid stratum, which appears at
-various depths below it, is granite, composed of feldspar, hornblende,
-quartz, mica, and frequently garnets. When found in a decomposing
-state, it is denominated _pizarra_. No metallic substances, except
-gold and oxides of iron, appear; the former, which is found in the
-interjacent bed of _cascalho_, exists only in grains; I examined a
-considerable quantity, but could not discover a single particle in a
-crystallized state.
-
-The country appears to be very poorly stocked with cattle; no cows are
-kept for milking, nor is any attention here paid to the production of
-an article of diet, so essential to the subsistence of a poor family;
-a few goats are kept, and the only milk used is that which they yield.
-The common food of the inhabitants is as follows:—for breakfast, a
-kind of kidney beans, called _feijoens_, boiled, and afterwards mixed
-with the flour of Indian corn; for dinner, _feijoens_ boiled with a
-little fat pork and some cabbage leaves, and a sort of pudding, made
-by pouring the water from the pork on a plate of the _farinha_, which
-is eaten with the hand, and much relished; for supper, some poor
-vegetables, also boiled up with fat pork. Fowls, which are bred here
-in great numbers, are generally cut to pieces and stewed for table.
-Wine is rarely used, even among the higher ranks; but here are fruits
-in great abundance, particularly bananas and oranges, which form a
-considerable part of the general diet.
-
-Very little sugar is grown here: the principal articles of produce sent
-to the capital, are Indian corn, and pulse of all kinds, bacon, fowls,
-_jaracandá_, or rose-wood, ipecacuanha, and a small quantity of gold.
-In many parts of the neighbourhood is found a tree, the bark of which
-has been successfully used as a substitute for the quinquina of Peru.
-
-In one of the frequent excursions I took in the neighbourhood of Canta
-Gallo, previous to my journey to the reputed silver mine, I obtained
-some information respecting the half-civilized aborigines of the
-district, from a man who employs himself in procuring ipecacuanha,
-and is a kind of chief among them. They reside in the woods, in a
-most miserable condition; their dwellings, some of which I saw, are
-formed of boughs of trees, bent so as to hold a thatch or tiling of
-palm-leaves; their beds are made of dry grass. Having little idea of
-planting or tillage, they depend for subsistence almost entirely on
-their bows and arrows, and on the roots and wild fruits which they
-casually find in the woods. The chief above-mentioned brought about
-fifty of these Indians to pay me a visit, which was not a little
-gratifying to me, as it afforded an opportunity of examining their
-features, and of conversing with the few among them who could speak a
-little of the Portuguese language. The dress of the men consisted of a
-waistcoat and a pair of drawers; that of the women, of a chemise and
-petticoat, with a handkerchief tied round the head, after the fashion
-of the Portuguese females. They bore the general characteristics of
-their race, the copper-colored skin, short and round visage, broad
-nose, lank black hair, and regular stature, inclining to be short and
-broad set. Being desirous to see a proof of their skill and precision
-in shooting, of which I had heard much, I placed an orange at thirty
-yards distance, which was pierced by an arrow from every one who drew
-his bow at it. I next pointed out a banana-tree, about eight inches in
-circumference, at a distance of forty yards; not a single arrow missed
-its aim, though they all shot at an elevated range. Interested by these
-proofs of their archery, I went with some of them into a wood to see
-them shoot at birds; though there were very few, they discovered them
-far more quickly than I could; and, cautiously creeping along until
-they were within bow-shot, never failed to bring down their game. The
-stillness and expedition with which they penetrated the thickets, and
-passed through the brushwood, were truly surprising; nor could any
-thing have afforded me a more satisfactory idea of their peculiar way
-of life. Their bows are made of the tough fibrous wood of the Iriri,
-six or seven feet long, and very stout; their arrows are full six feet
-long, and near an inch in diameter, pointed with a piece of cane cut
-to a feather edge, or with a bone, but of late more frequently with
-iron. They are loathsome in their persons, and in their habits but one
-remove from the Anthropophagi; a woman was gnawing at a half-roasted
-parrot, which was spiked on a stick, with the feathers scarcely burnt
-off, and the entrails hanging out[28]. They are not of a shy or morose
-character, but have a great aversion to labor, and cannot be brought
-to submit to any regular employment. Rarely is an Indian to be found
-serving as a domestic, or working for hire, and to this circumstance
-may be ascribed the low state of agriculture in the district; for as
-the farmers, when they begin the world, have seldom funds sufficient
-to purchase negroes at Rio, their operations are for a long time very
-confined, and frequently languish for want of hands. What benefits
-would result to the state, and how much would the general cause of
-humanity be served, if these Indians were civilized and domesticated! A
-tribe of idle and unsettled savages would be converted into useful and
-productive laborers; the whole face of the district would be improved;
-the roads, which at present connect it with the capital, would be
-cleared of the thousand inconveniences which now encumber them, and new
-ones[29] would be opened for the more expeditious conveyance of its
-produce.
-
-During my stay at Canta Gallo I undertook a journey to the gold-washing
-at Santa Rita, distant about five leagues, in a north-east direction.
-After passing the uneven country in the immediate neighbourhood of the
-village, we arrived at the Rio Negro, a considerable stream formed
-by many rivulets, which empties itself into the Paraiba; on crossing
-it[30], we entered upon a fine open country, the fertility of which
-was evident from the luxuriant growth of the tobacco and other plants:
-but it lay in a state of almost total neglect, and the families thinly
-scattered upon it appeared in the lowest condition of indolence and
-misery. We proceeded a league farther, through a tract entirely
-destitute of inhabitants, and arrived about two in the afternoon at
-Santa Rita. The proprietor of the works received us very kindly, and
-conducted us through them while dinner was preparing. The washing is
-in a deep ravine, bounded at one end by an abrupt hill, and open at the
-other to the plain. The vegetable earth appeared extremely rich, being
-clothed with luxuriant verdure, and the hills on each hand covered with
-trees of all sizes. The stratum of _cascalho_, which lies under a bed
-of soil four or five feet deep, is very thin and uneven, being no where
-more than two feet thick, and in many parts not more than seven or
-eight inches. The incumbent soil is removed at great labor and expense,
-being dug out and carried away in bowls; and the _cascalho_ is conveyed
-with great care to a convenient place for water, where it is washed by
-the most expert among the miners, in a way similar to that practised at
-the mines of Jaraguá. The proportion of gold produced was moderate: I
-was informed that it paid the master the rate of from fourteen pence to
-two shillings per day for each negro, which is a large profit, as the
-daily subsistence of one costs somewhat less than a penny.
-
-The sides of the ravine towards the top were bare, and of different
-shades of color, being tinged by the water which flows from the
-vegetable matter above: in the bottom, on the surface that was yet
-unworked, lay some huge, half-rounded, amorphous masses. In the parts
-which had been worked, I observed two or three substances of the same
-kind, which being too large to be moved, the earth which imbedded
-them had been cut away, and they appeared like detached nodules.
-On breaking a fragment from one of them, with my hammer, I was much
-surprised to find it a calcareous substance, a solid mass composed of
-hexagonal crystals, with a small portion of brilliant specular iron
-ore. I presented this fragment to the proprietor, informing him that it
-was limestone, at which he was truly astonished, having never before
-heard of stonelime[31]; nor would he believe me until I proved it by
-calcination. The mountains, as I afterwards found, are of the same
-substance.
-
-As I stood observing the heavy operation of cutting and carrying away
-the surface to get at the _cascalho_, it occurred to me that much
-time and labor might be saved by arching the work with brick; but, on
-suggesting the idea, I was informed that the sole or bottom was quite
-decomposed, and subject to much water.
-
-There is reason to suppose that the stratum of limestone, below the
-earth in the bottom of the valley, is of very modern formation, and
-that, if not too thick to cut through, there might be found, between
-it and the granite stratum underneath, a bed of _cascalho_ of prior
-formation, much richer in gold than the upper stratum.
-
-After having investigated these works, we made an excursion of seven
-or eight miles, chiefly over a rich plain, abounding with the finest
-timber. On the margins of the rivulets which we crossed, I observed
-that the moss was incrusted, somewhat like the tuffa at Matlock; and,
-on more particular examination, I found a stratum of tuffa in all
-the valleys, a few inches below the surface, which, as I conjecture,
-must have proceeded from the deposition of calcareous matter by the
-overflowings of the streams after heavy rains. The hills, even at
-this distance, were composed of the same sparry limestone as at the
-gold-washing. It is much to be wished that the value of this material
-were duly appreciated at the capital, where the cost of the wood used
-in burning shells into lime, exceeds the price at which lime brought
-from Santa Rita might be delivered, if proper roads were made for its
-conveyance from this district to Porto das Caixas. Such an undertaking
-highly deserves the attention of His Highness’s ministers; the benefits
-likely to result from it are incalculable, and the expense attending it
-would be trifling; for in no part of the globe are roads made so cheap,
-or public works of any kind done on such moderate terms, as in Brazil.
-
-This fine but almost uninhabited district produces spontaneously many
-valuable articles of commerce, which run to waste for want of hands to
-cultivate and gather them. Here is found that celebrated variety of
-the palm-tree, the long, serrated, lancet-formed leaves of which are
-composed of innumerable fibres, that rival silk both in fineness and
-strength. I bought some fishing-lines made of them for a mere trifle;
-and I have no doubt that, if proper means were employed to propagate
-the growth of the trees, this valuable substance might be produced in
-as great plenty, and at as cheap a rate, as flax is in England. I laid
-before His Highness’s ministers, a project for using it as a substitute
-for that article in the manufacture of fine cordage, and I shewed by
-experiment that it was fully adequate to the purpose.
-
-We remained two days at Santa Rita and its vicinity, and on the third,
-set out on our return, taking the same route by which we came. In some
-parts we observed numerous flocks of birds, particularly parrots, and
-a few fine wild hens of the wood, and these were the only objects that
-engaged our attention. We reached Canta Gallo without having met with
-any monstrous serpents, or any other uncommon sights which travellers
-often see or fancy in a strange country.
-
-After a few days’ rest, I set out, accompanied by a guide, to the
-supposed silver-mine, notice having previously been sent to the men to
-prepare them for my coming. We travelled for about two miles through a
-deep valley, and arrived at a rapid stream called Macáco, which runs
-between two almost perpendicular mountains of very inconsiderable
-height, along one of which the road leads for about a mile and a half.
-Having passed this gloomy and dangerous ravine, we proceeded half a
-league farther, and halted at a neat farm-house called Machado, with
-a portion of good and well-cultivated land around it, which looked
-like a garden in the wilderness. The owner, a native of the Azores,
-received us very politely, and introduced us to his lady, who, with her
-blooming family of daughters, was engaged in needle-work on materials
-of their own spinning. The neatness of their dress, and the general
-air of propriety and comfort in the apartment where they sat, strongly
-reminded me of my country; and when they regaled us with liquor made
-from the fruits of their own farm, the image of our domestic scenes in
-rural life was complete: I could almost have fancied myself transported
-from the rugged wilds of Brazil to the smiling vales of England.
-
-We left this peaceful abode; and, advancing for six miles through
-thickets and forests, and over some plain land, we reached a farm
-called St. Antonio, belonging to a widow named Dona Anna, who is
-noted throughout the country for making excellent butter and cheese.
-The dwelling is of two stories, and neat, but very inconvenient. The
-good lady gave me a hearty repast of milk, and we entered into some
-conversation respecting her dairy, in which I learned that she knew no
-other mode of making butter than that of agitating the cream in a jar
-or bottle; and her notions of cheese-making were equally defective,
-In looking about the grounds for an hour, while our mules rested, I
-noticed an excellent fence, formed by planting a strong thorny shrub,
-that seemed of very rapid and luxuriant growth. The few cows that were
-grazing in the inclosures appeared to be of a superior breed, but were
-not managed with either method or foresight. The principal produce of
-the farm is Indian corn, and a little cheese; the latter is only made
-occasionally, when there happens to be a sufficient supply of milk for
-the purpose.
-
-We were here shewn various samples of earthy matter, wrapped very
-carefully in paper, and preserved with great secrecy, under the names
-of platina, silver, &c. They proved to be merely small crystals of
-shining iron ore, and pyrites.
-
-Proceeding a league over a fine country, we reached the Rio Grande, a
-stream as large as the Derwent at Derby, which we crossed in a canoe,
-our mules swimming after us as usual. We passed several groupes of
-Aborigines, and occasionally saw many of their huts and places of
-abode. The road now led along the bases of some huge bold mountains
-of granite, from whose summits rushed fine cascades of water. The low
-ground was interspersed with fragments of the same rock, lying in
-heaps in every direction. In many places the grass was so tall that
-it reached above the skirts of my saddle, and, the weather being wet,
-rendered me very uncomfortable. After a laborious, and latterly a slow
-progress, we arrived by sun-set at the house of Father Thomas de Nossa
-Senhora da Conceição, who kindly accommodated us for the night.
-
-The house was new, and neatly built, containing only four rooms, with
-boarded floors; a convenience very rarely to be met with in these
-parts. It is absolutely encircled with fine streams, abounding with
-water-falls, which render the roads to it at all times indifferent,
-and in wet weather almost impassable. The father, an intelligent and
-industrious man, informed me that he took up that land about four years
-since, that he had only one negro, and had no funds wherewith to carry
-on his undertaking, except seven or eight pounds _per annum_, which he
-gained by his profession as a clergyman; this he expended in hiring
-those who chose to work. He shewed me his garden, which was full of
-fine coffee-trees, and was kept in the neatest order; his fields were
-covered with Indian corn; his live-stock consisted of a good milch
-cow, a number of pigs, and one mule. On asking him how he disposed
-of his produce, he told me that dealers came and purchased it on the
-spot. The whole of the _sesmaria_, or plantation, with the stock upon
-it, he valued at four hundred pounds sterling, and said that he had
-no doubt he could obtain that price for it. These were clear data for
-calculating the profits of farming, when managed with prudence and
-industry. Here is a man who, having begun with little or nothing,
-finds himself, at the end of four years, worth four hundred pounds; a
-snug independency in these parts, and not more than his exertions and
-perseverance deserved. Father Thomas lived more comfortably than any
-person I had hitherto met with in this district: he was economical, but
-not parsimonious; liberal in his sentiments, frank and communicative in
-his conversation, and polite in his manners.
-
-Here I was met by the discoverers of the reputed silver-mine, who came
-to conduct me to it. We set out on foot, and, after walking about
-six miles over mountains impassable for mules, fording rivulets, and
-passing thickets that left me scarcely a single article of dress
-untorn, we arrived at the miserable hut of these poor men; a perfect
-contrast to the neat dwelling of Father Thomas. Never in my life was
-I so exhausted by fatigue; I sat down, unable to go any farther, and
-rested about an hour, when, being somewhat recovered, I accompanied
-the men, along the edge of a beautiful stream, to the foot of the
-mountain, where they shewed me a hole which they had dug, about two
-feet deep, and informed me that the sand it contained at the bottom
-abounded with grains of silver. Having ordered a quantity to be taken
-out, I proceeded to examine the base of the mountain, which I found to
-be of granite-like gneiss, with garnets, and small crystals of pyrites.
-Near this place the margin of the rivulet contained rounded stones
-and sand, but no where was there to be found any metallic substance,
-except the one before mentioned. Indeed, the very idea of silver
-appearing here in dust or grains, as gold does, would be preposterous,
-and contradictory to every principle of nature, as, in such a state, it
-would probably have been attacked by the sulphur in the pyrites, so as
-to have assumed the form of a sulphuret.
-
-I returned extremely wearied and much exhausted to Father Thomas’s,
-where, after some needful repose, I proceeded to examine the sand and
-stones I had collected at the supposed silver-mine, but no particle
-of metal was to be found. I then ordered the men to produce their
-samples, which I examined both by the blow-pipe and by acids, but
-no silver appeared. After equivocating very much, they acknowledged
-that they had rubbed and beaten substances to powder, and when they
-found specular iron ore they thought it was silver. In one of the
-samples there certainly was silver, but it appeared to have been filed
-probably from an old buckle or spoon, or rubbed on a stone and mixed
-with a pulverized substance. The farce could no longer be carried on:
-I charged them, in a most determined manner, with imposture, which,
-after some hesitation, they confessed: an officer who was with me
-would have secured them, but I restrained him; for, having obtained a
-confession, I was unwilling to bring them to punishment, or to render
-them more miserable than they already were, by having them sent to the
-army. Perhaps that would have been doing them a greater service than
-setting them at liberty; for they were too lazy to work, and would, no
-doubt, return to their old habits of prowling about, and subsisting
-on the credulity of the public by spreading fallacious reports about
-mines, precious stones, &c. Such impositions are not uncommon in South
-America: I have known instances in which copper-filings, mixed with
-earth, and afterwards washed, have been produced as samples, in order
-to enhance the value of land, or serve some other sinister purpose. A
-passion for mining is fatally prevalent among some of the lower orders
-of the people: by deluding them with prospects of becoming speedily
-rich, it creates in them a disgust for labor, and entails want and
-wretchedness upon them. Even among the few families of this district,
-I observed some examples of its effects; those who devoted themselves
-wholly to mining were in general badly clothed and worse fed, while
-those who attended to agriculture alone were well provided with every
-necessary of life.
-
-Having concluded the affair, I took leave of Father Thomas, and
-returned to Canta Gallo, where I prepared my papers for a report
-respecting it, as the Conde de Linhares, had desired me. During the
-remainder of my stay I collected specimens of the different species of
-wood, which the neighbourhood produces. The following is a list of
-them:
-
- _Tapinhoam Canella_—Hard, and excellent for sheathing ships.
-
- _Venatico_—excellent timber.
-
- _Cedar_—good and durable.
-
- _Socupira_, also called _pao ferro_—hard and good.
-
- _Olio_—very solid, and of a peculiar fragrance.
-
- _Cubiuna._
-
- _Jaracandá_—cabinet-wood, variegated, black and yellow—This is
- called rose-wood in England: but the best sorts, as it appears to me,
- have not hitherto been imported.
-
- _Jaracatangá._
-
- _Ubatanga._
-
- _Palms_—many varieties, among which is the iriri, before described.
- Its wood, though small, is unrivalled for strength and elasticity.
-
- _Garfauna_—the bark of which, as I was informed, affords a yellow dye.
-
- _Embé_—a creeping plant. The stems are used instead of cords, and
- often made into bridles.
-
- Many species of thorny trees.
-
-Most of the above-named species of woods are of large growth, and well
-calculated for ship-building. It is remarkable that this district
-produces none of the dye-wood called Brazil wood.
-
-Here are innumerable fruit-trees and shrubs which I have omitted to
-particularize. Tobacco is cultivated in some parts, and is always
-manufactured into roll by uniting the leaves with each other, and
-twisting them with a winch. By this operation the juice is expressed,
-and after a short exposure to the atmosphere, the color of the tobacco
-changes from green to black.
-
-Of wild animals, ounces are the most common; they are met with of
-various colors, some black and brown-red. Tapirs or antas are not
-unfrequent, but I saw only the footsteps of some of them. Wild hogs
-breed here in great numbers, and also long-bearded monkeys; the
-latter, when asleep, snore so loud as to astonish the traveller. The
-most formidable reptiles are the corral snake, the surocucu, the
-surocucu-tinga, and the jararaca, all said to be mortally venomous,
-none of which I ever saw on the journey, except a small one of the
-former species.
-
-The prevailing method of clearing and cultivating the land here, is
-precisely similar to that practised in the neighbourhood of S. Paulo.
-After the timber and underwood have been cut down and burnt (often
-very imperfectly), the negresses dibble the seed; in about six weeks
-a slight weeding is performed, and then the ground is let alone till
-harvest. The seed-time begins in October and lasts until November; the
-maize is ripe in four or five months. The next year they commonly sow
-beans on the corn land, which they then let lie, and proceed to clear
-new ground. It is not common to molest the land from which they have
-had two crops in succession, before eight or ten years have elapsed.
-
-The sugar-cane and mandioca require from fourteen to eighteen months.
-Coffee, planted by shoots, bears fruit in two years, and is in
-perfection in five or six years. Cottons and palma Christi, raised from
-seed, bear the first year.
-
-Transplanting is only practised with tobacco; engrafting is little
-known and rarely attempted.
-
-The Indian corn is ground by a horizontal water-wheel, which acquires
-great velocity from the rush of water upon it. On the upper end is
-fixed the mill-stone, which makes from fifty to sixty revolutions in a
-minute. They have likewise a mode of pounding the corn into flour, by a
-machine called a Sloth. Near a current of water a large wooden mortar
-is placed, the pestle of which is mortised into the end of a lever
-twenty-five or thirty feet long, resting upon a fulcrum at five-eights
-of its length. The extremity of the shorter arm of this beam is
-scooped out, so as to receive a sufficient weight of water to raise
-the other end, to which appends the pestle, and to discharge itself
-when it has sunk to a given point. The alternate emptying and filling
-of this cavity cause the elevation and fall of the pestle, which take
-place about four times per minute. This contrivance surpasses all
-others in simplicity; and in a place where the waste of water is of no
-consequence, it completely answers its purpose.
-
-[Illustration: HORIZONTAL CORN MILL.
-
-POUNDING MACHINE.]
-
-[Illustration: Mandioca first set cuttings.
-
-Commencing to grow & form Root.
-
-Nearly full grown & appearance of the Root.]
-
-Having finished my affairs at Canta Gallo, I set out on my return to
-the capital, accompanied for about a league of the road by the worthy
-governor, the captain, the treasurer, and almost all the inhabitants.
-During a residence of about fifteen days among these excellent men,
-my table had been sumptuously supplied without cost, and I had been
-treated with a degree of respect far exceeding my expectations or
-merits. I took leave of them with regret, wishing most sincerely that
-it might be in my power to be of service to them at court, by making
-representations in their favor.
-
-I arrived at Morro Queimado at night, after a journey of thirty-four
-miles[32], and on the next day, in good time, reached the house of
-my worthy friend Captain Ferreira. Being now less pressed for time,
-I took a more leisurely survey of his establishment, particularly of
-his sugarwork and distillery, both which are very ill conducted. When
-I saw the furnaces for heating the coppers in the latter, I freely
-told the Captain, that they could not have been constructed on a worse
-plan, but I received for answer, that no better was known. It would,
-indeed, be extremely difficult to introduce improvements into this
-or any other parts of the distillery, for every thing is left to the
-management of the negroes. When I asked any question concerning the
-process, the owner professed his ignorance of it, and sent for one of
-the African foremen to answer me. With this man I reasoned respecting
-the excessive quantity of fuel consumed to no purpose, and proposed a
-method for saving it, as well as for correcting the disagreeable taste
-of the rum, caused by the empyreuma; which was, to redistil it with an
-equal quantity of water, taking care previously to clean out the still;
-but he only laughed at me, and signified that his certainly must be the
-best method, for he had learned it of an old sugar-maker. Thus it is,
-that from the indifference of the owners to their own interest, things
-are suffered to go on in the same routine, being left to the direction
-of men who shrink from a temporary increase of labor, even when it
-promises them a lasting advantage. This aversion to improvement I have
-often observed among the inhabitants of Brazil: when, for instance, I
-have questioned a brick-maker, a sugar-maker, a soap-boiler, or even
-a miner, as to his reasons for conducting his concerns in such an
-imperfect manner, I have been almost invariably referred to a negro for
-answers to my interrogatories.
-
-Some parts of this estate are said to contain gold, and at the time
-of my visit, Captain Ferreira was negociating for permission from
-Government to work them. I presented to him a drawing of a plan for
-washing the _cascalho_ in a manner superior to that commonly practised,
-and explained to him the use of grinding or stamping those concrete
-masses frequently found in it, which generally contain particles of
-gold, but being too hard to be crushed by the hand, are thrown aside
-among the debris.
-
-In this _fazenda_, as in most others, the conveniences for storing
-the produce, are so very poor and imperfect, that the weevil soon
-gets into the corn, and the cotton, coffee, and other produce are
-liable to be deteriorated in a thousand ways. The stabling, too, is
-bad, and the cattle are deplorably neglected; indeed, the only part
-of the live-stock that seems to be tolerably well attended to, is the
-swine. In the dwelling-house I observed a total inattention to domestic
-comfort; its general appearance confirmed a remark which I had often
-heard made, that the owners of estates here, dislike to live upon them,
-and considering their residence as only temporary, make shift with poor
-accommodations.
-
-The tract of land belonging to the farm is full two miles square, and
-though still susceptible of great improvement, has not been wholly
-neglected; the parts already cleared have produced many valuable crops,
-and the rest will no doubt, in a few years, be brought to an equally
-promising state of cultivation.
-
-Having staid two days with Captain Ferreira, I set out on the morning
-of the third for Porto das Caixas, where I arrived at two o’clock,
-after a journey of thirty miles, and was delayed some time, as the
-river was crowded with vessels, laden with ship-timber, for the
-capital. As soon as the navigation became sufficiently open, I embarked
-in a large boat, of about ten tons burthen, and rowing all night to
-the mouth of the river, sailed with a land wind, and arrived at Rio
-de Janeiro about noon. My first care was to inform His Excellency the
-minister of my return, after which I employed a few days in drawing up
-my journal for his inspection. He received it in the handsomest manner,
-and laid it before his Royal Highness, who was pleased to signify, that
-my description of the country, through which I had travelled, merited
-his approbation.
-
-[Illustration: _Published as the Act directs, 1822, by Longman & C.^o
-Paternoster Row._]
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. X.
-
- _Permission obtained to visit the Diamond Mines.—Account of a
- pretended Diamond presented to the Prince Regent.—Journey to Villa
- Rica._
-
-
-AFTER I had thoroughly recovered from the fatigues of my late journey,
-I solicited his Royal Highness for permission to go and explore the
-diamond mines of Cerro do Frio. This favor had never as yet been
-granted to a foreigner, nor had any Portuguese been permitted to visit
-the vicinity where the works are situated, except on business relative
-to them, and even then under restrictions, which rendered it impossible
-to acquire the means of giving an adequate description of them to the
-public. Through the kind friendship of the Conde de Linhares, the
-permission was granted, and my passports and letters of recommendation
-were speedily made out. Lord Strangford was much pleased at my being
-so highly favored, and willingly offered his service, and represented
-me favorably at court. I obtained admission to the archives, for the
-purpose of examining all the manuscript maps, and of copying from any
-of them whatever might be necessary to guide me in my route. It may
-here be proper to observe, that the most eligible mode of travelling
-in the interior of Brazil, especially on such an excursion as I had
-undertaken, is to procure orders from the government, and an escort of
-soldiers, who have a right, under such orders, to require proper relays
-of mules from all persons who reside on or near the road. The Conde
-de Linhares intimated to me, that I might select any two soldiers I
-thought proper, and while I was deliberating on the choice, a singular
-occurrence took place, which was the means of furnishing me with two
-men of the corps of miners, who were appointed to attend me, under an
-injunction on the part of His Excellency, that their future promotion
-would depend entirely on the report which I should give of their
-conduct after my return. I am happy to say that their services merited
-every commendation.
-
-The occurrence to which I allude was this:—A free negro of Villa
-do Principe, about nine hundred miles distant, had the assurance to
-write a letter to the Prince Regent, announcing that he possessed an
-amazingly large diamond which he had received from a deceased friend
-some years ago, and which he begged he might have the honor to present
-to His Royal Highness in person. As the magnitude which this poor
-fellow ascribed to his diamond was such as to raise imagination to its
-highest pitch, an order was immediately dispatched to the commander
-of Villa do Principe, to send him forthwith to Rio de Janeiro; he was
-accommodated with a conveyance, and escorted by two soldiers. As he
-passed along the road, all who had heard the report hailed him as
-already honored with a cross of the order of S. Bento, and as sure
-of being rewarded with the pay of a general of brigade. The soldiers
-also anticipated great promotion; and all persons envied the fortunate
-negro. At length, after a journey which occupied about twenty-eight
-days, he arrived at the capital, and was straightway conveyed to the
-palace. His happiness was now about to be consummated, in a few moments
-the hopes which he had for so many years indulged, would be realized,
-and he should be exalted from a low and obscure condition, to a state
-of affluence and distinction:—such, no doubt, were the thoughts which
-agitated him during the moments of suspence. At length he was admitted
-into the presence; he threw himself at the Prince’s feet, and delivered
-his wonderful gem. His Highness was astonished at its magnitude; a
-pause ensued; the attendants waited to hear the Prince’s opinion, and
-what he said they seconded. A round diamond, nearly a pound in weight,
-filled them all with wonder; some ready calculators reckoned the
-millions it was worth; others found it difficult to numerate the sum
-at which it would be valued, but the general opinion of His Highness’s
-servants was, that the treasury was many millions of crowns the richer.
-The noise which this occurrence created among the higher circles, may
-be easily conceived; the general topic of remark and wonder, was
-the negro’s offering. It was shewn to the ministers, among whom an
-apprehension, and even a doubt, was expressed, that a substance so
-large and round might not prove a real diamond; they, however, sent it
-to the treasury under a guard, and it was lodged in the deposit of the
-jewel-room.
-
-On the next day, the Conde de Linhares sent for me, and related all the
-circumstances which had come to his knowledge respecting this famous
-jewel, adding, in a low tone of voice, that he had his doubts about
-its proving a genuine diamond. His Excellency directed me to attend
-at his office in a few hours, when letters from himself and the other
-ministers to the Treasury should be given me[33], for permission to see
-this invaluable gem, in order to determine what it really was. Readily
-accepting a charge of so interesting a nature, I prepared myself, and
-attended at the hour appointed, when I received the letters, which I
-presented at the treasury to an officer in waiting, I was led through
-several apartments, in which much business seemed to be transacting,
-to the grand chamber, where presided the treasurer, attended by his
-secretaries. Having my letters in his hand, he entered into some
-conversation with me relative to the subject; I was then shewn through
-other grand apartments hung with scarlet and gold, and ornamented with
-figures as large as life, representing justice holding the balance. In
-the inner room, to which we were conducted, there were several strong
-chests with three locks each, the keys of which were kept by three
-different officers, who were all required to be present at the opening.
-One of these chests being unlocked, an elegant little cabinet was taken
-out, from which the treasurer took the gem, and in great form presented
-it to me. Its value sunk at the first sight, for before I touched it,
-I was convinced that it was a rounded piece of crystal. It was above
-two inches in diameter. On examining it, I told the governor it was
-not a diamond; and to convince him I took a diamond of five or six
-carats, and with it cut a very deep nick in the stone. This was proof
-positive; a certificate was accordingly made out, stating, that it was
-an inferior substance of little or no value, which I signed.
-
-Other boxes were now unlocked, from one of which they showed me two
-large slabs of diamond, each a full inch on the superficies, and about
-the eighth of an inch in thickness, of a very bad brown color. When
-found, they formed one entire piece, which, being amorphous, was not
-known to be a diamond, until the administrator or chief of the working
-party, after keeping it by him many days, had recourse to the old
-experiment of placing it on a hard stone and striking it with a hammer.
-The result of this experiment is, that if the substance resist the
-blow, or, separate in laminæ, it must be a diamond; the latter was the
-case in the present instance, and the man having thus made two diamonds
-from one, transmitted them to the intendant.
-
-The river Abaité, from whence these pieces came, has produced one of
-an octahedral form, which weighs seven-eights of an ounce Troy, and is
-perhaps the largest diamond in the world. It was found about twelve
-years ago by three men who were under sentence of banishment for high
-crimes; but on presenting this valuable gem to the then Viceroy, they
-were pardoned and rewarded. It is now in the private possession of the
-Prince Regent.
-
-I was afterwards favored with a sight of the remaining diamonds in the
-Treasury; they appeared to be in quantity about four or five thousand
-carats. The largest did not generally exceed eight carats, except
-one of a fine octahedral form, full seventeen. Among the few colored
-diamonds, one of the smallest was of a beautiful pink, one of a fine
-blue, and several were of a green tinge; the yellow were the most
-common and least esteemed.
-
-Having now finished my business, I took my leave of the treasurer, with
-thanks for his polite attention, and on my return home wrote a letter
-to the Conde de Linhares, stating the result of my visit. It was no
-agreeable task to a stranger to have to announce that a substance which
-had been considered as an inestimable addition to the treasures of
-the state, was in reality, though singular in its appearance, of very
-trifling value, and this too in a letter which was to be laid before
-the Prince. His Highness, however, was prepared for the intelligence,
-and was too noble-minded to manifest any chagrin at the disappointment.
-The poor negro who had presented it was of course deeply afflicted by
-this unwelcome news; instead of being accompanied home by an escort,
-he had to find his way thither as he could, and would, no doubt,
-have to encounter the ridicule and contempt of those who had of late
-congratulated him on his good fortune.
-
-When I had nearly completed my preparations for the journey, Mr.
-Goodall, a most respectable merchant, expressed a desire to accompany
-me to Villa Rica, which I readily acceded to, as he was a most
-agreeable companion. Lord Strangford having procured him passports from
-the ministers, he was enabled to join me without delay. On the 17th
-of August, 1809, we set out on a journey which no Englishman had ever
-before undertaken, nor had any ever yet been permitted to pass the
-barrier of alpine mountains that stretch along the coast.
-
-Having embarked in a large market-boat with our retinue, which
-consisted of the two soldiers before mentioned, and my servant, a most
-trusty negro-boy, we made sail at mid-day with a sea-breeze, and ran
-down the bay about six leagues. We then passed the island of Governador
-and various others, one of which was the beautiful Cocoa-nut island.
-Proceeding along the strait, formed by it and another of similar
-extent, we crossed a fine open bay, and arrived at the mouth of the
-Moremim, a picturesque river which presents in its serpentine course
-a great variety of beautiful scenery. It was now sun-set; the weather
-was mild and serene, and we paused awhile to enjoy one of the finest
-rural prospects which we had ever seen in Brazil—a fine romantic
-fore-ground, enriched by the vivid foliage of the woods on the banks of
-the stream, and contrasted by the bold outline of the mountains in the
-distance, among which we noticed that singular chain of perpendicular
-rocks, called the Organpipe mountains, from their resemblance in form
-and position to the front of the instrument alluded to. Having advanced
-two leagues up the river, we arrived at a village on its margin,
-called Porto da Estrella, a place of great stir and bustle, on account
-of the hourly arrival of numerous droves of mules laden with produce
-from the interior. Here are some poor dwellings, and a number of large
-storehouses for the reception of the produce. The muleteers, being
-provided with bedding and cooking utensils, never leave their cattle,
-so that good inns are to them unnecessary. We were shewn into the best
-in the place, which was as dirty and inconvenient as can possibly be
-imagined. I shall forbear to detail the discomforts of the night, and
-merely observe that they were such as to make us early stirrers in
-the morning. Our soldiers procured us mules, but owing to the great
-bustle of loading and unloading, we were not in travelling order until
-ten o’clock. We now proceeded about three leagues along the low land,
-having the range of mountains on our left, and passing the village
-of Piedade entered on a beautiful plain at their base. We stopped at
-a house at which the Prince Regent had remained three nights for the
-benefit of the air; but not being able to procure refreshment there, we
-passed on and began our ascent along an excellent paved road, extending
-five miles on a very steep elevation along the sides and over the
-ridges of the mountains. Having rested awhile at the half-way-house,
-which we had been near an hour in gaining, we toiled on, relieving
-ourselves at times by turning to take a view of Rio de Janeiro, and the
-bay, which from this lofty eminence appeared to great advantage. With
-some difficulty we reached the summit, which, as I suppose, is four
-thousand feet above the level of the sea; the atmosphere was at least
-ten degrees colder than on the plain.
-
-Our next halting place was a small village called Corgo Seco, situated
-in a most rugged and uneven district, with not half an acre of level
-ground in any part of its vicinity. Having taken some refreshment here,
-we proceeded to Belmonte, a beautiful spot, situated by the edge of a
-rapid stream, which washes the base of an immense mountain of granite
-on the left. We journeyed along this stream until we reached a station
-called Padre Correa, from the name of its owner. It consists of a
-house and chapel, with a handsome area in front. The Father maintains
-a large establishment of negroes, many of whom are employed in beating
-out mules’ shoes from the cool Swedish iron, after they have been
-forged into form. For these articles there is a considerable demand,
-as the unwrought material pays no duty on this side the river Paraiba,
-while on the other it is taxed full 100 _per cent_. which is also the
-case with salt. The great consumption of these necessary articles has
-probably induced Government to lay these heavy duties upon them, but
-certainly every principle of good policy furnishes an argument against
-the measure. Padre Correa received us very hospitably, afforded us an
-asylum for the night, and assisted us in regulating our baggage by
-supplying a pair of cane panniers for one of the mules, which proved
-very serviceable. Before sun-rise we were awakened by the clatter
-of hammers in the forges; the weather was dewy, and so cold that my
-thermometer was down at 46 degrees. We passed some time in viewing the
-garden, which was in tolerable order, and contained some fine peach
-trees in blossom. Our host informed us, that he had a good plantation
-a few miles distant, but his chief concern was the selling of corn and
-shoes for the use of the mules.
-
-Leaving this station we skirted the Piabunha, a river abounding in
-falls, which flows into the Paraiba. Among the hills and dales which
-we traversed, we at times observed farm-houses and plantations; but
-the road, farther on, was quite confined by continual wood-scenery.
-After proceeding about twenty miles we reached Cebolla, a tolerable
-establishment, consisting of a house of two stories, a small chapel,
-and a sugar-engine, in an unfinished state, situated in the bottom of
-a valley. The owner, Captain Jose Antonio Barbosa, was a Portuguese
-of the old school; he seemed much vexed that His Royal Highness had
-permitted strangers to travel the country, and treated us with a
-constrained civility, which shewed us that he thought we were come
-about no good. His conversation ran continually against the operations
-of Government in laying taxes upon rum and other commodities; and
-though he tasted the sweets of office, being part-renter of the
-lucrative ferry of Paraiba, which post he obtained through the
-interest of a very worthy gentleman in Rio de Janeiro, yet he had
-all the acerbity of a disappointed place-hunter. His self-interested
-and narrow-minded views were but too plainly directed to one object,
-monopoly; the mere mention of the Prince Regent’s liberality in
-permitting strangers to reside in Brazil appeared to torture him,
-and in short, so much of the snarler did he display while discussing
-this topic, that no character could have more forcibly reminded us of
-the dog in the manger. It is, however, but fair to add, that while
-indulging in severe reflections on strangers, he did not forget the
-duties of hospitality; before we went to rest, he invited us to partake
-of a family supper, consisting of a boiled duck smothered in rice, and
-a stewed pullet, to which sat down eight people, including ourselves.
-Having thanked our host for his kindness, we retired to the apartments
-allotted to us. My bed was so uneasy that I was obliged to sit up
-during most of the night, having no alternative, for as the clay floor
-was neither boarded nor paved, I could not venture to throw the bed
-clothes upon it, and sleep there. Never did mortal hail day-break with
-greater satisfaction; but my agreeable feelings were soon damped by one
-of those little vexatious accidents which in some states of mind are
-more hard to bear than real misfortunes. I had placed my thermometer in
-a _wind-door_ or air-hole (for the aperture was not glazed); a stupid
-fellow, in fastening the bridle of a mule to one of the bars, threw
-down the instrument and broke it. Luckily I had another, therefore the
-loss was not so grievous.
-
-Our soldiers having, with their wonted alacrity, provided mules, we
-set out at an early hour, and entered upon a much more level road than
-that of the preceding day. We passed along several valleys, the surface
-of which presented clay and decomposed granite, in some places more
-ferruginous than in others. There are numerous sheds all the way for
-the refreshment of travellers and their cattle. This day’s journey
-being only sixteen miles, we soon completed it, arriving about noon
-at the ferry of Paraibuna. This river, though as wide as the Thames at
-Westminster, is unnavigable, by reason of the large rocks which impede
-its course. The ferry-boat arriving, we went into it with all our
-mules, and were conveyed with oars and setting poles to the other side,
-where we found a Register for the examination of passengers, their
-passports, and property. The place is guarded by a few old soldiers,
-under the command of a lieutenant, who, though in ill health, shewed us
-every attention. Our soldiers got us a dinner cooked at a _venda_[34],
-kept by a young man originally from Oporto; we took tea and supped with
-the commandant, who assigned to us an apartment in the Register. He was
-very civil, and seemed highly pleased to see us, frequently exclaiming,
-“Os Inglezes são grande gente,” (the English are a great nation). We
-were gratified by this and other national compliments which he paid us,
-and not less so by the respect which every one who came to visit us
-testified for our country, as being in alliance with a Prince to whom
-they were enthusiastically devoted.
-
-The Register is a substantial edifice of wood, built on posts to
-preserve it from the overflows of the river, which frequently inundate
-the sandy flat on which it stands. It contains a few rooms, which serve
-as barracks for the guards, and has a handsome gallery fronting the
-ferry. The station is low, and in summer is said to be very hot and
-unhealthy; a circumstance which, joined to the indolence and poverty of
-the inhabitants, may sufficiently account for the general appearance of
-debility observable among them. The little employment they have arises
-chiefly from the passengers who frequent this great thoroughfare, and
-from the numerous troops of mules which are continually arriving on
-their way to, as well as from, the interior. The barges of the ferry
-are as fine vessels as any I ever saw used for the purpose; and indeed
-they ought to be, for a considerable toll is paid, not only for every
-mule, or other beast of burden, but for every person crossing the
-river. The annual amount collected yields, no doubt, a handsome profit
-to the renters; but it might be considerably augmented if a regular
-road were opened to Canta Gallo, which is only eighteen leagues distant.
-
-Being informed that our next day’s journey would be an arduous one, on
-account of the hilly district through which we should have to pass,
-we retired to rest betimes, and were stirring at an early hour. We
-mounted fresh mules, and proceeded along a good road through a rugged
-and thinly peopled district; in the course of five leagues, we passed
-over seven very high granite mountains, and eight smaller ones, and at
-length reached the ferry of the Paraiba, a river considerably larger
-than the Paraibuna. At the Register belonging to it, which is more
-extensive and better guarded than the former, all goods are examined
-and weighed, paying duty according to their weight, whatever be their
-kind, quality, or value. This regulation bears very unequally upon
-different articles; salt, for instance, pays nearly _cent. per cent._
-iron and lead about the same; while woollens, cottons, and other light
-goods do not, on an average, exceed eight or ten _per cent._
-
-The commandant of the Register offered us every assistance, and was
-kind enough to provide us a fresh mule for our baggage. The short time
-we staid here did not allow much leisure for observation; and, indeed,
-there was little of novelty to observe. The situation of the Register
-is pleasant; the country around is well wooded and fertile, though
-mountainous. The river is almost destitute of fish.
-
-We proceeded about a league and a half farther, through thick woods,
-and arrived at a place named Rosina de Negra, where we halted for the
-night. Our next day’s journey presented the same varieties of hill
-and ravine as those we had already passed. In one part of the road we
-observed a kind of barracks, consisting of an _estalagem_ and some
-_ranchos_ or huts, where an officer and about twenty horse-soldiers
-are stationed; they patrole the road, and are authorised to stop
-travellers, and make the strictest search of those whom they suspect
-of having gold-dust or diamonds concealed. Proceeding two leagues, we
-arrived at the Register of Mathias Barboza, situated in the midst of an
-almost impervious wood. It was built about sixty or seventy years ago,
-by the gentleman whose name it bears, and who was an ancestor of the
-noble family of Sousa.
-
-This Register is a large oblong building, with two great doors at each
-end, through which all travellers, with their mules, are required to
-pass. On entering, they stop, and deliver their passports to a soldier
-for examination by the commander, who, if he judges that a correct
-account is given of the property, suffers them to proceed: but if
-any grounds of suspicion occur, the mules are unloaded, and all the
-contents of their cargoes are examined with the strictest scrutiny. In
-these examinations it not unfrequently happens that a negro has been
-suspected of swallowing a diamond; in which case, he is shut up in a
-bare room until such time as the truth can be proved. The command of
-this station is entrusted to a major. The inner part of the building
-consists of apartments for the officers, _ranchos_ for the soldiers,
-cells for the confinement of suspected persons, and stabling for the
-mules. In the yard there are numerous posts, to which the cattle are
-tied while loading or unloading. There is also a _venda_ for the
-accommodation of travellers.
-
-Leaving this place, we proceeded through an extensive tract of wood,
-in which we occasionally observed a few deer, but no birds, except now
-and then a green parrot or a wood-pecker. The road, as far as the eye
-could reach, was bounded on each hand by close continuous thickets, and
-rarely enlivened by traces of habitation. Those persons who live by the
-way-side are commonly of the lowest order, who settle there with the
-view of selling refreshments to travellers, and corn for the mules;
-they are in general an idle, gossipping race: the more respectable
-classes reside at a distance from the public road.
-
-We arrived about four in the evening at a farm-house called Madeiras,
-belonging to Captain José Pinto de Sousa. The situation is cold and
-salubrious, the vicinity well-watered, and abounding in fine tracts of
-arable and pasture land, but deplorably neglected. The owner seemed to
-prefer ease, with inconvenience, to labor, with comfort; and, satisfied
-with the spontaneous bounty of nature, cared little about improving it
-by industry. The house itself was miserably out of repair: its walls,
-which consisted of lattice-work plastered with clay, were full of holes
-and crevices, and its roof was in a very crazy and shattered condition.
-We fared but poorly, and passed a very indifferent night; often
-reflecting on the apathy and listless indolence of the people: who,
-thought we, in a cold climate would live in a dwelling full of cracks
-and air-holes, when a few dashes of mud might render it comparatively
-comfortable!
-
-From this place, which is an hundred miles from Porto da Estrella,
-we continued our route next day over a chain of mountains, among
-which we encountered other falls of the Paraiba nearer its source,
-and, traversing a tract of close woodland, arrived at a station
-called the Fazenda do Juiz de Fora. Here we procured fresh mules, and
-proceeded for a considerable distance on the ascent, when we met with
-two planters from Minas Novas, who were going to Rio de Janeiro with
-forty-six mules loaded with cotton, packed in raw hides, each beast
-carrying two packages. They had been nearly three months on the road.
-We availed ourselves of their kind offers to carry intelligence to our
-friends in the capital, and gave them letters for that purpose.
-
-The remainder of our day’s journey afforded few incidents worth
-notice. We observed several pines of a singular species, which yielded
-abundance of resin. In one part of the road I shot a most beautiful
-bird, the name of which I could not learn, but was informed that it
-flew about much in the night. In another part, we noticed a beast of
-prey, which was crossing the road before us, and fled at our approach.
-I killed a small water-snake with two fins near its vent.
-
-We arrived towards evening at the _fazenda_ of Antonio Ferreira,
-formerly a good house, but now almost in ruins. The owner was not
-at home; but his old negro-servants provided as handsomely for us as
-we could have expected them to do if he had been present. We made a
-tolerable supper of stewed fowls, with the addition of a fine wild
-turkey, which I had killed in the vicinity. I may here observe, that a
-traveller in this country should neglect no opportunity of providing
-for himself with his gun, as he is never certain of palatable fare at
-the places where he alights.
-
-The surface of the country is in general good strong clay; all the
-rocks are of gneiss and granite, in the composition of which hornblende
-predominates. We this day passed the site of the first gold-washing,
-which is very small, and has been many years abandoned. The rivulets
-have a great deal of oxide of iron in small grains mixed with the
-sand in their eddies. In some places the granite is in a decomposing
-state, and there are large nodules of what the Germans call grünstein,
-which appear not unlike basalt. The air in these elevated districts is
-fresh and cool, except from two to four o’clock in the afternoon, when
-I found it rather hot. In the evening, while amusing ourselves with
-shooting, we observed a man in a friar’s habit, with a box bearing a
-picture of the Virgin, fastened to his waist by a belt. His face was
-overgrown with hair, and his whole appearance exceedingly wild and
-uncouth. On inquiry, we were informed that this extraordinary figure
-was a hermit; and that he had embraced this austere life by way of
-doing penance for some great crime.
-
-Having pursued our diversion while day-light lasted, we returned to
-the house, where, for the first time since our departure from Rio, we
-partook of a comfortable meal, and regaled ourselves with a bottle
-of excellent Madeira, which my worthy companion by good fortune had
-brought with him.
-
-We set out next day by sun-rise, and proceeded some miles along a
-tolerable road. The vallies as we advanced were wider, and more easy
-of cultivation, but the mountains were excessively steep. On even
-ground our general pace was three or four miles an hour, but on the
-acclivities we proceeded slowly, and were obliged to observe every step
-of our mules, and to balance ourselves accordingly. This action of the
-body produces no perceptible consequences for the first few days, but
-afterwards it begins to torture the loins with a species of lumbago.
-
-After a journey of twenty-eight miles, which occupied nine hours, we
-found ourselves at six in the evening at a small farm-house called
-Fazenda de Dôna Clara e Dôna Maria. These two good ladies honored us
-with a more polite reception than we had hitherto experienced on the
-journey. It being the festival of St. Bartholomew, a great holiday
-among the Brazilians, they had prepared a more sumptuous dinner
-than usual, of which they kindly invited us to partake. We were
-the more sensible of this act of hospitality, because it evidently
-proceeded from sincere good-will; and, like the widow’s mite, derived
-additional merit from the smallness of the store which supplied the
-means of performing it. Their establishment seemed barely provided
-with necessaries; and the house in which they lived was ill built and
-scantily furnished. We could not but smile at the earnestness with
-which one of these worthy ladies complained of the hardness of the
-times; they paid, she observed, a moidore every three years in taxes.
-How happy, thought we, would our English spinsters of slender incomes
-deem themselves in being so lightly assessed!
-
-We passed the evening tolerably, having provided ourselves with
-candles, which we found very necessary both here and in other places
-on the road; for the rooms in general are lighted only by a glimmering
-lamp, which rather augments than diminishes their melancholy gloom.
-
-In the morning we were informed that the mules which had been provided
-for us over-night were taken away from the stable. This so enraged
-our soldier, that he immediately rode in quest of them, brought them
-back, and pressed others for our service. We here saw the convenience
-of travelling under official orders: had we not been so provided, we
-might have been exposed to a most vexatious delay. These military
-requisitions of cattle may be considered by the owner as a grievance;
-but he generally indemnifies himself by high charges to other
-travellers, and by impositions in the way of trade.
-
-Being now within the province of Minas Geraes, (a country famed at
-Rio de Janeiro for its excellent cheese), I expected to see some
-improvement in the condition of the country,—some establishment
-worthy of being called a farm,—some dwelling, constructed not merely
-for shelter but for comfort. I hoped to remark among the inhabitants
-that air of health and animation which springs from the invigorating
-occupations and cheering pursuits of husbandry; but no such pleasing
-change was perceptible: the same want of exertion prevailed here as
-in other parts of the country; the people seemed to act as if the
-tenure by which they held their lands was about to be abolished; all
-around them had the appearance of make-shift; their old houses, fast
-hastening to decay, bore no marks of repair about them; wherever a bit
-of garden-ground was inclosed, it appeared overrun with weeds; where
-coffee-trees, planted in former years, still existed, the present
-occupiers were too indolent to gather the fruit; no inclosures were
-made for pasturage; a few goats supplied the little milk that was
-consumed; and cows’-milk was rarely to be procured. On observing these
-deplorable consequences of the apathy of the inhabitants, I could not
-but reflect on the advantages which might accrue from the introduction
-of the English system of agriculture among them. The example of a
-single farm, conducted on that system, might go far towards rousing
-the people from their slothful state; and, when they once felt their
-faculties awakened, they would be ashamed to lounge about as they now
-do, under an old great coat, for days together, burthens to themselves,
-and objects of contempt to all strangers who see them.
-
-The next place we visited, after quitting the residence of these old
-ladies, offered every requisite for making the experiment above alluded
-to. It was a _fazenda_ called Mantiqueira, situated in the largest
-plain we had hitherto traversed, consisting of rich land watered by
-numerous streams. The establishment was in a fit state to begin with:
-the house was falling to ruin, and the grounds about it were overrun
-with weeds and brushwood. What more desirable situation, exclaimed
-I to my companion, could an English farmer select! Here cattle of
-every description are cheap; cows and oxen at two years old may be
-purchased at 30s. or 40s. per head; excellent horses from 60s. to
-£8. each; and pigs, poultry, and other live-stock, at a price too
-trifling to mention. Here is land which, under the influence of this
-genial climate, is capable of yielding two hundred-fold; here is wood
-in abundance for every purpose; excellent clay for making bricks; and
-water at command. Yet all these advantages are lost to the present
-occupiers, who consider them too cheap to be valuable; and, perpetually
-hankering after the precious minerals, seem to think that the only
-standard for estimating the gifts of nature, is the difficulty of
-obtaining them.
-
-Having passed the hamlet of St. Sebastian, we arrived late in the
-evening at Borda do Campo, a village consisting of about twenty houses,
-the best of which is that of Captain Rodrigo de Lima, who, on learning
-our situation, kindly took us in for the night. While supper was
-preparing, we had some conversation with him respecting the agriculture
-and produce of the neighbourhood, in the course of which he paid much
-attention to our observations, and promised next day to shew us the
-system he pursued. At the repast, which was speedily announced, he
-introduced us to his wife and daughter, and a lady who was then on a
-visit to them. This was an unexpected act of politeness, and one which
-had never yet been exercised towards us by any master of a family in
-the whole course of our journey. The few females we occasionally saw
-at any former place generally secluded themselves on our arrival and
-during our stay; and, when they came near us by chance, they commonly
-ran away in as much apparent alarm as if they had been accustomed to
-be frightened at the name of an Englishman. The ladies appeared in
-very neat dresses of English manufacture, with a profusion of gold
-chains about their necks, which are always worn on receiving or paying
-visits. Their conversation was gay and enlivening; they were very
-inquisitive respecting the costume of English women, and seemed quite
-astonished at hearing that they wore caps, it being never the custom
-among the Brazilian females to cover their heads until advanced in
-years. They ornament their hair with combs, frequently of gold, and
-very richly wrought. Wine was introduced, of which the ladies could
-not be prevailed on to partake: they gave our healths by putting the
-glass to their lips. After supper, the table was covered with delicious
-sweetmeats; when, being desirous of paying the lady of the house a
-compliment, I spoke highly of their excellence, and presumed that the
-fruits were preserved under her immediate direction; but she assured
-me to the contrary, and observed that her negress did all that sort of
-domestic work. I perceived, or imagined, that she was rather offended
-at my remark, and therefore apologized by saying, that it was not
-uncommon for the ladies in England to interest themselves personally in
-the concerns of housewifery. The remainder of the evening passed off
-very agreeably.
-
-On looking out of my chamber-window the following morning, I was
-surprised to see two small and very neat inclosures, in one of which
-flax was growing, and in the other wheat. The latter, which apparently
-had been sown about seven weeks, was very poor and unpromising: the
-ground had too much water, and seemed of late to have been flooded. Our
-host regaled us with a breakfast of stewed fowl, excellent coffee and
-milk, and a dish of _feijones_, with mandioca and buttered toast; after
-which he conducted us to his inclosures.
-
-The flax was very healthful and strong: he told us he cut[35] it three
-or four times a year, and that it was dressed, spun, and woven in his
-own house. He grew but little, having occasion for no more than what
-answered his domestic purposes. The wheat, he told us, was blighted. He
-shewed us a sample of last year’s growth, which was very poor, coarse,
-and foul. The mills are of similar construction to those used at Canta
-Gallo, but I did not observe a pair of stones fit for the grinding of
-wheat.
-
-I now expressed a wish to see his dairy, which the good gentleman
-immediately complied with. Instead of an apartment, such as I expected
-to find, fitted up and kept in order for that sole purpose, I was shewn
-into a kind of dirty store-room, the smell of which was intolerable.
-The present, I was told, was not the time for making cheese, as
-the cows gave milk only in the rainy season. I begged to see the
-implements used in the process; and, on examining them, found, to my
-utter astonishment, that neither the vats nor cloths had been washed
-since they were last used; and the milk-pails, &c. were in the same
-condition. This sufficiently accounted for the offensive smell which I
-had perceived on entering the place. When I asked to see the utensil
-used for making butter, an apology was made, by stating that it was
-not in the way: they had observed my disgust at the other vessels, and
-probably thought that this was equally unfit to be inspected. I did all
-in my power to inform our worthy host of the manner in which English
-dairies were conducted, and gave him several directions, which he wrote
-down, but seemed quite indifferent about adopting them. On enquiry, I
-found that no provision was made for the cows; there were no houses
-erected for milking, and that operation was frequently neglected, and
-at all times badly performed.
-
-The premises bore traces of the industry and taste of the former
-occupants: there was a mud-wall round them, encompassing about an acre
-of ground, which, when perfect, must have given the whole a retired and
-comfortable appearance; but it was now partly broken down in ruins.
-The steps leading to the front door of the dwelling were of the lapis
-ollaris, or pot-stone, of which substance there is a stratum in the
-vicinity.
-
-Our cattle being ready, we mounted about eleven in the forenoon,
-returning thanks to our host, and offering to pay for the accommodation
-we had met with; but the only compensation he required, was a promise,
-on our part, to pass a day or two with him on our return. The ladies,
-who had not appeared at breakfast, came out upon the gallery, and very
-pleasingly and politely wished us a good journey.
-
-Resuming our route, we passed several small farms, and observed
-that the blight had destroyed all their bananas, and withered their
-coffee-trees. My thermometer at the time was not lower than 52°, but
-the damage had been done some days before by a sharp southerly wind.
-In some parts of the road there were very small inclosures of flax
-and rye. The country now appeared more open, and the wood-scenery
-lay at a greater distance. We rode by the side of a barren mountain,
-which was covered to an extent of three miles with quartz, and
-produced little or no herbage, except a species of wiry or windle
-grass, which was much parched by the sun. We descended a declivity
-tremendously steep, and full a mile in length, at the bottom of which
-we crossed the Rio das Mortes, here a small rivulet. On its further
-bank is an _estalagem_, or inn, called Registro Velho, (Old Register)
-having been originally built as a searching-office, to prevent the
-smuggling of gold. Proceeding hence, the eye is again relieved from
-confined wood-scenery by the prospect of a grand amphitheatre of
-mountains, which are bounded by others of amazing magnitude, covered
-with forests. On the side of one hill, which we skirted obliquely, I
-observed several crystallized masses, which, on examination, proved
-to be clusters of cubes of ferruginous quartz of a dark-brown color.
-We shortly afterwards arrived at a village called Barbacena, situated
-on a commanding eminence, in a most fertile country, and apparently
-containing about two hundred dwelling-houses. While we stopped to take
-some refreshment, numbers of the inhabitants came to look at us, having
-never before seen Englishmen, and being on the rack of curiosity to
-know the objects of our journey. At this place two great roads from the
-mining country unite, and form the main road to Rio de Janeiro. That
-to the westward leads from S. João d’El Rey, Sabará, and Cuiabá; the
-other from Villa Rica, Mariana, Villa do Principe, Tejuco, Minas Novas,
-&c. Being a sort of half-way station to the capital, and the last open
-place on the road, it is much frequented by people from different parts
-of the interior, and has a considerable traffic in various articles,
-particularly baizes, cotton goods, salt, and iron. Many of the shops
-were well stocked with English manufactures. The place is governed by
-an _Ouvidor_, or justice of the peace, and a military officer. In its
-neighbourhood there is a quarry of soft, whitish granite, from which
-mill-stones are made; but, from the specimens I saw of it, the material
-must be very unfit for such a purpose.
-
-We arrived, about four in the evening, at a poor place called
-Resequinha, the owner of which made every provision for us which his
-scanty means afforded. He dispatched a negro to gather grass for
-the mules, which is here incredibly scarce; and killed us a fowl
-or two for dinner. The time previous to that meal hung heavy on our
-hands; there were no birds to afford us an hour’s shooting, and we
-had no source of diversion, except that which the lively fancy and
-inexhaustible humor of my companion afforded. We dined heartily about
-seven o’clock on stewed fowls and mandioca, which fully supplied the
-want of bread. That article is so extremely scarce in these parts,
-that even the populous village of Barbacena, though situated in the
-richest corn-district of the province, could furnish us only one rusk.
-Being overcome with weariness, we prepared for rest. One of our beds
-was placed on the table, the other on a dried hide stretched upon the
-clay floor. These were miserable accommodations; but sleep knows little
-distinction between the hovel and the palace, and a man thoroughly
-disposed may enjoy it as soundly in one as in the other. So it was
-with my companion; he was in a profound slumber within five minutes
-after he had lain down, in despite of the rough materials of which his
-pallet was composed. Mine prevented me from sleeping, and compelled me
-to sit up during most of the night; it consisted, as well as his, of
-the leaves of Indian corn crammed into a bag, with the mouth tied up;
-but the careless negro who performed that operation had neglected to
-pick out the core or pith from which the grain is rubbed, so that there
-was no finding an easy posture upon it. I sat musing on the absolute
-wretchedness of every thing around; a miserable lamp hung over our
-heads and threw a dismal glimmer about the apartment; the floor was
-uneven and broken into holes; the table, on which we had dined,
-consisted of one large plank of a quality not discoverable without the
-assistance of a scraper, as it had never been cleaned since it was
-made; there was not a chair or any thing resembling a seat, except an
-antique bench with a back to it, fixed at a distance on one side of the
-table, so that some of the guests had to take their repast standing.
-The very beasts in the out-houses were better provided for than the
-master, if we might judge from the healthy condition of those we saw,
-whose slothful apathy could be matched only with that of the swine they
-fed.
-
-We left Resequinha an hour after day-break, and entered on some clayey
-ground which caused our mules to come down frequently, as they were
-unshod. The day being Sunday we found some difficulty in procuring
-fresh mules, as they were all engaged in taking their masters to mass.
-After proceeding about a league and a half we arrived at the _fazenda_
-do Gama, consisting of a good mansion and some out-buildings. The
-house, which is the residence of a major, stands on an eminence in
-a fine open country, beautifully interspersed with clumps of trees
-and small patches of wood, but wholly uncultivated and destitute of
-inclosures. The land appeared much burnt up, and ill supplied with
-water, but the vallies, we were told, abounded in numerous streams
-and rivulets. Having stopped at the door, we were saluted by the voice
-of a fine motherly-looking lady, apparently about forty, who invited
-us to alight, and we readily obeyed, having occasion to change our
-baggage-mule. Two young ladies, the daughters of the one whom we had
-first seen, came on the gallery to welcome us. As the morning was
-cool, they were covered with purple mantles of baize, which left only
-a part of the face exposed, but shewed us sufficient to prove that the
-females of this province, here called _mineras_, are above mediocrity
-in personal charms. This opinion was confirmed on entering the house,
-where these ladies appeared to much greater advantage; they were in
-the bloom of health, rather tall in stature, and in their air and
-gestures extremely graceful. We had just entered into conversation
-when in came our soldier to announce that the baggage-mule was loaded,
-and that the day was so far spent as barely to allow time enough to
-reach the next station before night. This honest fellow for the first
-time on our journey was the bearer of unwelcome news. I asked him why
-he did not bring us to this mansion last night, instead of halting
-at the miserable dog-hole of Resequinha. “Ah, Sir,” replied he, “the
-mules could travel no further.” “Then you might have told us of this
-delightful place, and we would have walked hither had it been double
-the distance.” How much more merrily we should have passed the
-evening, thought I, on observing two fine guitars hung up in a closet
-that was accidentally opened. The mother, who now came in, gave us an
-invitation to stop, regretting that her husband, being confined by
-illness to his bed, was unable to pay his respects to us in person. We
-expressed our disappointment at not being able to avail ourselves of
-this invitation, and again related how ill we had passed the night at
-Resequinha. “Yes,” observed one of the daughters very facetiously, “men
-alone make very insipid society; you would have been much better here,
-would not you?” Our soldier again came to say that the baggage-mule
-was out of sight, and that we should be in danger of losing our way.
-The mule, said I, may surely for once fall lame to accommodate us, or
-some lucky misfortune may occur to give us a pretext for prolonging our
-stay. We were at length obliged to yield to the pressing remonstrances
-of our soldier, and took leave of the good lady and her amiable
-daughters, promising to visit them on our return. We pursued our
-journey with reluctance, over a dreary tract of country, passing at
-intervals through small woods, where we shot a few wood-peckers, here
-called _carpinteros_, a name sufficiently characteristic of their
-peculiar habits. The incessant hacking which they make with their beaks
-may be heard at a considerable distance. No incident worth mentioning
-occurred in this day’s journey, which terminated at Bandeira de
-Coelho, where we arrived at sun-set. A more dirty and slovenly place,
-in a finer situation, we never visited. It was with great difficulty
-that my negro-boy procured us a pot of any sort to dress us a fowl and
-some beans for supper. The kitchen was a mere dirt-hole, blackened with
-soot and smoke above and all around, and covered with mud and filth
-below: the cooking utensil was a pot placed on three stones and heated
-by a fire of green wood. The owner was very assiduous in helping us,
-and heartily desired us to make free. He was reputed to be a man of
-considerable property, which he had accumulated by selling corn for the
-troops of mules which frequently stop here, and are generally better
-accommodated than his biped guests. We procured something in the form
-of a supper, and passed the night under the same sort of shed as that
-which sheltered our cattle, and on bedding very little superior in
-quality to theirs.
-
-The experience of this night completed the catalogue of inconveniences
-to which we had been exposed since the commencement of our journey. I
-would advise every traveller who pursues the same route, to provide
-himself with a hammock and blankets, a stock of tea, sugar, candles,
-liquors, soap, and salt, two kettles, and a drinking-horn, (for in
-few places will he meet with any of these articles), as well as an
-umbrella, which can by no means be dispensed with. This equipage,
-(together with proper instruments), is necessary for a person who
-travels to make observations on the country, and will require two
-baggage-mules to carry it.
-
-We set out next morning at six, without breakfast, not being able to
-procure either coffee or milk; and proceeding six miles, through a fine
-open country, arrived at a large village called Louza, containing full
-two thousand inhabitants. It is well built, but as I was informed, has
-much declined from its former consequence, which it owed principally
-to the rich mines in its vicinity, now almost exhausted. We procured
-a tolerable breakfast of coffee and eggs at a _vend_; and, while we
-partook of it, were much amused by the numbers of inhabitants, who
-crowded the door in eager curiosity to see us, asking a variety of
-questions of a political nature, and forming endless conjectures
-respecting the object of our journey.
-
-Leaving this village about eleven o’clock, we proceeded along a range
-of mountains composed of argillaceous schistus, and passed a hill
-covered with micaceous iron ore: in one part of it there was a break
-that showed marks of stratification, which appeared vertical, or it
-was probably a strong vein of ferruginous matter, which traversed the
-mountain. I was not a little surprised to find that the road, for above
-half a mile, was covered with rich oxide of iron.
-
-We passed a place called Alto de Virginia, where, as well as in the
-vicinity, to a considerable extent, there are gold-washings, which
-bear the general name of Lavras de Virginia. I examined the heaps of
-debris, but found in them nothing but rounded quartz and ferruginous
-matter. Journeying half a league further, we came to the gold-washings
-of S. Antonio do Ouro Branco, where hillocks of the same materials
-abounded; and we soon afterwards entered the poor and almost deserted
-village of the same name, containing about five hundred souls. We had
-an interview with the commandant, but could obtain nothing in the way
-of refreshment; indeed the few people we saw were so needy, that far
-from being able to supply our wants, they seemed to crave all we had to
-satisfy their own, and eyed us as if they expected we had brought them
-something. Glad to get away from this wretched place, we continued our
-journey through a succession of fine vallies, and arrived about four
-o’clock at the foot of a tremendous mountain, overhung with clouds.
-The ascent was so steep that, judging it in vain to attempt to ride, I
-dismounted; our soldier, who was a lighter man than myself, exchanged
-mules with me, and up we went in a zig-zag direction for half an hour,
-when we found ourselves immersed in a thick cloud, which for some time
-hindered us from seeing our way. We were at length able to proceed, and
-in many parts had to mount up ledges nearly two feet perpendicular,
-which we performed without alighting, as our saddles were secured from
-slipping off behind by a strong strap passing round the mule’s neck.
-It is considered very unsafe to dismount in these ascents, for the
-animals go much less steady when led than when ridden. At seven o’clock
-we reached the summit, where, though night was setting in, we found it
-necessary to rest half an hour, and then proceeded a league in the dark
-without our baggage-mule, which, being unable to keep pace with us, had
-been left in charge of two men and the negro-boy. We were under little
-apprehension for the safety of our property, though, as we afterwards
-learnt, the poor animal was down above twenty times in the course of
-the ascent. About eight o’clock we reached Alto do Morro, our baggage
-arriving about an hour after. Here we halted for the night in one of
-the best inns we had hitherto seen, the hostess of which soon provided
-us with a comfortable supper, of which we partook very heartily, and
-passed an agreeable evening. The good order and propriety which reigned
-in this inn confirmed an observation we had often made, that of all
-houses on the road those under the direction of females were managed
-with most ability, and certainly afforded the best accommodations. I
-may add, that there prevailed in them that evident disposition and wish
-to oblige which generally makes up for any deficiency, and by appealing
-to a stranger’s liberality makes him satisfied with whatever is set
-before him.
-
-The land, through which we this day passed, appeared much burnt up,
-being in general very bare of vegetable soil, and having few trees to
-defend it against the heat of the sun. In the mountains we observed
-several slips or breaks, which presented abrupt and singular masses
-lying in all directions like confused heaps of architectural ruins,
-disclosing veins of soft talc, and some _cascalho_, poor in gold. The
-stratum was argillaceous schistus, very ferruginous, and friable.
-At the bottom of these slips, which appeared to be caused by the
-disrupture of one part of the mountain from the other (probably through
-the infiltration of water), there were small streams, which in rainy
-weather swell into torrents, and burst through their channels with
-great velocity.
-
-The next day, it being our intention to reach Villa Rica before
-night, we set out at an early hour, notwithstanding the cold cloudy
-weather and the heavy dew which prevailed. We passed through a bare
-and uneven tract of country, presenting similar characteristics to
-those above described. Near a place called Capão, I rode down a hill
-covered with rich iron ore in such profusion, that tons might have
-been gathered from the surface. Proceeding a short distance farther,
-we arrived at a house, the owner of which, we afterwards understood,
-possessed a topaz-mine in the neighbourhood. The mention of a _mine_
-of topazes excited my curiosity, as it gave me the idea of a vein
-worked under-ground, and containing those substances in the matrix as
-originally formed. On expressing to the owner my desire to see the
-works, he kindly undertook to accompany me to the spot. After walking
-about half a mile up the mountain just mentioned, I was shown two
-breaks or slips, in which my guide informed me were the topaz-mines. We
-entered one of them, which was in extent little short of two acres; the
-argillaceous schistus, which formed the upper stratum, appeared in a
-variety of stages, the greater part migrating into micaceous schistus.
-In one part I observed two negroes poking in the little soft veins,
-which the slips disclosed, with a piece of rusty iron, probably part
-of an old hoop; and on enquiring what they were about, I was informed
-they were the _miners_, searching for topazes. I took one of their
-instruments, and on using it as they did, found these veins to contain
-a very minute micaceous substance approaching to earthy talc, also some
-quartz, and large crystals of specular iron ore. I had the good fortune
-to find two or three topazes, which, as they had only one pyramid each,
-and appeared fractured, I judged to be out of their original place. It
-had hitherto been my opinion, that all the topazes which I had seen
-at Rio de Janeiro, or elsewhere, and which were of similar form to
-these, had been broken from the matrix by the miners; I now, therefore,
-fully expected to meet with some having double pyramids, but, to my
-great disappointment, all that I found were entirely detached. From
-a great quantity (at least a cart-load) of inferior topazes, which
-were afterwards shown to me in the owner’s house, (and any number of
-which I might have taken away), I could not select one with a double
-pyramid. They informed me that sometimes, but very rarely, topazes had
-been found attached to quartz, but even in these instances the quartz
-was fractured and out of its original place[36]. The topazes which were
-shewn me, were very imperfect, and full of flaws. The negroes employed
-in these works were superintended by two Creolians, who received what
-they found.
-
-After I had collected a variety of specimens, we returned to our mules,
-continued our journey over bleak and sterile mountains, through roads
-covered with dust, and arrived about three o’clock in sight of Villa
-Rica. Though the town stands on an eminence rather steep and lofty, the
-approach to it is not noble or striking, neither is there any thing in
-a near view of it, which, to the eye of a traveller, corresponds with
-the grandeur of its name. The environs, unlike those of opulent towns
-in general, exhibited few signs of cultivation; not an acre of good
-pasture was any where to be seen, nor an inclosure of any kind. We
-arrived a little after four, and alighted at one of the first houses
-to the left, on entering the town; it had been recommended to us as
-one of the best inns, but we found, that, in point of cleanliness and
-accommodation, report greatly overrated it. The owner, being a priest,
-entrusted the entire management to a mulatto, who acted as if he was
-seldom under the eye of his master. Having ordered dinner, we walked
-into the town for about a mile; the streets were very irregular, and
-so badly paved as to give us no favorable idea of the opulence of the
-inhabitants. As night was coming on, and we felt fatigued, we postponed
-delivering our letters until next day, and returned to our inn. Our
-dinner, which was served up in as slovenly a manner as we had ever
-witnessed, even in the poorest _rancho_ on the road, consisted of some
-stewed beef and a fowl. The bread was tolerable, but dear. Being little
-inclined to sit up after our repast, we retired early to rest; our
-rooms, though destitute of almost every appropriate convenience, were
-better than those to which we had of late been accustomed.
-
-Notwithstanding the fatigue of the journey, which heartily disposed me
-to sleep, my mind was for some time occupied in reflecting on the place
-at which we had now arrived, and which had long been the theme of our
-wonder and conjecture. Villa Rica—the rich village! The capital of
-the province of Minas Geraes, and the seat of its government; a place
-which had for many years been reputed the richest in Brazil, as to it
-was brought all the gold found in the vast district around. Impatient
-to see some vestiges of that splendor which its name implies, I slept
-but little, and rose at an early hour. We, with difficulty, obtained
-our breakfast, consisting of coffee and eggs, with bread and English
-butter, after which we dressed and went to deliver our letters.
-
-Our arrival being announced, we were directed to present ourselves at
-the audience-chambers, which form part of a large edifice, containing
-also the post-office and other public rooms for the transaction of
-Government business. We were introduced to the General of the Forces,
-and to Dr. Lucas Antonio Monteiro de Barras, Judge of the Supreme
-Court; the latter held the principal authority in the absence of the
-Viceroy, who was gone to Rio de Janeiro, another from Goyazes being
-expected shortly to succeed him. We were honored with a most handsome
-reception, and various houses were put in our choice, with a kind
-invitation to make use of any of them during our stay, but we preferred
-taking lodgings in the centre of the town, within three minutes’ walk
-of the Palace, in Rua Dereita, the very Bond Street of Villa Rica.
-
-After our interview with the Judge, we devoted some hours to a
-perambulation of the town, and returned much fatigued to dine at our
-inn. In the evening I paid a visit to the vicar, who gave me a hearty
-welcome, and in the usual style of Portuguese compliment, told me his
-house was mine. The saying, had it been verified, would have put me
-in possession of one of the best mansions in Villa Rica. At tea the
-worthy pastor introduced me to several officers, among whom was the
-late governor of the Diamond district, who gave me much information
-concerning it, and shewed me an aqua-marina, which had been found in
-one of the washings. It was a perfect hexagonal prism, full seven
-inches in length, and three quarters of an inch in diameter, clear
-and free from flaws. After some hours of very agreeable conversation,
-the party broke up, and it being dark, I was conducted to my inn by
-a servant of the vicar’s, with his lantern. At the corners of the
-streets, along which we passed, there were groups of the lower order
-of people offering their prayers; in a niche above them was a figure
-of the Virgin, with tapers burning before it. A voice in a low solemn
-tone uttered the vespers, the responses were made by the multitude. I
-took off my hat as I passed, knowing that such a token of reverence is
-always expected.
-
-The next day was occupied chiefly in removing our equipage to our new
-lodgings in Rua Dereita; to this service our soldiers were particularly
-attentive, and left us nothing to do which they could do for us. On
-the day following we were honored with visits from the judge, the
-general, the vicar, and many of the principal inhabitants, all of whom
-testified their respect for us in the most polite manner. Many of
-them afterwards sent me presents of fine sugar, coffee, sweetmeats,
-cheese, and some good bread. One gentleman, to give me a proof of the
-richness of the soil and salubrity of the climate, sent me a cabbage,
-full fourteen inches in diameter, when stripped of its outside leaves;
-a finer vegetable never was produced.
-
-When our leisure permitted, we took excursions to view the town and
-its vicinity, sometimes on horseback and sometimes on foot, generally
-going and returning in a different direction. It is situated on the
-side of a large mountain, connected with others forming an immense
-chain, of which it is one of the highest. Most of the streets range,
-in steps, as it were, from the base to the summit, and are crossed by
-others which lead up the acclivity. It is most admirably supplied with
-water, which is conducted into almost every house in a most convenient
-and pleasant manner. In the streets are many fountains, which, though
-not to be compared with those of Italy in architectural taste, are well
-constructed. One cistern in particular contained water which tasted
-strongly of sulphate of iron; the natives consider it serviceable in
-the cure of cutaneous diseases, and frequently bathe in it. The town is
-divided into two parishes, and contains a population of about twenty
-thousand inhabitants, of whom there are more whites than blacks. The
-climate is delightful, and perhaps equal to that of Naples. Though the
-latitude of the place is only 20° south, yet owing to its elevated
-site, the temperature of the air is generally moderate. The thermometer
-never exceeds 82° in the shade and rarely below 48°, but its usual
-range is from 64° to 80° in summer, and from 48° to 70° in winter. The
-greatest heats prevail in January. Owing to its great elevation various
-changes from heat to cold prevail in the same day, and there are
-frequent showers of rain. Thunder-storms are common, but by no means
-violent. The sun is sometimes clouded by dews and mist so dense as not
-to subside until the forenoon is far advanced.
-
-The gardens here are laid out with great taste, and from the
-peculiarity of their construction present a curious spectacle. As there
-is scarcely a piece of level ground, even ten yards square, on the
-whole side of the mountain, the defect has been remedied by cutting
-spaces one above another at regular distances, and supporting them by
-low walls, the top of one being on a level with the base of that next
-above it. An easy flight of steps leads from one level to the other.
-These terraces seemed to me to be the very kingdom of Flora, for never
-did I before see such a profusion of delicate flowers. Here were also
-excellent vegetables of every kind, such as artichokes, asparagus,
-spinach, cabbage, kidney-beans, and potatoes. There are many indigenous
-fruits which might be much improved by a better system of horticulture.
-The peach appears to be the only exotic fruit which has been hitherto
-introduced; it florishes amazingly. I have frequently seen the
-branches of the trees so loaded as to require perpendicular support.
-
-The town is of considerable extent, but by no means so well peopled as
-when the mines were rich. Few of the inhabitants have any employment
-except the shopkeepers, who are indeed a numerous class. English
-woollens were by no means dear, superfine cloth being at 30s. to 35s.
-per yard; coatings, &c. nearly as cheap as in England; common cotton
-prints at 1s. 6d. to 2s. per yard; hats, handkerchiefs, kerseymeres,
-and Manchester piece goods in great plenty. There seemed, indeed, to
-be a glut of English merchandise and produce of all sorts, except
-earthenware, hams, porter, and butter, which were dear on account of
-the risk of carriage. Common Figueira wine was 3s. 6d. the bottle. The
-shops that sold the produce of the country were few in number and very
-indifferent. There were a great many tailors, shoe-makers, tin-workers,
-and venders of hardware, some smiths, and no inconsiderable number of
-saddlers. In a country where every one is a horseman, this trade must,
-one would imagine, take the lead of most others. The saddles that were
-shewn me here, were of a much superior make to those which I saw in Rio
-de Janeiro. I was surprised to find no workers in gold in a place so
-renowned for the production of that precious metal, but I was informed
-that the trade was prohibited by law, to prevent the gold from being
-worked before it was permuted.
-
-The market of Villa Rica was but ill supplied, notwithstanding the
-fertility of the district around it. Pulse and vegetables for the table
-were scarce, even grass was an article in great demand[37], and milk
-was as dear as it is in London. Poultry sold at from 3s. 6d. to 4s.
-6d. per couple. Beef of a tolerable kind, but by no means good, might
-be had at 1-1/2d. per pound. Pork was very fine: mutton was utterly
-unknown. Tallow was exceedingly dear, and candles were more than double
-the price at which they sell in this country.
-
-Though our arrival in the town excited some surprise, as we were the
-first of our nation who had visited it, yet the people did not regard
-us entirely as strangers, many of them having seen Englishmen in their
-frequent intercourse with Rio de Janeiro. My worthy companion had
-letters to some of the principal shopkeepers, which we took an early
-opportunity of delivering. When we spoke to them of the richness of
-the country, and of the quantity of gold with which it was reputed to
-abound, they seemed glad of the opportunity of telling us, that they
-believed the gold was all sent to England, adding that their capital
-ought now to be termed Villa Pobre, instead of Villa Rica. Indeed we
-were surprised to observe the comparative poverty which prevailed
-among them. Of above two thousand habitations, which the town
-contained, a considerable proportion was untenanted; and the rents of
-the rest were continually lowering. Houses were to be purchased at one
-half their real value; for instance, a house built a few years ago at
-one thousand pounds cost, would not now sell for more than five hundred
-pounds.
-
-The mountain on which the town stands, appeared to me in length from
-eight to nine miles, in every part narrow and almost insulated, being
-surrounded by deep ravines. In riding over it in various directions,
-I observed it to be composed of argillaceous schistus in almost every
-gradation, migrating from the compact blue slate into micaceous
-schistus. In some parts it lies in regular strata, in others it appears
-in confused masses. The slate is sometimes, but not very generally,
-used for paving, roofing, and other similar purposes. In some parts
-I noticed a few slender, confused, and irregular quartzose veins of
-little consequence, a large proportion of ferruginous accumulations
-and stalactitic aggregates, together with pyrites, and a considerable
-quantity of quartz pebbles of all sizes. That side on which the town
-is built presents many small hills, which form a number of gulleys in
-narrow ravines. Numerous streamlets flow down from the springs in the
-mountain in various channels, and in rainy weather swell into cascades;
-they form a rivulet at its base called Rio do Carmo, which in its
-course from hence is joined by many others, and changes its name first
-into that of Rio S. Jose, and then into Rio Doce. Of the latter I shall
-have occasion in the sequel to speak more at large.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XI.
-
- _Origin and present State of Villa Rica.—Account of the Mint.—Visit
- to the City of Mariana.—Excursion to the Fazendas of Barro and
- Castro, belonging to His Excellency the Conde de Linhares._
-
-
-THE history of an establishment, which, twenty years after its
-foundation, was reputed the richest place on the globe, was an object
-of considerable interest with me, and I made many enquiries respecting
-it from some of the best informed men on the spot. It appears that
-the first discovery of this once rich mountain was effected by the
-enterprising spirit of the Paulistas, who, of all the colonists in
-Brazil, retained the largest share of that ardent and indefatigable
-zeal for discovery, which characterized the Lusitanians of former days.
-They penetrated from their capital into these regions, braving every
-hardship, and encountering every difficulty which a savage country,
-infested by still more savage inhabitants, opposed to them. They cut
-their way through impervious woods, carrying their provisions with
-them, and occasionally cultivating small patches of land to afford
-them food to retreat to, in case of necessity, as well as to keep up
-a communication with their city S. Paulo. Every inch of ground was
-disputed by the barbarous Indians, here called Buticudas, who were
-constantly either attacking them openly or lying in ambush, and but
-too frequently succeeded in surprising some of them, or their negroes,
-whom they immediately sacrificed to their horrible appetite for human
-flesh. They believed the negroes to be the great monkeys of the wood.
-The bones of the unfortunate sufferers were frequently found exposed,
-shocking testimonies of the barbarity of their murderers, whom the
-Paulistas, roused to revenge, invariably shot, wherever they met them.
-These examples of vengeance answered their desired end; the Indians,
-terrified as well by the noise as by the fatal effect of fire-arms,
-fled with precipitation, believing that the white men commanded
-lightning and thunder.
-
-It does not appear that in exploring this territory they received any
-assistance whatever from the Aborigines: they followed the course of
-rivers, occasionally finding gold, of which they skimmed the surface,
-and continued to proceed until they arrived at the mountain which
-is our present subject. Its riches arrested their course; they
-immediately erected temporary houses and began their operations. The
-principal men of the party that first settled here, were Antonio Dias,
-Bartholomo Rocinho, Antonio Ferreira (_filho_) and Garcia Ruis. It
-appears that they took the most direct way to the place, for the roads
-they then opened are the same which are still used. The fame of their
-success soon reached the city of S. Paulo; fresh adventurers arrived
-in great numbers, bringing with them all the negroes they had means
-to purchase. Other adventurers went from S. Paulo to Rio de Janeiro
-to procure more negroes, their own city being drained; and thus the
-news of the lately discovered gold mountain being made known in the
-Brazilian capital, men of all descriptions went in crowds to this land
-of promise by the way of S. Paulo, which was the only route then known.
-The first settlers might have prevented the exposure of their good
-fortune, had they been able to moderate their joy, and consented to act
-in concert; but as gold was in such great abundance, every individual
-appropriated a lot of ground, and thus became a capitalist. Each strove
-which should make the most of his treasure in the shortest time, and
-thus there was a continual demand for more negroes, more iron, &c. and,
-in the general eagerness to obtain them, the secret, which all were
-interested in keeping, was disclosed. The Paulistas independent in
-spirit, and proud of their wealth, were desirous of giving laws to the
-new-comers; but the latter determining to oppose this measure, formed
-themselves into a party under the guidance of Manuel Nunes Vianna, an
-adventurer of some consequence, who strenuously asserted their claim
-to equal rights and advantages. Disputes arose on both sides, and were
-at length aggravated into hostilities, which proved unfavorable to the
-Paulistas, the greater part of whom fled to a considerable station of
-their own, and there awaited reinforcements. Vianna and his followers,
-without loss of time, went in pursuit of their foes, whom they found on
-a plain near the site of St. João d’El Rey. The two parties met on the
-border of a river, and a sanguinary battle took place, which ended in
-the defeat of the Paulistas, who afterwards made the best terms they
-could. The slain were buried on the margin of the river, which, from
-that circumstance, took the name of Rio das Mortes.
-
-The Paulistas, bent on revenge, but weakened by defeat, appealed to the
-sovereign, King Pedro, denouncing Vianna and his followers as rebels,
-who were attempting to take the district to themselves, and set up an
-independent government. The King’s ministers apprised of the state of
-affairs, and learning by report the immense riches of the country,
-immediately sent a chief, with a competent body of troops, to take the
-advantage of the strife between the two parties; which in a country
-tenable by a few men, on account of its numerous strong-holds, was a
-most fortunate circumstance. The name of this chief was Albuquerque;
-a man of enterprise and perseverance, in all respects qualified for
-the service on which he was sent. His appearance at first occasioned
-much confusion and discontent among both parties; and though he was not
-openly opposed, yet he was in continual alarm. The Paulistas now saw
-that the riches which they in conjunction with their rivals might have
-retained, were about to be seized by a third party, which would reduce
-them both to subordination. Disturbances prevailed for some time, but
-reinforcements continually arriving from Government, tranquillity was
-at length perfectly established; and in the year 1711, a regular town
-began to be formed; a government-house, a mint, and a depôt for arms
-were built. A code of laws was enacted for the regulation of the mines;
-all gold-dust found was ordered to be delivered to officers appointed
-for that purpose; a fifth in weight was taken for the King, and the
-remaining four parts were purified, melted into ingots at the expense
-of Government, then assayed, marked according to their value, and
-delivered to the owners, with a certificate to render them current. For
-the greater convenience of trade, gold-dust was likewise permitted to
-circulate for small payments. Notwithstanding these strict regulations,
-a considerable quantity of the precious metal in its original state
-found its way to Rio de Janeiro, Bahia, and other ports, clandestinely,
-without paying the royal fifth, until Government, apprised of this
-illicit traffic, established Registers in various parts for the
-examination of all passengers, and stationed soldiers to patrole the
-roads. By these means, gold in immense quantities was seized and
-confiscated; the persons on whom any was found, forfeited all their
-property, and, unless they had friends of great influence, were sent as
-convicts to Africa for life. The greatest disgrace was attached to the
-name of smuggler; and such was the rigor of the law against offenders
-of this description, that every person quitting the district was
-obliged to take a certificate stating whither he was going, and what he
-carried with him. This regulation is still in force, and is rigorously
-observed.
-
-Villa Rica soon enjoyed a considerable trade with Rio de Janeiro; the
-returns were negroes, iron, woollens, salt, provisions of various
-kinds, and wine, all which at that time bore amazingly high profits.
-
-About the year 1713, when Dr. Bras da Silva was appointed governor,
-the quantity of gold produced was so considerable that the royal fifth
-amounted to above half a million sterling annually. The mountain
-became pierced like a honey-comb, as the miners worked every soft
-part they could find, and penetrated as far as they could, conveying
-the _cascalho_ which they dug out to a convenient place for washing.
-In rainy weather the torrents of water running down the sides of
-the mountain, carried away much earthy matter containing delicate
-particles of gold, which settled in the ground near its base. When
-the waters abated, this rich deposit gave employment to numbers of
-the poorer sort of people, who took it away and washed it at their
-convenience.
-
-Antonio Dias, the person already mentioned as one of the leaders of
-the Paulistas, who discovered the place, having become extremely
-rich, built a fine church, and dying soon after, bequeathed to it
-considerable funds. It bears his name. Five or six others were begun
-and soon finished, as neither wood nor stone was wanting; and the
-inhabitants were all ready to contribute a share of their property,
-and to employ their negroes in furtherance of these pious works. A law
-highly creditable to the wisdom of the Portuguese government was now
-enacted, to prohibit friars from entering the territories of the mines.
-What treasures were thus saved to the state, and what a number of
-persons were thus continued in useful labor, who would else have become
-burthensome to the community!
-
-The town now underwent many improvements; its streets were more
-regularly built, and some parts of the side of the mountain were
-levelled, to afford more convenient room for the construction of
-houses, and the laying out of gardens. Reservoirs were formed, from
-which water was distributed by means of conduits to all parts, and
-public fountains were erected in the most convenient and central
-situations. The mint and smelting-houses were enlarged, and rendered
-more commodious for the transaction of business. About this period the
-inhabitants amounted to twelve thousand or upwards; those who possessed
-mines, were either the first settlers or their descendants, and as
-the best part of the district was occupied, the new adventurers who
-continued to arrive from time to time, were obliged to enter into the
-service of the existing owners until they had learned their methods
-of working, after which they generally went in search of fresh mines,
-proceeding along the water-courses and ravines, where they sometimes
-discovered new sources of wealth. Between the years 1730 and 1750, the
-mines were in the height of their prosperity; the King’s fifth, during
-some years of that period, is said to have amounted to at least a
-million sterling annually.
-
-The mines which produced this immense wealth, at length became
-gradually less abundant; and, as the precious metal disappeared,
-numbers of the miners retired, some to the mother-country, loaded with
-riches, which tempted fresh adventurers, and many to Rio de Janeiro and
-other sea-ports, where they employed their large capitals in commerce.
-
-Villa Rica, at the present day, scarcely retains a shadow of its former
-splendor. Its inhabitants, with the exception of the shopkeepers,
-are void of employment; they totally neglect the fine country around
-them, which, by proper cultivation, would amply compensate for the
-loss of the wealth which their ancestors drew from its bosom. Their
-education, their habits, their hereditary prejudices, alike unfit
-them for active life; perpetually indulging in visionary prospects
-of sudden wealth, they fancy themselves exempted from that universal
-law of nature which ordains that man shall live by the sweat of his
-brow. In contemplating the fortunes accumulated by their predecessors,
-they overlook the industry and perseverance which obtained them, and
-entirely lose sight of the change of circumstances which renders those
-qualities now doubly necessary. The successors of men who rise to
-opulence from small beginnings, seldom follow the example set before
-them, even when trained to it; how then should a Creolian, reared in
-idleness and ignorance, feel any thing of the benefits of industry! His
-negroes constitute his principal property, and them he manages so ill,
-that the profits of their labor hardly defray the expenses of their
-maintenance: in the regular course of nature they become old and unable
-to work, yet he continues in the same listless and slothful way, or
-sinks into a state of absolute inactivity, not knowing what to do from
-morning to night. This deplorable degeneracy is almost the universal
-characteristic of the descendants of the original settlers; every trade
-is occupied either by mulattoes or negroes, both of which classes seem
-superior in intellect to their masters, because they make a better use
-of it.
-
-During my stay here, I paid frequent visits to the mint, and was
-liberally permitted by the officers to see every process performed
-there. In the smelting-house were eight or ten small blast-furnaces, in
-form much resembling blacksmiths’ hearths. The fuel used is charcoal.
-When a quantity of gold-dust is brought, (no matter whether large or
-small), say, for instance, six ounces, it is first permuted, and a
-fifth taken for the Prince; the rest is put in a Hessian crucible,
-about three inches in diameter, which is immediately placed in the
-furnace. A quantity of corrosive sublimate is then put to it, which,
-on being heated, exhales very strong fumes; the scoriæ, if any be
-formed, are taken off with a pair of tongs, and more sublimate is added
-if required. Ebullition sometimes occurs, in which case the crucible
-is covered with a bit of common tile. As soon as the mercury is
-evaporated, the gold is poured into an ingot-mould, previously rubbed
-with animal fat; it is afterwards turned out into a tub of water. The
-ingot generally, in some part or other, has mercury attached to it,
-(which it seizes immediately), and the part of the gold thus affected
-assumes the appearance of lead[38]. To remove this, they hold it in
-a strong fire with a pair of tongs until the mercury is evaporated.
-It is afterwards sent to the assay-master, who first compares it on
-the touchstone with gold bars of different alloys, ascertained and
-marked, and then assays it. The two methods being found to agree, the
-assay-master stamps upon the ingot its degree of fineness, (called
-_toque_), also its weight, its number, the name of the place, and the
-year. It is then registered in a book kept for that purpose, and a copy
-of the entry is made out on a slip of printed paper, in which the ingot
-is wrapped, and delivered to the owner for circulation. The operation
-of melting a given quantity seldom occupies more than ten minutes or a
-quarter of an hour; that of cupelling about double the time: but I have
-seen men deliver their gold-dust, and receive it in a circulating form
-in less than an hour; so that little delay takes place, and, as there
-are six furnaces, the bringers of gold have seldom to wait for their
-turn. The pale color and low quality of various bars of gold are always
-imputed to the silver, platina, or other metal contained in them. I
-have seen some as low as sixteen carats, and others as fine as 23-1/2
-carats, which is within half a carat of what is denominated pure gold.
-Twenty-two is the standard, and gold exceeding that receives a premium
-according to its fineness.
-
-Considerable quantities of arsenical pyrites, said to be cobalt, were
-brought to me: I examined some specimens with the blow-pipe, but found
-no vestige of that metal, as the substance in no stage imparted a
-blue color to borax or glass. Iron pyrites is found about three miles
-from the town, where there is a very strong vein of it in quartz.
-Antimony was brought to me from some distance, and also a few bits
-of copper much oxidated, which were said to have been found in the
-washings at a place called Caldeiroens, but this I had great reason
-to doubt. Not a few impositions respecting the discovery of copper
-were attempted upon me. One man brought a rounded piece of jasper,
-about an ounce in weight, and with it half an ounce of copper, of the
-form and about the size of a duck-shot, which he told me had been
-produced by a smelting stone similar to the jasper then before me. I
-with much difficulty persuaded him that the person who had performed
-the operation for him had dropped a copper coin into the crucible.
-I was astonished to find that many persons, even gentlemen of some
-consequence, had a notion that almost every red-colored stone in the
-pavement of the streets was copper. One fellow had circulated a report
-that he possessed several pieces rich in that metal; but, on being
-sent for, and questioned closely, he stated that he had lost them in
-removing to another house. It is not surprising that tales of this kind
-should gain easy credit among persons stimulated by avarice and blinded
-by ignorance, and that the artful men who invent and propagate them,
-should be tempted by success to repeat their impositions, and corrupt
-others by their example. The rich iron ores with which the district
-abounds, and of which I saw many specimens, might furnish employment
-much more profitable than washing for gold, or following other idle and
-chimerical speculations.
-
-During the first few days of my residence here, my soldiers procured
-me a quantity of the finest porcelain clay I have ever seen; that used
-in the manufactory at Sèvres, near Paris, is inferior to it. This clay
-is found at the foot of a mountain of argillaceous schistus, called S.
-Antonio, near Congonhas do Campo, in a vein accompanied with quartz and
-specular iron ore.
-
-A week after my arrival here, I was invited to go to a pottery about
-three miles distant. Crossing a bridge over the Rio do Carmo, at the
-foot of the town of Villa Rica, we ascended another steep mountain, on
-the summit of which I found iron ore in great quantities. Though not
-very rich, I have no doubt it would produce 25 _per cent._ of metal.
-The want of wood, which is here complained of as an objection to
-working it, might be remedied by planting; for this summit is a fine
-plain, which proper cultivation would render highly productive. At
-present, though so near the town, it lies totally neglected, without
-a single inclosure upon it. The pottery, at which we soon arrived,
-has been but recently established. The clay is used in its native
-state, without any admixture, and is cleared of its coarse particles
-by washing. After the water has been let off and evaporated so as
-to leave it of a sufficient consistency, it is put on the wheel and
-formed into plates, mugs, jars, &c. which are bulky and heavy, but by
-no means strong. They are rendered less fragile by being covered with
-an excellent thick glazing. The furnaces have no chimneys, but consist
-merely of a low arch in which are several vent holes. The glazing
-furnace is reverberatory, but it is so ill constructed as to destroy
-much fuel and produce little heat. Throughout the whole district there
-is good coarse clay, for bricks, tiles, &c.
-
-I was here invited to taste some wine, made from grapes grown on
-the spot, which was excellent. A more happy situation than this
-vicinity affords for the growth of fruits of every kind can scarcely
-be imagined. The pear, the olive, and the mulberry would thrive here
-equally well with the grape, if proper pains were taken with them. A
-skilful agriculturist would with great ease, I am certain, bring it
-into such a state of improvement, as to serve the double purpose of
-a corn and dairy farm; excellent wheat might be grown, and a certain
-quantity of the land kept under artificial grasses for cutting. A fine
-stream of water runs through the whole, with a sufficient fall to turn
-mills.
-
-The principles of husbandry seem as little understood here as in any
-part of the territory through which we had hitherto travelled. Perhaps
-there is no country on the globe where the vicissitudes of plenty and
-scarcity do not prevail, and where human experience has not shewn the
-necessity of laying by a store in time of abundance, as a provision for
-a season of famine; but here this salutary practice is almost wholly
-disregarded. The cattle are turned out on the uninclosed tracts[39],
-and left to subsist on whatever they can find. In the summer months,
-when the grass throughout the wide extent is burnt up, they flock to
-the margins of the rivulets as their last resource, which soon fails.
-Numbers of them die of famine, and those that survive the season are so
-exhausted and weakened, that they seldom thoroughly recover.
-
-A small mount in the vicinity of this pottery presented much
-ferruginous matter, and a heavy substance that appeared to me barytes
-in a botryoidal form, a specimen of which I took with me. Since my
-return to England it has been proved, by analysis, to be Wavellite,
-without fluoric acid.
-
-During my stay at Villa Rica, I rode to the city of Mariana, distant
-eight miles, by a tremendous and almost impassable road, along a
-ridge of mountains; and afterwards went thither by the general road
-which passes between two high hills, and for some distance along the
-river-side, all the way on the descent. The margins of the Rio do
-Carmo, which runs through the town, have been washed the whole way
-from Villa Rica: parties from which place held possession of this
-settlement as early as the year 1710, claiming it on account of the
-gold brought down from thence by the current of the river. It was
-made a bishop’s see about the year 1715, and was called Cidade de
-Mariana, in honor of the then reigning Queen of Portugal, the present
-Prince Regent’s grandmother. It is a small, neat, and well-built town,
-containing from six to seven thousand inhabitants. Here is a college
-for the education of young men destined for the church. The bishop
-is a prelate of exemplary character, and is beloved by all who know
-him. The place has very little trade, and depends chiefly on the mines
-and farms in its vicinity. Many miners reside here whose works are
-several leagues distant, some of them have also washings extending to
-the village of Camargo, situated beyond a large plain which stretches
-westward from the confines of the city.
-
-Having resided in Villa Rica nearly a fortnight, I expressed a desire
-to visit two estates, forty miles distant, known by the names of
-Barro and Castro, both belonging to the Conde de Linhares. Between
-the years 1730 and 1740 these estates produced much gold, and were
-then in the possession of Senhor Mathias Barboza, a settler of great
-respectability, who took up these lands and drove the Aborigines from
-them. He becoming very rich, sent his only daughter to Portugal to
-be educated, where she remained, and after his death inherited his
-whole property. She was married in Lisbon to a gentleman of the family
-of Sousa, and from them are descended the two noblemen of that name,
-who now hold high official situations under the Prince Regent. His
-Excellency the Conde’s steward furnished me and my worthy friend with
-mules, and Dr. Lucas, the Judge, obligingly ordered every necessary to
-be provided for our journey. We rode through Mariana, and arrived at
-Alto do Chapada, a village, three miles distant from it, situated on an
-elevation in the midst of a fine plain. We soon afterwards reached a
-very high and confined situation, between two perpendicular mountains,
-from whence we had a bird’s eye view of the village of S. Sebastian.
-From this steep we descended, with great difficulty, on foot, to
-the Rio do Carmo at its base, over which is a very high-arched and
-picturesque bridge. Passing this ravine we proceeded a full league by
-the river side, through a rich country abounding in fine sloping hills
-and fertile plains, watered by numerous streams, which flow into the
-river in various directions, and all of which bear vestiges of having
-been formerly washed for gold. The road-side exhibited similar remains,
-and seemed to have been at some period connected with the river, which,
-in this part, is as large as the Thames at Windsor. We passed through
-San Giatanha, a straggling, thinly peopled village, and proceeding
-about three miles farther, arrived at an indifferent house, called
-Lavras Velhas, where we halted for the night, having performed half
-our journey. The owner of this place found it difficult, with thirty
-or forty negroes, to maintain himself decently, though the land was
-susceptible of every species of culture, and needed only the hand of
-industry to render it productive. Every thing about the establishment
-exhibited a pitiful spectacle of neglect, indifference, and sloth. It
-is but justice to add, that he treated us with the greatest civility,
-and amply supplied our necessities.
-
-Leaving Lavras Velhas at eight next morning, we passed Morro dos
-Arreaes, the country presenting still finer valleys and excellent
-timber, but totally destitute of cattle. Ascending a high hill, we
-were immerged for about an hour in a cloud, and exposed to some small
-rain, but not sufficient to penetrate our coats. This was the only rain
-we experienced on the road by day. In the night the rain sometimes
-fell plentifully. We observed some exceedingly large worms, stretched
-motionless on the road, which our guide told us were sure signs of wet
-weather. From this height we saw the Rio Gualacha, which, with another
-river, joins the Rio do Carmo about ten leagues below, and forms the
-Rio San Jose. Proceeding in that direction through a fine country,
-we reached Altos de St. Miguel, where the river last mentioned is of
-considerable width, but not deep. Its waters are extremely turbid, on
-account of the mud brought from the gold-washings along the banks, from
-its source to this place. These heights command a fine view of three
-windings of the river; at their base there are vestiges of one of the
-oldest and most extensive gold-washings, which yielded much treasure to
-its discoverer and proprietor, Senhor Mathias Barboza. The country is
-well wooded, but rather thinly peopled; I expressed some surprise at
-observing no good dwelling-houses in a district which formerly produced
-so much wealth, and was informed that the first miners, eager to take
-the cream of the gold to as large an extent as they could, seldom
-remained long on the same spot, and contented themselves with building
-sheds, or _ranchos_, to serve for their temporary residence.
-
-Descending this mountain, we entered upon the estate of His Excellency,
-called Fazenda do Barro, and were shewn the house at a distance of
-nearly a league, on a pleasing eminence, near the river-side. On
-arriving, an excellent dinner was provided for us, of which, having
-been eight hours on our mules, we partook very heartily.
-
-The house, and indeed the whole establishment, were strikingly superior
-in point of convenience, to the miserable places we had lately passed.
-Having dined, we refreshed ourselves with a walk in the garden, where
-the coffee-trees in full blossom showed, at a distance, as if their
-branches were loaded with snow. This spot afforded a view of a most
-enchanting country, diversified with gentle eminences and large valleys
-well clothed with timber. From the farther margin of the river, which
-flows at one hundred yards’ distance in front of the house, rises a
-fine hill, well calculated for the culture of every species of produce,
-and connected with others of equal fertility.
-
-On the following day I was chiefly occupied in visiting every part
-of the establishment. The distil-house, sugar-engine, and corn-mill,
-were very much out of repair; the two latter were worked by horizontal
-water-wheels of great power. The buildings of the _fazenda_ form
-a square, the southern side being occupied by the house, and the
-three others consisting of dwellings for the negroes, storehouses,
-carpenters’ and blacksmiths’ shops, and other offices equally useful.
-
-Having requested to see the cattle, I was shown seven fine well
-proportioned cows; their calves were old, and they being unaccustomed
-to be milked regularly, gave very little. I signified to the people my
-wish to instruct them in the way of making butter after the English
-mode; and the carpenter hearing my description of a churn, readily
-assured me that he could make one, and set about it forthwith in the
-following manner. He procured a trunk of a tree of the length and
-girth required; sawed it length-wise in two equal parts, which, (after
-hollowing them sufficiently, and preparing a bottom), he joined with
-two iron hoops so tightly as to hold water. The churn-staff and top
-were soon finished: but now an unexpected difficulty occurred; here
-was no place free from dust and dirt to serve for a dairy, nor any pan
-fit to hold the milk. All the cooking-pots that could be spared were
-cleaned for this purpose, but they were quite of the wrong make, being
-wide at the bottom and narrow at the brim. They were, however, laid by
-along with the churn, to be used the first time the cows were milked.
-The good lady of the house assisted in our preparations, and seemed
-much interested in them.
-
-In the afternoon I rode out to see the gold-washings. On the way
-thither I observed a man training a horse, with a cord attached to the
-bridle in one hand, and a whip in the other. Two pieces of leather,
-in the form of breechings, were sewed to two iron rings; one part
-was put over the back of the animal, the other part slipped down as
-a breeching; the part on the back was to prevent its slipping lower.
-To these rings were tied cords from the horse’s fore-feet, capable
-of being shortened or lengthened at pleasure. The horse being put in
-motion, took very short fore-steps, somewhat like those of the chargers
-in equestrian performances. Horses thus trained are here called
-_pacers_, and are in great request among persons of distinction of both
-sexes, their gait being very easy and graceful.
-
-On arriving at the washings, I saw a great extent of ground already
-worked, and immense heaps of quartzose stones. On the margin of the
-river where they were then working, I found them cutting away the
-bank, to the depth of at least ten feet, to get at the _cascalho_
-incumbent on the rock. The substance they had to cut through was clay,
-so strong that, though falls of water were let upon it, and negroes
-were constantly working it with hoes of various kinds, it was with
-difficulty to be removed. This was not the only impediment, for, by the
-constant precipitation of mud, the _cascalho_ was five feet below the
-bed of the river; hence, when they had sunk their pits, they had to use
-means for drawing the water from them. The hydraulic machines employed
-for this purpose are constructed as follows: A trough or spout, made
-of four stout planks, forming a trunk, about six inches square, is
-placed in an inclined position, with its lower end in the pit, where
-a roller is properly secured to a pile driven in the ground: an iron
-chain, with peculiar links, on every one of which is fixed a piece of
-wood, nearly answering the interior dimensions of the spout, is passed
-through it, then under the roller, and over the outside, up to the axis
-of a water-wheel, which, being put in motion, causes the discharge of
-a column water equal to the cavity. These machines are calculated to
-raise a great deal of water, but they are liable to be thrown out of
-repair. In many cases hand-pumps would serve the purpose better, being
-made at little trouble or expense, easily repaired, and always ready
-at an hour’s notice. They are here utterly unknown.
-
-In the operation of getting gold, the heavy work is assigned to the
-male negroes, and the lighter labor to the females. The _cascalho_,
-dug from these pits by the former, is carried away by the latter in
-_gamellas_, or bowls, to be washed. When a sufficient quantity has been
-procured, the men proceed to that process, which they perform much
-in the way already described in treating of S. Paulo. I perceived,
-however, that here they did not, in the first instance, attempt to
-separate the gold from the black oxide of iron, but emptied their
-_gamellas_ into a larger vessel, by rinsing them in the water which
-it contained. The substance deposited in this vessel was delivered
-out, in small portions of about a pound each, to the most skilful
-washers, as the operation of washing, or, as it was termed, purifying
-it, required great niceness and dexterity. Some of the grains of gold
-were so fine as to float on the surface, and of course were liable to
-be washed away in these repeated changes of water; to prevent which
-the negroes bruised a few handfuls of herbs on a stone, and mixed the
-juice in small proportions with the water in their _gamellas_. Whether
-this liquid did in reality tend to precipitate the gold, I could not
-positively ascertain, but the negroes certainly used it with the
-greatest confidence.
-
-There is another mode of separating the gold from the _cascalho_ called
-canoe-washing, which is extremely interesting. The canoes are made in
-the following manner:—Two ten or twelve-inch planks, about twelve or
-fifteen feet in length, are laid on the ground, forming an inclined
-plane, sloping about one inch in twelve: two other planks of similar
-dimensions are fixed in the same direction at the lower end, forming a
-second inclined plane, with a fall of six inches from the former. On
-their sides are boards placed edge-wise, and staked down to the ground
-so as to form long shallow troughs, the bottoms of which are covered
-with hides tanned with the hair on, having the hairy side outwards, or,
-in defect of these, with rough baize. Down these troughs is conveyed
-the water containing the oxide of iron and the lighter particles of
-gold; the latter substance precipitating in its course is entangled by
-the hair. Every half hour the hides are taken up, and carried to a tank
-near at hand, formed of four walls, say five feet long, four broad,
-and four deep, and containing about two feet depth of water. The hides
-are stretched over this tank and well beaten, then dipped and beaten
-repeatedly, until all the gold is disentangled, after which they are
-carried back and replaced in the troughs. The tanks are locked up at
-nights, and well secured. The sediment taken from them being light, is
-easily washed away by the hand in the manner before described, leaving
-only the black oxide of iron, called _esmeril_, and the gold, which is
-so fine that mercury is used to separate it. The process, as I saw it
-performed, was as follows: About two pounds weight of oxide of iron,
-very rich in fine grains of gold, was put into a clean bowl; a quantity
-of mercury, about two ounces, was added to it; the mass of oxide, which
-was very damp, was worked by the hand for about twenty minutes, when
-the mercury appeared to have separated the _esmeril_, and to have taken
-up all the gold, assuming a soft doughy mass, that retained any form
-into which it was squeezed. The grains of gold, however, remained, not
-amalgamated with, but merely enveloped in the mercury. The mass was put
-into a folded handkerchief, and an ounce or more of mercury was wrung
-or squeezed from it. The rest was put into a small brass dish, covered
-with a few green leaves, and then placed over a charcoal fire, where it
-was stirred with an iron rod to prevent the gold from adhering to the
-sides of the dish. The leaves were occasionally changed as they became
-parched by the heat. When taken off, they exhibited, in some parts,
-small globules of mercury, and in others white oxide; on washing them
-with water, nearly half an ounce of the former substance was obtained
-from them[40]. I ever observed that the gold, after this operation,
-was changed in color from an agreeable soft yellow to a dirty brown,
-and presented a very different appearance from that which was not
-subjected to mercury.
-
-By way of suggesting an improvement, I made some drawings and models of
-earthen vessels for evaporating, and afterwards condensing the mercury;
-but the quantity of gold in the hands of individuals requiring this
-mode of separation is so inconsiderable, that it would scarcely be
-worth their while to alter the process now practised.
-
-I rode over various parts of the estate, and more particularly along
-both banks of the river, which, as well as the bed, appeared to have
-been much washed. The bends, or parts where eddies were formed, were
-the places noted as being rich in gold. Wherever the margin formed a
-flat, or level, the _cascalho_ continued under the surface to some
-distance, appearing like a continuation of the bed of the river, which,
-in all probability, it was, as the river is known to have been much
-wider formerly. The parts that were then working, and others that had
-yet to be worked, bore a very unpromising appearance.
-
-An opportunity was soon afforded me of carrying into execution the
-proposed dairy experiment. Having obtained about six quarts of milk,
-(which, on account of the scarcity of grass, was very poor), I put it
-into the culinary vessels that had been set apart for it; but such
-was the state of the place in which they were deposited, that that
-though I placed banana leaves over them, the surface next morning was
-covered with dust. I took off the cream in the best manner I could,
-but not being able to find a cellar or cold place for it to stand in,
-I was obliged to leave it in the same room with the milk, where it was
-hardly secure against the pigs. On each of the two following mornings,
-I obtained about two gallons of milk, which, being added to the other,
-was in due time churned; and, notwithstanding the disadvantages of poor
-milk, improper utensils, and bad keeping, a tolerably fair proportion
-of good butter was obtained. The people seemed highly satisfied with
-the success of the process; but I had strong doubts that they would
-not pursue it after my departure, as they must naturally dislike
-the trouble and care which it required. Such was the force of their
-habitual and long-cherished prejudices, that I have no hesitation
-in saying they would take ten times more pains to procure forty
-shillings-worth of gold, at an expense of thirty shillings, than they
-would to obtain forty-shillings worth of butter, though it were only to
-cost them five.
-
-It may be expected that I should assign some reasons for entering so
-frequently into detail upon one of the simplest branches of rural
-economy. I have to observe, then, that ere I left Rio de Janeiro to
-undertake this journey, I was informed that the cheese generally
-consumed in that capital, and regarded there as a luxury, was the
-produce of the district to which I was going. Its taste was sometimes
-so extremely rancid and disagreeable, as to be utterly unwholesome, and
-from this circumstance I judged that there must be great mismanagement
-in the preparation of it. All the farms which I had occasion to visit
-on my journey to Villa Rica, and from thence to this place, fully
-confirmed my opinion; for, miserable as was the condition of every
-department belonging to them, that of the dairy was still worse. In
-the few places where they pretended to prepare milk for cheese, not
-only were the various utensils in an extremely filthy condition,
-but the rennet was so putrid as to be in the last degree sickening.
-I endeavoured to make the people sensible of the advantages of an
-improved mode of management, and wherever I had an opportunity, gave
-them information how to proceed; but as oral or written instructions
-were little calculated to make a durable impression, I determined, when
-leisure and convenience should concur, to enforce them by example. The
-first and only opportunity of this kind presented itself at the Fazenda
-do Barro; and I was the more induced to avail myself of it, from
-considering that the precedent which I wished to give to the farmers
-of the district, would have greater influence by being sanctioned by
-the approval of His Excellency the Conde de Linhares. The result, as
-I have just observed, was not very flattering to my hopes; a solitary
-experiment can do little towards reforming a general evil of long
-continuance; and there is no probability that this or any other branch
-of the farming system of the country will be improved, until the great
-and the opulent zealously unite for the accomplishment of an object so
-highly important.
-
-In our excursions through various parts of the estate, we observed on
-the exterior of many of the trees a great variety of crimson lichens,
-which, on being steeped in water, imparted a very strong tinge of that
-color. Here were excellent barks for tanning, particularly that of a
-tree called Canafistula, which does not redden or color the hide. We
-found many beautiful varieties of the jacarandá, or rose-wood.
-
-Having resided at Barro some days, we set out for the Fazenda de
-Castro, distant about seven miles, where we arrived, after a pleasant
-ride over a mountainous and finely-wooded district, containing large
-tracts of rich virgin land, watered by many excellent streams. This
-noble mansion was erected by the first possessor of the district,
-Senhor Mathias Barboza. It is very spacious and airy, having a gallery
-in front forty-eight yards long, to which open fourteen folding-doors,
-or windows, extending nearly from the top to the bottom of the rooms.
-It is situated near the confluence of the Ribeiro do Carmo and the Rio
-Gualacha, which form the San Jose, a river as large as the Thames at
-Battersea.
-
-We did not rest above an hour at this _fazenda_, it being our
-intention to visit the _aldea_ or village of S. José da Barra Longa,
-situated on the confines of the territory inhabited by the Buticudos
-Indians. Crossing the river by a fine wooden bridge, built about fifty
-years ago, but still in tolerable repair, we proceeded along the bank,
-which was embellished with several gardens, and presented more frequent
-appearances of cultivation than we had of late been accustomed to
-view. The climate is much hotter than at Villa Rica, on account of the
-lowness of the situation; and we were informed that fruits of every
-kind, particularly the pine, grew in this soil to great perfection in
-size and fineness of flavor. The truth of these accounts we could not
-ascertain, as this was not the fruit season.
-
-After travelling about four miles, we arrived at the village. It
-being Sunday, numbers of people had come from various parts in the
-neighbourhood to attend divine service, and, after it was over, flocked
-in crowds to the place where we alighted. It appeared as if the whole
-population of the village, men, women, and children, were possessed
-with the same spirit of curiosity, so great was their eagerness to get
-a sight of us. We dined in a mixed company of ladies and gentlemen, at
-the house of the worthy vicar, who kept a very hospitable table, and
-paid us the most flattering attention. A military officer and a judge,
-who were of the party, entered into conversation with us; and it was
-difficult to decide who were the most inquisitive, they, respecting
-the motives and objects of our journey, or we, respecting the state of
-the country, the Aborigines, &c.
-
-We learnt that the village was founded about twenty-three years ago
-by a number of Portuguese, who were tempted to settle, in a spot thus
-exposed to the depredations of the Buticudos, by the gold with which
-it abounded. At the present day, I was informed that it contains about
-four hundred inhabitants, and that the vicinity is well peopled, so
-that a sufficient force is always at hand to repel the savages; who, no
-longer daring to attack openly, now have often recourse to stratagem.
-When they have marked out a house, and ascertained its strength, they
-set fire to it by shooting arrows with fire-brands into the roof, and
-fall on the unfortunate inhabitants as they are attempting to escape.
-These savages, accustomed to live in the woods, and well practised in
-all the arts requisite for catching the wild animals on which they
-subsist, have a thousand stratagems for way-laying the settlers.
-Sometimes they render themselves invisible by tying branches and young
-trees about them, and fix their bows imperceptibly, so that, when a
-poor negro or white happens to pass near them, they seldom miss their
-aim. At other times they rub themselves with ashes and lie on the
-ground, or make pit-falls, in which they place pointed stakes, and
-cover them with twigs and leaves. They have a great dread of fire-arms,
-and betake themselves to flight whenever they hear them: but these
-weapons are by no means so general among the settlers as they ought to
-be, and the few they have are of very indifferent make, and frequently
-altogether useless. It sometimes, though rarely, happens, that the
-soldiers surprise the aborigines, in which case no combat takes place;
-the latter run away as speedily as possible; and their pursuers, taking
-vengeance for injuries sustained, seldom give quarter. Those whom
-they make prisoners they are obliged to tie hand and foot, and carry
-on a pole to a place of security: if any one of them be loosed but
-for a moment, he bursts away, and flees into the woods like a tiger,
-leaving his pursuers behind. They are untameable, either by stripes or
-kindness; and, if they find no means of escaping from confinement, they
-commonly refuse sustenance, and die of hunger.
-
-The injuries occasionally done to settlers by these savages have
-excited the attention of Government, who have passed a decisive law
-against them. A proclamation has been issued by the Prince Regent, in
-which they are invited to live in villages, and become Christians,
-under a promise that, if they come to terms of peace and amity with the
-Portuguese, their rights shall be acknowledged, and they shall enjoy,
-in common with other subjects, the protection of the state; but, if
-they persist in their barbarous and inhuman practices, the soldiers
-of His Royal Highness are ordered to carry on a war of extermination
-against them. Those who are taken prisoners are at the disposal of
-their captors as slaves, for the space of ten years. It is doubtful
-whether the offers of conciliation contained in this proclamation
-will produce in any degree the desired effect; for the Buticudos have
-an unconquerable aversion to a settled way of life, and a rooted
-antipathy to every other nation; nor have they intelligence enough to
-appreciate the benefits of civilized society; so that there appears
-no hope of reducing them but by the dreadful alternative proposed in
-the latter part of the decree. One reason for having recourse to this
-summary mode of dealing with them, which will probably outweigh any
-arguments in favor of gentler proceedings, is, that the country they
-inhabit contains gold, and the settlers and adventurers are desirous
-to obtain speedy possession of it. Some officers, well acquainted with
-the locality of the territory, and skilled in the art of conducting an
-Indian war, are already employed in this difficult enterprise. About
-two leagues from this village is another, called Piranga, situated
-near the margin of a river of that name, which at a distance of four
-leagues joins the San Jose, and with it forms the Rio Dôce. This river
-runs through a fine country, in a northerly and afterwards an easterly
-direction, discharging itself into the sea in lat. 19° 30′ south. There
-are three islands at its mouth, called Os Tres Irmâos, (the Three
-Brothers).
-
-Were this river rendered navigable, what benefits might accrue to
-the fine country through which it flows! Large quantities of sugar,
-cotton, and other produce, which the soil is capable of growing,
-besides excellent timber for exportation, would then form the basis of
-an extensive commerce, by stimulating the industry of the planters,
-who are at present averse from cultivating beyond the extent of their
-own consumption, on account of the heavy expense attendant on a
-land-carriage of above five hundred miles to the nearest sea-port.
-
-Piranga is perhaps more exposed to the attacks of the Indians than
-the village of San Jose, but there are some gold-washings in its
-neighbourhood which tempt the inhabitants to brave that danger. A small
-band of horse-soldiers is stationed here to parade the confines, enter
-the woods, and go in quest of the natives whenever information is
-given. Yet, notwithstanding these precautions, the village is never in
-perfect security; a house in its immediate vicinity was surprised a few
-months previous to our visit to this district.
-
-We now took leave of the vicar and his guests, and, I may add, of
-all the villagers, who came out to salute us as we passed. Returning
-to Castro, I remained the whole of the next day to examine the
-establishment. It is built, like that at Barro, in the form of a
-square, the dwellings of the negroes forming three sides, and the
-mansion the fourth, the entrance being in front through a pair of
-gates, which, when shut, secure the whole. The rooms in the mansion
-were like ancient halls, adorned with carvings, and fitted up and
-furnished after the old fashion. Here were blunderbusses, swords, and
-other weapons for defence, used in former days, when the house was
-liable to the continual attacks of the Buticudos. The stairs, gallery,
-and floors, were of fine wood, of a quality which time had not in any
-degree perceptibly injured. Attached to the house were the remains
-of a sugar-mill, distil-house, corn-mill, and a machine, worked by a
-strap and spindles, for spinning cotton, all in a state of neglect. The
-whole establishment bore marks of former opulence and grandeur, from
-which it appeared to have gradually declined as the gold-washings at
-the confluence of the rivers and in other parts had become exhausted.
-The negroes were now all removed to Castro, except a few infirm and
-sick, who were stationed here to keep the mansion in order, (this being
-considered as a light employment for them), until such time as their
-convalescence should fit them for resuming their labors along with
-their brethren at the other estate.
-
-Having made a sketch of the house, and visited every part which
-interested me, I returned by the same road to Barro, where I employed
-myself in making a topographical map of the river, distinguishing by
-different colors the places already washed for gold, those which were
-then washing, and the yet unworked grounds. This sort of map might be
-made on a large scale, so as to include a whole district or parish,
-where the several mines, or gold-beds, in their different stages, might
-be exhibited at one view.
-
-On this estate are employed one hundred and fifty-six negroes, of all
-descriptions, who, on such excellent land, producing every necessary
-for food and clothing, might be expected to earn considerably more
-than their own maintenance; yet a former steward managed so ill for
-twenty successive years, that, although he had nothing to purchase but
-a little iron, and though the gold-mines were then more productive
-than at present, he ran the establishment annually into debt to the
-shopkeepers of Villa Rica. A single circumstance may account for this
-mismanagement; the noble proprietor resided in Portugal. At present the
-estate is in a much more prosperous way, being entrusted to the care of
-another steward, and three overseers, all Creolians. The latter receive
-a salary of thirty _milrees_ (about nine pounds sterling) _per annum_,
-besides their maintenance; their business is to execute the orders of
-the steward, and to superintend the labor of the negroes committed to
-their charge. They lead a life of extreme indolence, never putting
-their hands to any species of work.
-
-The general diet of the country-people in this land of Canaan is
-somewhat similar to that of the miners in the vicinity of S. Paulo,
-already described. The master, his steward, and the overseers, sit
-down to a breakfast of kidney-beans of a black color, boiled, which
-they mix with the flour of Indian corn, and eat with a little dry pork
-fried or boiled. The dinner generally consists, also, of a bit of pork
-or bacon boiled, the water from which is poured upon a dish of the
-flour above mentioned, thus forming a stiff pudding. A large quantity
-(about half a peck) of this food is poured in a heap in the middle of
-the table, and a great dish of boiled beans is set upon it: each person
-helps himself in the readiest way, there being only one knife, which is
-very often dispensed with. A plate or two of colewort or cabbage-leaves
-complete the repast. The food is commonly served up in the earthen
-vessels used for cooking it; sometimes on pewter dishes. The general
-beverage is water. At supper nothing is seen but large quantities of
-boiled greens, with a little bit of poor bacon to flavor them. On any
-festival occasion, or when strangers appear, the dinner or supper is
-improved by the addition of a stewed fowl.
-
-The food prepared for the negroes is Indian corn-flour, mixed with hot
-water, in which a bit of pork has been boiled. This dish serves both
-for breakfast and supper. Their dinner consists of beans boiled in the
-same way. This unfortunate race of men are here treated with great
-kindness and humanity, which, indeed, their good behaviour seems to
-deserve. They are allowed as much land as they can, at their leisure,
-cultivate, (Sundays and holidays being by law allotted to them for
-that purpose), and are permitted to sell or dispose of their produce
-as they please. Their owners clothe them with shirts and trowsers made
-of coarse cotton, which is grown and woven on the estate. Their days
-of labor are rather long; before sun-rise a bell rings to summon them
-to prayers, which are recited by one of the overseers, and repeated
-by the congregation; after worship is over they proceed to work, at
-which they continue till after sun-set, when prayers are said as in
-the morning. An hour after supper they are employed in preparing
-wood to burn, taking Indian corn from the husk, and in other in-door
-operations. Swelled necks are not uncommon among the men-negroes, but
-in other respects they appear healthy: I saw few or none afflicted with
-elephantiasis, or with any cutaneous disease. There were many very
-aged of both sexes; a few even remembered their old master, the first
-possessor, though he has been dead upwards of sixty years.
-
-Their principal article of diet, the _farinha de milho_, or flour of
-Indian corn, appeared so palatable and nutritive, that, after living
-upon it for some time, I had the curiosity to enquire into the mode
-of preparing it from the grain. It is first soaked in water, and
-afterwards pounded in its swelled and moist state, to separate the
-outer husk. It then appears almost granulated, and is put upon copper
-pans, which have a fire underneath, and in these it is kept constantly
-stirred until it is dry and fit for eating. This substitute for bread
-is as common among the inhabitants here as is the _farinha de Pao_,
-or mandioca, among the people of Rio de Janeiro, S. Paulo, and other
-districts.
-
-The grain is grown always on virgin lands, cleared by burning, after
-the manner already described. In good seasons, or, in other words, when
-the dry weather allows the felled wood to be completely reduced to
-ashes, the return is from one hundred and fifty to two hundred bushels
-for one. Weeding is only performed after the seed has been a short
-time in the ground; indeed, the growing crops suffer less from the
-neglect of that operation than from the depredations of rats, which are
-frequently very considerable.
-
-On the state of society here I had little leisure to make observations.
-A general debility seemed to prevail among the females, which I imputed
-to the want of better food and more exercise: they confine themselves
-principally to the sedentary employments of sewing, or making lace.
-While at San Jose I saw many females from the country, dressed in gowns
-made of English prints; some of them had woollen mantles, edged with
-gold lace or Manchester velvet, thrown loosely over their shoulders.
-Their hair was invariably fastened with combs, and they in general
-wore, out of doors, men’s hats. The men, most of whom belonged to the
-militia, appeared in uniforms. No two things can be more different
-than the deshabille and full-dress of a nominal militia officer. When
-at home he seldom puts on more than half his clothes, over which he
-throws an old great coat; and saunters about the house in this attire
-from morning till night, a true picture of idleness. On Sundays, or
-on gala-days, after some hours spent in decorating his person, he
-sallies forth, completely metamorphosed from a slip-shod sloven into
-a spruce-officer, glittering in a weight of gold lace, on a horse
-caparisoned with equal splendor, forming as fine a sight for the gazing
-multitude as a general at a review. He observes no medium between these
-extremes, being always very shabby or very fine.
-
-During my stay at Barro I was presented with some singularly fine
-fruit, equal in flavor to fresh almonds, and capable of being preserved
-by drying only, so as to become a valuable article of commerce. Having
-never before heard of this fruit, I am induced to give a brief account
-of it. The exterior substance is about the size of a full-grown
-cocoa-nut with the rind on, say nine or ten inches long and five or
-six in the thickest part. It grows suspended from the branch by a
-very slender but strong stem. This shell is full of kernels, to the
-number of from thirty to fifty, of the shape of almonds, but twice or
-thrice the size, disposed in ranges or layers, and separated from each
-other by a white pithy substance. As these kernels ripen, the top of
-the shell, which appears like a lid, is gradually forced open, and
-when they are at full maturity, the larger part, which contains them,
-separates and falls to the ground. The trees, at the season of shedding
-their fruits, are frequented by wild hogs, herds of monkies, flocks of
-parrots, and other birds, which never quit them, while any of these
-delicious nuts remain. I was credibly informed that some trees have
-been known to produce above a ton weight in a season. One of the nuts I
-preserved and brought with me, which I sent to Sir Joseph Banks.
-
-We now took leave of the good people at the _fazenda_, and returned to
-Villa Rica by the way we came. I had, with great difficulty, procured a
-few pounds of butter, made after the new process, as a present for Dr.
-Lucas, the Judge, which arrived perfectly fresh and sweet. On passing
-Lavras Velhas, as we returned, we were shown some excellent cinchona,
-very like that of Peru, and said to possess similar properties in
-a high degree. From the specimen we saw, there was every reason
-to believe, that, if fairly introduced into practice, it might be
-administered in many cases with as much success as Peruvian bark; and,
-as great quantities might be procured here, the experiment is certainly
-worth attending to by medical men. I sent a parcel of it home, but by
-some accident or other it was lost at the Custom-house.
-
-In many parts of our route we might have collected insects, but they
-require so much attention and care in preserving them for conveyance
-so great a distance, that I gave up the pursuit. It appeared to me
-extraordinary, that I had not, since my arrival in Brazil, seen (except
-in the cabinets of the curious,) more than one _curculio imperialis_
-(diamond-beetle), though I had frequently searched for them in almost
-every variety of plantation.
-
-During my absence from Villa Rica one of my soldiers had procured me a
-full pound of native bismuth in lumps, none of which exceeded an ounce
-in weight. It is frequently found in this state, which proves that it
-is out of its place, as it originally occurs in veins. Many pieces of
-pyrites, and various iron ores, were also brought to me.
-
-I had commissioned some persons to collect land shells for me during my
-absence, and was now to my great gratification presented with six, of
-a fine chesnut brown color, with beautiful pink mouths, belonging to a
-new variety of the helix. Having kept them a few days, without taking
-out the animals, I was surprised to find that one of the latter had
-laid two eggs. I had before imagined that they were oviparous. I took
-one of the shells in my hand, while the animal was crawling, when it
-immediately folded itself, and entered very quickly, in which exertion
-another egg was deposited in the mouth of the shell. All the eggs were
-about the size of a sparrow’s. These were the only land shells I had
-seen on this journey.
-
-On resuming my visit to the mint I took an early opportunity of stating
-to the acting governors my ideas respecting a new regulation for
-supplying mercury to the miners. One great impediment to the use of
-that metal, so essential in certain branches of the process, was the
-exorbitant price at which it was exclusively sold by the apothecaries,
-generally upwards of two shillings the ounce. I suggested that the mint
-should be the general depository for it, and that it should be issued
-from thence to the gold-washers without profit. By this regulation
-the article would be brought into general use, much to the benefit
-of the state as well as of private individuals. I also gave them
-models of earthen vessels, which might be made at a small expense, for
-evaporating and condensing the mercury, which, if universally adopted,
-would effect a great saving in the consumption of that article.
-
-The remainder of my stay, previous to my journey to Tejuco, passed
-very agreeably. In the evening-parties to which I was invited, and
-which generally consisted of ladies and gentlemen, I observed that the
-English style of dress prevailed, particularly among the former. The
-houses of the higher classes in Villa Rica are much more convenient and
-better furnished than any I saw in Rio de Janeiro and S. Paulo, and
-are for the most part kept in the exactest order. Their beds seemed
-to me so elegant as to deserve a particular description. The posts
-were of fine wood, fluted or carved in various ways; the sides plain,
-the bottoms of boards or leather. The bed itself was of cotton, the
-sheets of fine linen edged with lace of home manufacture, full nine
-inches broad. The bolster was covered with fine muslin, the ends of
-which were edged also with lace. The pillows were made round at the
-ends and covered with pink sarsnet, over which was another of fine
-muslin, terminated with broad lace, which being starched and delicately
-managed had a very rich appearance. The coverlet was yellow satin of a
-Damask pattern, edged like the sheets and pillows with broad lace. The
-hangings were of the same materials, in the form of a canopy, without
-curtains. Not excepting the refinements of recent date in this article
-of furniture, I never saw beds so magnificent as those of the opulent
-in this captaincy.
-
-Every thing being now in readiness for my departure, I waited upon
-the several inhabitants to whom I had been introduced, to express
-my thanks for the polite attentions they had shewn me, and received
-from them the most obliging assurances of friendship, and the kindest
-wishes for my welfare. I also, much to my regret, took leave of my
-valued friend and fellow-traveller, Mr. Goodall, whose affairs required
-him to go to St. João D’El Rey, and thence return to Rio de Janeiro.
-Never was a traveller more fortunate in a companion; always cheerful
-and in spirits, he had the happy faculty of regarding every thing on
-its bright side, and in all the various inconveniences of bad roads,
-wretched inns, miserable fare, and worse accommodations, he exemplified
-the truth of the adage that, “a merry heart hath a continual feast.”
-Being perfectly master of the language, and well acquainted with the
-character and manners of the people, he made himself at home every
-where, and generally contrived to draw from the conversation of those
-around him, some topic either for lively remark or instructive comment.
-These amiable qualities, the offspring of a cultivated understanding
-and an excellent heart, gave him a double claim to that respect and
-confidence which we ever entertain for those whom we distinguish by the
-name of friend.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XII
-
-_Journey from Villa Rica to Tejuco, the Capital of the Diamond
-District._
-
-
-HAVING previously sent letters to his Excellency the Conde de Linhares,
-giving him an account of my proceedings, I set out from Villa Rica,
-attended by the two soldiers and my negro servant. I passed through the
-city of Mariana, and entered upon the plain in its vicinity already
-mentioned, which, in the rainy season, is often entirely overflowed.
-To the left I observed a beautiful and romantic mountain, called Morro
-de Santa Anna, on which stood many small neat houses, surrounded
-by coffee-plantations and orangeries; its base was watered by a
-_corvinha_, or rivulet, the banks of which contain much gold, and are
-worked by the inhabitants of the mount. Passing onward, the road became
-very confined; and the land, though now covered with wood, appeared to
-have been formerly under cultivation. We here met a number of mules
-laden with sugar, destined for Villa Rica, or, if not sold there, for
-Rio de Janeiro.
-
-We arrived and refreshed at a little village called Camargo, and passed
-an excellent house, situated near a rivulet of that name, where there
-is a gold-washing, which employs about two hundred negroes, and is said
-to be very productive. About a league farther we passed a poor little
-place called Bento Rodriguez, and about six in the evening arrived at
-a very considerable village, called Inficionado, which contains full
-fifteen hundred inhabitants. It had been more populous, but its mines
-having decreased, it was then on the decline. Finding no inn that
-offered any thing tolerable, I alighted at the house of a shopkeeper,
-who very civilly provided me an apartment to sleep in, and introduced
-me at supper to his wife, and three other ladies, whose society was
-very pleasant and cheerful. On the next day, after some trouble,
-my soldiers at a late hour procured mules, when I set out about ten
-o’clock upon a bad road, and, after travelling half a league, arrived
-at the Corgo do Inficionado, a fine rivulet flowing through a country
-rich in gold, particularly near the village of Santa Barbara, where
-washings appear in all directions. From hence to the village of Catas
-Altas, two leagues distant, is a tract of the finest open country I
-ever travelled in Brazil; it has many features resembling that between
-Matlock and Derby, and its mountains bear a strong similarity to those
-of Westmoreland. There are slips in some of them in which topazes are
-found, but rarely any of good quality. This district appeared equally
-suited for mining and agriculture, the ground being rich above as well
-as below. The village of Catas Altas, through which we rode, contains
-at least two thousand inhabitants, and is situated in a populous
-neighbourhood. The public buildings are well constructed, and the
-private houses in general appear very respectable, but bear evident
-marks of decay. We crossed the river which is broad but shallow, and
-has works on its banks of greater extent and under better management
-than any I had hitherto seen. The whole vicinity is irrigated by
-numerous rivulets, many of which are diverted from their courses to a
-great distance for the purpose of gold-washing. In all parts, even on
-the tops and sides of the hills, we observed operations of this kind
-going on; in the valleys there were many spots still rich in gold,
-which had not yet been washed.
-
-Continuing about six miles over this naked country, we entered on a
-more confined road, and passing a village called Cocaes, proceeded half
-a league further in the dark, to the mansion of Senhor Felicio, the
-_Capitao Mor_ of the district, where we alighted, having travelled this
-day above thirty miles. On being announced, I was immediately shown
-up stairs into a suite of handsome apartments, furnished with great
-magnificence, where I was introduced by the _Capitao_ to his amiable
-lady and daughter. We were joined by Dr. Gomides, a man of talents and
-science, with whom I entered into conversation, and who afterwards
-showed me a fine collection of gold in various forms, some like
-duck-shot, others laminated with micaceous iron, others arborescent.
-He had also some specimens of stalactitic matter, on which nitre was
-forming, others of specular iron ore, and three or four fine pieces
-of chrome, which I at first took for realgar. From this gentleman I
-received considerable information respecting the mineralogy of the
-country, which is so difficult to be obtained accurate, that I found
-reason to reject all which did not correspond with what I saw. In the
-course of the evening the party was joined by the Count de Oeyenhausen,
-who commands a corps of cavalry in the district. He made many enquiries
-of me respecting England, that being the country in which he had
-received his education, and to which he seemed as much attached as to
-his native soil.
-
-This large establishment, though still rich in gold, is worked by
-only two hundred negroes. One part of the estate is an auriferous
-mountain of schistus, containing beds of micaceous iron ore; the
-latter substance forms a thin stratum, which contains gold in grains
-laminated with it. It is singular to remark, that the _cascalho_, which
-generally, nay, almost invariably occurs in ravines and low situations,
-is here found at a very small depth below the surface on the summit.
-
-The discovery of the original gold mine in this rich _sesmaria_,
-is said to have been owing to the following accident. Some negroes
-employed in clearing the land, broke up an ant-hill of considerable
-size, when, on laying it open to the air, for the purpose of destroying
-or dispersing the insects, large grains of gold were found. It is,
-however, highly probable that the general characteristics of the soil
-had led to the discovery long before this period, and that the accident
-here related, served only to indicate the presence of gold in a part
-which had not been supposed to contain any. The estate is situated
-almost in the centre of the mining country, and is reputed one of the
-richest portions of it. The owner and his brother, who are partners,
-have conducted their concerns in a liberal way, and are said to be very
-wealthy. It was my wish to have staid a day or two for the purpose of
-inspecting the extensive works which they have opened; but I forebore
-to make any request of this nature, as I perceived, or supposed, some
-little jealousy or suspicion respecting my views. It seemed to be the
-opinion here, as well as in other places, that I had a mission from
-Government, authorizing me to enquire into the state of the mines, and
-give a report concerning them.
-
-In riding past the works, after having taken leave of the _Capitao_
-I did not perceive any machinery used for facilitating manual labor.
-The tedious process of washing by hand was most generally practised;
-in some instances inclined canoes were used, which, if carried to the
-degree of improvement of which they are susceptible, might much more
-effectually answer the purpose.
-
-Between the mountain on _Capitao_ Felicio’s estate and the village of
-Sabará is a rich mining district, which extends also to Bromare, over
-a continuation of hilly country. It is occupied by several opulent
-miners, who possess many fine grounds still unworked. A tract of land
-a few miles in extent is appropriated to agricultural purposes, being
-reputed to be destitute of gold.
-
-I proceeded four leagues, over a well-watered and finely-wooded
-country, to a hamlet called Vaz, a name which had become familiar
-to my ear through the frequent mention which my soldiers made of
-“the good old man of Vaz.” This person, whose reception of me fully
-justified the appellation with which he had been distinguished, was
-a farmer from Oporto, who had been resident here about forty years.
-He bought the estate with twenty negroes upon it, and paid for it by
-yearly instalments in twenty years afterwards. This mode of disposing
-of estates is much practised, being at once easy to the purchaser,
-and advantageous to the seller, as it ensures to the latter a better
-price than he could obtain on the condition of immediate payment.
-The house, which is well-built and convenient, has a sugar-mill and
-distillery attached to it. The sugar is generally sent to Rio, under an
-agreement with the carrier, giving him half or sometimes two-thirds of
-the proceeds, with a promise of back-carriage of salt, iron, and other
-commodities.
-
-Owing to the kind assiduities of my worthy host, the evening passed
-very agreeably. Many of the neighbours came to see and converse with
-me, as I was the first Englishman, or perhaps foreigner, who had ever
-travelled so far into the interior. Their curiosity led them to examine
-almost every implement I carried with me; my saddle, bridle, and
-stirrups, were viewed with great attention; nor could they imagine how
-it was possible to sit in the former with any degree of safety. There
-was no convincing them that it was much preferable to the Portuguese
-saddle, which has a ridge about eight inches high, both before and
-behind, so that the rider is, as it were, in the stocks, and, though
-not so liable to be thrown out, has a most galling and uncomfortable
-seat.
-
-The next morning I visited the negroes’ houses, and was much pleased
-to find one set apart for the reception of poor distressed travelling
-negroes, who here find a fatherly protection, and are allowed to
-stay as long a time as may suit their necessities. On taking leave
-of the good old gentleman, I could not prevail on him to accept any
-remuneration for his kindness, and he replied to my thanks with the
-warmest assurances of welcome. I crossed a fine stream, and rode
-through several plantations of sugar-cane, which were at this season
-nearly ready for cutting. The country, as we proceeded, gradually
-became more mountainous, and abounded with argillaceous schistus
-very full of quartz. After riding about sixteen miles, we saw a very
-singular mountain, or bare rock of granite, called Itambé, forming part
-of a high ridge which lay on our left. About four o’clock we arrived
-at a poor village, also called Itambé, situated near a fine river of
-the same name. This place was formerly of some consequence, but as the
-gold in its vicinity failed, it sunk into poverty and wretchedness.
-It contains about a thousand inhabitants, who, degraded to the lowest
-stage of inactive apathy, looked as if they were the ghosts of their
-progenitors haunting the ruins of their departed wealth.
-
-Every thing about them bore a cheerless aspect; the houses were ready
-to fall to the ground through want of repair; the door-places were
-overgrown with grass, and the patches of garden-ground that here and
-there appeared, were covered with weeds. The face of the country, too,
-was entirely different from that which I had passed on my way hither,
-being universally sterile, dry, and stony. It may well be supposed,
-from this description, that our accommodations here were of the worst
-kind: we halted at a miserable abode, where they offered us some mouldy
-Indian corn and _feijones_, and, after a great deal of difficulty,
-procured us a fowl. My servant was obliged to clean all the utensils
-before they could be used; and the soldiers while cooking, were obliged
-to guard the pot lest some half-famished prowler should steal it. The
-commandant of the place, with whom we had afterwards some conversation,
-answered our remarks on the visible signs of starvation in the looks of
-the villagers, by coolly saying, “While they get Indian corn to eat,
-and water to drink, they will not die of hunger.” I was glad to depart
-from this home of famine as fast as possible, heartily joining in the
-exclamation which the Portuguese have bestowed upon it; “Das mizerias
-de Itambé _libera nos Domine_!”—(From the miseries of Itambé the Lord
-deliver us!)
-
-After riding about five miles, we came to the River Das Onzas, so
-named from the numbers of those animals which formerly infested its
-banks. Changing our mules at a village called Lagos, cosisting of a
-few miserable _fazendas_, we proceeded a league over a most rugged
-and mountainous road, and passing a ridge, entered on a fine country,
-presenting to view a grand picturesque mountain nearly a league distant
-from us; about mid-way up was a large house, to which we directed our
-course. We forded a rather deep river called Rio Negro, on account of
-the blackness of its waters, caused by the decomposition of bituminous
-or vegetable matter. Its margin, along which we rode for some distance,
-presented some fine grazing land. Passing through a broken and
-irregular tract of country, we arrived at another deserted village
-called Gaspar Soares, and rode up to the house above-mentioned, the
-owner of which was from home, but his lady received me very politely.
-Having arrived rather early in the evening, I employed myself some time
-in walking about the grounds: the mountain on which the house stands
-consists almost entirely of micaceous iron ore[41]; the wall before
-the door of the house was built of that substance. In some parts, to
-my great surprise, I observed it lying in regular strata, not more
-than an inch in thickness, between beds of white sand. The quantity of
-ore found in this neighbourhood is so considerable as to have induced
-Government to commence an iron-work, under the direction of Dr. Manoel
-Ferreira da Camara, Intendant of the Diamond District. In aid of this
-undertaking, the gentleman, at whose house I was a guest, has presented
-a square league of woodland, the only tract of that description in the
-neighbourhood. The ground for the intended works is marked out, and
-a few blocks of stone are prepared; but the undertaking seems to go
-on very slowly, and probably will not arrive at any great degree of
-perfection.
-
-This hill and the streams near it were formerly rich in gold, but they
-have been completely washed, and are at present as much exhausted
-as the works at Itambé. A rivulet which runs over the top of the
-hill afforded conveniences for washing, which are very rarely to be
-met with; it is now intended to be converted to the use of the iron
-manufactory.
-
-On the following day I continued my route northerly, over a fine
-country, and, after riding, or rather walking, about six miles of
-bad road with wretched mules, ascended a hill abounding with rich
-compact iron ore. Two leagues of the way were covered with excellent
-oxide of iron, and it appeared as if the hills were entirely covered
-with that substance. Without any material occurrence, we arrived at a
-beautiful rivulet, near which stood a miserable hut, where two women
-were weaving cotton. This place, apparently so insignificant, proved
-one of the most interesting, in a mineralogical point of view, which
-I had hitherto visited. It is called Lagos, and also bears the name
-of Ouro Branco (White Gold), in allusion to a granular substance, not
-unlike gold in size and weight, found in a gold-washing in the bed of
-the stream. This substance, which has since been proved to be platina,
-was discovered many years ago in the _cascalho_ below the vegetable
-earth, and incumbent on the solid rock, accompanied with gold and
-black oxide of iron. From these circumstances the people judged it
-to be gold united with some other metal, from which it could not be
-separated; and, as the quantity of real gold found was small, and the
-white gold, as they called it, was not known to be of value, the work
-was gradually neglected, and at length abandoned. I procured a specimen
-of the substance: it appeared accompanied with _osmium_ and _iridium_,
-and was in rougher grains than the platina brought from the province of
-Choco; which latter circumstance may be owing to its not having been
-triturated with mercury. Now that the substance is known to be platina,
-it is doubtful whether the work might be resumed with advantage, as
-the demand for that article is at present so small, that the quantity
-sold would hardly pay expenses. Near this place is a work called Mata
-Cavallos.
-
-The rivulet of Lagos empties itself into the Rio de St. Antonio,
-along which we rode a small distance, and proceeding about four miles
-farther, arrived at Conceição, a large and tolerably handsome village.
-I was conducted to the house of the curate, who kindly assigned to me
-an apartment for the night, and, perceiving that I was unwell, gave me
-an invitation to rest a day, which I very gladly accepted.
-
-I here received many visits from the villagers, whose curiosity had
-been excited by the news of an Englishman having arrived: some of
-them were upwards of eighty years of age, and, as they had resided
-here more than fifty, they were able to give many curious accounts of
-the country, and of the progress and decline of its mines. I was much
-pleased with the information they communicated, but more so with the
-attention of the good curate, who corrected every misrepresentation,
-and seemed anxious that I should not be led into error, either through
-accident or design. By some means or other, an opinion circulated
-among them that I was a medical man, and numbers of infirm persons,
-principally old men, women, and children, were brought to me for
-advice. In the evening we were entertained with music by some of the
-younger females, who brought their guitars, and sung several pleasing
-airs.
-
-I was here shown a Buticudo Indian boy, apparently about nine years of
-age, who had been taken about six months before. He could not utter a
-word of Portuguese; but, from the expression of his countenance, his
-mind seemed capable of receiving any tuition. His eyes had so much
-vivacity in them that they almost spoke, especially when his attention
-was attracted by any thing agreeable, as I found by offering him
-a few sweetmeats, with which he seemed much delighted. I examined
-his features and the construction of his frame with some curiosity,
-as exhibiting the characteristics of the singular race of men from
-whom he sprung. The face was short, the mouth rather wide, the nose
-broad, the eyes large and black, skin of a dusky copper color, hair
-jet-black, strong, straight, and of regular length, limbs stout and
-well-proportioned, feet large, probably from going without shoes. He
-lived with a poor woman, who clothed and brought him up exactly as
-one of her family. On enquiring how he came there, I was informed
-that he belonged to a party of Indians who were surprised at a place
-about six leagues distant, and all either fell or escaped, except this
-little fellow, who was taken care of, and brought hither by an officer
-resident in the village.
-
-Being still too unwell to travel, I remained another day, and met with
-every attention and care from the good clergyman and his housekeeper.
-In the course of conversation, he informed me that he studied and had
-been ordained at S. Paulo; and when he learnt that I had been there so
-recently, seemed much pleased, and asked me many questions respecting
-the present state of that city, which showed his attachment to it as
-the scene of his youthful days.
-
-About a week previous to my arrival, this village was the scene of
-a somewhat remarkable adventure. A _tropeiro_[42] going to Rio de
-Janeiro with some loaded mules, was overtaken by two cavalry soldiers,
-who ordered him to surrender his fowling-piece; which being done, they
-bored the butt-end with a gimblet, and finding it hollow, took off the
-iron from the end, where they found a cavity containing about three
-hundred carats of diamonds, which they immediately seized. The man
-in vain protested his innocence, stating that he had bought the gun
-of a friend: he was hurried away, and thrown into prison at Tejuco,
-where I afterwards saw him. The diamonds were confiscated, and the
-soldiers received half their value. The fate of this man is a dreadful
-instance of the rigor of the existing laws: he will forfeit all his
-property, and be confined, probably, for the remainder of his days
-in a loathsome prison, among felons and murderers. What must be the
-feelings (if, indeed, he can be said to possess any) of the fellow who
-betrayed him; for, doubtless, the poor man owed his misfortune to some
-secret villain, in the shape of a confidential friend, who, having
-learned his mode of carrying diamonds concealed, had, for the sake of
-a paltry premium, or from some mean spirited motive, given notice of
-it to Government! How must the miscreant recoil at having brought to
-irreparable ruin, and plunged into that lowest state of human misery,
-perpetual imprisonment, a man who not only claimed his sympathy as a
-fellow-creature, but was united to him by the ties of friendship!
-
-The village of Conceição, seemed to me large enough to contain
-two thousand inhabitants, but, like most others in this exhausted
-district, it was fast hastening to decay. The rent of a tolerable
-house is about two shillings a month. The only manufacture carried on
-here is that of a little cotton, which is spun by the hand and woven
-into coarse shirting. It appears to be a maxim among the inhabitants
-rather to go naked, than labor to clothe themselves. The vestiges of
-old gold-washings in every direction, and the slight quantities still
-found in all parts, from the summits of the mountains to their bases,
-might almost lead a traveller to conclude that the whole country was
-at one period auriferous. The surface is in general fine red earth,
-and in many parts presents fine situations for iron works, as there
-is ore and wood in abundance. It is much to be wished that such works
-were established; for iron is so dear at Conceição, and the people in
-general so poor, that the mules have seldom a shoe to their feet, which
-is irksome to the riders, and dangerous to the animals themselves,
-as they are continually coming down, particularly when ascending a
-clay-hill, after a shower of rain.
-
-Neither here, nor in any other part of my journey from Villa Rica,
-did I observe any limestone, though I was informed that considerable
-quantities were found near Sabará.
-
-Taking leave of the worthy curate, I set out for Tapinhoá-canga[43],
-distant about thirty miles. After an unpleasant ride through a rough
-stony country, abounding in quartz laminated with schistus, I reached a
-village called Corvos, where there are some gold-washings, one of which
-produced, about half a year ago, a net profit of £800, though only
-four negroes were employed a month upon it. The road to the village
-above mentioned led through a most uneven tract, presenting formidable
-precipices, which required us to travel with so much caution, that
-we did not complete our journey until an hour after sun-set. I was
-received into a very respectable house, which had the appearance
-of former opulence. The owner, Captain Bom-jardim, a venerable old
-gentleman, came to welcome me: on entering into conversation, he
-informed me that he had emigrated hither from Oporto at the age of
-seventeen, and had lived here sixty-two years. He was tempted to settle
-here by the hope of participating in the rich treasures for which the
-country was then famed; but he arrived two or three years too late:
-the mines were already on the decline, and he was obliged to turn his
-attention to agricultural pursuits, in which he persevered with such
-success that he was enabled to realize a comfortable independency, and
-to bring up a numerous family in credit and respectability. It had been
-well if his neighbours had profited by so eminent an example, instead
-of deserting the country when the gold on its surface disappeared.
-That many did so was evident from the declining state of the village;
-a great number of its houses were falling to decay, others were
-untenanted, and its population, which formerly amounted to near three
-thousand, was dwindled to a third of that amount.
-
-Continuing my journey next day, I crossed the ridge of a lofty chain of
-mountains, abounding with streams, that were much swoln in consequence
-of the late rains; one of the largest, called Rio dos Peixes, I forded
-thrice, and entered on a wide champaign country. In many parts I saw
-large tracts of bare places, where the grit-stone alternated with
-argillaceous schistus. The next ten miles led through an elevated
-and fertile plain, intersected with rivulets in every direction, and
-well calculated for farming, but very thinly inhabited. Early in the
-afternoon I reached an eminence, from which I had a fine view of Villa
-do Principe, situated on the rise of a lofty hill opposite, the base of
-which was washed by a rivulet called _Corvinho dos Quatro Vintens_[44].
-On arriving in the town, I was conducted to the house of the governor,
-or chief magistrate, who received me very politely, and introduced me
-to his lady and a party of friends, with whom I took tea.
-
-Villa do Principe was established as a _comarco_, or district, in
-the year 1730, when the gold-washings were most productive: but it
-dates its origin fifteen years earlier, at which period the place was
-discovered by the Paulistas, who had then commenced to migrate from
-Villa Rica and the adjacent settlements. The town at present contains
-about five thousand inhabitants, the most considerable proportion of
-whom are shopkeepers, and the rest artisans, farmers, miners, and
-laborers. Here is a house of permutation, to which every miner in the
-district brings the gold he obtains, and pays the royal fifth, as is
-done in Villa Rica. The _ouvidor_ holds the office of mint-master,
-which renders his situation one of the best in the gift of the crown.
-Here are several inferior officers belonging to various departments of
-the public service. As this town is situated very near the confines of
-the Diamond District, and on the high road leading to it, the strictest
-regulations prevail respecting the passage of all persons thither. No
-one, except travellers on business, with certificates to that effect,
-is suffered to proceed, until a formal notification has been made to
-the governor of that district; the laws of which are so strict, that
-any person found within it, out of the regular road, is liable to
-be apprehended on suspicion, and subjected to an examination, which
-frequently occasions much trouble and delay.
-
-The country around Villa do Principe is very fine and open, being free
-from those impenetrable woods, which occur so frequently in other
-parts of the province. Its soil is in general very productive, and the
-climate mild and salubrious.
-
-At a washing about six leagues distant, a lump of gold was found of
-several pounds weight. From the same place I procured some above two
-ounces, and obtained the large crystals now in my possession, one of
-which is considered unique.
-
-I quitted Villa do Principe about noon on the day following, after
-making my acknowledgments for the polite attentions of the governor,
-who kindly sent a servant to attend me the first league of the road.
-This man I commissioned, under a promise of pecuniary recompence, to
-collect for me land-shells and insects, against my return, which I
-expected would take place in two or three months; and, from the aptness
-with which he received my directions, (joined to the prospect of
-emolument), I had little doubt but that he would attend to them.
-
-As we journeyed on, I perceived that the country bore an aspect
-entirely different from that in the neighbourhood of Villa do
-Principe: its surface, consisting of coarse sand and rounded quartz
-pebbles, was almost destitute of wood or herbage. One hillock near
-the road exhibited perpendicular laminæ of micaceous grit, which, on
-alighting from my horse and examining, I found to be flexible. My
-soldier, hearing me remark that the country bore characteristics which
-I had never observed elsewhere, exclaimed, “Senhor, we are in the
-Diamond District.” This circumstance, which I had not before thought
-of, fully accounted for the change. We travelled over a very sterile
-country for the first four leagues, and passed several high mountains.
-Towards the close of the day we reached an eminence, from which we
-beheld a most romantic cluster of dwellings, resembling a labyrinth,
-or a negroes-town in Africa. We descended the hill, and approached the
-place; when, it being nearly dark, I was conducted to a house much
-larger than any of the others, where I learnt that the establishment
-was a diamond-work called San Gonzales, the first which occurs in the
-Serro do Frio. It has been some time on the decline, and employs about
-200 negroes. The intendant, a very intelligent man, had been apprised
-of our coming by a letter from the governor at Tejuco, and gave me
-a very friendly reception. While engaged in conversation with him,
-I observed (it being now moon-light) some fine cows in front of the
-premises, and concluded that they were come to be milked, but this I
-understood was not the case. They were licking the doorposts and sides
-of the houses, with much apparent eagerness, and, on enquiring what
-this signified, I was told that they wanted salt. They were so tame
-and gentle that, on holding out my hand, they licked it; when, being
-desirous to see the effect which salt produced on them, I procured
-some, and gave them a handful: but they became so very unruly for more,
-that had I not immediately desisted and retired, their fury might have
-produced serious consequences. This article is so necessary for the
-support of the cattle, that their very existence depends on it, yet it
-is encumbered with a heavier duty than any other article of import,
-iron alone excepted. Surely, when it is considered that vast herds are
-daily sent from this province to Rio de Janeiro, each paying a toll of
-nearly twelve shillings on crossing the river Paraibuna, the impolicy
-of this duty must be self-evident, because, in raising the price of the
-commodity to an excessive degree, it checks the breed of cattle, and
-thus ultimately defeats the purpose for which it was imposed.
-
-The next day, before we left this romantic place, I devoted some
-time to an examination of the refuse-hillocks contiguous to the
-diamond-works, but found nothing among the heaps of quartzose stones,
-which had been washed when this place was more in repute. I here
-noticed a thin stratum below the roots of the grass, which I had
-elsewhere seen, but never so distinctly characteristic. It is called
-_bergalhão_, and consists of quartz pebbles, generally angular, and
-not unfrequently large beds of solid quartz not more than four or
-five inches thick. This stratum does not appear to have been formed
-at the same time, or by the same means as the _cascalho_, from which
-it is invariably separated by a stratum of vegetable earth unequal
-in thickness; it has more the appearance of a thin bed of quartz
-subsequently shattered into innumerable fragments.
-
-Having taken leave of the administrator, I proceeded through a
-continuation of mountains and sterile country, very thinly inhabited.
-I stopt at one of the best of the few miserable houses on the road to
-procure some refreshment. There was a half-starved cat in the door-way,
-the sight of which plainly evinced to me what I had to expect. Poor
-animal, thought I, the habitation in which thou existest, will not
-afford maintenance for a mouse, much less for thee! While musing on
-this picture of distress and famine, a poor meagre woman came to the
-door, of whom I requested a little water, which she brought me, and
-while I was drinking it she began to implore charity. Her countenance
-had already expressed what her tongue now uttered: I gave her the few
-provisions my soldiers had with them, together with a small piece of
-money, and took leave;—the last words I heard from her were those of
-gratitude.
-
-Ere we arrived at this place, we had seen Tejuco at full twelve miles’
-distance, and were now much nearer. We crossed two rapid rivulets,
-one of them called Rio Negro, the waters of which were of a very black
-color, and afterwards passed a guard-house, or register, called Milho
-Verde, situated near a stream of the same name, formerly much noted for
-diamonds. Here a band of soldiers are stationed, who are always on the
-alert, riding after and examining passengers. The country is extremely
-rough, and destitute of vegetation, covered in all directions with
-grit-stone rocks full of rounded quartzose pebbles. We rode two miles
-along the Corvinho de St. Francisco, which runs through the ravine
-at the foot of the mountain on the side of which Tejuco is built,
-presenting much the same appearance as Villa Rica. I entered the town,
-and took up my abode at the best inn, which contained some neat rooms,
-and afforded tolerable accommodations.
-
-This was Sunday the 17th of September, being one month since my
-departure from Rio de Janeiro, during which period I had been
-almost continually on horseback; for the time I remained at Villa
-Rica was principally occupied in journies to various places in the
-neighbourhood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XIII.
-
- _Visit to the Diamond Works on the River Jiquitinhonha.—General
- Description of the Works.—Mode of Washing.—Return to Tejuco.—Visit
- to the Treasury.—Excursion to Rio Pardo.—Miscellaneous Remarks._
-
-
-THE continual fatigues, and want of accommodation on the journey, had
-rendered me very unwell, and I was therefore desirous of resting a
-week at Tejuco before I proceeded to the diamond mines; but, learning
-that I had been expected for the last two or three days, I sent one of
-my soldiers up to the house of Dr. Camara, the governor, to announce
-my arrival, and to state that I was prevented by indisposition from
-personally paying my respects to him. He immediately came with a few
-friends to visit me, gave me a most hearty welcome to Tejuco, and staid
-with me at least three hours. I delivered to him my public and private
-letters, passports, and other credentials, which he perused with great
-satisfaction, observing to the _ouvidor_ and his friends, that I
-possessed the same privileges which they did, having permission from
-the court to see every place I wished, which they were directed to show
-me. He then told me that, in expectation of my arrival, he had delayed
-a journey to the greatest of the diamond works, called Mandanga,
-situated on the river Jiquitinhonha, which employs about a thousand
-Negroes, and on particular occasions double that number. He was
-desirous that I should see this great work with all the machinery in
-operation, which would be very speedily removed, the late rains having
-swoln the rivers so much as to render working more, impracticable. He
-therefore kindly invited me to breakfast at his house on the following
-morning, when he would have all in readiness for a journey of about
-thirty miles to the place above mentioned.
-
-At an early hour I arose; and, though so unwell as to be scarcely
-more than half alive, I could not resist the favorable opportunity
-now offered me of gratifying the curiosity which had so long occupied
-my mind, by visiting the diamond mines, in company with the principal
-officer in the administration of them, who was therefore qualified
-to furnish me with the amplest information. A fine horse was waiting
-for me at the door, and I rode up to the house of the governor, who
-introduced me to his amiable lady, daughters, and family, with whom
-I had the honor to take breakfast. Several officers of the diamond
-establishment arrived on horseback to accompany us, their presence
-being required on this occasion.
-
-At nine o’clock we set out, and crossed the ravine, watered by the
-small rivulet of St. Franciso, which separates Tejuco from the opposite
-mountains. The road was very rough and uneven, continually ascending
-or descending mountains of considerable extent, the strata of which
-were grit alternating with micaceous schistus, and presenting an
-immense quantity of rude masses, composed of grit and rounded quartz,
-forming a loose and friable kind of pudding-stone. The country appeared
-almost destitute of wood, presenting occasionally a few poor shrubs;
-there were no cattle to be seen, yet some of the tracts would certainly
-maintain sheep in great numbers. Having halted at a place about half
-way, we descended a very steep mountain, full a mile in the declivity,
-and entered a ravine, where we crossed a very good wooden bridge over
-the river Jiquitinhonha, which is larger than the Derwent at Derby. We
-rode along its margin, where the land appears much richer, presenting
-a good vegetable soil covered with underwood; and, proceeding about a
-league, arrived at the famed place called Mandanga. The habitations,
-which are about one hundred in number, are built detached, and are
-generally of a circular form, with very high thatched roofs, like
-African huts, but much larger. The walls are formed of upright stakes,
-interwoven with small branches, and coated with clay inside and out.
-The houses of the officers are of the same materials but of much more
-convenient form, and whitewashed within. Near some of the houses we
-observed inclosures for gardens, which, in some degree, enlivened
-the prospect, and gave an air of comfort to these rude and simple
-dwellings.
-
-I remained here five days, during which I was occupied in viewing and
-examining various parts of the works, of which I shall here attempt to
-give a general description.
-
-This rich river, formed by the junction of a number of streams which
-will be hereafter noted, is as wide as the Thames at Windsor, and
-in general from three to nine feet deep. The part now in working is
-a curve or elbow, from which the current is diverted into a canal
-cut across the tongue of land, round which it winds, the river being
-stopped just below the head of the canal by an embankment, formed
-of several thousand bags of sand. This is a work of considerable
-magnitude, and requires the co-operation of all the negroes to
-complete it; for, the river being wide and not very shallow, and also
-occasionally subject to overflows, they have to make the embankment so
-strong as to resist the pressure of the water, admitting it to rise
-four or five feet.
-
-[Illustration: BREAK IN THE HILL SHEWING THE TOPAZ MINE AT CAPON.]
-
-[Illustration: BED OF THE RIVER LAID DRY BY AN AQUEDUCT TO CONNECT THE
-ALLUVIAL SOIL IN ORDER TO WASH IT FOR DIAMONDS, GOLD, &c.]
-
-The deeper parts of the channel of the river are laid dry by means
-of large _caissons_ or chain-pumps, worked by a water-wheel. The
-mud is then carried off, and the _cascalho_ is dug up and removed
-to a convenient place for washing. This labor was, until lately,
-performed by the negroes, who carried the _cascalho_ in _gamellas_
-on their heads, but Dr. Camara has formed two inclined planes about
-one hundred yards in length, along which carts are drawn by a large
-water-wheel, divided into two parts, the ladles or buckets of which are
-so constructed that the rotatory motion may be altered by changing the
-current of water from one side to the other; this wheel, by means of
-a rope made of untanned hides, works two carts, one of which descends
-empty on one inclined plane, while the other, loaded with _cascalho_,
-is drawn to the top of the other inclined plane, where it falls into
-a cradle, empties itself, and descends in its turn. At a work, called
-Cangica, formerly of great importance, about a mile up the river on the
-opposite side, there are three cylindrical engines (_wims_) for drawing
-the _cascalho_, like those used in the mining country of Derbyshire,
-and also rail-ways over some uneven ground. This was the first and
-only machinery of consequence which I saw in the Diamond District, and
-there appear many obstacles to the general introduction of it. Timber,
-when wanted of large size, has to be fetched a distance of one hundred
-miles at a very heavy expense; there are few persons competent to the
-construction of machines, and the workmen dislike to make them, fearing
-that this is only part of a general plan for superseding manual labor.
-
-The stratum of _cascalho_ consists of the same materials with that in
-the gold district. On many parts, by the edge of the river, are large
-conglomerated masses of rounded pebbles cemented by oxide of iron,
-which sometimes envelop gold and diamonds. They calculate on getting
-as much _cascalho_ in the dry season as will occupy all their hands
-during the months which are more subject to rain. When carried from
-the bed of the river whence it is dug, it is laid in heaps containing
-apparently from five to fifteen tons each.
-
-Water is conveyed from a distance, and is distributed to the various
-parts of the works by means of aqueducts, constructed with great
-ingenuity and skill. The method of washing for diamonds at this place
-is as follows:—A shed is erected in the form of a parallelogram,
-twenty-five or thirty yards long, and about fifteen wide, consisting of
-upright posts which support a roof thatched with long grass. Down the
-middle of the area of this shed a current of water is conveyed through
-a canal covered with strong planks, on which the _cascalho_ is laid two
-or three feet thick. On the other side of the area is a flooring of
-planks, from four to five yards long, embedded in clay, extending the
-whole length of the shed, and having a slope from the canal, of three
-or four inches to a yard. This flooring is divided into about twenty
-compartments or troughs, each about three feet wide, by means of planks
-placed on their edge. The upper ends of all these troughs (here called
-canoes) communicate with the canal, and are so formed that water is
-admitted into them between two planks that are about an inch separate.
-Through this opening the current falls about six inches into the
-trough, and may be directed to any part of it, or stopped at pleasure
-by means of a small quantity of clay. For instance, sometimes water is
-required only from one corner of the aperture, then the remaining part
-is stopped; sometimes it is wanted from the centre, then the extremes
-are stopped; and sometimes only a gentle rill is wanted, then the clay
-is applied accordingly. Along the lower ends of the troughs a small
-channel is dug to carry off the water.
-
-[Illustration: NEGROES WASHING FOR DIAMONDS, GOLD &c.]
-
-On the heap of _cascalho_, at equal distances, are placed three high
-chairs[45] for the officers or overseers. After they are seated, the
-negroes[46] enter the troughs, each provided with a rake of a peculiar
-form and short handle, with which he rakes into the trough about fifty
-or eighty pounds weight of _cascalho_. The water being then let in
-upon it, the _cascalho_ is spread abroad and continually raked up to
-the head of the trough, so as to be kept in constant motion. This
-operation is performed for the space of a quarter of an hour; the water
-then begins to run clearer, having washed the earthy particles away,
-the gravel-like matter is raked up to the end of the trough; after the
-current flows away quite clear, the largest stones are thrown out, and
-afterwards those of inferior size, then the whole is examined with
-great care for diamonds[47]. When a negro finds one, he immediately
-stands upright and claps his hands, then extends them, holding the gem
-between his forefinger and thumb; an overseer receives it from him, and
-deposits it in a _gamella_ or bowl, suspended from the centre of the
-structure, half full of water. In this vessel all the diamonds found
-in the course of the day are placed, and at the close of the work are
-taken out and delivered to the principal officer, who, after they have
-been weighed, registers the particulars in a book kept for that purpose.
-
-When a negro is so fortunate as to find a diamond of the weight of an
-_octavo_ (17-1/2 carats), much ceremony takes place; he is crowned with
-a wreath of flowers and carried in procession to the administrator, who
-gives him his freedom, by paying his owner for it. He also receives a
-present of new clothes, and is permitted to work on his own account.
-When a stone of eight or ten carats is found, the negro receives two
-new shirts, a complete new suit, with a hat and a handsome knife. For
-smaller stones of trivial amount proportionate premiums are given.
-During my stay at Tejuco a stone of 16-1/2 carats was found: it was
-pleasing to see the anxious desire manifested by the officers, that it
-might prove heavy enough to entitle the poor negro to his freedom; and
-when, on being delivered and weighed, it proved only a carat short of
-the requisite weight, all seemed to sympathize in his disappointment.
-
-Many precautions are taken to prevent the negroes from embezzling
-diamonds. Although they work in a bent position, and consequently
-never know whether the overseers are watching them or not, yet it
-is easy for them to omit gathering any which they see, and to place
-them in a corner of the trough for the purpose of secreting them at
-leisure hours, to prevent which they are frequently changed while the
-operation is going on. A word of command being given by the overseers,
-they instantly move into each other’s troughs, so that no opportunity
-of collusion can take place. If a negro be suspected of having
-swallowed a diamond, he is confined in a strong room until the fact
-can be ascertained. Formerly the punishment inflicted on a negro for
-smuggling diamonds was confiscation of his person to the state; but it
-being thought too hard for the owner to suffer for the offence of his
-servant, the penalty has been commuted for personal imprisonment and
-chastisement. This is a much lighter punishment than that which their
-owners or any white man would suffer for a similar offence.
-
-There is no particular regulation respecting the dress of the negroes:
-they work in the clothes most suitable to the nature of their
-employment, generally in a waistcoat and a pair of drawers, and not
-naked, as some travellers have stated. Their hours of labor are from
-a little before sunrise until sun-set, half an hour being allowed for
-breakfast, and two hours at noon. While washing they change their
-posture as often as they please, which is very necessary, as the work
-requires them to place their feet on the edges of the trough, and to
-stoop considerably. This posture is particularly prejudicial to young
-growing negroes, as it renders them in-kneed. Four or five times during
-the day they all rest, when snuff, of which they are very fond, is
-given to them.
-
-The negroes are formed into working parties, called troops, containing
-two hundred each, under the direction of an administrator and inferior
-officers. Each troop has a clergyman and a surgeon to attend it.
-With respect to the subsistence of the negroes, although the present
-governor has in some degree improved it by allowing a daily portion of
-fresh beef, which was not allowed by his predecessors, yet I am sorry
-to observe that it is still poor and scanty: and in other respects
-they are more hardly dealt with than those of any other establishment
-which I visited: notwithstanding this, the owners are all anxious to
-get their negroes into the service, doubtless from sinister motives, of
-which more will be said hereafter.
-
-The officers are liberally paid, and live in a style of considerable
-elegance, which a stranger would not be led to expect in so remote
-a place. Our tables were daily covered with a profusion of excellent
-viands, served up on fine Wedgewood ware, and the state of their
-household generally corresponded with this essential part of it. They
-were ever ready to assist me in my examination of the works, and freely
-gave me all the necessary information respecting them.
-
-Having detailed the process of washing for diamonds, I proceed to a
-general description of the situations in which they are found. The flat
-pieces of ground on each side the river are equally rich throughout
-their extent, and hence the officers are enabled to calculate the value
-of an unworked place by comparison with the amount found on working
-in the part adjoining. These known places are left in reserve, and
-trial is made of more uncertain grounds. The following observation I
-often heard from the Intendant: “That piece of ground” (speaking of an
-unworked flat by the side of the river) “will yield me ten thousand
-carats of diamonds whenever we shall be required to get them in the
-regular course of working, or when, on any particular occasion, an
-order from Government arrives, demanding an extraordinary and immediate
-supply.”
-
-The substances accompanying diamonds, and considered good indications
-of them, are bright bean-like iron ore, a slaty flint-like substance,
-approaching Lydian-stone, of fine texture, black oxide of iron in
-great quantities, rounded bits of blue quartz, yellow crystal, and
-other materials entirely different from any thing known to be produced
-in the adjacent mountains. Diamonds are by no means peculiar to the
-beds of rivers or deep ravines; they have been found in cavities and
-water-courses on the summits of the most lofty mountains.
-
-I had some conversation with the officers respecting the matrix of the
-diamond, not a vestige of which could I trace. They informed me that
-they often found diamonds cemented in pudding-stone, accompanied with
-grains of gold, but that they always broke them out, as they could
-not enter them in the treasury, or weigh them with matter adhering to
-them. I obtained a mass of pudding-stone, apparently of very recent
-formation, cemented by ferruginous matter enveloping grains of gold and
-diamonds; likewise a few pounds of the _cascalho_ in its unwashed state.
-
-This river, and other streams in its vicinity, have been in washing
-many years, and have produced great quantities of diamonds, which have
-ever been reputed of the finest quality. They vary in size; some are so
-small that four or five are required to weigh one grain, consequently
-sixteen or twenty to the carat: there are seldom found more than two
-or three stones of from seventeen to twenty carats in the course of a
-year, and not once in two years is there found throughout the whole
-washings a stone of thirty carats. During the few days I was here they
-were not very successful; the whole quantity found amounted only to
-forty, the largest of which was only four carats, and of a light green
-color.
-
-From the great quantity of _debris_, or worked _cascalho_, in every
-part near the river, it is reasonable to calculate that the works have
-been in operation above forty years; of course there must arrive a
-period at which they will be exhausted, but there are grounds in the
-neighbourhood, particularly in the Cerro de St. Antonio, and in the
-country now inhabited by the Indians, which will probably afford these
-gems in equal abundance.
-
-After residing here five days, we visited a diamond work called
-Monteiro, about two miles up the river, and went a league further to
-a gold-work called Carrapato. The _cascalho_ at this work was taken
-from a part of the river eight feet deep, which formed an eddy under
-a projecting point; I was shewn a heap of it, that was estimated to
-be worth £10,000. In removing this heap from its bed, four hundred
-negroes had been employed three months; and to wash it, would occupy
-one hundred men for three months more, the expense of both operations
-amounting to perhaps £1,500. We arrived at this place at eight o’clock
-in the morning; six negroes were employed four hours in washing two
-troughs, containing together about a ton of _cascalho_, when, to
-my great surprise, after the water ran clear, and the large stones
-were thrown out, the black oxide of iron, of which there was great
-abundance, was fringed with grains of gold, a novel and very agreeable
-sight to a stranger. The gold was taken out at three or four different
-times, and, when the washing was completed, was dried over a fire and
-weighed: it amounted to nearly twenty ounces Troy. This is esteemed a
-very rich place, and such circumstances are of rare occurrence. The
-whole neighbourhood is sterile, presenting the same characteristics
-as those before described. By proper cultivation the vallies might
-be rendered very productive; but, as the troops of negroes and their
-officers are continually changing, no agricultural establishments are
-formed.
-
-This place probably derived its name from a most disagreeable insect,
-which infests the low brushwood in the neighbourhood. It is like a
-sheep-tick; and, on getting access to any part of the body, it fastens
-imperceptibly, buries its head under the skin, and draws blood until
-its body is swelled to the size of a bean. If forcibly removed, it
-leaves a very deep disagreeable hole, which is frequently difficult to
-heal. The best mode of getting rid of the animal is to anoint it with
-either laudanum or oil, and suffer it to remain until it dies, when it
-will drop off.
-
-In the afternoon we returned to Tejuco by another route more
-mountainous than that by which we had come. Crossing a deep ravine,
-formerly very rich in diamonds, we rode up a mountain full a mile on
-the ascent, and passed several rivulets, which I was informed had
-produced many fine stones. These, and in fact all the best situations
-in the district, had been in the possession of the smugglers, and were
-explored by those enterprising men. In the course of our journey, I
-observed that whenever a traveller or a negro was seen by any of our
-party at a distance from the road, a soldier was instantly dispatched
-to bring him to the officers, before whom he underwent an examination.
-
-In the evening we arrived at Tejuco, where I was desirous of remaining
-a week to recruit my strength. Dr. Camara ordered my baggage to his
-house, whither I removed in compliance with his pressing invitation:
-he was kind enough to give me his library as my private room; it was
-extensive and very select, consisting chiefly of English authors on
-science. Adjoining to it is a fine garden of nearly three acres in
-extent, planted chiefly with grass. It was formerly a gold-washing, and
-consequently presented a surface of only refuse stones; but the present
-proprietor levelled it, brought a little soil from various parts, and
-planted a peculiar variety of grass, which he keeps in cutting for his
-mules. This was the commencement of the fruit season; the peaches,
-with which the trees were loaded, were nearly ripe. The asparagus, and
-vegetables of every description, were very fine. The climate appeared
-to be mild and genial; the thermometer was generally at 62 degrees at
-sunrise, and at mid-day, in a room rather exposed to the sun, rose to
-74 degrees.
-
-Tejuco being situated in a sterile district, which produces nothing
-for the maintenance of its inhabitants, in number about six thousand,
-depends, for a supply of provisions, on farms situated several leagues
-distant. The bread of the country was at this time extremely dear;
-Indian corn, from which it is made, being from 5s. 6d. to 6s. the
-bushel; beans and other pulse in proportion. Beef was very indifferent,
-this being the dry season; pork and poultry were rather plentiful.
-At no place do I recollect to have seen a greater proportion of
-indigent people, particularly of females. Full a hundred and fifty
-of these unhappy persons come weekly to receive portions of flour
-which the governor was pleased to allow them. They are totally
-without occupation, here being neither agriculture nor manufactures
-to afford them any; yet both these main supports of the population
-might be introduced, if a proper spirit of industry prevailed among
-the inhabitants. The land would, with little trouble, yield excellent
-crops, were any kind of inclosures made, which, it must be allowed,
-is an undertaking attended with some difficulties, yet not of such
-magnitude as to render it hopeless. With respect to manufactures, a
-most valuable material is at hand, as cotton from Minas Novas, distant
-only from sixty to one hundred miles, passes through this place to the
-capital.
-
-Yet, notwithstanding the idleness of the inhabitants, Tejuco may be
-called florishing, on account of the circulation of property created
-by the diamond works. The annual sum paid by Government for the
-hire of negroes, salaries of officers, and various necessaries, such
-as nitre and iron, does not amount to less than £35,000, and this,
-added to the demands of the inhabitants of the town and its vicinity,
-occasions a considerable trade. The shops are stocked with English
-cottons, baizes, and cloths, and other manufactured goods; also hams,
-cheese, butter, porter, and other articles of consumption. Mules from
-Bahia and Rio de Janeiro came loaded with them. Great complaints were
-made among the shopkeepers of the bad quality of the cotton goods,
-and of their losing their colors in washing. Some of the principal
-inhabitants exclaimed against the introduction of foreign luxuries, and
-rather wished that their trade with England should furnish them the
-means of working their iron mines, and enable them to defend themselves.
-
-Tejuco, owing to its situation by the side of a hill, is very
-irregularly built; its streets are uneven, but the houses in general
-are well constructed and in good condition, compared with those of
-other towns in the interior. Its name, which, in the Portuguese
-language, signifies a muddy place, is derived from places of that
-description in its neighbourhood, which are rendered passable by being
-covered with large pieces of wood.
-
-Through the kind care and attention of Dr. Camara and his excellent
-family, my health was in part re-established, and I was enabled to
-ride out daily, occupying myself in seeing all I could, and gaining
-the best information, in which I was assisted by my worthy host and
-all his friends. Our evenings were passed in a most agreeable manner,
-among the parties which regularly assembled at the Intendant’s house,
-consisting of some of the principal inhabitants of the town. In these
-parties the gentlemen engage at whist, and the ladies take tea and play
-round games, or enter into conversation on the passing occurrences
-of the day. In no part of Brazil did I meet with society so select
-and agreeable; this may certainly be called the court of the mining
-district. In their manners there was no ceremonious reserve or courtly
-refinement, but their whole demeanour was genteel and well-bred,
-enlivened by an ease and good humor which the affability of the
-chief and his amiable lady and daughters ever tended to promote. The
-company all dressed after the English mode, and in dresses of English
-manufacture: the gentlemen were almost all men of title, distinguished
-with stars, yet the _constellation_ which they formed, was far inferior
-in brilliancy and elegance to that of the ladies.
-
-I was invited to pay a visit to the treasury, which can only be viewed
-when a meeting of officers is called, as the treasure is kept in
-chests, under three distinct locks, the keys of which are entrusted
-to three several officers, who are all required to be present at the
-opening. They here showed me the diamonds taken from the _tropeiro_ at
-Conceição, which were in general much better than those from the mines
-worked by Government. One about eleven carats was a very fine stone,
-perfectly crystallized, in the form of an octahedron. The unfortunate
-man from whom they were taken, I was informed, was very ill in prison.
-I was then shown about eight hundred carats found in the regular course
-of washing; they were in general very small, not one exceeding five
-carats. I observed several round and many inferior ones colored. Those
-with a dark green hue and rough exterior, were, they informed me, when
-cut, of the purest water, and from Rio Pardo.
-
-Here the diamonds found in the district are deposited monthly, as they
-are received from the different works. They are carefully weighed, and
-some selected and kept separate. The average quantity obtained may be
-estimated at from 20,000 to 25,000 carats annually, which are sent
-under a military escort to Rio, and there lodged in the treasury.
-
-The diamonds are tied up in black silk bags, and deposited in elegant
-inner cabinets, the whole of which are locked up in strong chests bound
-with iron.
-
-They then showed me the gold, which was in large bars, weighing from
-five to ten pounds each, the whole of which I estimated at full 150lbs.
-weight. It was found in the district of Cerro do Frio, and was reserved
-to pay part of the expenses attending the establishment.
-
-An excursion was some days afterwards proposed to another diamond work,
-called Rio Pardo, distant about twenty miles in a north-west direction.
-After proceeding a third of the way, over a country covered with a poor
-wiry sort of grass, we passed several fine falls of water, and crossed
-a ridge of mountains. The land as we advanced appeared much better,
-though still very naked, having only a few poor crooked small trees,
-that rather increased than took from its desolate appearance.
-
-We passed through Chapada, a little dirty village, once famous for
-its washings, as were all the streams and ravines in the vicinity,
-and proceeded over some good clay-land, and a considerable tract of
-peat-moss, well watered by streams which burst in all directions from
-the hills. The country was open, and had a most romantic appearance,
-caused by a quantity of low rocks of soft pudding-stone, laminated,
-which lay on the surface in the most irregular forms. These lands were
-well calculated for pasturage, particularly in the season of abundance,
-but I was told that the cattle put to graze upon them were frequently
-stolen by the negroes[48], and that there were many noxious plants in
-the herbage which proved fatal to the beasts that ate them.
-
-We arrived at the houses of the establishment about eleven in the
-forenoon, and walked four miles farther to the diamond works, on
-which a full troop of negroes was then employed. Rio Pardo is a dirty
-paltry-looking rivulet, which runs into the Rio Velho: in some parts it
-is confined by shelving rocks of quartz, through which it runs rapidly;
-in others it takes a serpentine course, and forms eddies, which are
-called _caldrones_, on account of their resemblance to the cavity of
-a boiler. The bed of the river, though confined, has a stratum of
-_cascalho_ of variable thickness, which, after the current has been
-diverted, is dug up, and washed in the same way as at Jiquitinhonha.
-The _caldrones_, or holes, formerly eddies, but now partly filled
-with _cascalho_, so as to be no more than three or four feet deep,
-are frequently found to contain many diamonds; one of them, which was
-cleared by four men in as many days, produced one hundred and eighty
-carats.
-
-Rio Pardo, though paltry and insignificant in its appearance, has
-produced as large a quantity of the most precious gems as any river
-in the district. The rough blueish-green-colored diamonds, formerly
-so much esteemed by the Hollanders, continue to be found here, and
-the stones of this rivulet are to this day reputed the most valuable
-in Brazil. The accompanying substances are somewhat different from
-those of the washings at Mandanga; here is no bean-like iron ore, but
-a considerable quantity of flinty-slate, like Lydian-stone, in various
-shapes and sizes, and very small black oxide of iron; the earthy matter
-is also much finer than at the above place. I was informed that there
-remained as much unworked ground as would occupy a hundred negroes full
-twenty years.
-
-Rio Pardo runs about a league to the westward of Capella Velha, which
-is a chapel on a mountain, washed at its base by a stream, called
-Corgo de Capella Velha, which some years ago was worked, and produced
-diamonds of great size and superior brilliancy. The rivulets to the
-eastward of this ridge of mountains run into the Jiquitinhonha; those
-to the westward have their course into the Rio Velho, which flows into
-the Rio de San Francisco. The height of the mountains I had no means
-of ascertaining, but they are considered as undoubtedly the highest in
-Brazil. The air in this elevated region is pure and rather keen; the
-thermometer in the mornings and evenings stood at 62, and at mid-day
-about 74. In all the parts which I visited, the land appeared favorable
-for the growth of almost every species of produce, and, if properly
-inclosed and cultivated, might in no long time become the granary of
-the district.
-
-On our return to Tejuco I was shown several dwarfish trees, of the
-height and size of a common crab-tree, with extremely crooked branches;
-and was informed that they were a species of the _quercus suber_. I cut
-from them some pieces of bark about an inch in thickness, which were
-elastic, and actually proved to be cork. It seemed to me a question of
-considerable interest, whether these trees, if regularly planted and
-attended to, might not produce cork of as good a quality as that which
-we obtain from the Mediterranean.
-
-After resting a few days, I accompanied the Intendant to a small
-diamond work, called Corolina, and returned the same day. This work
-some years ago produced many good stones, but at present it employs
-very few people. The mode of washing is exactly the same with that
-practised at Mandanga.
-
-At Tejuco some tolerably good barley was shown to me; it was not so
-heavy as that of our best from Norfolk, and was but little known. The
-Intendant uses it as provender for his mules whenever he can obtain
-it. On examining the sample, I could not but reflect that, if land
-so ill-managed produced such barley, how much superior would be the
-quality of the grain under good management.
-
-At a subsequent period of my visit, the Intendant, with whom
-malt-liquor is a favorite beverage, expressed a desire to see some
-of the barley converted into malt, in order to brew beer, and, after
-repeated solicitations, I undertook to make the experiment. A quantity
-was procured which I endeavoured to prepare in the best manner that
-circumstances would allow. Having steeped it the requisite time,
-I put it on a cold floor, and managed it as is customary in our
-malt-houses; when it had germinated sufficiently, I dried it over a
-slow fire; afterwards, having cleansed it from the combs by rubbing,
-I crushed it, and finally mashed it. The infusion produced a tolerable
-wort, which, however, I did not deem sufficiently good, as it wanted
-saccharine matter: this deficiency I supplied by the admixture of a
-small quantity of sugar. It was then boiled until it was judged of a
-proper consistency, and a very pleasant bitter was added instead of
-hops. The fermentation I endeavoured to promote with leaven, which had
-been prepared a few days before, and, when that process had terminated,
-the liquor was put into small casks, which we stopped close. Though
-it might not prove good from the hasty manner in which the process
-was conducted, yet the mode of preparing it was exemplified, which
-was the main purpose of the experiment. It appeared to me by no means
-impossible either to make malt or to brew beer, if proper places were
-made under-ground, so as to ensure a moderate degree of cold for the
-operation of malting, and for the subsequent process. Sugar is here
-so abundant, that any quantity of saccharine matter might be added to
-improve the poorness of the malt; and it is highly probable that a very
-pleasant beverage might be made, which would relieve the inhabitants
-of this remote district from the necessity of having recourse to the
-metropolis for bad wines, and from the ill effects which proceed from
-drinking bad spirits distilled in the vicinity.
-
-Many parts of this fine country abound in oranges, pines, peaches,
-guavas, and a great variety of indigenous fruits, both sweet and acid,
-particularly the _jaboticaba_, which is very rich in mucilaginous
-matter; yet no attempt has hitherto been made to obtain wine from any
-of them. Ginger and pepper grow here spontaneously, and many spices
-might probably be cultivated with success.
-
-Grass for cattle was as dear at Tejuco as at Rio de Janeiro, and
-the small quantity which cost eight-pence would scarcely suffice a
-mule a day. The Intendant and the Captain of the cavalry had each of
-them about two acres under cultivation, of a species called _Engorda
-Cavallos_ (fattener of horses), which grew from five to seven feet
-high, with a thick esculent stem, and long lancet-shaped leaves. It has
-a large fibrous root, and is well-calculated for stony ground where
-there is little earth; it even grew among rounded stones that had been
-washed three years before[49].
-
-The Intendant, who had a taste for rural economy, and more particularly
-his lady, were very anxious to make their own butter and cheese, and
-expressed a great desire to be instructed in the process as practised
-in England, though milk was very scarce; and it was not without much
-difficulty that, after sending a few miles, about three gallons were
-collected. In the mean time such household utensils as were most fit
-for the purpose, having been made ready, and others procured, very
-excellent butter was produced, and afterwards a few cheeses were made,
-which there was every reason to suppose would prove good. The lady
-interested herself greatly in the experiment, not only performing part
-of the operations, with the assistance of her daughter, but inviting
-several of her friends in the town to see with what little trouble
-the processes were performed, and distributing the products among
-them[50]:—a rare example of industry! I am decidedly of opinion,
-that, were the females of Brazil better educated, especially in
-whatever relates to domestic economy, and were they accustomed to
-see the concerns of a household conducted with regularity and order,
-they would be better members of society; for I have ever observed in
-them that inquisitive disposition and desire of information, which
-may be called the first step to improvement. But what can be expected
-from ill-educated females, reared from their infancy among negras, in
-miserable houses, scarcely affording a shelter from the rain, or a
-shade from the sun, and destitute of every ray of comfort!
-
-In 1815, some iron works were established at the Morro de Pilar, a
-mountain rich in ore, about twenty-five leagues south of Tejuco, on the
-road to Villa Rica. The _Observador Portuguese_, vol. xvii. p. 143,
-contains an interesting account of the festivities which took place
-when the first sample of iron was brought from thence to the capital of
-the Diamond District.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XIV.
-
- _Some Account of the Districts of Minas Novas and Paracatu.—Of the
- large Diamond found in the River Abaiti._
-
-
-IT was my intention to have continued my journey to Minas Novas, and
-from thence westward to Paracatu, and to have returned by Abaiti,
-a place that has produced many large diamonds, though generally of
-inferior quality. This design I was prevented from accomplishing by
-illness, being attacked with a violent sciatic complaint, accompanied
-with great debility in the right side, which obliged me to return as
-soon as possible. While I remained at Tejuco, for the purpose of
-regaining strength sufficient to encounter the fatigues of a journey
-back to the capital, I employed myself in collecting information
-respecting these districts from intelligent persons who resided there,
-as well as from officers on the establishment. The following brief
-description is the result of the communications with which they favored
-me.
-
-The principal village in Minas Novas, called Tocaya, is thirty-five
-leagues distant from Tejuco, in a north-easterly direction. The road
-thither is parallel with the river Jiquitinhonha, which runs from two
-to five leagues westward of it[51]. Numerous rivulets flow into it in
-this direction, in some of which are found white topazes, more commonly
-known here by the name of _minas novas_. They are pretty pellucid
-pebbles, generally rounded, though sometimes they occur perfectly
-crystallized, in the same form as the yellow topaz. Blue topazes
-and _aqua-marinas_ are also found here; some of the former are of a
-singular variety, being in one part blue, and in the other clear and
-pellucid. This neighbourhood is also noted for producing the beautiful
-Chrysoberyl, which is much esteemed by the higher orders of society in
-Brazil, and in great request among the jewellers of Rio de Janeiro.
-These gems rarely occur crystallized; they sell at considerable
-prices in their rough state, and are much more valued in America than
-in England, where, indeed, they are little known, or they would be
-more highly appreciated, being, when polished, of great brilliancy and
-exquisite beauty.
-
-To the westward of the river Jiquitinhonha, and opposite the village
-of Bom Successo, is the Cerro of Santo Antonio, a place much famed
-for diamonds, which are said to be of an indifferent quality. There
-are, also, other parts, well known to many of the inhabitants of the
-district as being rich in these treasures.
-
-The country is very fertile, and produces a great variety of the finest
-woods for cabinet-works; also numerous fruits, and most exquisite
-Vanilla, which grows spontaneously. The land, being less elevated[52]
-than Cerro do Frio, is said to be much warmer, and is highly favorable
-to the growth of sugar and coffee. The plantations are chiefly of
-cotton, which is reputed to be equal in color and quality to that
-of Maranham. It is transported to Rio de Janeiro on mules, and many
-hundreds of those useful animals are continually employed in this
-commerce. A troop of loaded mules are full three months, and sometimes
-four, in going, and the same time in returning. These animals in this
-district are double the price that they are in S. Paulo. The journeys
-are attended with considerable expense and difficulty; Indian corn must
-be daily bought for their use; and, notwithstanding the great attention
-paid to them on the road, many die, and others are frequently lamed and
-disabled. Their burdens are divided into two equal parts, and suspended
-on a pack-saddle of peculiar make by straps of raw hide. The average
-burden is nine _arrobas_, nearly equal to three hundred pounds weight,
-the carriage-expense of which, from Rio de Janeiro to Minas Novas, is
-six or seven pounds sterling; to Tejuco five pounds; to Villa Rica
-about three.
-
-The trade to Minas Novas from Rio de Janeiro consists principally in
-negroes, iron, salt, woollens, hats, printed cottons, hardware, arms,
-and some fancy articles, a little wine and oil, salt-fish, and butter.
-Few luxuries enter these remote parts, the inhabitants seeking for
-little beyond mere necessaries.
-
-Minas Novas is under the jurisdiction of the _Ouvidor_ of Villa do
-Principe, who goes thither once a year to settle disputes, administer
-justice, and discharge other duties belonging to his office.
-
-At Tocaya the Jiquitinhonha flows into a larger river, called Rio
-Grande, which, taking an easterly direction, enters the sea in
-lat. 16° 20´ south, near Porto Seguro. A gentleman with whom I was
-acquainted undertook to navigate this fine river from Tocaya to the
-sea, and, as the current was rapid, he performed the task in six
-days. On his return, which occupied fifteen days, he observed several
-tributary rivers, the sources of which are unknown, as they rise in the
-country inhabited by the Indians. The river being free from falls, may
-in a short time be frequented by vessels from sea, for I did not learn
-that its entrance was shallow or unfit for navigation; probably the
-land about it is low and marshy, which may be the reason that it is so
-little known.
-
-It cannot be too much recommended to the Government of Brazil,
-immediately to order a survey of this river, which might be performed
-in one of their launches in two months at little or no expense, and,
-were it found necessary, a chain of connection might be established
-from its mouth to Tocaya. The benefits resulting to the inhabitants
-from opening the navigation may be easily conceived. The produce of the
-country, its cotton, coffee, and sugar, its rich cabinet-woods, and
-many other valuable articles, would be brought into active commerce;
-extensive plantations would be established, and the whole territory
-would be improved. It is true that the commerce of the district would
-flow through another channel, and the tolls paid on passing the
-Paraibuna, to and from the capital, would be a little diminished: but
-surely the policy of Government is not so confined as to allow that
-consideration to have any weight against a measure of such national
-importance, when it is obvious that one of the greatest disadvantages
-under which the empire of Brazil labors, is the want of traffic on all
-its rivers, except to Rio Grande de St. Pedro.
-
-The population of Minas Novas is thin, compared with its extent, but is
-daily increasing. It does not appear that mining is the object which
-attracts settlers, though there is a considerable quantity of precious
-stones exported, which are found only here, as has been before observed.
-
-Where the rivers are deep it is very difficult to raise the _cascalho_
-from their beds, in order to wash it for gold, &c. for this purpose
-various trivial and ineffectual methods are practised: it would be
-highly conducive to the interest of the proprietor, as well as of the
-state, to have rafts or boats constructed, and to adopt the machinery
-used by the ballast-heavers on the river Thames[53], by means of which
-the _cascalho_ might be raised, even from a depth of twenty feet.
-The requisite iron-work might be prepared in Rio de Janeiro, (if
-necessary,) and admitted into the mining country, free of duty: there
-would probably be such an increase of gold obtained by it, that the
-proportionate augmentation of the royal fifths would amply repay the
-expense of introducing the improvement.
-
-Paracatu is the principal village or town of a district of the same
-name, which lies about ninety leagues north-west of Tejuco, bordering
-on the _Capitania_ of Goyazes, from which it is separated by a chain
-of high mountains that take a northerly direction. The numerous rivers
-which rise on the eastern side of the mountains, and flow into the
-great river S. Francisco, are rich in gold. The population of the
-village is estimated at above a thousand souls, and will shortly be
-more numerous, as the reputed richness of some late discoveries has
-tempted many families to migrate thither. It has all the advantages of
-a high and healthy situation, in the midst of a most fertile country,
-and has considerable intercourse with Sabará and Villa Rica, where the
-gold procured in its vicinity is permuted. It is governed by a _Capitao
-Mor_, who is subordinate to the governor of the latter place, to whom
-all disputes of consequence are referred. To the southward is the rich
-_destacamento_ of Rio da Prata, a river that yields fine diamonds, and
-has been much frequented by many adventurers, who, when discovered and
-seized, are called _grimpeiros_ (smugglers). A strong guard of soldiers
-is stationed here to prevent the precious stones from being sought for
-clandestinely.
-
-A few leagues to the north of the Rio Prata is the rivulet named
-Abaité, celebrated for having produced the largest diamond in the
-Prince’s possession, which was found about twelve years ago. Though
-this circumstance has been already briefly stated, it may be allowed
-me in this place to relate the particulars as they were detailed
-to me during my stay at Tejuco. Three intelligent men, having been
-found guilty of high crimes, were banished into the interior, and
-ordered not to approach any of the capital towns, or to remain in
-civilized society, on pain of perpetual imprisonment. Driven by this
-hard sentence into the most unfrequented part of the country, they
-endeavoured to explore new mines or new productions, in the hope
-that, sooner or later, they might have the good fortune to make some
-important discovery, which would obtain a reversal of their sentence,
-and enable them to regain their station in society. They wandered
-about in this neighbourhood, making frequent searches in its various
-rivers for more than six years, during which time they were exposed
-to a double risk, being continually liable to become the prey of the
-Anthropophagi, and in no less danger of being seized by the soldiers
-of Government. At length they by hazard made some trials in the river
-Abaité, at a time when its waters were so low, in consequence of a
-long season of drought, that a part of its bed was left exposed. Here,
-while searching and washing for gold, they had the good fortune to
-find a diamond nearly an ounce in weight. Elated by this providential
-discovery, which at first they could scarcely believe to be real, yet,
-hesitating between a dread of the rigorous laws relating to diamonds,
-and a hope of regaining their liberty, they consulted a clergyman, who
-advised them to trust to the mercy of the state, and accompanied them
-to Villa Rica, where he procured them access to the governor. They
-threw themselves at his feet, and delivered to him the invaluable gem
-on which their hopes rested, relating all the circumstances connected
-with it. The governor, astonished at its magnitude, could not trust the
-evidence of his senses, but called the officers of the establishment
-to decide whether it was a diamond, who set the matter beyond all
-doubt. Being thus, by the most strange and unforeseen accident, put in
-possession of the largest diamond ever found in America, he thought
-proper to suspend the sentence of the men as a reward for their having
-delivered it to him. The gem was sent to Rio de Janeiro, from whence
-a frigate was dispatched with it to Lisbon, whither the holy father
-was also sent to make the proper representations respecting it. The
-sovereign confirmed the pardon of the delinquents, and bestowed some
-preferment on the worthy sacerdote.
-
-The governor immediately ordered a guard on the river, which was
-soon afterwards worked under the direction of the Intendant of Cerro
-do Frio, who sent thither an administrator and two hundred negroes.
-It has since been worked at different periods with various success;
-sometimes large diamonds have been found, but of an indifferent
-quality. The work, being considered unprofitable, is now abandoned by
-Government, but it yet gives occupation to numbers of adventurers. Its
-neighbourhood has many interesting places, hitherto but little explored.
-
-A few leagues from this river is a very rich vein of lead ore in
-calcareous spar. I have seen pieces of it of the weight of twenty
-pounds, and it is said to be so abundant, that any quantity may be
-obtained. Some of the specimens presented to me were covered with
-carbonate of lead. It has not the appearance of being rich in silver.
-No one has undertaken to work it, as the difficulty and expense of
-conveying the metal to Rio de Janeiro, would exceed the price at which
-it would sell for at present in that market[54]. When the neighbourhood
-becomes more populous, and the value of this useful metal is better
-known, the mine will probably be a source of riches; for lead ore is
-certainly scarce in Brazil, nor did I hear of any other place which
-produces it.
-
-The river St. Francisco is very considerable, and is said to contain
-great quantities of fish[55], which is a sufficient proof that there
-are but few (if any) gold-washings in it. On the banks, and in the
-country to the eastward, great numbers of cattle are bred, which are
-sold in all the populous towns of the captaincy, and large herds are
-sent to Rio de Janeiro, a distance of above six hundred miles. A
-considerable commerce is carried on with them, and some families, who
-raise large numbers, are reported to have acquired great fortunes by
-it. The want of salt is a very general complaint; it is requisite for
-the cattle, nor will they breed well without it.
-
-This district is too far distant from a sea-port to enjoy any extent
-of commerce in the general articles of its produce. Gold and precious
-stones are easily transported, but lead, and other commodities of
-greater bulk and inferior value, would scarcely pay the expense of
-carriage. Hence no cotton, coffee, or sugar is grown for exportation,
-and the quantity consumed in the district is very limited, owing to
-the small number of the inhabitants, and the miserable indigence in
-which they generally live, their common diet being Indian corn-flour,
-boiled beans, and a little pork. The trade to Rio de Janeiro is much
-similar to that of Minas Novas, and consists chiefly in iron, salt,
-cotton-prints, woollens, arms, hardware, and a few trivial luxuries:
-also hats and India goods. Persons of all ranks are eager to purchase
-negroes. The only articles sent to Villa Rica are gold-dust and hides.
-
-In this district, and in other parts of these immense territories,
-particularly to the eastward, are large tracts of land _devoluto_, or
-not occupied by any person under a grant from government. These lands
-to a considerable extent (half a league to a league square) may be
-taken by making proper application, and afterwards held as freehold.
-Other excellent situations are in the possession of indigent people,
-who are equally incapable and unwilling to reap advantage from them.
-These may be bought very cheap, and are certainly preferable to the
-unoccupied tracts, as they have generally some few conveniences
-attached to them, and may, therefore, more easily be brought into a
-proper state of cultivation. Here is every inducement for a spirited
-and experienced agriculturist to settle: a rich and fertile district,
-in which there remains much to be discovered in every department, where
-all the necessaries, and many of the luxuries of life are produced
-almost spontaneously; and where the exertions of industry would be
-rewarded in a tenfold degree by the bounteous hand of nature, and
-stimulated by the certain hope of arousing a slender population to
-follow the example. Nor could there be any objection on the score of
-differences in opinion; for I am persuaded that no one would here be
-molested for his religious tenets, while he prudently avoided giving
-offence, and paid the same regard to the conscience of his neighbour
-which he expected for his own.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XV.
-
-_Observations on Tejuco and Cerro do Frio_.
-
-
-IN the foregoing pages I have endeavoured to present to the reader
-a narrative of whatever I observed worthy of note in the Diamond
-District, and have related the several particulars in the order in
-which they occurred to me, reserving the task of general description
-for that period of my residence there when I might be supposed best
-qualified to perform it. This mode of proceeding will expose me to
-the risk of a few repetitions, for which my apology must rest on the
-peculiar circumstances under which I visited Tejuco,—on the continual
-journeys in which I was occupied from the moment of my arrival to the
-time when I was attacked by illness, and which left me no leisure for
-combining my actual observations with general views of the country.
-
-The district of Cerro do Frio consists of rugged mountains, that have
-a northerly and southerly direction, and are generally allowed to be
-the highest in Brazil. What is termed the Diamond ground, extends
-about sixteen leagues from north to south, and about eight from east
-to west. It was first explored by some enterprising miners from Villa
-do Principe, a few years after the establishment of that town. These
-men proceeding northerly found an open country, watered by many small
-rivulets, which they tried for gold by washing: some of them engaged
-their attention for a short time, but not proving sufficiently rich,
-they continued their route, passing the places now called San Gonçalo
-and Milho Verde, until they arrived at a few streams that flow from the
-base of the mountain on which Tejuco is built. These rivulets were then
-washed for gold, and were considered as belonging to the district of
-Villa do Principe. No idea was at first entertained that the rivulets
-contained diamonds, although it is said that some were collected and
-presented to the then governor of Villa do Principe as curious bright
-stones, and were used by him as counters at cards. Soon afterwards a
-few of them found their way to Lisbon, and were given as pretty pebbles
-to the Dutch minister to send to Holland, which was then the principal
-mart in Europe for precious stones. The lapidaries, to whom they were
-presented for examination, pronounced these pebbles to be very fine
-diamonds. Information was accordingly sent to the Dutch consul at
-Lisbon, who did not fail to profit by the occasion; for he managed the
-affair with Government so well, that he contracted for the precious
-stones, at the same time that he communicated the intelligence.
-Government afterwards endeavoured to monopolize the diamonds, and made
-a distinct district of Cerro do Frio, placing it under peculiar laws
-and regulations.
-
-The number of diamonds sent over during the first twenty years after
-the discovery is said to be almost incredible, and to exceed one
-thousand ounces in weight. This supply could not fail to diminish the
-general value of diamonds, as none had ever before been known to come
-from any other part of the globe, except India, whither the Brazilian
-diamonds were afterwards sent, and found a better market there than in
-Europe.
-
-By stratagems and intrigues Government was prevailed on to let these
-invaluable territories to a company, who were under stipulations to
-work with a limited number of negroes, or to pay a certain sum per
-day for every negro employed. This opened a door to every species of
-fraud; double the stipulated number of negroes was admitted; and this
-imposition was connived at by the agents of Government, who received
-pay in one hand and bribes in the other. Presents were made to men
-possessing influence at court, by the contractors, who soon became
-rich; and they continued (subject to a few regulations) in possession
-of the diamond mines until about the year 1772, when, Government
-determining to take them into their own hands, these contracts were
-ended.
-
-This was the time for reforming abuses, and for placing this rich
-district under the best regulations, but it was neglected; prejudice
-prevailed over prudence; and the management was entrusted to men
-who did not understand the real interests of the concern, or, what
-is more probable, who were so shackled in their authority, that
-they could not pursue them. From this time, affairs became worse,
-and the establishment was in debt to foreigners, who had advanced a
-considerable sum of money on the security of having all the diamonds
-which the mines produced. There were other incumbrances, which can be
-removed only by a total change of system. In its present state the
-establishment appears to produce much greater wealth than it actually
-does. During a period of five years, from 1801 to 1806 inclusive,
-the expenses were £204,000; and the diamonds sent to the treasury at
-Rio de Janeiro weighed 115,675 carats. The value of gold found in
-the same period amounted to £17,300 sterling, from which it appears
-that the diamonds actually cost Government thirty-three shillings and
-nine-pence per carat. These years were esteemed singularly productive;
-the mines do not in general yield to Government more than 20,000 carats
-annually[56].
-
-The town is under the absolute government of the Intendant. The
-principal officers of the civil and military establishments are, an
-_ouvidor_ or _fiscal_, a captain of cavalry, and a _capitao mor_. In
-the Diamond establishment there is a great number of officers, of
-whom the following are the principal: 1st, the Intendant, who is a
-judge, and intendant-general of the Diamond district (this office
-is one of the best in the gift of the crown): 2d. the Treasurer,
-whose situation is almost a sinecure; he receives 8,000 crusades _per
-annum_: and 3d. the Administrator-general, who has a salary of 6000.
-The book-keeper has 4,000; and three clerks, or key-keepers, have from
-800 to 1,000 each. These officers are employed in whatever relates to
-the treasury, or to the general concerns of the establishment; they
-all reside in Tejuco, and are the most respectable of the inhabitants.
-The management of the different works is entrusted to eight or ten
-under-administrators, each having in his care two hundred negroes,
-called a troop; to which, besides a clergyman and a surgeon, are
-attached several overseers and subordinate officers, who have salaries
-of from 400 to 200 crusades. The privilege of employing a certain
-number of negroes in the works is common to all the officers, to an
-extent corresponding with their rank; the superior officers let to hire
-as many as they please, say forty, and sometimes upwards of fifty; the
-inferior officers are permitted to let out two or three, in preference
-to other individuals; a decidedly bad practice, as will be shown
-hereafter.
-
-The Intendant holds a place of great trust: he is the superior
-magistrate, and his duty is to administer justice, and to see that
-the laws peculiar to the district are duly executed. He is of course
-president of the assembly, or juncta, and calls meetings whenever he
-thinks proper; he disposes of the military force of the district,
-orders roads to be made or stopped, and stations guards on them to
-examine travellers, and to detain suspicious persons. He has also
-the privilege of giving or refusing permission for persons to enter
-the district, or settle in it; and every one, however high in rank
-and property, who passes thither is supposed to have the Intendant’s
-express concurrence, which, as a matter of form, is sometimes dispensed
-with. He appoints officers, signs all papers, receives all reports
-that are made, and acts accordingly. To him solely the treasury is
-entrusted for the payment of the salaries of the officers, the negroes’
-wages, tradesmen’s bills, and every incidental expense attending the
-establishment. He issues paper-money, and withdraws it from circulation
-whenever he thinks proper; for all which he is responsible to
-Government alone, and may be said to be almost absolute in his office.
-
-In addition to these important functions, the present Intendant has
-assumed the whole direction and regulation of the mining concern, which
-none of his predecessors ever practically interfered with, it being the
-peculiar province of the Administrator-general. For this undertaking
-he is equally qualified by the superiority of his talents, and by the
-extent of his acquirements: he studied mineralogy many years under
-the celebrated Werner, by whom he was considered as one of his most
-enlightened disciples; afterwards he travelled through Hungary, and
-all the most interesting German states; and, lastly, made the tour of
-England and Scotland, where he resided two years.
-
-The Administrator-general, to whom belong the management and direction
-of the works, ought to be equally experienced in mining and mechanics,
-particularly in hydraulics: he should be a man of general information,
-combined with great practical knowledge, relative to the locality of
-the district, so as to be able to ascertain the real value of every
-situation, and to direct the operations accordingly. He should have a
-mind fertile in resources, and prepared to meet every disappointment
-or casualty that can possibly occur, that the time of the negroes may
-not be employed in vain; he should also facilitate their labors by the
-introduction of machinery, and should be particularly attentive to
-their good treatment, since on them his success, and consequently his
-reputation, must in a great measure depend.
-
-On this latter point humanity and policy ought alike to direct the
-attention of the superiors of the establishment. It is natural to
-suppose that negroes, when treated with harshness, ill fed and ill
-clothed, will be indifferent to the interests of their employers, and,
-perhaps, determined not to find diamonds, whereas, when subjected
-to milder and kinder usage, which might be done without relaxing in
-vigilance, they would become anxious to please, and would search more
-diligently in order to obtain notice and reward. It must be obvious
-that negroes rarely conceal diamonds for _themselves_; and yet custom
-has rendered the feelings of their real owners in Tejuco so irritable,
-on being suspected to encourage the practice, that if the word
-_grimpeiro_ (smuggler) is mentioned in conversation, they shudder with
-horror and distort their features, calling on the Virgin to witness
-their abhorrence of a crime to which Government has attached the
-greatest disgraces and punishments.
-
-Pure, honest souls! Being a stranger in the country, I conceived
-that these gentlemen really felt the sentiments which their words
-and gestures expressed; and, as persons of all ranks seemed to fear
-conversing on the subject, I thought at first that I should not see
-a single diamond in all Tejuco, except those in the treasury; but
-a little acquaintance with the town soon convinced me that I was a
-novice; for, on visiting a few friends to whom I had introductions, I
-found that diamonds were bartered for every thing, and were actually
-much more current than specie. Even pious indulgencies were bought
-with them; and surely no one could have suspected that the seller of
-His Holiness’s bulls would condescend to taste the forbidden fruits of
-Tejuco.
-
-As I had the honor to reside at the house of the Intendant, I was
-considered by the people of the town as a person connected with
-Government, and therefore as one who ought not to be informed of the
-secret traffic among them; hence, when in company with the officers
-of the establishment, whenever the word _grimpeiro_ was mentioned,
-I found it necessary to manifest the same feelings of disgust which
-they did; and, on expressing my surprise that any one could so far
-degrade himself as to be guilty of the crime of smuggling diamonds,
-it was tacitly agreed that no white man could stoop to such dishonor.
-The point was soon settled; for I found it best not to oppose general
-opinions, nor to enter too minutely on delicate subjects; and it was
-sometimes expedient for me to seem regardless of what I was most
-steadfastly looking at.
-
-In Tejuco there are about nine or ten principal shopkeepers, to whom
-the establishment itself, and the officers belonging to it, are
-frequently indebted; indeed, these men receive the greater part of the
-money due to the various persons employed in the works, in exchange
-chiefly for English commodities of one description or other. The
-establishment is paid once a year, and for this purpose a sum not less
-than 300,000 crusades is sent from Villa Rica, to which may be added
-60,000 or 100,000 more, found in the gold mines of the district. The
-greater part of this money flowing into the hands of the shopkeepers,
-as above stated, is immediately employed in a way injurious to the
-interests of Government; nor can worse policy be imagined than that
-of allowing so large an expenditure in a place which offers such
-temptations.
-
-Some years ago many gold-mines were washed in this district, but as
-information was given that diamonds were found in them, they were
-ordered to be abandoned. At present more equitable measures are
-adopted, and the proprietors are commencing to work some of them again,
-under an agreement to give up whatever diamonds they find.[57]
-
-There is a general order to work all the gold-mines which were formerly
-confiscated, and this measure will, it is hoped, increase the quantity
-of gold, and have a good effect in every respect.
-
-If Government are obliged to hire negroes wherever they can obtain
-them, (which appears to be the case), it would be at least expedient to
-have a store to supply them, in order that the money paid in wages to
-them might return into the funds of the establishment.
-
-The hiring of negroes to the diamond works is the favorite occupation
-of all ranks in Tejuco; rich and poor endeavour to engage in it to as
-great an extent as their property will allow. The pay of the slaves
-is trifling compared with the risk, their labor being heavy, their
-maintenance poor, and their treatment harsh; there must, therefore,
-be some temptation not openly seen, yet as well known as light from
-darkness. Numbers of persons are thus induced to reside in Tejuco
-under various pretexts, but with no other real view than to get their
-negroes into the service, and to live idly on their wages, and on what
-they conceal or pick up. Thus all fatten upon the pasture, except
-those in the extreme of indigence, and others who, from the neglect of
-economy, are always poor. There are a numerous class, from the age of
-seven years to upwards of twenty, who are without any visible means of
-earning their subsistence, and would remain idle even if manufactories
-were established; for though they are brought up from their infancy
-with negro-children, yet in the working department they would abandon
-their former play-fellows. The people in general are rendered more
-averse from habits of regular industry by the continual hopes which
-they indulge of becoming opulent by some fortunate discovery of mines;
-these fallacious ideas, which they instil into the minds of their
-children, strongly prejudice them against labor, though they all exist
-miserably, and not unfrequently depend upon donations. Their education
-is extremely limited: they are in general total strangers to the
-sciences, and are very scantily informed on any useful subject.
-
-As the object of my journey into this district was to examine into the
-real state of affairs, and to give a true report of them on my return,
-for which purpose I was furnished with many privileges never allowed
-to any person before, and was thus enabled to see all that I desired,
-humanity requires that I should make some observations on the fate of
-those unfortunate persons who have been tempted to smuggle diamonds,
-and have been caught in the act. I even mentioned the subject to His
-Excellency, the minister, on my return to Rio de Janeiro; but as his
-occupations were great, and the state of my health required me to leave
-the country immediately, nothing more was said of it.
-
-The great demand for these precious articles, and the facility of
-secreting them, have caused them to be searched for and carried away
-in violation of the existing laws of the country. Of the numbers who
-have engaged in this illicit traffic, from an eager desire to become
-rich at once, many have eluded the vigilance of the guards, and have
-finished their career with credit and opulence; others less fortunate
-have been detected, and have incurred the punishment annexed to the
-offence, namely, the surrender of their illegally acquired treasure,
-the confiscation of their whole property, and exile to Africa, or
-confinement, perhaps for life, in a loathsome prison. Mild as are
-the criminal laws of Brazil, the latter part of this sentence is an
-exception at which human nature shudders. Surely, when a poor wretch,
-who has been tempted to this offence, has atoned for it by the loss of
-all he possessed, he has suffered sufficiently without being subjected
-to the forfeiture of personal liberty, and to all the woes incident to
-hopeless captivity. Far be it from me to countenance any infringement
-on the laws which have been established for the protection of property,
-either public or private; to respect the institutions of whatever
-nation I may live in, I hope I shall always be among the first, and to
-encourage others to disregard them, the very last; for illicit trade
-of every description is a deceitful and dangerous pursuit, the sweets
-of which are ever attended with a counteracting portion of evils. The
-object of my reasoning is to shew that these degraded persons have been
-of service to the state, and may still be rendered useful to it. May
-it be permitted me to enquire who were the discoverers of perhaps all
-the diamond mines which have enriched the caskets of the royal family
-of Portugal beyond comparison with those of any other state, and which
-have not only augmented the revenues of the government, but have proved
-the source from which many respectable and enterprising individuals
-have derived their opulence? Adventurers, who, at great risk and with
-indefatigable toil, have penetrated unknown forests, and explored deep
-ravines among the haunts of the savage Anthropophagi, in search of
-gold-mines, and in them have by chance found diamonds. When a place
-of this description has been once discovered by these men, it seldom
-remains long secret; the agents of Government take possession of it,
-and either work it immediately, or guard it until a future occasion.
-The discoverer of course flies from the place; and if he have picked
-up a few stones, or robbed the earth of some of its most brilliant
-rarities, he will seek the best and safest means of procuring value for
-them. If he be a man of sufficient property, he will hire a few mules,
-load them with cotton, bacon, and other commodities, and proceed to
-Rio de Janeiro in regular form. On his arrival there, he enters some
-good house in which he has confidence, and disposes of his concealed
-treasure. His mind is then relieved from apprehension, and he begins
-to make preparations for his return. His first care is to lay out his
-money to the best advantage; negroes are his chief object, and these
-pay a duty to the state on their leaving Angola, and another of ten
-_milreis_ each on entering the mining country. If they be employed
-in mining, Government obtains a fifth of the gold found, and if in
-agriculture, a tenth of the produce is exacted. The next object of
-the adventurer is to lay in a stock of woollens, and other English
-manufactures, which pay a duty of fifteen _per cent._ on being landed,
-and are subject to another, according to their weight, on entering
-the territory of the mines. Thus it really appears that most of the
-contraband property is divided between the state and the smuggler: but
-this is not all; the diamonds are sent out of the country, and real
-effects of value are received in return, leaving a balance entirely in
-favor of Brazil.
-
-This illicit trade has been carried on to a very considerable extent:
-there is a strong presumptive authority for stating that, since the
-first discovery of the mines, diamonds to the amount of two millions
-sterling have thus found their way to Europe, exclusive of what the
-contractors accounted for. This has been owing to the ill management
-of the whole establishment, and to the total want of necessary
-regulations, which have prevailed so long, that it will not be easy to
-apply a remedy. Let us suppose for a moment the system to be changed;
-the two thousand negroes employed in the establishment to be the
-property of the crown (whom two years’ profit of the diamond mines
-would be adequate to purchase); these negroes to be supplied with every
-article for their support from a general store, and to be treated
-as mildly as possible; they would then form a society, and, knowing
-no other masters than their officers, would have only one common
-interest to serve. The contraband trade by this means, though perhaps
-not totally destroyed, would receive an irrecoverable blow, and would
-be reduced almost to nothing. Should such a change take place, the
-shopkeepers, and those persons who subsist by hiring negroes to the
-works, would find the source of their emoluments dried up, and, rather
-than remain at Tejuco, would migrate to situations more congenial
-to their interests: thus the district would be freed from that bane
-which has so long overrun it, and Government would reap the advantage
-of having the mines worked by their own negroes, whom it would be
-difficult for others to seduce.
-
-Another evil which such a change of system would be calculated to
-remove, is the following:—Every article of sustenance required for
-the establishment is purchased of farmers who reside a few leagues
-from Tejuco, or who have farms at a greater distance; and this absurd
-practice is the cause of much unnecessary intercourse. There are
-thousands of acres of excellent land in the vicinity of the diamond
-works, having choice of situation, and fit for the growth of every
-species of produce. How well might a part of the force above-mentioned
-be occasionally spared for a few days only, to be employed in the
-first operations of husbandry, which would be, to inclose a sufficient
-quantity of ground in various parts for the maintenance of the
-establishment. A certain number of negroes would be allotted, in
-proportion to the land under cultivation, and on particular occasions,
-as in harvest, an auxiliary force would be always at hand. This would
-be farming with double advantage; the plough would work instead of the
-hoe; after-crops would be sown to be eaten off the ground, which would
-thus be enriched and kept in good condition. Numbers of acres would be
-planted with artificial grass, subject to irrigation where that was
-practicable, and thus, contrary to the general practice, the cattle
-would be provided with subsistence in the dry season. Indian corn,
-wheat, mandioca, feijones, potatoes, &c. would be cultivated, and,
-under proper management, would yield crops equal to the most sanguine
-expectation. Storehouses, with requisite conveniences, would soon be
-erected, in which the grain might be kept without spoiling. Thus would
-the first principles of husbandry be introduced into the district, and
-prove a source of more lasting benefit to the state than mines either
-of gold or diamonds, for when the latter were exhausted there would
-remain an active and industrious population. It seems, indeed, to have
-been the purpose of nature, in distributing these precious substances
-in these remote and almost unknown parts, to allure civilized men to
-settle upon them.
-
-From the circumstances which have been already explained, it will
-appear that, under the present system, the Government pay for all
-the diamonds that are found here, and probably receive little more
-than one-half; therefore it is evident that those conveyed through
-other channels can be sold to the public at a lower price than that
-at which the former are obtained. But the embarrassed state of the
-establishment is such, that the managers cannot lessen their expenses,
-being obliged to take credit for every article, and to hire almost any
-negroes that are offered. These evils have taken too deep root to be
-eradicated, even by the abilities of the present Intendant: had such a
-man been placed here forty years ago, empowered to act without control,
-and to govern the district as private property, on the principles above
-stated, he might have rendered it a province both rich and independent.
-
-As all the diamonds found in these works belong to the crown, the
-royal family have been accustomed to select from the quantity annually
-remitted whatever stones they considered worthy their notice,
-which were generally those exceeding seventeen carats. They were
-formerly sent to Holland to be cut, the Dutch being the contractors
-of the diamonds, from the first discovery of the mines; but since
-the emigration of the court to Rio de Janeiro, that trade has been
-transferred to England, where these precious stones annually arrive,
-and are sold by private contract.
-
-The collection of diamonds now in the possession of the Prince Regent
-is unequalled in number, size, and quality, by that of any potentate
-in the world; and I am credibly informed that it exceeds in estimated
-value three millions sterling.
-
-This district has a direct communication with Bahia, and a few troops
-of mules are continually employed in going from one place to the
-other. The journey is much longer than to Rio de Janeiro, but the
-country is less mountainous; there are fewer _ranchos_ or hovels on
-the road, and in one part it is requisite to carry fresh water for two
-days’ consumption. The commodities sent from Tejuco to Minas Novas
-are very trivial, consisting of smuggled gold, chrysoberyls, topazes,
-amethysts, and other stones; in return for which are brought English
-fine manufactured goods, particularly hats, printed cottons, stockings,
-and saddles, which have been much cheaper in Bahia than in England.
-Coarser articles are generally sent from Rio de Janeiro, the distance
-being, as before observed, much shorter.
-
-Of navigable rivers we can say but little. The many small streams,
-that rise in various parts, join and form the Jiquitinhonha, which,
-as before observed, may be navigated to sea, without any impediment,
-in at most ten days’ time. How much would the country be benefited if
-a port were established at the entrance of this river, and vessels
-were allowed to load and unload; canoes would find their way from
-thence into the interior in the short space of twenty days, loaded
-with every article necessary for the consumption of the district. How
-superior would this mode of conveyance be to that of making roads
-through impervious woods, and over almost impassable mountains. How
-many thousands of crusades annually expended on mules would be thus
-saved to the public, and what numbers of men would thus be trained for
-the service of the marine, instead of those now employed as muleteers.
-With the advantage of such a communication, Minas Novas and Cerro do
-Frio would soon more than double their population, and it might be
-anticipated that the banks of these fine rivers, now lying deserted
-and useless, would bloom with every variety of vegetation, which this
-genial climate is capable of producing.
-
-Under the present system Tejuco ought to maintain itself, and have the
-least possible intercourse with other places. Its commerce ought to
-be confined wholly to gold and precious stones; but should Government
-determine to make diamonds a free trade, then a contrary policy would
-be requisite. On this subject I shall, in the sequel, have some
-observations to make.
-
-The quadrupeds of Cerro do Frio are common to other parts of Brazil.
-Mules are the principal beasts of burthen, and are much dearer than
-in the districts more to the southward. Horses are not so numerous,
-but cheaper, being in very little request, and used only on journeys
-of pleasure. Horned cattle are bred at a considerable distance, and
-brought for the consumption of the place. Sheep are almost unknown;
-hogs and goats are more plentiful; of dogs there are but few, and the
-race is very indifferent. Ounces are very seldom seen; there are not
-many deer; the danta, or tapir, is not uncommon.
-
-Of birds there are a few varieties, but in no great numbers;
-partridges are rather common; we shot several in our way to the
-different mines, which proved good eating. Domestic fowls are in
-tolerable plenty, but by no means cheap, being eighteen-pence to two
-shillings each.
-
-Of serpents, I saw only one, and it was harmless: but I was informed
-that the rattle-snake and the _jararaca_, both equally venomous, are
-common in this district. Lizards are very numerous, and the _cayman_,
-or alligator, is found in most of the lagoons and rivers.
-
-Fish are extremely scarce in all the streams, owing to the quantity
-of matter with which their waters are impregnated from the numerous
-washings.
-
-This district is in general free from that troublesome plague, the
-mosquito, as that insect is peculiar to low and swampy places, and does
-not bite with such disagreeable effect in elevated and airy situations.
-Bees are but little attended to, and are scarcely known; were the
-management of them better understood and practised by the inhabitants,
-they might be much increased, and wax might even be exported.
-
-In closing my observations on this district, I may be permitted to add
-some particulars relative to the capital. The families whom I had the
-honor to visit appeared to live in great sociability. They frequently
-form tea-parties. The dress of the ladies consists almost entirely of
-articles of English manufacture, cotton-prints, straw hats, artificial
-flowers, jewelry, &c. Owing to the distance of Tejuco from a sea-port,
-piano-fortes have not been introduced here, or they would probably be
-in considerable demand; for the ladies in general have a taste for
-music, and touch the guitar with great spirit and elegance. Dancing is
-a favorite amusement, and all appear much pleased and animated with the
-English country-dance. The ladies seldom go abroad, except to mass,
-and then they are usually carried in a chair hung with curtains and
-a canopy, and suspended from a pole borne by two men. The sedentary
-habits of the females I have often thought injurious to their health;
-but, since English saddles have been introduced, they begin to take
-airings on horseback.
-
-Warm baths are very generally used, being considered of great efficacy
-in removing recent colds, to which all persons here are liable, on
-account of the peculiar nature of the climate. They are invariably
-offered at night to travellers, as a means of relieving the pains
-occasioned by the fatigues of the day.
-
-A continuance of ill health obliged me to take leave of my friends in
-Tejuco, and to return to Rio de Janeiro with all possible expedition.
-It will not be expected that I should relate all the particulars of my
-journey thither, as I retraced my former route with a few occasional
-deviations; I shall therefore confine myself to whatever I saw worthy
-of interest which I did not observe on my way to Tejuco.
-
-Dr. Camara did me the honor to accompany me as far as San Gonçal, and
-showed me a work a short distance from the establishment, near the
-margin of a river of the same name. As I staid here one entire day
-with this gentleman, I had leisure to examine this singular situation,
-where I, for the first time, found mountains of sienite, incredibly
-hard, composed of hornblende and feldspar. About forty years ago this
-excavation, which was of considerable depth, was suddenly filled up by
-the bursting-in of the side, for want of proper support to resist the
-pressure of the incumbent stratum, which falling in immense masses,
-totally destroyed the works; and they remained in this state until
-about two years ago. As the wings of vague report are in general much
-longer than those of truth, this place had the reputation of being
-extremely rich in diamonds, and the apparent impossibility of clearing
-it, added greatly to the credit which was given to it. Old inhabitants
-came forward to say that they had been employed in the works when the
-accident happened, and that the diamonds found in them excelled in
-number, size, and fineness those produced at any other place. These
-reports soon reached the ears of the Intendant, who, within a year
-after entering his office at Tejuco, formed a plan of clearing and
-excavating the works. Such a stupendous undertaking was calculated only
-for a man of his superior talents and enterprise. He stationed there
-four hundred negroes under the direction of the best officers on the
-establishment; inclined planes were formed, and pulleys calculated to
-lift immense weights were erected. As some of the masses of sienite
-were too large to be raised whole, and the substance was so hard
-that steel would not stand to bore it, they were obliged to contrive
-means for breaking them. Recourse was had to large fires, with which
-the rocks were heated, and cold water was thrown upon them from tubs
-suspended by long pieces of timber formed somewhat like cranes. After
-six months of very heavy and incessant labor, the place was cleared.
-Let us for a moment reflect on the sanguine expectations which had
-been formed respecting the size of the diamonds, their number and
-brilliancy, the honors that would be conferred on the officers, &c.
-and we may judge what must have been the general disappointment, when,
-after the very bottom had been scraped, not a diamond was found! Thus
-ended this serious trial, made at great expense, labor, and risk; like
-many other speculations, built on the delusive stories propagated by
-old miners respecting places formerly worked, by which new adventurers
-are generally tempted, and frequently ruined.
-
-I continued my former route, visiting the same friends who had received
-me on my journey to Tejuco, until I arrived at Cocaes. In the vicinity
-of this place are found fine amethysts and crystals, through which
-titanium is interspersed. Proceeding from hence, I took a more easterly
-route to Bromada, distant about five leagues. A great part of the road
-was covered with rich iron ore. I passed through the village of St.
-John, and entered a fine valley, through which ran a little rivulet,
-called St. Antonio;—a more delightful place cannot be imagined: the
-grounds, which lay in gentle elevations, were capable of every kind
-of cultivation, and appeared calculated amply to repay the farmer for
-any labor he might bestow on them. In addition to these advantages,
-and that of a fine climate, this vicinity yet contains some places
-extremely rich in gold. At the end of this valley we crossed the
-rivulet over a good stone bridge, and passed through a pretty hamlet
-called Barra; proceeding a league further, we arrived at the house
-of Captain José Alvarez, who received me with great kindness. This
-being Sunday, many of the neighbours were on a visit to his house; a
-sumptuous dinner had been provided, and the evening passed in very
-interesting conversation relative to the mode of mining in that
-neighbourhood. Next day I went to visit the gold-works belonging to
-this gentleman, the principal of which was situated near the summit
-of a mountain of decomposed granite, one part of which seemed to have
-slipped from the other, leaving a cleft of twenty feet perpendicular.
-The face of this cleft appeared of different colors, some more red
-or brown than others; the parts esteemed most rich in gold had the
-appearance of irregular cavities, filled by a stalactitic substance
-in decomposition. This mountain has produced a great quantity of
-gold, and continues yet rich: it may be truly called auriferous; for
-I directed negroes to bring me specimens of earth from every part of
-the cleft, from the roots of the grass to the bottom, all of which I
-found to contain gold. At this place stamps are used to reduce the more
-indurated substances, but they are so ill constructed as to produce
-but little effect. After a most pressing invitation to stay, and
-advantageous offers of land to a considerable extent, which I found it
-expedient to decline, I took leave of the owner of this establishment,
-and passed a very large house belonging to _Capitao Mor_ Penha, a very
-opulent miner, who has a large establishment of negroes, and extensive
-lands. I continued my route five leagues through an auriferous country,
-passed the village of St. Barbara, and arrived at Cantas Altas. From
-hence I proceeded to Villa Rica, without observing any thing worth
-notice.
-
-I was here received with the same attention and respect which I had
-experienced on my first visit. Finding it necessary to remain a few
-days to recruit my health, I examined a variety of substances that had
-been collected for me during my absence, but was not fortunate enough
-to meet with any thing very interesting. The theatre being open, I
-passed two evenings there, and was much gratified to find that the
-rational amusement of the drama had superseded savage bullfights. The
-theatre and decorations were neat, and the performances tolerable;
-were they better encouraged, the public would receive greater
-gratification. They have ever been under the control of the governor,
-and are generally so fettered as to be obliged to perform such pieces
-only as his caprice may dictate.
-
-Leaving Villa Rica, I continued my journey to the capital, where I
-arrived about the middle of February 1810, in a most exhausted state,
-from the combined effects of fatigue and an indisposition which
-continual exertion and want of rest had increased in a considerable
-degree. I informed His Excellency the Conde de Linhares of my arrival,
-and, in a few days afterwards, had the honor of presenting to him
-a report, stating the particulars of my journey. I was afterwards
-introduced to the Prince, who did me the honor to express his
-approbation of my account of the country through which I had travelled,
-and requested me to publish it. He was graciously pleased to make both
-my attendants inferior officers, in reward for their good conduct;
-and when I expressed my thanks for this mark of his attention, he
-replied, that it was too trivial to notice, and desired me to name in
-what manner he could testify the sense he entertained of my services.
-At this moment my health was so extremely precarious, that I could
-not think of remaining in Rio de Janeiro, where I found myself daily
-getting worse; otherwise I have not the smallest doubt that the
-generosity of the Prince would have amply repaid me for the fatigues I
-had encountered.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XVI.
-
-_General View of Minas Geraes._
-
-
-THE _capitania_ of Minas Geraes extends from 600 to 700 miles from
-north to south, and about the same distance from east to west. It is
-bounded on the north by the _capitania_ of Bahia; on the west by that
-of Goyaz; on the south by the river Paraibuna, which divides it from
-the _capitania_ of Rio de Janeiro. It is separated from the _capitania_
-of Espirito Santo and the coast by an immense chain of mountains, which
-country, being inhabited by the Aborigenes, is of course very little
-known.
-
-This _capitania_ is estimated to contain three hundred and sixty
-thousand inhabitants, of whom two hundred thousand are negroes, or
-their immediate offspring. The population of Indians is not included
-in this estimate, nor can it be ascertained; they are considered as by
-no means numerous, as they never make any opposition against an armed
-force, however small. In the course of my journey I did not see one,
-except the child at the village of Conceição, nor did I ever hear of
-one of the race of the Buticudos becoming civilized, or living in any
-of the villages with the settled inhabitants[58].
-
-The regular military establishment of the _capitania_ is very
-respectable, and consists of 1400 cavalry, which number is prescribed
-by law. Their principal station is at Villa Rica, where the general
-resides, who, jointly with the governor, issues all orders respecting
-them. They form a disposeable force for the general service of the
-_capitania_; they are appointed to guard certain places known to
-contain valuable products; also to receive tolls, collect tythes,
-patrol the roads, and search suspicious persons, for which purposes
-parties of them are stationed at the various guard-houses and
-registers. They go in quest of felons, guard the prisons, and likewise
-execute orders to impress men levied for service in Rio de Janeiro.
-They are employed exclusively in the mining country, which they never
-quit, except when they escort diamonds and treasure to the capital,
-or are dispatched on any particular service. The regiment is a very
-fine one, and enjoys so high a reputation, that numbers are continually
-offering to enlist in it. While I was at Villa Rica, nearly two hundred
-volunteers were serving, without any remuneration whatever, waiting
-to be placed on the establishment according to their seniority, as
-vacancies should occur. This affords the general an opportunity of
-choosing the most soldier-like men, and those of best character; in
-which respects it is asserted, and I believe with great truth, that the
-corps is unrivalled. The officers enter very young, and serve as cadets
-for a certain period, during which they perform the duty and receive
-the pay of privates, from whom they are distinguished by a star on the
-right shoulder, and generally exercise together. They are promoted
-according to seniority.
-
-Besides this force, there is a militia, in which all the male
-inhabitants of the _capitania_ are enrolled, and are liable to be
-called out when occasions require. It is a part of the present policy
-of the Prince’s ministers to stimulate the Creolians to active
-occupations, by obliging them either to till their grounds, or to enter
-the ranks and become soldiers.
-
-The known produce of this vast extent of territory comes next under
-consideration. On this subject I shall not follow a variety of vague
-accounts, which have been compiled with little regard to truth, but
-shall present to the reader the result of my own observations.
-
-The great quantities of gold, precious stones, iron, &c. produced in
-this country have been largely treated upon. Lead ore appears to be
-rare, as it is found only near Abaité. Antimony abounds in the vicinity
-of Sabará; native bismuth is found near Villa Rica; arsenical and iron
-pyrites are very common; titanium is found in octahedral crystals,
-also in beautiful prisms and tender spicula, finely grouped in rock
-crystal. Platina may be obtained in tolerable quantities at Lagos, but
-the place which produces it has been abandoned from want of a market.
-Chromate of lead, _I was informed_, is found in the vicinity of Cocaes;
-but I have reason to suspect I was imposed upon. At Tejuco, also, I was
-shown some, and was presented with two pieces, which are uncommonly
-fine, more brilliant in color than that from Siberia, and distinctly
-crystallized on a matrix of granular sand-stone, accompanied with the
-green oxide of chrome. Copper can scarcely be said to exist in this
-country; the only place at present known to produce it, is a mountain
-twenty leagues from Tejuco, where small particles appear in a rock
-of quartz and hornblende: the matrix is so hard, and the quantity of
-copper so trivial, as to afford no encouragement to work it. The place
-has been examined by the Intendant, and is known to most persons in
-Tejuco[59]. No mines of silver have been discovered in the _capitania_,
-but the gold is generally found to contain that precious metal,
-sometimes in great proportion. No tin, cobalt, or any other metal,
-except those above mentioned, have been hitherto met with.
-
-Of salts, impure nitrate of potass is formed in great abundance,
-generally, if not always, in calcareous situations, in a tract of
-country which commences from ten to fourteen degrees west of Tejuco,
-particularly at Monte Rodrigo, which is situated between the two
-celebrated rivers called Rio dos Velhos and Parauna. This mountain is
-very large and well wooded; the stratum is calcareous, and contains
-many eaves furred, as it were, with nitrate of potass. Since Government
-has made nitre an object of commerce, and encouraged its production,
-many families have settled at this place, and have collected large
-quantities of this saliferous substance, which, after several
-operations, is sent to Rio de Janeiro, where it is refined for the
-great powder-manufactory recently established near that city.
-
-In various places are found the finest clays in great plenty, fit for
-porcelain and earthenware of every description, which are entirely
-neglected. In other parts I saw cyanite, actinolite, tremolite,
-pot-stone, and chlorite. Conglomerate masses of recent formation,
-enveloping diamonds and grains of gold, are sometimes, though rarely,
-met with; also a siliceous substance of a fine dark-blue color,
-probably totally unknown.
-
-On the vegetable products of this _capitania_ I have but few
-observations to make, in addition to those already given in the course
-of my narrative. Many parts are well calculated for the growth of
-hemp and flax, and water for steeping them is easily obtained in most
-situations; so that the only impediment to the introduction of these
-useful plants appears to be the labor required to clear them.
-
-In the immense woods the finest trees are frequently destroyed by the
-creeping plants, which cannot grow without adhering to some support.
-When they attach themselves to a tree, they shoot up very rapidly,
-encircling it with numerous fibres, and in a few years become so strong
-as entirely to stop the growth of the tree, and at length destroy it.
-When in a young state, they are so flexible as to be used for ordinary
-purposes instead of cords. I have seen negroes make their bridles of
-them, and ride with them for a day together.
-
-As these forests remain unexplored, many of the trees are unknown, and
-consequently the qualities of their barks. However, there are some used
-by the inhabitants in dying yellow; and I was informed some yielded
-a black color that could not be washed out. There is a variety which
-serves for curing skins, or tanning, some of which give the hide a red
-color, others leave it almost white: but this art is so little known,
-and the people are so averse to employments of this sort, that it has
-hitherto made little progress.
-
-Gum tragacanth is in great plenty, and of a very good quality. There
-are immense quantities of aromatic shrubs; and I found in many places,
-upon the bark of trees, and more particularly upon old wood, a lichen,
-which yielded to water a most beautiful crimson color[60]. Jointed
-canes grow spontaneously, frequently above thirty feet long, and in
-many places form arcades over the road: these plants always indicate
-the soil to be very fertile.
-
-Ferns grow so large, as almost to lose their characteristic: I have
-frequently seen them twelve feet high. These and other succulent
-plants, when reduced to ashes, serve to make soap, of which almost
-every negra knows the process, and most families make for their own
-use. It is very sharp, and washes white articles uncommonly well[61].
-In this fine country, where almost every gradation of climate may be
-found, European fruits, such as olives, almonds, chesnuts, mulberries,
-&c. would thrive, if properly attended to.
-
-The mulberry is cultivated at one place, where I saw a few silk worms.
-The climate is favorable to them, but the population is not sufficient
-to carry the breeding of them to any extent, as they require great
-attendance and care.
-
-Cochineal may be said to be almost unknown in the _capitania_;
-the _palma Christi_ grows spontaneously, and from its seeds great
-quantities of castor oil may be extracted. For bananas and other
-tropical fruits the climate is not sufficiently hot, and is too
-changeable. Beans, peas, and pulse in general are very fine; pumpkins
-also, and cabbages grow to a great size. It is a fine country for
-flowers; the rose is extremely fragrant, and is in bloom all the year.
-Varieties of the passion-flower are found in all parts; pinks and
-carnations, with numberless other flowers, grow in great profusion.
-
-This _capitania_ contains four _comarcas_, or districts, St. João d’El
-Rey, Sabará, Villa Rica, and Cerro do Frio, all of which produced much
-more gold a few years after their discovery than at present, though in
-the year 1809 Villa Rica alone received for gold permuted a hundred and
-six _arrobas_ of thirty-two pounds each. The mines in the other three
-_comarcas_ cannot be rated to permute less than from fifteen to twenty
-_arrobas_, therefore the _capitania_ may be estimated to yield to
-Government, as the annual fifth, a quantity not less than one hundred
-and fifty _arrobas_.
-
-St. João d’El Rey, the capital of the district so called, is a
-considerable town, and contains at least five thousand inhabitants. It
-is situated near the Rio das Mortes, which runs northerly, and empties
-itself into the Rio das Velhas. The country around it is very fertile,
-and produces excellent fruits, both exotic and indigenous; also Indian
-corn, and beans in great quantities; as well as a little wheat. This
-_comarca_ being more cultivated than any other part, is called the
-granary of the district; cheese is made here in tolerable quantity, and
-bacon very indifferently cured, both which are sent to Rio de Janeiro,
-and form a considerable trade. Great numbers of fowls are also sent
-thither, and a little rum, sugar, and coffee. Provisions of all kinds
-are much cheaper than at Villa Rica; pork and beef are about a penny
-per pound, poultry in proportion, and vegetables equally cheap.
-
-About two leagues distant from the town is the rivulet of San
-José,[62] formerly abounding in gold-washings, some of which continue
-good, particularly those in the vicinity of a pretty village, called
-Campanha. In the neighbourhood is a mountain that produces a great
-quantity of iron pyrites, which many people believe to be gold, and say
-that no method is yet known for extracting it. In this district are
-a great number of pines of a very singular variety, from the bark of
-which exudes much resinous gum. The wood is of a fine brown-red color,
-full of knots, and inconceivably hard.
-
-Some cotton, although not very considerable in quantity, is grown in
-this district; it is spun by hand, and woven into coarse clothing,
-generally for the use of the negroes. Finer cloth is sometimes woven
-for table linen. The making of lace is a favorite occupation with the
-ladies of St. João d’El Rey, who are reputed to be more attentive
-to domestic concerns than those of other towns, many of them being
-descendants of the Paulistas, so celebrated for industry and economy.
-
-The district of Sabará was discovered and settled by the Paulistas,
-who took possession of it as early as the year 1690, or, according to
-some accounts, twenty years earlier. They founded the town which is
-now the capital of the district, and worked several gold-mines in its
-neighbourhood, the produce of which they sent to their native place, as
-it was their custom to do with all the gold found in the various parts
-which they explored; on this account the city of S. Paulo acquired a
-much higher reputation for riches than it merited, it being generally
-believed that all the gold sent from thence was procured in that
-vicinity. Some years after the establishment of Sabará, the Court of
-Lisbon sent out a nobleman as governor to reduce the settlers, and to
-oblige them to pay a tribute in conformity to the laws of the colony.
-The settlers took up arms, and several encounters took place, in one of
-which the nobleman was killed: but, after some time, the viceroy sent
-great reinforcements into the interior, and quelled the insurgents, who
-submitted to pay a fifth of the gold produced. An adventurer of the
-name of Artis, who was a man of great intrepidity and perseverance, and
-had made considerable discoveries in the neighbourhood, was afterwards
-appointed governor, and this proved the means of reconciling all
-parties.
-
-Respecting the working of the mines throughout this _capitania_, it has
-been already observed, that much loss of time and labor is occasioned
-by the want of machinery, and proper implements for the workmen. Not a
-cart or wheel-barrow is in use: every thing necessary to be removed is
-carried on the heads of the poor negroes, in _gamellas_, who have in
-many instances to climb up steep ascents, where inclined planes might
-be employed to great advantage, and would be formed with very little
-trouble. The cassoon is the only hydraulic machine known, and is very
-generally adopted: but it is constructed with great difficulty and
-expense, and can be used only where a strong current of water can be
-commanded. Pumps might, at very trivial cost, be constructed on the
-simple plan of the machines used to pound their Indian corn.
-
-The tedious process of washing the _cascalho_ for gold in _gamellas_,
-would be much shortened by using a machine of very easy construction.
-Suppose a cylinder to be formed of bars of iron longitudinally placed,
-and nailed to circles of wood, open at each end, and suspended on
-two centres, one about sixteen inches higher than the other. At the
-highest end the _cascalho_ is to enter by being put into a hopper which
-communicates with it. The bars must be nailed almost close to each
-other at the upper end, gradually widening to the lower end, where
-they should be about half an inch asunder. The cylinder ought to be
-from ten to twelve feet long, and a stream of water conducted to fall
-upon it length-wise: it should be inclosed, like a dressing-machine
-in a flour-mill, and be subjected to a very quick motion. The portion
-of _cascalho_ containing the most gold will fall through, near the
-upper end; the other parts, according to their comparative fineness,
-gradually descending until nothing but the pebbles fall out at the
-lower end. The earth, &c. falling into partitions or troughs below the
-cylinder, would be ready for being separated from the gold by hand,
-which might be done with very little trouble. Machines of this kind
-might be made on any scale, and, if generally known and adopted, would
-save the labor of the negroes in a tenfold degree. The one constructing
-in Cerro do Frio will, when complete, do more work than a hundred
-negroes in the same space of time. A considerable improvement might yet
-be made in this useful apparatus; for, if the gold, &c. washed from
-the machine were to fall upon troughs placed in an inclined position,
-having a channel across about a yard from the upper end,[63] all the
-gold would precipitate into it, and; if a negro were to be continually
-employed in agitating the water, the earthy matter would run off,
-leaving only the gold and the ferruginous particles, which might be
-easily separated by mercury[64]. The utility of machinery of this kind
-is too obvious to need pointing out.
-
-Mills composed of three heavy irregular stones, resembling our
-flint-mills, would reduce many of the ferruginous aggregates and
-softer substances which contain gold. The matter thus reduced might be
-immediately washed by falling or being put into the inclined planes
-before described, and would, no doubt, prove the means of obtaining
-considerable quantities of the precious metal, which would be otherwise
-lost. Stamps might be useful where gold is found in hard and brittle
-substances: but these would be more effectually pulverized by a heavy
-stone rolling upon its edge, not unlike a tanner’s bark-mill.
-
-In many instances, hand-sieves might be useful, and would save much
-time and labor in washing, but perhaps they would be too expensive.
-Even miners’ tools are much wanted, the only ones in use being the
-iron bar and the hoe. The common miner’s pick would in many cases be
-serviceable, and _bucking-irons_[65] would reduce the matrix much more
-effectually than beating it with stones, which is the only mode now
-practised. It is a most unfortunate circumstance, and very detrimental
-to the interests of the miners, that whatever is made of iron is so
-dear as to be beyond the means of the inhabitants to procure, nor have
-they any substitute for it.
-
-When the present state of the mining country is considered, and its
-rich resources are compared with the want of science, which prevents
-the inhabitants from improving them, how much is it to be wished that
-Government would establish and encourage economical societies on the
-plan of our Society of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce, in which
-inquiries might be made into all subjects relative to the useful arts.
-Repositories also might be established in all the principal towns
-of the _capitania_, where models of useful machinery and various
-implements might be kept for the inspection of the public. Scientific
-publications should be purchased, and every means employed to promote
-the cultivation of science among the inhabitants. At the meetings of
-the societies, every measure tending to increase the commerce of the
-district should be discussed with particular attention; honorary gifts
-should be made to those who most promoted its welfare, and premiums
-should be offered for the encouragement of all attempts to ameliorate
-the condition of the working class of the negroes.
-
-Thus emulation would be enkindled among them, and useful knowledge,
-descending from parent to child, would soon be universally diffused.
-This would be the true foundation of the prosperity of the country;
-for no territory perhaps in the world is so rich in natural products,
-and at the same time so neglected for want of an enlightened and
-industrious population.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XVII.
-
-_Brief Notices on the Capitanias of Bahia, Pernambuco, Seara, Maranham,
-Para, and Goyaz._
-
-
-THE _capitania_ of Bahia, to the northward of Minas Geraes, comes next
-under consideration, respecting which, as I did not visit it, I have
-only to present some observations from the best information I could
-procure. It extends a considerable distance along the coast, being
-bounded on the north by the great river St. Francisco, which runs into
-the sea in lat. 11° south, and separated from the district of Ilheos
-(formerly a _capitania_) by the river Das Contas in lat. 14° south. It
-receives its name from the capacious bay on which its capital is built,
-and which affords excellent anchorage for ships of any burthen. St.
-Salvador, the capital, also called Cidade de Bahia, was originally the
-seat of the supreme government of Brazil: it consists of two parts, one
-built on low ground near the shore, where the commerce is carried on,
-and the other on a high hill, which being considered the most healthy,
-is the residence of all the people of consequence. Its population
-is said to be nearly equal to that of Rio de Janeiro, and is stated
-at not less than seventy thousand souls. The houses are built with
-latticed windows and balconies, similar to those in Rio de Janeiro.
-The churches are the public buildings most worthy of notice: they are
-said to be richly ornamented within. The government of the city is
-vested in a governor, who is nominated by the court for three years.
-Here all law proceedings, civil and criminal, come before the tribunal,
-called _Rellaças_, the sentence of which is in general final, though
-appeals in certain cases may be made to a higher tribunal, called the
-_Dezembargo do Paço_.
-
-This town is tolerably defended, also the bay, as well as circumstances
-will permit. On the shore is a royal arsenal, and numerous houses for
-stores, &c. The custom-house and wharfs are conveniently situated.
-Ships of war have been built here, also many very large and fine
-vessels for the merchant service. For these purposes a large supply of
-fine timber was (and, I presume, continues to be) readily obtained from
-the interior from the number of fine rivers which flow into the bay.
-The wood holds iron better, and is superior to our oak.
-
-The manners and customs of the people differ little from those of the
-inhabitants of the capital; but it is said that in the best societies
-here, more gaiety and refinement prevail, and the higher classes are
-more sociable, than in Rio de Janeiro. A taste for music is general;
-there are few houses without the guitar, and all the more respectable
-families have piano-fortes. The ladies dress in the English style,
-and ornament themselves with gold chains: they wear very few diamonds;
-their favorite gem is the chrysolite. For deshabille at home they wear
-a kind of loose dress, over which they throw a veil on the entrance of
-strangers. They are considered as far less industrious than the females
-of the southern districts. The domestic dress of the men consists of a
-jacket and loose trowsers, made of light printed cotton.
-
-Religious processions take place here, as in Rio de Janeiro, on
-great festivals and rejoicing days; and these festive occasions are
-distinguished by various amusements, which continue from morning
-to night. At these times the Brazilians have a custom of covering
-the walls and balconies of their houses with velvet or beautiful
-silks, embroidered with gold lace, in architectural orders, made and
-ornamented for the purpose; thus adorned the houses exhibit a most
-splendid appearance.
-
-One of the most memorable seasons of rejoicing of late years was when
-the Prince touched at this city on his voyage to Rio de Janeiro, and
-remained several days. The inhabitants testified their loyalty and
-attachment to him by every public demonstration of joy, and by a
-display of all the grandeur and magnificence which they had means to
-furnish. As a more solid proof of their attachment and regard, they
-unanimously voted to subscribe a sum equal to a million sterling to
-build a palace for the royal family, if the Prince would condescend to
-reside among them.
-
-The climate is always warm, but is refreshed by the sea-breeze, and
-is in some degree tempered by the long absence of the sun, the nights
-being of almost uniform length throughout the year. Though hotter than
-Rio de Janeiro, Bahia is considered much more healthful, having a more
-airy situation, and being better supplied with water. The practice of
-bathing is very general, and most of the houses have conveniences for
-this purpose.
-
-Bahia is plentifully supplied with provisions. Beef and pork are in
-abundance; the former is decidedly bad, the latter tolerable. Fish are
-in great plenty and variety, and form a principal article in the diet
-of the inhabitants. Fish, with sallad, is the general supper of almost
-all ranks; even the rich desire nothing more for this repast in family.
-Numbers of retail shopkeepers, who sell wine, cheese, groceries, &c.
-buy fish and fry it, and afterwards retail it in small quantities.
-Poultry is in plenty, but not cheap; vegetables, and pulse of every
-description, are in very great profusion. The markets are well supplied
-with all the tropical fruits, many of which are said to be in great
-perfection, particularly the pine, the mango, and the banana; the
-latter is esteemed the best in America. Preserved fruits are in great
-abundance, owing to the cheapness of sugar; great varieties of them
-are sold in the streets, and two or three preserved limes in a cup
-of syrup may be bought for less than a penny. Even the lower orders
-conclude the meanest dinner with this delicious delicacy.
-
-The soil of this _capitania_ is peculiar, and is esteemed the best
-in Brazil for the growth of the sugar-cane. This advantage, and the
-conveniences arising from the numerous rivers that flow from the
-interior into the bay, have occasioned the establishment of many sugar
-plantations, undoubtedly the finest in the country, which have produced
-immense quantities of that article. The soil most adapted to the plant,
-and held in the highest estimation, is a black greasy loam, a deposit,
-containing a large quantity of decomposed vegetable matter.
-
-The opulent and best informed planters have imported steam-engines for
-the crushing of cane, which will probably prove very advantageous, and
-cheaper in many situations, as they can at all times be worked, and are
-as easily regulated as a water-mill.
-
-The mode of cultivating the cane has already been detailed. If planted
-in new soil, it is fit for cutting in fourteen months, but in old and
-poorer land it requires eighteen or twenty months. When ripe, the
-canes are cut and dressed by taking off the top leaves, &c. which
-afford excellent provender for cattle; they are then brought to the
-mill, which is composed of three wooden or iron cylinders, moving on
-their axes in a perpendicular position, and between them the canes
-are repeatedly passed until all the juice is expressed, and they are
-reduced to a mass of dry fibres.
-
-The cane-juice is conducted through spouts to a large boiler or
-clarifier, where a certain quantity of alkaline matter, called
-_temper_, is added to it[66]. Afterwards it is conducted to the largest
-of a range of boilers, consisting of three, or sometimes four, one
-less than another. The largest seldom contains more than one hundred
-gallons. Here the syrup boils for a certain time, and is continually
-skimmed; it is then laded to the next, where it continues to boil until
-more of the aqueous fluid is evaporated; after which, it is laded into
-the third boiler, and is there sometimes sufficiently boiled without
-removing it into the fourth. They judge of its consistency by the
-touch; a little of the syrup is taken between the thumb and finger, and
-if it forms threads, and breaks on being drawn about an inch, it is
-supposed to be boiled sufficiently[67]. It then begins to granulate,
-and is gently laded into earthen pots of the form of a sugar-loaf,
-about two feet deep and ten inches in diameter at the open end, where,
-on cooling, it becomes concrete. In the lower end of each pot is a
-small hole, which at first is nearly closed; but after the sugar begins
-to cool, it is unstopped, and a piece of cane is put in to admit the
-molasses to drain. Soon after the moulds are filled, they are removed
-into an airy room, where they are placed so that the molasses drain
-into a large cistern, from whence they are conveyed into the fermenting
-vats, which are recepticles for all the refuse of every description in
-the sugar-house. In the process of fermentation much depends on the
-quality of the wood of which the vats are made; some of them bring the
-liquor into a proper state for distillation two or three days sooner
-than others.
-
-The greatest part of the sugars made here are clayed, by a very simple
-operation, which consists merely in covering the sugar with very moist
-clay, the water from which percolates the mass, and carries with it the
-remaining molasses. When the earthy matter becomes dry, more is applied
-until the sugar is perfectly freed, and nearly white. This operation
-renders the article unfit for making loaf sugar. After remaining in
-the drying-house about six weeks, the moulds are placed with the large
-end downwards, and the sugar leaves them; they are then beaten down to
-powder in large strong cases, constructed of four entire planks, and
-the two ends, generally about eight feet long, and about twenty-six
-inches square[68], holding from fifteen to sixteen hundred-weight. The
-cases, when filled, are nailed down, and are ready for shipping.
-
-The principal points to be attended to in making sugar are, first, that
-the canes be all ripe, and well cleaned from _trash_ and leaves; next,
-that they be immediately crushed, and not suffered to lie in heaps
-to heat; and thirdly, that the rollers, and all the passages for the
-liquor, be well cleansed by washing as often as necessary.
-
-A greater quantity of sugar is shipped from Bahia than from all the
-other parts of Brazil united, and in general it is of a very good
-quality; that from certain plantations is particularly so. It is
-not however, esteemed of so strong a body as our best from the West
-Indies[69].
-
-The tobacco of this _capitania_ is peculiar to it; and, by an exclusive
-privilege, no other part of Brazil was allowed to cultivate the same
-sort. It has given rise to much commerce, and has enriched many
-families. It was the most esteemed sort, not only in Portugal, but in
-Spain, and all her colonies, where it has been sold at great prices.
-Great quantities of it were consumed in Barbary; and on many parts of
-the coast of Guinea the demand for it was such that it was almost
-impossible to carry on trade for gold, ivory, gums, and oil without
-it. The mode of growing and manufacturing it is as follows:—First, a
-good piece of ground is prepared, the finer dressed the better; the
-seed is sown broad-cast, and when the plants are about six weeks or two
-months grown, they are transplanted into ground prepared as before. In
-eight or ten months they arrive at their full growth, and when ripe
-the leaves are taken from the stem, which frequently grows from four
-to seven feet high. They are laid upon the ground, or, in preference,
-upon any support which will preserve them from absorbing moisture,
-and admit a free circulation of air underneath. When they become in a
-slight degree withered, they are twisted with a strong winch, the end
-of one leaf uniting with the other, and the twist is coiled into a
-roll weighing from thirty to forty pounds. By this operation the juice
-of the leaf is expressed, which is viscid, and when oxidated becomes
-of a black color, not unlike molasses. The tobacco, after this last
-operation, is fit for commerce.
-
-It is an object highly worthy the attention of the Portuguese
-government, to introduce other modes of curing tobacco. There can be
-no doubt that the soil and climate are congenial to it, and, were it
-properly prepared, it would probably equal any in Virginia, and become
-as great an article of commerce among the northern nations. Should
-such a commerce be pursued, how many cargoes of this commodity alone
-would arrive in our ports, and from thence be distributed to the
-different markets of Europe!
-
-Cotton has of late been grown here in considerable quantities, and
-has been sent to England at nearly the same price with that grown in
-Pernambuco, and its plantations are daily increasing and improving[70].
-
-Here are many plantations of coffee, but it is not esteemed so fine
-as that from Rio de Janeiro. Rice is produced in tolerable quantity,
-and its quality is superior: but the husk is so difficult to separate
-from the grain, that a great part is bruised in the operation, and is
-thus rendered of less value. The method of cleaning it is bad. Why not
-apply such mills as those used in Carolina, of which there is now one
-working at Maranham by steam, that has improved the quality of rice so
-materially, that it now sells in Europe for nearly the same price as
-the North American.
-
-The beautiful dye-wood, called Brazil-wood, is shipped from this port
-and Pernambuco, of a quality much superior to that of Rio de Janeiro.
-This is one of the articles prohibited from general commerce, being
-the property of the royal household. Fustic in small quantities is
-brought from the interior.
-
-The indigo made here is so far inferior to that imported from India
-as scarcely to be worth mentioning. It is owing to the great quantity
-of lime in it. There is a general opinion among all who make indigo,
-that some part of the process is very prejudicial to the health of
-the negroes, who frequently become sick, and often die while employed
-in it, which is most probably owing to deleterious gas which escapes
-during fermentation.
-
-Bahia has a considerable trade with all the ports on the coast,
-from whence are exported various articles, the prices of which are
-continually fluctuating. A great number of fine brigs and smaller
-vessels are employed in this trade.
-
-Produce to a considerable amount was exported to the River Plata, from
-whence a great quantity of hides and tallow were returned.
-
-The imports to Bahia from Europe consist in general of the same
-articles with those specified in the description of Rio de Janeiro. In
-this _capitania_ was found the largest piece of native copper that has
-ever appeared, being in weight upwards of 2,000lbs. It was discovered
-several years ago by some persons who were preparing to wash for gold.
-
-To the north of Bahia are the _capitanias_ of Pernambuco, Seará,
-and Maranham, the interior of which is very little known, though
-some parts of the coast are tolerably populous. Pernambuco, though
-situated nearly in the latitude of eight degrees, is considered
-healthy. The town is built on a rising ground, much exposed, and
-constantly refreshed by the sea-breeze. It has many excellent edifices,
-and is supposed to contain more opulent merchants, in proportion to
-population, than any other place in Brazil. It produces _vanilla_,
-cocoa, and a considerable quantity of sugar; but the chief article
-of its trade is cotton, which for many years had the reputation of
-being superior to any other, but of late it has much deteriorated,
-from neglect, either in the growth, or in the gathering the pods and
-cleaning it from the seeds, or probably from general inattention to the
-whole management of it. The cotton, when ready for packing, is pressed
-into raw hides, so hard as to form very heavy packages. The operation
-is superintended by an officer authorised by Government, who puts a
-stamp upon it describing its quality, which enables the shipper to pass
-it through the custom-house, where it pays a heavy duty on exportation.
-
-The district of Seará is but little known, it enjoys an extensive trade
-in cotton and sugar. Maranham, though a very small district, has of
-late raised itself considerably into eminence by the cultivation of
-cotton, the other productions are the same as those of Pernambuco.
-Cotton and rice are the staple articles, with some cocoa and sugar,
-numerous cargoes of which are annually exported.
-
-The dye-wood of these districts is considered excellent, and is
-sometimes shipped from this coast. The tree which produces the
-_annatto_ is very common, and the seeds from which it is washed are
-of the best quality, and might be obtained in great abundance. Cocoa
-may be grown in any quantity; capsicum, pimento, ginger, &c. are very
-plentiful.
-
-The markets are well stored with fish and meat, the latter very
-indifferent in its kind. Poultry, vegetables, and fruits, are in great
-abundance.
-
-St. Louis, the capital, is built upon an island, and is esteemed
-healthy, though so near the equator. Several rivers run into the bay,
-which afford an eligible conveyance for the produce of the vicinity.
-The island is said to contain 20,000 inhabitants, and the population in
-the rivers is by no means inconsiderable.
-
-The _capitania_ of Pará, is considered the largest in Brazil: its
-extent is imperfectly known. The principal town is called Belem, where
-the governor resides, and, its government being superior, it may be
-said to preside over several of the neighbouring districts. The land
-is low and unhealthy, the great river, or port, is much interrupted
-by shoals and currents. It is a dangerous coast, and exposed to a
-continual swell, so as to render it hazardous for ships to anchor upon
-it, as they roll so much that they not only endanger their masts, but
-are subject to strain.
-
-The town of Pará is situated on the river Tocantines, the navigation
-of which is difficult, and is seldom attempted, except by small craft:
-the Confiance sloop of war with great care sailed up it, and anchored
-near the town, several days previous to the expedition against Cayenne.
-The town may contain ten thousand inhabitants, who are in general
-very poor, probably from want of commerce: for although the great
-rivers Tocantins and Amazons have their source, the latter in Peru,
-and the former in the _capitania_ of Goyaz, though they receive almost
-millions of inferior streams in their course through immense tracts of
-territory, yet they are not productive of any commerce of consequence.
-The exports from Pará consist of a considerable quantity of rice,
-cocoa, cotton, drugs, hides of various sorts, woods, and a few other
-articles. The trade is much on the increase, and it is to be hoped,
-that from its vast internal communications, it may be greatly extended,
-and more ships loaded for Europe, as a cargo is generally rather
-precarious, and sometimes difficult to be obtained.
-
-The climate is hot, as may well be supposed, from its lying so near
-the equinoctial. Thunder, with lightning and rain, occurs generally
-every afternoon, when the air becomes more cool, and the heat less
-disagreeable.
-
-On conversing with creditable men who had lived many years at Pará,
-Maranham, and upon the coast, I never heard them relate the strange
-accounts of the Indians which Estalla has related. As a Spaniard, he
-seems to be amusing the public with the actions of his own countrymen
-in Chili, and to aim, in common with all the writers of his nation, to
-prejudice the world against the Portuguese.
-
-The _capitania_ of Goyaz is bounded chiefly by Minas Geraes on the
-east, Matto Grosso on the west, and Pará on the north. Its greatest
-extent in length is from lat. 6° south to 21°. Villa Boa, its
-principal town, is situated in lat. 16° south, about eighty leagues
-to the west of Paracatu, from whence there is a good road. Here is
-a permutation-house, where all the gold found in the _capitania_ is
-permuted. The governor is elected for three years, after which he is
-generally appointed to Bahia or Minas Geraes. In the _capitania_ are
-many gold mines, some of which produce gold of a very fine quality.
-Diamonds have been found in some parts, which are different in their
-appearance from those found in Cerro do Frio, having more brilliancy
-on their exterior; but when cut, they are not in general of so pure
-a water, though of a very desirable size. As this fine district is
-so distant from the coast, it has very little commerce in any of
-its productions, except the valuable substances above mentioned,
-and cattle, which are bred on the frontiers; also some cotton, and
-occasionally a few particular articles, which are sent to Rio de
-Janeiro. The mules on the return-journey, are all loaded with salt,
-iron, cheap cotton-prints, woollens (particularly baizes), hats,
-fire-arms, powder, and shot, and a variety of artificers’ tools. When
-any of the inhabitants have any thing peculiarly precious to dispose
-of, they generally take it to Rio de Janeiro, and lay out the proceeds
-chiefly in the purchase of negroes, (they being at all times the first
-object), iron, salt, and other commodities.
-
-The population is very small in comparison to the extent of the
-district, but is likely to be increased by new settlers; although
-the indigent in Villa Rica, Tejuco, and other places in the mining
-country, are little inclined to remove out of society, even for the
-chance of riches: in fact, having no negroes fit to work, and being
-totally destitute of exertion themselves, all situations are to them
-indifferent. These are by no means the class of people who can be
-styled adventurers. The poorer class of inhabitants who have obtained
-a small portion of gold, sometimes make a journey to Paracatu or
-Villa Rica, to purchase what negroes they want. This _capitania_ has
-been very little explored, and scarcely any thing is known of its
-productions beyond what is above stated; indeed, it is not unreasonable
-to presume that the soil contains the same variety of metals as the
-district of Minas Geraes. Many persons from thence, with whom I have
-conversed, speak of it with delight as being a fine country, having
-numerous rivers well stored with fish, woods abounding with fine birds,
-which afford excellent diversion to the sportsman; also a great variety
-of animals.
-
-This _capitania_ communicates with Matto Grosso, S. Paulo, and Pará, by
-rivers which are navigable, though frequently interrupted by falls.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XVIII.
-
-_Geographical Description of the Capitania of Matto Grosso[71]._
-
-
-RESPECTING this extensive portion of Brazil, I had an opportunity
-of gaining considerable information, being intimately acquainted
-with the commanding officer of the military force stationed there,
-Colonel Martines, an engineer of extraordinary merit, who had made
-four journeys to Matto Grosso, and had resided there some years. He
-was kind enough to give me a description of his route from S. Paulo
-to the capital of that province, and promised me a chart of the
-navigable rivers and roads from thence to Pará, which had been formed
-by officers of his party, together with documents in illustration
-of it. But he being hastily called away on a particular service, was
-prevented from executing his promise, and I could only profit by the
-verbal description which he repeatedly gave me. This description,
-as proceeding from an officer of such undoubted veracity, it was my
-intention to give to the public; but, after my return to England, I was
-agreeably surprised to find a MS. nearly corresponding with it, in the
-hands of that eminent geographer, Mr. Arrowsmith, who has liberally
-permitted me to make use of it. To his excellent map, compiled
-according to the latest MS. charts communicated from Brazil, I beg
-leave to refer the reader for an accurate delineation of the particular
-localities here detailed.
-
-This extensive _capitania_ is separated from the neighbouring territory
-belonging to Spain by the intervening channels of the rivers Paraguay,
-Madeira, Mamoré, and Guaporé, which form a broad and natural trench
-around it of five hundred leagues in circuit, by means of which, and by
-upwards of thirty rivers that empty themselves into it, a communication
-is opened through many and distant points with the interior of Brazil.
-This _capitania_, from its geographical position, has ever been
-considered as the grand outwork of Brazil, not only because it covers
-the interior divisions of this vast portion of the new continent,
-which is the cradle of its greatest rivers, branching in innumerable
-channels, and enriched with great and untouched treasures; but also
-because, by this extensive channel, the Portuguese are enabled to
-penetrate to the establishments of Spain in Peru.
-
-
-_The River Araguaya, or Grande._
-
-The eastern boundary of the _capitania_ of Matto Grosso, separating
-it from that of Goyaz, is the river Grande, two hundred leagues from
-Villa Bella. This river, known in the state of Pará, by the name
-of Araguaya only, which is conferred on it by the numerous nations
-inhabiting its banks, has its remotest source in lat. 19°, and running
-north and south, intersected at various points by the meridian of 52°
-30′, flows in lat. 6° into the Tocantines, wherein it loses its name;
-and both, thus united in one ample stream, continue their course for
-three hundred and seventy leagues, and fall into the southern estuary
-of the mighty river Amazons in lat 1° 40′ between the two celebrated
-bays of Marapata and Limseiro, opposite to the great island of Joannes,
-or Murajo, and twenty leagues west of the city of Pará. The river das
-Mortes, which rises far to the west of the Rio Grande, and forms its
-highest western branch, running for a considerable space to the east,
-and afterwards to the north, with an entire course of 150 leagues, till
-it enters the Araguaya in lat. 12°, is entirely within the _capitania_
-of Matto Grosso.
-
-The river Araguaya is peopled by many tribes of warlike savages; it
-abounds in all the productions peculiar to the state of Pará, and
-affords an uninterrupted navigation from the city of that name, and
-by the river, with the centre of Brazil and the _capitania_ of Matto
-Grosso. The same is practicable by the river das Mortes, and other
-western branches which enter the Rio Grande below. These branches,
-no doubt, contain unexplored mines; for there is no physical reason
-why gold should be found in the rivers that enter the Araguaya on the
-eastern side, (where, besides Villa Boa, are situated several villages
-belonging to the _capitania_ of Goyaz), and not likewise in the
-branches on the opposite side. It is positively known that the river
-das Mortes is auriferous, and hence it is fair to conclude that the
-smaller streams which flow into it are much more so, for the nearer the
-source the greater is the quantity of gold found. The mines of one of
-its western branches were abandoned, not from the absence or scarcity
-of the precious metal, but because, being remote from the road, and in
-the midst of a swamp peopled by savages, the few settlers could not get
-conveniently supplied with arms, implements, and other articles.
-
-In some of these mines gold above twenty-three carats has been found,
-but the greater part is only of seventeen, and of a green color, being
-combined with a large portion of silver.
-
-
-_The River Chingu_,
-
-the clearest, and one of the largest and most copious branches of the
-Amazons, which it enters on the south side, after a course of three
-hundred leagues, in lat. 1° 42′, and long. 53°, seventy leagues west
-of the city of Pará, in a direct line, but one hundred of navigation,
-is confined in a great part of its course to the _capitania_ of Matto
-Grosso.
-
-Its remote sources supply, not only the lands in which rise also the
-branches and rivers forming to the east and north the upper part of the
-river Cuiaba, but also that large space north of the river das Mortes,
-intersected by the great road from Goyaz, extending as far as the river
-Porrudos. There is a tradition among the guides of the Sutãos[72] of
-Pirá and the Indians established on the banks of the Chingu, that,
-after mounting the first large falls of this river, much gold was found
-in it, of which the Jesuits, those great explorers, obtained a large
-quantity. It is probable that the now unknown Minas dos Martirios,
-famous as the first discovery made by Bart^o. Bueno, and of which I
-have heard repeated mention in S. Paulo, exist only on some of the
-many branches that form the river Chingu. For this enterprising man,
-after having discovered those mines, returned to S. Paulo in order to
-engage negroes, and provide implements for extracting those treasures,
-which to this day continue to elude the searches of others, retraced
-his course; but passing by the mines of Cuiaba, which had been just
-discovered and were found wonderfully productive, he was there deserted
-by the greatest part of his followers. Fearing that he should lose the
-rest also, he turned eastward, and, in his anxiety to avoid the mines
-of Cuiaba, got still farther from those of dos Martirios, until he lost
-himself in the immense wastes, wherein he wandered many months, and
-at length accidentally found the mines of Goyaz, which his father had
-before seen. These, like all the rest, proved very productive at the
-beginning.
-
-This rich and new discovery soon diverted the attention of adventurers
-from the preceding; and the route to the Minas dos Martirios, together
-with their positive situation, have long been lost in a vague tradition
-of their existence. As the place was explored without the assistance of
-a compass, or any of the means necessary for defining its geographical
-position, there could not but prevail much doubt and uncertainty
-respecting it. Now there is no such discovery on the river Tocantines,
-which comprehends the whole _capitania_ of Goyaz: the first account
-places it near a river, which indeed runs into the Amazons, like the
-Tocantines, but which was sought for passing near the upper branches,
-and west of the river Cuiaba, a situation in which the river Chingu
-alone is found; other explorers place it on the Araguaya, which renders
-it useless to look there, for it is more than two hundred leagues
-north-west of the place sought. This is substantiated by a fact of
-later date, which is as follows:—A grandson of Bart^o. Bueno, under
-the direction of an ancient journal of this discovery, describing
-the route to it, descended by the river das Mortes, and entered some
-extensive plains on its western bank, on which he travelled westward
-for some days, when he arrived at a plain covered with white _Mangaba_
-trees, which were designated in the journal. From this place they had a
-sight of some detached high mountains between the north and west, three
-of which were of the figure specified, and indicated the situation of
-the Minas dos Martirios. An unexpected attack of the Indians, in which
-the chief and many others of the adventurers were killed, dispersed the
-party, and frustrated the object at the moment when it appeared to be
-already attained.
-
-The river abounds in various products: cocoa is in plenty; there are
-some spices, and various indigenous fruits.
-
-
-_The River Tapajos_
-
-is the third which derives its copious sources, flowing through
-numerous large branches, from the _capitania_ of Matto Grosso. It runs
-north between the Madeira and the Chingu for three hundred leagues,
-flowing into the Amazons in lat. 2° 24′ 50″, and long. 55°, which is
-the geographical position of the town of Santarem, situated at its
-mouth one hundred and eighteen leagues from the city of Pará, and one
-hundred and sixty-two by the shortest navigation. The river Tapajos
-rises in the plains of the Parexis, so called from an Indian nation
-which inhabits them. These plains occupy a vast space, not level, but
-formed by undulating heaps of sand and light earth, resembling large
-waves. The spectator who is in the midst of them ever sees before
-him a distant and extended mount; he advances towards it by a gentle
-and long declivity, traverses the plain, and advances by an ascent
-equally gentle until he gains imperceptibly the heights he saw; another
-eminence then presents itself, and he proceeds with the same recurring
-circumstances. The soil of these wide plains is sandy, and so light
-that loaded beasts in passing sink into it so much as to impede their
-progress. The pasturage is poor, consisting of a grass composed of
-wiry stalks a foot high, and small rough lancet-shaped leaves; the
-animals in grazing pluck them up with the roots covered with sand; on
-this account the passage by land is difficult and tedious; though, on
-finding any of the streams, which abound in these plains, there is
-grass and other mild herbage, which afford tolerable pasturage. The
-plains of Parexis form, to a large extent and breadth, the summit of
-those high mountains of the same name, and are situated on some of
-the most elevated land in all Brazil; for from them descend the two
-greatest rivers of South America,—the Paraguay, as well in its own
-numerous heads, as in its great and higher branches, the Jauru, the
-Sypotuba, and the Cuiaba,—and the Madeira, which is the largest river
-that flows into the Amazons on the south.
-
-The Tapajos, flowing in a direction contrary to that of the above-named
-river, rises in these mountains. Its westermost branch is the river
-Arinos, which intwines its sources with those of the Cuiaba at a
-short distance from those of the Paraguay. The river Arinos has a
-western branch, called Rio Negro, from which, to the point where it is
-navigable, there is a passage of eight leagues over land to the river
-Cuiaba, below its upper and greatest falls; and, in like manner, from
-the Arinos itself the passage to the same part of the river Cuiaba is
-twelve leagues.
-
-The Arinos is auriferous at its springs, and in 1747 the mines of
-Santa Isabel were discovered in it, but immediately abandoned, as not
-answering the expectations created in those fortunate times by the
-great quantities of gold drawn from the mines of Cuiaba and Matto
-Grosso. The lands were infested by dangerous tribes of warlike Indians.
-
-The river Sumidouro empties itself on the south side into the Arinos,
-and its source being a short distance from that of the Sypotuba, a
-large western branch of the Paraguay, there is an easy communication
-from one river to the other. The famous discoverer, João de Souza
-Echevedo, in 1746, made this passage: he descended the river Cuiaba,
-and sailing up the Sypotuba to its very sources, he there passed his
-canoes over land into the Sumidouro, which he navigated, following the
-current, notwithstanding that the river runs for some distance under
-ground, and thence derives its appellation. After this, he passed into
-the Arinos, and thence into the Tapajos, where he surmounted the falls,
-though more difficult than those of the Madeira, and discovered many
-symptoms of gold in the river of Tres Barras, a western arm of the
-Tapajos, a hundred leagues below the springs of the Arinos. West of
-the Sumidouro, and in the plains of Parexis, the river Xacurutina has
-its origin to the north of the river Jauru: it is famous for a lake,
-situated in one of its branches, where every year is produced a great
-quantity of salt, which is a constant cause of war among the Indians.
-Some navigators make the Xacurutina an arm of the Arinos, and others of
-the Sumidouro. In these plains of Parexis, terminating to the west in
-the high mountains so denominated, which, extending two hundred leagues
-in a north-north-west direction, front the Guapore at a distance of
-fifteen or twenty leagues, springs the river Juruena, between the heads
-of the Sarare and the Guapore, a league east of the former and two
-west of the latter. This river, the largest and westermost branch of
-the Tapajos, rises in lat. 14° 42′, twenty leagues north-north-east of
-Villa Bella, and, running north one hundred and twenty leagues, flows
-into the Arinos, and with it forms the bed of the Tapajos.
-
-The Juruena receives on both sides many small rivers, those from
-the west affording many practicable communications by short passages
-over-land with the Guapore and its confluent streams. The uppermost
-of these, which is nearest to Villa Bella, is the Securiu, navigable
-even there, and almost to its source. This is a league north of the
-principal source of the river Sarare, which, a quarter of a league
-from its head, is three yards deep and five broad. Thus sailing up
-the Juruena, into the Securiu, and making from its source the short
-land-passage of a league to the Sarare, the navigator may reach Villa
-Bella in less than eight days, without any other obstacle than that of
-the fall formed by the Sarare, three leagues below its source, where it
-precipitates itself from the Parexis mountains on the western slope:
-this difficulty may be surmounted in detail, or by at once passing
-the four leagues, for the Sarare from its fall becomes immediately
-navigable to the capital of Matto Grosso. A league north of the source
-of the Sarare is the first head of the river Galera, the second
-confluent of the Guapore below Villa Bella; and a league east of the
-same head rises the Ema, a western branch of the Securiu, affording
-equal facility of communication. The Galera has three other sources
-north of the first in the plains of the Parexis, all ample streams; the
-last and most northerly, called Sabará, is distant little more than
-a league from the source of the river Juina, a large western branch
-of the Juruena. Thus by the Juina and the Securiu, with a crossing
-of five or six leagues, so as to pass the falls of the Galera on the
-western scarp of the mountain, the Juruena may be connected with the
-Guapore.
-
-Lastly, the Juruena may be navigated to its upper fall, which is within
-two leagues of its own source. The fall is formed by two small leaps,
-the river being, even in this part, thirty yards broad and of great
-depth; from hence downwards it flows with great rapidity, yet its falls
-are not greater, and are more passable, than those of the Arinos.
-With the same circumstances, and by similar short land-passages, a
-communication is practicable from the Juruena with the rivers Guapore
-and Jauru, which are to the eastward of it, although these two rivers
-precipitate themselves from the south side of the Parexis mountains,
-where they rise, and immediately form numerous and extensive falls.
-
-From the geographical position of the Tapajos, it is evident that this
-river facilitates navigation and commerce from the maritime city of
-Pará to the mines of Matto Grosso and Cuiaba, by means of its large
-branches, the Juruena and Arinos; if the short passages over-land
-should be found troublesome to drag canoes, the goods may be forwarded
-immediately on mules. This navigation to Matto Grosso is at least two
-hundred leagues shorter than that performed through the Madeira and
-Guapore; it is consequently less tedious and expensive, and equally
-advantageous to the mines of Cuiaba. The navigation of the river
-Tapajos might lead also to new discoveries in the vast unexplored parts
-of this river, up to its entrance into the plains of the Parexis,
-and their products might add to those of the extensive regions on
-the Amazons. Besides this, the river is known to be auriferous for a
-great part of its course: it is known also, that, passing from the
-Juruena into its western arm, the river Camararé, and the heads of the
-river Jamary or das Candeas, which, running in broad streams down the
-eastern side of the Parexis mountains, enters the Madeira, there are
-mines which have inspired great hopes, though but lately seen, after a
-fruitless search of twenty years.
-
-
-_The River Paraguay_
-
-has its remote springs to the west of the heads of the Arinos in
-latitude 13°, and, after a southern course of six hundred leagues,
-enters the ocean under the appellation of the Rio de la Plata. The
-heads of the Paraguay are seventy leagues north-east from Villa Bella,
-and forty leagues north from Cuiaba, and divided into many branches,
-and already forming complete rivers, which, as they run south,
-successively unite, and form the channel of this immense river, which
-is immediately navigable. To the west, a short distance from the main
-source of the Paraguay, is that of the Sypotuba, which disembogues on
-its west bank in lat. 15° 50′, after a course of sixty leagues. In
-the upper part of this river, and near its western branch called the
-Jurubauba, was formerly a gold-mine, which was worked with considerable
-profit; but the superior advantages derived from others subsequently
-explored in Matto Grosso and Cuiaba, caused it to be abandoned, and
-its site is not now known with certainty. The little river Cabaral,
-also auriferous, enters the Paraguay on the west side, three leagues
-below the mouth of the Sypotuba. On the banks of the latter lives a
-nation of Indians, called _Barbados_, from the distinction peculiar to
-themselves, among all the Indian nations, of having large beards.
-
-The Boriars Araviras inhabit the banks of the Cabaral: they are a
-mixture of two different nations, who in the year 1797 sent four
-chiefs of their tribe, accompanied by their mother, to Villa Bella,
-in order to solicit the friendship of the Portuguese. The nation
-called Parrarioné lives in their neighbourhood, close by the Sypotuba.
-A league below the mouth of the Cabaral, on the east bank of the
-Paraguay, is Villa Maria, a small and useful establishment, founded in
-1778. Seven leagues south of Villa Maria, and on the west bank of the
-Paraguay, the river Jauru disembogues into it in lat. 16° 24′. This
-river is remarkable for the boundary-mark erected at its mouth in 1754,
-as well as for being entirely Portuguese, together with the lands on
-its south bank, and bordering on the Spanish possessions. It rises
-in the plains of the Parexis in lat. 14° 42′, and long. 58° 30′, and
-running south to lat. 15° 45′, the situation of the Register of the
-same name, it there turns to the south-east for thirty-four leagues,
-till, by an entire course of sixty leagues, it reaches its junction
-with the Paraguay. There are salt-water-pits, which in part have
-supplied Matto Grosso, ever since its foundation, with salt: they are
-in the interior of the country, seven leagues from the Register, and
-extend to a place called Salina de Almeida, from the name of the person
-who first employed himself in these works.
-
-These salt-pits are situated along the margins of broad marshy bottoms,
-in which are found fish of the same kind with those in the Paraguay.
-The Salina de Almeida is not far distant from the bank of Jauru, and
-the great quantity of saline liquid found in it continues three leagues
-farther to the south, where a junction is formed with another from the
-west, called Pitas; westward of which are high and dry plains, where
-are found numerous large circles, formed by a species of palm called
-Carandas. These plains terminate nine leagues west of the Salina de
-Almeida, in a large pool or marsh, called Paopique, which runs to the
-south.
-
-The confluence of the Jauru with the Paraguay is a point of much
-importance: it guards and covers the great road between Villa Bella,
-Cuiaba, and their intermediate establishments, and in the same manner
-commands the navigation of both the rivers, and defends the entrance
-into the interior of the latter _capitania_. The Paraguay from this
-place has a free navigation upwards, almost to its sources, which are
-scarcely seventy leagues distant, with no other impediment than a large
-fall. These sources are said to contain diamonds.
-
-The mark placed at the mouth of the Jauru is a pyramid of beautiful
-marble, brought to this distant point from Lisbon. It bears
-inscriptions commemorative of the treaty between the courts of Spain
-and Portugal, by which the respective territories, of which it stands
-as the boundary, were defined.
-
-The lofty chain of mountains, which extends from the sources of the
-Paraguay near its eastern bank, border the river opposite the mouth
-of the Jauru, and are terminated seven leagues below it by the Morro
-Escalvado in lat. 16° 43′. Eastward of this mount or point, all is
-marsh, and nine leagues below it there flows into the east side of
-the Paraguay a deep stream or river, called Rio Novo, discovered in
-1786, which may hereafter afford a navigation to near St. Pedro d’El
-Rey, when the aquatic plants that obstruct its channel are removed.
-The most distant sources of this river are the rivulets of Sta. Anna,
-Bento Gomes, and others which cross the great road of Cuiaba to the
-west of Cocaes. In lat. 17° 33′ the west banks of the Paraguay become
-mountainous at the north point of the Serra da Insua, which, three
-leagues to the south, makes a deep break to form the mouth of the
-lake Gaiba. This lake extends westward, and there is a broad canal of
-four leagues in extent, which comes from the north, communicating from
-the above lake to that of Uberava, somewhat larger than the Gaiba,
-situated exactly contiguous to the Serra da Insua, on its north side.
-Six leagues and a half below the mouth of the Gaiba, and opposite this
-mountainous bank of the Paraguay, is the mouth of the St. Lourenço,
-formerly called Porrudos. Twenty-six leagues above this the river
-Cuiaba enters its western bank in lat. 17° 20′, and long. 57° 5′: these
-two rivers are of great extent; that of Lourenço has its sources in
-lat. 15°, forty leagues east of the town of Cuiaba, receiving (besides
-the branches crossed by the road from Goyaz) other great streams on its
-east side, such as the Paraiba or Piquiri, which receives the Jaquari
-and the Itiquira, all of moderate size, and navigable. The Itiquira
-has been navigated to its heads, from whence the canoes were dragged
-over-land to the Sucuriu, which falls into the Parana four leagues
-below the mouth of the river Tiete on the opposite side. The rivers
-Itiquira and Sucuriu were found to have fewer and smaller falls than
-the Taquari, and the land-passage is much shorter and more convenient
-than that of the Camapuão, so that this navigation is preferable to
-that by the two last-mentioned rivers: it is attended by only two
-obstacles,—many Indians, and a want of provisions.
-
-The navigation to the town of Cuiaba by the river of that name, from
-its above-mentioned confluence, is short and easy: in the first ten
-leagues, after passing the two small islands of Ariacuni and Tarumus,
-occurs a large plantation of bananas, formed on an embankment on the
-east side of the river. Three leagues above this place the Guacho-uassu
-enters the Cuiaba by its east bank, and on the same side, seven leagues
-farther, the Guacho-mirim. From this point the river winds in a
-north-east direction, eleven leagues to the island of Pirahim, and from
-thence makes a large bend to the east, receiving numerous streams, and
-passes the town of Cuiaba, which is situated a mile to the eastward of
-it. This town is ninety-six leagues to the east of Villa Bella, and the
-same distance from the confluence of its river with the Paraguay. It
-is large, and, together with its dependencies, may at present contain
-30,000 souls. It is well provided with meat, fish, fruits, and all
-sorts of vegetables, at a much cheaper rate than at the sea-ports.
-Their country is well adapted for cultivation, and has rich mines, but
-in some places little water to work them in dry weather. They were
-discovered in 1718, and have been estimated to produce annually above
-twenty _arrobas_ of gold of extremely fine quality. These mines have
-produced an enormous quantity of gold compared with the thinness of the
-population, and the want of means, machinery, &c. for working them.
-
-Twenty leagues south-west of the town of Cuiaba is the settlement of
-St. Pedro d’El Rey, the largest of all the adjacent settlements, and
-contains full 2,000 inhabitants. It is situated near the western side
-of the rivulet Bento Gomes, which, at the distance of a league and a
-half south of the settlement, forms a large bay, called Rio de Janeiro.
-The river Cuiaba has its sources forty leagues above the town, and its
-banks are cultivated through the greater part of its extent, including
-fourteen leagues below the town, down the stream. Four leagues below
-the principal mouth of the river Porrudos, the Paraguay is bordered by
-the mountains that separate it from Gaiba on its western bank, and in
-this place they obtain the appellation of _Serra das Pedras de Amolar_,
-from being composed of a stone of which whet-stones are made. This
-is the only spot which is not inundated by the floods of the river,
-and is therefore much visited by the canoes that navigate it. These
-_Serras_ terminate two leagues to the south in those of the Dourados,
-immediately below which there is a channel on the west side of the
-Paraguay, which, piercing between two high detached mounts, called
-Cheines, leads to the lake Mendiuri, six leagues long, and the largest
-on the Paraguay.
-
-From the Dourados the Paraguay runs southward to the Serras of
-Albuquerque, where it touches directly on the northern point, on which
-is situated a town of that name. These Serras form a compact square of
-ten leagues, and contain much calcareous stone; the land is considered
-the best on either side the Paraguay, from the river downwards, and
-only equalled by that on the western margins of the lakes Mandiuri
-and Gaiba. From Albuquerque the Paraguay turns to the east, skirting
-its Serras, which terminate at the end of six leagues in the Serra do
-Rabicho, opposite which, on the north bank of the river, is situated
-the lower southern mouth of the Paraguay-mirim. This is an arm of the
-Paraguay, which, terminating here, forms an island fourteen leagues
-in length from north to south: it is the usual channel for canoes in
-times of inundation. From the mouth of the Paraguay-mirim the river
-takes a southerly direction to the mouth of the Taquari, navigated
-annually by flotillas of canoes and other craft, which come from S.
-Paulo to Cuiaba, and even as far as the Register of Jauru, when their
-destination happens to be Villa Bella.
-
-As this navigation is an object of great importance, from its
-connecting two distinct districts, the following compendious
-description of the route pursued in it may not prove uninteresting; it
-is abstracted from the diary of a man of science, who performed the
-journey a few years ago, in the month of October, when the Paraguay
-begins to retire to its own channel. The description may commence at
-the Taquari, as the voyage from thence to Cuiaba and the Jauru has
-already been detailed. The largest of the many mouths of the Taquari
-in the Paraguay is in lat. 19° 15′, and long. 54°. In the first ten
-leagues of navigation, the channel of the river is lost, as it crosses
-some large plains, covered with water to the depth of several feet.
-This is contiguous to Taquari, a place where the river is much confined.
-
-From this place it is twenty leagues to the resting-place of Allegre,
-in lat. 18° 12′, and this space contains, on both banks of the Taquari,
-many entrances into the paths, which lead in time of the floods to
-various distant places on the Paraguay, Porrudos, and Cuiaba. From
-this resting-place there are thirty leagues of navigation, on the
-course of the river east to the fall of Barra, where it is impeded
-and unnavigable above a mile, though a part of it may be passed in
-half-loaded and part of it in empty canoes. At the head of this fall
-the river Cochim enters the Taquari, and the navigation here quits
-the latter for the Cochim. At its mouth it is twenty fathoms broad,
-and a league upwards receives on its south bank the Taquari-mirim, a
-river nearly as broad as itself. A little above this confluence is
-situated its first fall, which is called _da Ilha_, and may be passed
-in empty canoes. A league above is the fall of Giquitaya, passed
-with half cargoes, and a league and a quarter farther, that of the
-Choradeira, the current of which is very rapid. Beyond this is the
-fall of Avanhandava-uassu, where the cargoes are carried over-land for
-half a mile, and the canoes are conducted through a difficult channel
-of three fathoms, at the end of which they are pushed over the rocks
-in order to pass the head or cataract. Half a league above is the fall
-do Jauru, so called from a river of that name, which enters the Cochim
-above it, on the north side. From this confluence upwards there occur
-seven falls in the course of five leagues and a half, in the midst
-of which distance the river cuts and is enchannelled in a mountain,
-through which it runs smoothly, although scarcely five fathoms broad,
-and receives on its south side the stream of the Paredão, which is
-said to be auriferous. Half a league above the last of the seven falls
-before-mentioned are three successive ones, called _Tres Irmãos_, and
-at an equal distance above them, that of Das Furnas, which is passed
-laboriously with canoes unloaded. From this place the navigation
-continues on the Cochim through a succession of falls, until that river
-is joined by the Camapuão, eight yards in breadth at its mouth. From
-this point to its junction with the Taquari, the course of the Cochim
-is thirty leagues.
-
-The river Camapuã, along which the navigation is continued, becomes
-narrower on passing some rivulets that flow into it, and so shallow,
-as to be in general scarcely two feet deep, and the canoes are rather
-dragged than navigated along its sandy bed. After two leagues of this
-labor, they quit the Camapuão-uassu, leaving it on the right hand,
-choked with fallen trees, &c., and enter into the Camapuão-mirim, up
-which they proceed one league, when they reach the _fazenda_, or
-estate, of the same name. This is an important establishment, belonging
-to the Portuguese, in the centre of those vast and desert regions
-that intervene between the great rivers Paraguay and Parana, ninety
-leagues south-south-west, in a direct line from the town of Cuiaba. The
-place seems very proper for a Register, to prevent the smuggling of
-gold in this route, and to fix the duties on goods passing to Cuiaba
-and Matto Grosso. The canoes and cargoes are transported from the
-Fazenda de Campauão by land about a mile to the river Sanguixuga, the
-principal source of the Rio Pardo. From the end of the land-passages
-the navigation continues down the Sanguixuga, and, in the interval of
-three leagues, they pass four falls to the Rio Vermelho (so called
-from the color of its waters), which enters the Pardo. Half a league
-from the mouth of the Vermelho, the Pardo has the fall of the Pedras
-de Amolar, and a league below receives on its south side the river
-Claro, from which, after proceeding two leagues of level stream, there
-occur nine falls in the space of two leagues more. The passage of them
-occupies twelve or fourteen days in going up the river, though only one
-in returning. Below the last of these, called the Bangue, the river
-Sucuriu enters the Pardo on its south side. Three leagues below the
-mouth of the Sucuriu is the cataract of Curare, about eight yards high,
-to avoid which the canoes are hauled over land, through a passage of a
-hundred yards. From this cataract, in the space of ten leagues, there
-occur ten falls, which occupy fifteen or twenty days in ascending the
-river, though only one in descending. The breadth of the Rio Pardo in
-this part is twenty-two fathoms. Two leagues below the last of these
-falls is a deep inlet of three hundred and ninety fathoms; half a
-league lower the canoes are hauled over a space of land of a hundred
-and fifty yards. Half a league further is the fall of Sirga Negra; one
-league further, that of Sirga Matto; and a little more than a league
-from thence, the great cataract, or Salto da Cajuru, ten yards in
-height, to avoid which, the canoes are hauled through a narrow channel
-here formed by the river. At a distance equal to the preceding is the
-Cajuru-mirim, and immediately after is found the fall of _da Ilha_, the
-thirty-third and last on this river. Six leagues below this fall, the
-Rio Pardo receives on its north side the river Orelha da Anta;[A] and
-four leagues lower down, on the same side, the Orelha da Onça[73], from
-the mouth of which, after eleven leagues of navigation, is found the
-junction which the river Anhandery-uassu makes from the south with the
-Pardo, which, from the passage of Camapuão to this point, completes a
-south-east course of forty-five leagues in extent. The Anhandery and
-the Pardo, from their confluence, run sixteen leagues of navigation
-westward, in one channel, and disembogue in the west bank of the
-Parana in lat. about 21°. The velocity of the current of the Rio Pardo
-is very irregular: it may be navigated downward in five or six days,
-but cannot be ascended in less than twenty or thirty, and that by
-hauling, for the force of the stream in some places is too great for
-oars.
-
-The river Parana is of great breadth and weight of water, and is
-navigated against its current up to the mouth of the fine river Tieté.
-In the first three leagues occurs the island of Manoel Homem. Five
-leagues above this island the Rio Verde falls into the Parana, by
-a mouth of forty-two fathoms, on its western bank, and at an equal
-distance above, on the opposite eastern side, the river Aguapehy
-enters, by a mouth apparently above twenty yards wide. Eight leagues
-above this river, and on the west side of the Parana, the large river
-Sucuriu has its mouth, at least fifty fathoms wide, and, after four
-leagues of navigation further, on the same side of the Parana, is
-found the mouth of the large and interesting river, the Tieté[74]. The
-distance between the rivers Tieté and Pardo, according to the windings
-of the Parana, may be estimated at thirty-five leagues; the direction
-north, inclining to the east. Passing up the Tieté, in the first three
-leagues is found the great Salto de Itapura (a great cascade) to avoid
-which, the canoes are dragged sixty fathoms over-land. A league above
-is the difficult fall of Itapura-mirim; another league upwards are the
-three falls, called Tres Irmaos, and little more than that distance
-onward, that of Itupiru, half a league long; two leagues further is the
-fall of Uaicurituba-mirim, and in the upper part of it the small river
-Sucury enters the Tieté upon its north bank. One league above it is the
-fall of Utupiba, a quarter of a league in length. The same distance
-above is the fall of Araracangua-uassu, which is passed with unloaded
-canoes. Five leagues above this is found the Araracangua-mirim; one
-league further, the Arassatuba, and at the same distance, Uaicurituba,
-from which, in the space of nine leagues, occur seven falls. Three and
-a half leagues above the last of them is that of the Escaramunca, so
-called from the abrupt windings of the river among a thousand rocks and
-stoppages. Two leagues above this is the large fall of Avanhandava,
-where the canoes are unloaded, and their cargoes carried half a mile
-over-land[75], and the canoes hauled the greatest part of the way, to
-avoid a cataract sixteen yards perpendicular. A league and a half above
-this is the fall of Avanhandava-mirim, and very near it, that of the
-Campo, from which there are fourteen leagues of clear navigation to
-those of the Camboyu-voca, and next to the Tambau-mirim and Uassu, both
-within the compass of two leagues. One league further is the fall of
-Tambitiririca; three leagues from thence, the Uamicanga, and a little
-more than two leagues upwards, the Jacuripipira enters the Tieté on
-the north side, and has a mouth fifteen fathoms broad. A league and
-a half above this is the Jacuripipira-mirim, six leagues from whence
-is the fall of Congouha, a league in length. For the space of eight
-leagues from this there are six falls, of which the last is Banharem.
-From this it is three leagues and a half to the mouth of the Paraniaba,
-thirty-eight fathoms broad: it enters the Tieté on the north; and
-the latter river from this point immediately narrows itself to forty
-fathoms wide. From the mouth of the Paraniaba there is a navigation
-of four leagues to the small fall of Ilha, and fourteen leagues more,
-with frequent windings to that of Itahy, near a populous village,
-called Jundahy. Six leagues from this is the fall of Pedrenegoa, which
-is a quarter of a league long; and half a league above it, the river
-Sorecaba, which comes from the town of the same name, in lat. 23° 31′,
-empties itself on the south into the Tieté. Near this town are several
-mountains, called Guaraceaba, some of which abound with rich oxide of
-iron, which on smelting, has proved very good. Upon them grows fine
-timber for machinery, and wood of every size, fit for reducing into
-charcoal. Numerous streams flow from them, which may be employed to
-great advantage, and their base is washed by the river Campanhes,
-near the Capivara, both of which empty themselves into the Tieté at
-a short distance. From the river Sorecaba it is only six leagues to
-Porto Felix, where all the embarkation is now made to Matto Grosso
-from S. Paulo, the distance being about twenty-three leagues from
-that city. Through this conveyance, salt, iron, ammunition, clothing
-for the troops, &c. are sent annually by Government.—Trading parties
-frequently arrive at S. Paulo from Cuiaba in the month of February, and
-return in April or May.
-
-Resuming our account of the Paraguay, it is to be observed that the
-Embotetieu enters that river five leagues below the mouth of the
-Taquari, and on the same side. It is now called Mondego, and was
-formerly navigated by the traders from S. Paulo, who entered by the
-Anhandery-uassu, the south branch of the Pardo. On the north bank of
-the Mondego, twenty leagues above its mouth, the Spaniards founded the
-city of Xerez, which the Paulistas destroyed. Ten leagues above this
-place, in the mountains that form the upper part of the Embotetieu,
-there is a tradition that there are rich mines which were discovered
-fifty years ago. One league below the mouth of the Mondego there are
-two high insulated mounts fronting each other on the Paraguay: at the
-extremity of the southern declivity of the mount on the west side, near
-the bank of the river, is the garrison of New Coimbra, founded in 1775;
-it is the last and southermost Portuguese establishment on the great
-Paraguay. Eleven leagues to the south of Coimbra, on the west side of
-the Paraguay, is the mouth of Bahia Negra, a large sheet of water of
-six leagues in extent, being five leagues long from north to south: it
-receives the waters of the wide-flooded plains and lands to the south
-and west of the mountains of Albuquerque. At this bay the Portuguese
-possessions on both banks of the Paraguay terminate. From thence the
-river continues to lat. 21°, where, on its west bank, is situated a
-hill known to the Portuguese by the name of Miguel José, crowned with
-a Spanish fort with four pieces of artillery, called Bourbon. Three
-leagues above this the little river Guirino falls into the Paraguay
-on the east side. Nine leagues to the south of the above fort, and in
-lat. 21° 22´, are other mountains, on both sides the Paraguay, which
-command this river; for the eastern side is surmounted with a lofty
-chain extending to the interior of the country, near which is the
-sugar-loaf mount; the opposite side is equally mountainous, but not
-so high or extensive; and in the middle of the river there is a high
-rocky island, which, with the mountainous banks on each side, forms two
-channels of about a musket-shot across. This, in case of war between
-the neighbouring nations, would be a post of the highest importance, as
-it forms a natural barrier, which would require little fortification
-to render it an effectual obstacle to invasion. Here terminate those
-extensive inundations, to which both banks of the Paraguay are subject:
-they commence at the mouth of the Jauru, and to this point cover
-an extent of one hundred leagues from north to south, and forty in
-breadth, at their highest floods, forming an apparent lake, which
-geographers of former days, as well as some moderns have termed the
-Xarayes. This inundation confounds the channel of the great Paraguay
-with those of its various confluents, in such a manner that, from
-twenty to thirty leagues above their regular mouths, it is possible, in
-time of the floods, to navigate across from one to the other, always
-in deep water, without ever seeing or approaching the banks of the
-Paraguay. During this wonderful inundation, the high mountains and
-elevated land which it incloses appear like so many superb islands,
-and the lower grounds form a labyrinth of lakes, bays, and pools, many
-of which remain after the floods have subsided. From the intricacy of
-these inundated plains, the navigation is rendered impracticable to
-all who do not unite experience with skill. From this position, (the
-only barrier on the Paraguay), the banks downward are in general high
-and firm, particularly the eastern or Portuguese side. In lat. 22° 5′,
-a considerable river empties itself into it, which the Spaniards, at
-the demarcation in 1753, would have to be the Corrientes, whereas the
-heads of this river are twenty leagues north of the real Corrientes
-mentioned in the treaty.
-
-Between the Paraguay and Parana there runs from north to south an
-extensive chain of mountains, which have the appellation of Amanbay;
-they terminate to the south of the river Iguatimy, forming a ridge
-running east and west, called Maracayer. From these mountains spring
-all the rivers which, from the Taquari southward, enter the Paraguay,
-and from the same chain, also, proceed many other rivers, which, taking
-a contrary direction, flow into the Parana, one of them, and the most
-southerly, being the Igoatimy, which has its mouth in lat. 23° 47′, a
-little above the seven falls, or the wonderful cataract of the Parana.
-This cataract is a most sublime spectacle, being distinguished to the
-eye of the spectator from below by the appearance of six rainbows, and
-emitting from its fall a constant cloud of vapors, which impregnates
-the air to a great distance. On the north side of the Igoatimy, twenty
-leagues from its mouth, the Portuguese had formerly the fortress of
-Bauris, which was abandoned in 1777. The Igoatimy has its sources ten
-leagues above this place, among high and rugged mountains. The river
-Xexuy enters the Paraguay on the east side in lat. 24° 11′, twenty
-leagues below the Ipane, another small river, called Ipanemirim,
-intervening.
-
-This is a summary and highly interesting description of Portuguese
-Paraguay, to the point where the territory ought (as our Tourist
-observes) to extend! and such is the situation of this great river,
-that the above-mentioned rivers which concentrate toward the interior
-of Brazil, enter it on the eastern side; not one enters it on the
-western, from the Jauru to the parallel of the Ipane. Many parts of
-the banks of all those rivers are laid under water at the time of the
-floods, and the plains are covered to a considerable depth.
-
-A river of such vast size as the Paraguay, in a temperate and
-salubrious climate, abounding with fish, bordered by extensive plains
-and high mountains, intersected by so many rivers, bays, lakes, and
-forests, must naturally have drawn many of the Indian nations to
-inhabit its banks: but, immediately after the discovery of the new
-continent, the incursions of the Paulistas and Spaniards seem to have
-dispersed and destroyed the numerous tribes: the Jesuits transplanted
-many thousands to their settlements on the Uruguay and Parana. Other
-nations fled from the avarice of the new settlers to countries
-less favored, but more secure by reason of their distance, and the
-difficulty of approach. This emigration of one nation to districts
-occupied by another, became the fruitful source of inveterate and
-sanguinary wars among them, which tended to reduce their numbers. There
-are, however, still some Indians left on the borders of the Paraguay,
-among whom the Guaycurus, or Cavalier Indians, are principally
-distinguished for valour. They occupy the lands from the river Taquari,
-extending southwards, along all the rivers that enter the Paraguay on
-the eastern side, as far as the river Ipane, and in like manner, on
-the opposite bank, from the mountains of Albuquerque downwards. They
-have made war repeatedly on the Spaniards and Portuguese, without ever
-being subdued. They are armed with lances of extraordinary length,
-bows, arrows, &c. They make long incursions on horseback into the
-neighbouring territories; they procure horses in exchange for stout
-cotton cloaks, called _Ponches_, which they manufacture. There are
-other Indian nations inhabiting these large tracts, some of whom have
-intermixed both with the Portuguese and Spaniards, there being few of
-the latter on any part of the confines without some traces of Indian
-physiognomy.
-
-From the river Xexuy, downwards, the Paraguay takes its general course
-southwards for thirty-two leagues to the city of Assumpcion, the
-capital of Paraguay, and the residence of its governor. This city is
-situated on an obtuse angle made by the eastern bank of the river; the
-population is by no means trifling, and there are some Portuguese
-among the inhabitants. The government is of vast extent, and its
-total population is said to amount to near 120,000 souls. The land is
-fertile, and contains many rich farms: its principal produce is the
-_matte_, which is exported to Tucuman and Buenos Ayres, from whence
-it is sent to various parts of the Spanish dominions, along the coast
-of Chili and Peru, being a general article of consumption among all
-ranks of people. Its other products are hides, tobacco, and sugar. From
-Buenos Ayres large boats arrive at the city of Assumpcion, after two or
-three months’ passage; the only difficulty in navigating is the great
-weight of the waters of the Paraguay, which flow with great rapidity:
-but this disadvantage is lessened by favorable winds, which blow the
-greater part of the year from the south.
-
-Six leagues below Assumpcion, on the western side of the Paraguay, the
-river Pilcomayo enters that river by its first mouth; its second is
-fourteen or sixteen leagues lower. In this space some other smaller
-rivers enter on the eastern side, and amongst them the Tibiquari, on an
-arm of which, twenty leagues south-east from Assumpcion, is Villa Rica,
-a large Spanish town, with much property in cattle on its extensive
-plains. The river Vermelho enters the west side of the Paraguay in lat.
-26° 50′: on a remote upper branch of this river is the town of Salto,
-near an accessible fall; it is an important point to the Spaniards, who
-are transporting their goods from Buenos Ayres, Tucuman, &c. to Upper
-Peru.
-
-
-_The River Parana_,
-
-or Great River, which the first discoverers considered as the
-chief, on account of its abundant waters, unites with the eastern
-side of the Paraguay in lat. 27° 25´, and their united streams take
-the name of the Rio de la Plata, which originated in the following
-circumstance:—Martim de Sousa, the first donatary of the _capitania_
-of St. Vicente, furnished Aleixo Garcio, with an adequate escort to
-explore the hitherto untrodden wilds to the west of the extensive coast
-of Brazil. This intrepid Portuguese, by the route of the Tieté, reached
-the Paraguay, which he crossed, and penetrated considerably into the
-interior, from whence he returned, it is said, loaded with silver, and
-some gold: but he halted on the Paraguay, and waited for the coming of
-his son, a youth of tender years, with some of his people, whilst he
-sent forward an account of the discovery. He was surprised by a body of
-Indians, who killed him, took his son prisoner, and carried off all his
-riches: the year following, sixty Portuguese, who were sent in search
-of Garcia, shared the same fate. The Spaniards who first settled on
-this river, seeing so much silver amongst these Indians, and supposing
-it to be the produce of the country, called the river La Plata.[76]
-
-The Parana derives its principal sources from the west side of the
-mountains of Mantiqueira, twenty-five leagues west of the town of
-Paraty.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XIX.
-
-_Account of the Capitania of Rio Grande._
-
-
-THE _capitania_ of Rio Grande is one of the most important in Brazil.
-It is of considerable extent, and is bounded by the _capitania_ of
-S. Paulo on the north, Matto Grosso on the west, and by the Spanish
-territories, between it and the Rio de la Plata, on the south.
-
-Its port is situated about 32° south; it is dangerous to enter, first
-from its being shoal water, and next, from a violent sea always
-running, and from the shifting of the sands. Notwithstanding these
-inconveniences, there is a great trade carried on from this place to
-all the ports of Brazil, in brigs and small vessels that do not draw
-above ten feet water. After passing the bar, which is long, they enter
-into an inland sea, or lagoon, of deep water, and navigate to the north
-and west to its head, where the principal river runs into it. To the
-southward is the lagoon Meni, and the neutral ground; a little to the
-southward of which is the Spanish fortress of Santa Theresa, lately put
-in repair.
-
-The principal town is defended by many forts, some of which are upon
-islets. Since it was taken from the Spaniards by General Coimbra,
-the Portuguese have much strengthened it, and now there is a very
-considerable force of cavalry, horse-artillery, and foot-soldiers; so
-that at a short notice, with the addition of the militia, a body of
-five or seven thousand men might be calculated upon.
-
-The climate is considered very fine, and the soil so productive, that
-this district may be called the granary of Brazil; the wheat grown
-here is shipped to all the ports on the coast where bread is used.
-Farming, however, is carried on in so slovenly a manner, that the grain
-is always rough, bad skinned, and extremely foul. It is packed in raw
-hides, which are sewed up like sacks; it swells, and heats frequently
-on the passage from Rio Grande to the more northerly ports; and often,
-after landing in Rio de Janeiro, it is left on the quay exposed for
-days to the rain.
-
-The vicinity of Rio Grande is extremely populous; in a circuit of
-twenty leagues, the inhabitants, including the troops, are estimated
-at 100,000. Their principal occupations are, the breeding of cattle,
-for which the immense tract of pastureland is so well calculated; the
-drying and preparing of hides, and the making of _charque_, or what is
-called, in the river Plata, jug-beef. It is prepared in the following
-manner:—After the ox is skinned, the flesh is stripped from the bones
-in as large flakes as possible, in some degree resembling sides of
-bacon: it is put into hot brine, where it remains from twelve to forty
-hours, according to the thickness. It is then taken out, drained, and
-dried in the sun, afterwards shipped to all parts of Brazil. It is a
-general article of consumption among the lower classes and negroes, and
-is not unfrequently seen at respectable tables, being in taste somewhat
-similar to hung-beef. It constitutes the general food for the sailors,
-and forms part of almost every cargo sent out from this port. It has
-found its way to the West Indies, where it is in great request, and has
-been frequently sold, during the war, at nine-pence or a shilling per
-pound. The _charque_ prepared at Rio Grande is much superior to that
-brought from the river Plata. During the time that the English troops
-were in possession of Monte Video, in consequence of an apprehension
-that the cattle might be driven away, and they be in want of supplies,
-large quantities were contracted for at S. Pedro, which arrived at
-Monte Video, though not wanted. They were afterwards shipped for the
-West India market.
-
-The quantity of hides exported from hence is almost incredible; they
-furnish many vessels with entire cargoes, which are carried to the
-northern ports, and from thence embarked for Europe. The annual
-average may be estimated at not less than three hundred thousand.
-
-Tallow forms another considerable article of commerce, which in general
-is shipped in the crude state, and not refined, as in the river Plata.
-The greater part is consumed in Brazil, and the dealers find it
-preferable to refine the article on the spot, where they manufacture it
-into candles. It is packed in waste raw-hide packages.[77]
-
-Horns and horse-hair form an inferior branch of the commerce, and are
-shipped from this port in great quantities.
-
-The above are the staple productions of Rio Grande, which give
-employment perhaps to a hundred sail of coasters, some of which make
-two or three voyages in a year, carrying thither rum, sugar, tobacco,
-cotton, rice, coarse manufactured cotton, sweet meats, &c.[78]
-
-Of European merchandise, they bring wine, olive-oil, glass, and a great
-variety of English commodities, particularly iron, (though they much
-prefer the Swedish), baizes, coatings, stout woollen cloths, Manchester
-velverets of various qualities and colors, printed cottons, calicoes,
-muslins, handkerchiefs, silk, cotton, and worsted hosiery, hats,
-flannels, &c.
-
-Sail-cloth, cordage, anchors, tar, paints, fowling pieces,
-ammunition of all sorts, hardware of every description, particularly
-slaughter-knives, some plated ware, and fancy articles. A great part of
-the goods are conveyed upon horses into the interior, where they are
-carried from house to house for sale or exchange.
-
-During the old system, so lately as within these four years, a most
-lucrative trade was here carried on with the Spaniards, who came
-in numbers, and most eagerly bought up the tobacco, and such of
-the English manufactures as could be transported on horseback, at
-great prices. Thus Rio Grande and its vicinity became very enviable
-situations, where considerable fortunes were made in a little time,
-as the goods bought were much in request, though contraband, and
-were paid for in specie. This trade, so advantageous to each party,
-is now entirely ruined through the eagerness of our speculators in
-over-stocking the markets, and selling for two what would have been
-eagerly bought for six.
-
-The neighbourhood of the capital is an unpleasant place, being
-surrounded with sand and sandhills of no inconsiderable size, formed by
-the wind blowing the sand in heaps in various directions, which become
-half indurated, and appear stratified. The excessively high winds,
-which frequently prevail, blow the sand so as to be very disagreeable,
-as it enters every part of the house.
-
-The cattle bred in this _capitania_ are very numerous, and large herds
-are brought hither from the Spanish frontiers.
-
-The large river Uruguay rises in this _capitania_, and empties itself
-into the river Plata, a little above Buenos Ayres; there are numerous
-others of less consequence, the banks of which are well stored with
-wood. Some attempts were lately made, by miners sent from Villa Rica,
-to work gold-washings. In the neighbourhood of the capital they have
-coal, a specimen of which I have seen. From the same district, a
-gentleman shewed me a substance which he could not define; on seeing
-it, I asked him if he was certain that it came from thence; he assured
-me that he was: I then told him that it was wolfram; and stated that
-this metal strongly indicated tin, of which it is frequently an
-attendant in Europe, though probably it may not be so in America. It
-was a rude lump, not rounded by friction, and weighed at least a pound.
-Of the geology and general features of the rocks of this _capitania_
-very little is known.
-
-In various parts _jaguars_, and other beasts of prey, are very common.
-Among the graniverous animals are _capivaras_ of great size, deer
-in vast herds, and _armadillos_, which afford excellent eating when
-roasted. Of birds, there are ostriches of the dark-colored species,
-which go about in flocks of great numbers. There are eagles, hawks,
-and other birds of prey, particularly a species of crow of the vulture
-kind. Cranes, storks, wild turkeys, ducks, partridges, horned plovers,
-goat-suckers, horned owls, small parrots, cardinals, humming birds, &c.
-are found in great numbers.
-
-The inhabitants are, generally speaking, athletic and robust, and
-so extremely fond of riding, as not to go the smallest distance on
-foot. They are esteemed excellent horsemen, and greatly surpass their
-neighbours in dexterity and agility, particularly in catching cattle
-with the balls and the _lazo_. But it ought to be understood that the
-Spaniards have Peons on their farms, who are more nearly allied to the
-Indians than to them, whereas the Portuguese have Creolians, bred up to
-the business, or expert negroes, who are inferior to none in this labor.
-
-It is singular to Europeans, that in this fine climate, where the
-thermometer is frequently below 40° Fahrenheit, and where are bred
-as fine cows as any in the world, and every convenience is at hand
-for dairies, neither butter nor cheese is made, except on particular
-occasions; nor is milk even for coffee to be procured at all times. It
-may probably be urged that the production of these articles would not
-answer the purpose of the farmers: but certainly it might be made to
-do so; and I hesitate not to say, that a hundred cows, kept for dairy
-purposes, would yield to any man capable of rearing, training, and
-managing them, a greater profit than any other part of husbandry. This
-colony might easily be made to supply the neighbouring districts, and
-even the whole of Brazil, with these articles.
-
-A number of years ago some hemp was grown here by order of Government:
-it proved excellent, but was abandoned because it was troublesome to
-dress, and probably did not yield sufficient profit, owing to the high
-price of labor.
-
-In some places grapes are very good, and probably wine will soon be
-made from them, as the restraint laid by the mother-country upon her
-colonies is now removed.
-
-Troops have been for a considerable time pouring into Rio Grande, the
-result was, Monte Video taken possession of by the Portuguese. This
-so enraged Artigas, a Spanish officer and great land owner, that he
-rallied the inhabitants of the country, and, being joined by the Peons
-and negroes, made war against the new possessors, (from whom he had
-probably received indignities and injury), issuing orders for reprisals
-at sea, and carrying on a desolating warfare. But this was not all—his
-people, under no discipline, plundered the good _Fazendistas_, and
-robbed and murdered private individuals; thus changing the scene from
-peace, happiness, and contentment, to anarchy, confusion, rapine,
-plunder, and murder.
-
-A great many rivers run into Rio Grande, which has more the appearance
-of a vast lake or inland sea than a river. On the banks of these
-rivers we find many settlers enjoying most beautiful situations, and
-lands to a great extent. Here may be said to be the finest situations
-for growing wheat; falls of water for mills, and excellent water
-conveyance to ships wanting cargoes, who might with the greatest
-facility load and transport it all over Brazil, the Cape, Isle of
-France, &c. An active people would soon enjoy a trade of their own
-instead of importing flour from the United States, which is even now
-the case.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XX.
-
-_General Observations on the Trade from England to Brazil._
-
-
-HAVING, in a preceding part of this work, stated the importance of Rio
-de Janeiro as a port which, from its locality, appears destined by
-nature to become the metropolis of a vast empire, and the centre of an
-extensive commerce, it may not be improper in this place to treat more
-at large on this interesting subject.
-
-The ships best calculated for trade from England are those which carry
-about four hundred tons, and sail well: it is particularly necessary
-that they should have the latter quality; for, if they have not, the
-voyage from thence to England is frequently rendered very tedious
-by their being driven too far to the westward by the north-east
-trade-wind. Owing to this circumstance, it is not uncommon for a
-packet, or fast-sailing ship, to make a passage from the coast of
-Brazil to England in five or six weeks, when a heavy-sailing vessel is
-double that time in arriving at her destination. The best season for
-sailing from England, and that which affords the greatest probability
-of making a short passage, is the month of February or March, because
-then the north-east winds prevail. I should advise crossing the line in
-not less than 22°, nor more than 25° west longitude, if the destination
-be the Plata or Rio de Janeiro, as I have twice experienced very long
-calms in crossing the line between 19° and 20°. Ships bound to Bahia,
-Pernambuco, and ports more northerly, will of course cross the line
-more to the westward, as they will have nothing to fear: but the
-south-west trade-wind would generally cause ships going farther south
-to fall in with the land too soon. Should that be the case, I would
-advise them, if they make the land to the north of the Abrolhos[79],
-to keep in-shore, as the land-breeze is frequently from the northward
-until mid-day. The ports on this coast are in general good and secure,
-nevertheless it is highly desirable to be provided with good anchors
-and cables, particularly in the Rio de la Plata. In the Portuguese
-territories the port-charges are not so expensive as formerly; a dollar
-per day is exacted for anchorage, which forms the principal charge. I
-particularly recommend that all homeward-bound ships should lay in a
-sufficiency of necessary stores, especially of water, so as to make the
-passage without being obliged to go into the Western Isles, as there
-the port-charges and attendant expenses are very exorbitant, though the
-only articles wanted may be a few casks of water, and a hundred weight
-or two of bread.
-
-Ships are loaded in Rio de Janeiro, and other ports of Brazil, as well
-as in the Plata, by lighters, which are very expensive, and difficult
-to be procured when many ships are receiving their cargoes; good boats
-are extremely useful and necessary.
-
-When a vessel enters any of the ports, the health-boat and custom-boat
-make a visit before she anchors, and their report is immediately
-made; after which, proper officers, called _guardas_, are sent on
-board. These men in general are not very liberally provided for; they
-are extremely civil and accommodating, and ought to be treated with
-respect. Since the establishment of the treaty of commerce between this
-government and that of Brazil the contraband trade has been almost done
-away; for the duties are now much reduced, and the accommodation which
-the judge and subordinate officers of the custom-house are disposed to
-allow, is such, as to render that nefarious practice unnecessary.
-
-It may not be improper in this place to describe the consequences
-produced in Rio de Janeiro by the excessive commercial speculations
-into which our merchants entered, immediately after the emigration of
-the Court of Portugal, and which could only be equalled by those which
-followed our expeditions to the Rio de la Plata.
-
-Owing to the incredible competition or struggle among our merchants,
-who should send most ships and cargoes to a country, whose civilized
-population, exclusive of slaves, did not exceed eight hundred thousand
-souls, (one-third, at least, of whom may be said to make use only of
-what their land produces), it is natural to suppose that the market
-would be almost instantly overstocked. So great and so unexpected was
-the influx of English manufactures into Rio de Janeiro, within a few
-days after the arrival of the Prince, that the rent of houses to put
-them into became enormously dear. The bay was covered with ships,
-and the custom-house soon overflowed with goods: even salt, casks of
-ironmongery, and nails, salt-fish, hogsheads of cheese, hats, together
-with an immense quantity of crates and hogsheads of earthen and glass
-ware, cordage, bottled and barrelled porter, paints, gums, resin,
-tar, &c. were exposed, not only to the sun and rain, but general
-depredation. The inhabitants of Rio de Janeiro, and more particularly
-some of the Creolians and strangers from the interior, thought that
-these goods were placed there for their benefit, and extolled the
-goodness and generosity of the English, who strewed the beach to
-a great extent with articles for which their own countrymen had
-heretofore charged them such high prices! It is true that the gentlemen
-entrusted with these valuable consignments did apply for sentinels
-to be placed to guard the articles thus exposed, and their request
-was immediately complied with. The result was such as might easily
-have been anticipated from such watchmen, many of whom did not fail
-to profit largely by the appointment. In the course of some weeks the
-beach began to assume a less crowded appearance; some few of the goods
-were taken to the residences of their owners, others were removed; but
-to what place, or by whom, there was no way of ascertaining; and a
-very great proportion was sold at the custom-house _for the benefit of
-the underwriters_. This stratagem, then so frequently practised, (and
-certainly deserving of the severest reprehension), afterwards operated
-as a very serious injury to the regular sale of articles; for, as the
-market was so overstocked, scarcely any one would offer money for
-goods, except at the custom-house sales. As the depreciation continued,
-numberless packages were there exposed for sale, in part damaged, or
-apparently so. Indeed, little more than the mark of a cord on the
-outside of a single article, or a corner discolored, in a package
-however large, was a sufficient pretext for presuming and pronouncing
-the whole to be damaged. Great quantities of goods were brought to the
-hammer in the custom-house warehouses, under every disadvantage; thus
-the owners recovered the amount insured for, and the insurers lost the
-difference between that sum and the price they were sold at, also the
-attendant expenses. Many of the underwriters will, it is to be feared,
-retain a lasting remembrance of the sales which took place at Rio de
-Janeiro, and other parts of South America, _for their benefit_.
-
-To the serious losses thus occasioned by an overstocked market, and
-by the sacrifice of goods at whatever price could be obtained, may be
-added another, which originated in the ignorance of many persons who
-sent out articles to a considerable amount not at all suited to the
-country; one speculator, of wonderful foresight, sent large invoices
-of various sorts of stays for ladies who never heard of such armour;
-another sent skates, for the use of a people who are totally uninformed
-that water can become ice; a third sent out a considerable assortment
-of the most elegant coffin-furniture, not knowing that coffins are
-never used by the Brazilians, or in the Plata. To these absurd
-speculations may be added iron-stoves and fire-irons, candles, and
-numerous others, particularly in articles of taste: elegant services
-of cut glass were little appreciated by men accustomed to drink out
-of a horn or a cocoa-nut-shell; and brilliant chandeliers were still
-less valued in a country where only lamps that afforded a gloomy light,
-were used. Superfine woollen cloths were equally ill-suited to the
-market; no one thought them sufficiently strong. An immense quantity
-of high-priced saddles, and thousands of whips[80], were sent out to
-a people as incapable of adopting them as they were of knowing their
-convenience. They were astonished to see Englishmen ride on such
-saddles; nor could they imagine any thing more insecure. Of the bridles
-scarcely any use could be made, as the bit was not calculated to keep
-the horse or mule in subordination: these articles were of course
-sacrificed. Great quantities of the nails and ironmongery were useless,
-as they were not calculated for the general purposes of the people.
-Large cargoes of Manchester goods were sent; and, in a few months, more
-arrived than had been consumed in the course of twenty years preceding.
-No discrimination was used in the assortment of these articles, with
-respect either to quantity or fineness, so that common prints were
-disposed of at less than a shilling a yard, and frequently in barter.
-Fish from Newfoundland met with a similar fate; also porter, large
-quantities of which, in barrels, arrived among a people, of whom a few
-only had tasted that article as a luxury. How the shippers in London,
-and other British ports, could imagine that porter, would at once
-become a general beverage, it is difficult to conceive, especially
-when sent in barrels. These cargoes, being unsaleable, were of course
-warehoused, and of course spoiled. Newfoundland fish, that was
-generally sold at from twelve to twenty dollars _per quintal_, was now
-unsaleable at four, and in many instances did not pay warehouse-room.
-Earthenware was perhaps rather more favorably received than many of the
-former articles, for plates, &c. soon came into general use. Having
-enumerated various commodities which suffered a general depreciation,
-it may be sufficient to add that many invoices of fancy goods, and such
-as do not constitute a staple trade, were sold at from sixty to seventy
-_per cent._ under costs and charges, and others were totally lost. To
-enter more into detail would be unnecessary: it is hoped that the trade
-will in time find its regular course, and that the adventurers will
-derive from it some compensation for their former losses, though no
-possible change can repair the total ruin which numbers have incurred.
-Experience will now have fully shown the fallacy of those golden hopes
-which some persons conceived from the reputed wealth of South America,
-and we shall no longer hear of those absurdities which characterised
-the first commercial speculations to the river Plata. What must have
-been the delusions of those traders who sent out tools, formed with a
-hatchet on one side and a hammer on the other, for the conveniency of
-breaking the rocks, and cutting the precious metals from them, as if
-they imagined that a man had only to go into the mountains, and cut out
-as much gold as would pay for the articles he wanted!
-
-Other evils resulted from these ill-judged and excessive speculations
-to South America, which might naturally have been anticipated. The
-first was, that the produce was bought up with such avidity that many
-articles were soon double their ordinary value, and continued to rise
-as our manufactures lowered. But this was not all: the purchasers
-suffered equally from their ignorance of the quality of the articles,
-as from their eagerness in purchasing them. For instance; any kind
-of sebaceous matter was greedily bought for tallow; and numberless
-hides, spoiled in the drying and eaten by the grub, met with ready
-sale. Little attention was paid to the state they were in; and thus it
-frequently happened that lots and cargoes of those articles, instead of
-reimbursing the adventurer to whom they were consigned, scarcely paid
-freight and charge. This was also the case with coffee and other staple
-articles. Many gentlemen, more knowing than others, sent home lots of
-curious wood, and even entered into the illicit trade of shipping the
-dye-wood, which generally proved very disadvantageous, as the wood of
-that species grown in the vicinity of Rio de Janeiro is very inferior
-in quality to that of Pernambuco, from whence that trade is carried
-on for account of the Crown. The folly of speculation did not stop
-here: precious stones appeared to offer the most abundant source of
-riches; the general calculation was made upon the price at which they
-sold in London: but every trader bought them, more or less, at the
-price at which they were offered; invoices of goods were bartered for
-some, which in London would sell for, comparatively, a trifle, as they
-were taken without discrimination as to quality or perfection; green
-tourmalines were sold for emeralds, crystals for topazes, and both
-common stones and glass have been bought as diamonds to a considerable
-amount. Gold and diamonds were well known to be produced in Brazil;
-and their being by law contraband, was a sufficient temptation to
-eager speculators who had never before seen either in their native
-state. False diamonds were weighed with scrupulousness, and bought
-with avidity, to sell by the rules stated by Jefferies. Gold-dust,
-as it is commonly called, appeared in no inconsiderable quantity,
-and, after being weighed with equal exactness, was bought or bartered
-for. But previous to this many samples underwent the following easy
-and ingenious process:—The brass pans purchased at the stores were
-filed, and mixed with the gold in the proportion of from ten to twenty
-_per cent._ according to the opinion which the seller formed of the
-sagacity of the person with whom he had to deal: and thus, by a simple
-contrivance, some of our countrymen re-purchased at three or four
-guineas per ounce the very article which they had before sold at 2s.
-6d. per pound!!!
-
-In enumerating the losses occasioned by the depreciation of goods, I
-have omitted to notice the heavy expenses upon them after the purchase,
-as packing, shipping, convoy-duty, freight, insurance, commission, and
-other incidental charges. Then suppose any staple article to be bought;
-there are the expenses of commission for buying of warehouse-room,
-shipping and the attendant fees, freight, and insurance; and, on the
-arrival of the merchandize in England, there are duties, dockage,
-warehouse-room, and many other items which leave no small interest in
-the hands of those who do the business.
-
-It is scarcely possible to imagine, much less to describe, the
-disappointment which prevailed among the young supercargoes a few
-months after their arrival in South America, particularly among those
-who had orders not to sell the goods entrusted to them lower than the
-prices specified in their invoices.
-
-They could scarcely awaken themselves from the chimerical delusion
-that their mind was filled with; they disbelieved every thing,
-and continued to write to their employers to send out more goods,
-thinking the riches they had so fondly anticipated must yet roll
-down in torrents from the interior. The heart-breaking letters of
-those who sent them out, expressing the most poignant distress for
-want of remittances, at length awakened them, and their sanguine
-expectations of incalculable riches, heaps of dollars, or bars of
-gold, began to vanish. Many of the inhabitants came to look at their
-stores, but few offered to buy; and, incredible as it may appear, yet
-it is true, that when goods were offered to them at half the original
-cost, they invariably exclaimed, “Very dear.” Scenes of this kind I
-have repeatedly witnessed, and could scarcely suppress my indignation
-at seeing goods thus depreciated, which a few months before were so
-eagerly sought after, and bought at ten times the amount. Gentlemen
-consignees so situated were at a loss how to act: the duties, rents,
-charges, and other expenses were high, and must peremptorily be paid;
-their only resource was to open a shop or room for the purpose of
-selling their goods by retail, as the inhabitants wanted them.
-
-These young men most unfortunately had calculated upon doing business
-only in the large way, similar to our most opulent mercantile
-establishments: on their arrival they took the best houses, set apart
-their hours for morning rides and attending to business, for going to
-their country seats[81], and dinner-parties. The idea of vending by
-retail was a bitter which destroyed all their pleasing anticipations of
-doing business in style: they thought themselves merchants, expecting
-to sell at any price they pleased to ask, and to buy at what they
-thought proper to offer! and could not stoop to be shopkeepers; many
-of them, rather than yield to that, sent goods to auctions, and sold
-them at what they would fetch, thus rendering a ruinous account to
-their employers. Others with more prudence accommodated themselves to
-circumstances, and were not offended at being asked for a pair of boots
-or a hat. These persons reaped all the advantage of the trade, as they
-got their price by selling to those whose necessities prompted them to
-purchase, and were ever ready to sell by the package when opportunity
-offered. Many of these young men, it is true, have been deservedly much
-blamed by the consignors, who have expressed great dissatisfaction
-at their extravagant mode of living, and at their proceedings, both
-in the disposal of the property sent to them, and in the purchase of
-merchandize to return; these complaints were justly founded, though
-something may be said in extenuation of the former, not only on the
-ground of their want of knowledge, but the unexampled situation of
-affairs; for a respectable and useful clerk, however capable of copying
-an invoice, or attending his employer’s counting-house, must make a
-very poor figure so situated, being very incapable of ascertaining or
-stating the merits of manufactured goods, and still less qualified to
-purchase the staple articles and general produce of the country. These
-severe and grievous disadvantages frequently gave the Brazilians the
-double advantage of buying below the market-price, and of selling above
-it.
-
-From these and many other unfortunate and disastrous circumstances,
-the trade could not fail to become gradually worse and worse; hence it
-is very natural to imagine that necessitous consignors, eager to see
-the riches which they had so long and so vainly anticipated, became
-more pressing for remittances. One disappointment succeeded another;
-remonstrances were made; and powers of attorney were at length sent
-out almost by cargoes; property was removed from one consignee to
-another, at great expense, but to no purpose. At home the greatest
-confusion prevailed for want of money, until that lamentable and
-unfortunate epoch, when the columns of the Gazette were filled with the
-names of those very respectable merchants, who, before those ruinous
-speculations, were in a state of affluence. Many of those to whom
-immense sums were entrusted, have not even yet returned to their native
-country.
-
-Misunderstandings frequently arose between the English and the
-Portuguese, either in making contracts, or in not complying with them;
-and they were continually prosecuting each other for injuries which
-both parties professed to have sustained. These litigations might have
-terminated very expensively, if not otherwise seriously, had not the
-wise measures of the _Juiz Conservador_ prevented the perplexities of
-legal proceedings. The appeals of the English were always heard; they
-were strangers whom His Royal Highness protected, and they ever found
-in the Conde de Linhares a firm and powerful friend.
-
-In the Plata, the monied men bought very largely of the cargoes which
-first arrived, and were afterwards considerable losers by the overflow
-which took place, when men of less capital bought for ten thousand
-dollars, what a few weeks before sold for fifteen or twenty. In Rio de
-Janeiro the case was somewhat different; for the monied men thought the
-English manufactures inexhaustible, and therefore kept back their gold,
-leaving the trade principally to men of a secondary class, who bought
-with great caution, and sold very promptly, for fear of a further
-depreciation.
-
-Having stated the ruinous consequences of sending out goods not
-saleable, it may be proper to point out the articles in general
-consumption, though even these may be sold at great loss, if the
-markets be overstocked, for trade must depend on the wants and
-necessities of the consumer. If an individual possesses seven or eight
-hats, as many coats, &c. it is unreasonable to suppose that he can want
-more, though he may be tempted to purchase, if offered at very reduced
-prices: but even that must have an end, and a trade must soon expire
-where one party is constantly the loser. This has been too generally
-the result of our late speculations in South America, into which people
-hurried without calculation or foresight.
-
-Iron and steel are articles for which there is a general and constant
-demand. The smiths prefer Swedish iron, as they have been always
-accustomed to it, and do not know how to heat and work the English. The
-next article to be mentioned is salt, in which the Brazilians are by no
-means nice. It is made and loaded at one or two places on the coast,
-but that which is most esteemed comes from the Cape de Verde islands;
-that brought from Liverpool is generally used in the sea-ports. Common
-woollens, baizes, and some stout fine cloths, particularly blue and
-black, are generally worn; also kerseymeres. Cotton goods of almost
-every description, especially if low priced, meet with ready sale,
-as do German linens. Hats of all sorts, (particularly dress-hats),
-and boots and shoes of English manufacture, have of late been sold
-in great quantities; the leather is much preferable to that made in
-Brazil. Common and finer earthenware, and glass; some sorts of fine
-and coarse hardware, and some plated goods, as candles now begin to be
-used instead of lamps. Bottled porter, Cheshire cheese, butter, cheap
-furniture, tin-plate, brass, lead in various shapes, shot of all sizes,
-gunpowder, drugs, some philosophical instruments, books, low-priced
-paper, watches, telescopes, salt provisions, as hams, tongues, and
-barrelled pork, low-priced saddlery, and most of all, India and other
-goods fit for the African coast. Marble mortars, mirrors, and many
-fancy articles of less note. Silk and cotton hosiery, fashionable
-dresses for ladies, particularly fine stockings and shoes.
-
-It is to be observed that the mother-country still continues to send
-oil, wine, brandy, linens, cottons, some silks, and a variety of
-articles of inferior consequence. India goods, consisting chiefly
-of cottons, are sent from the Malabar coast, and China goods are in
-great plenty. From North America are imported flour, salt provisions,
-turpentine, tar, staves, household furniture, &c.
-
-Naval stores, clothing for sailors, arms, &c. may be said to be
-generally in demand.
-
-The staple articles of trade from Brazil and the river Plate which are
-most in demand in this country, when its markets are not overstocked,
-are cotton, sugar, coffee, hides, tallow of good quality, horns, horse
-and cow hair, fur-skins, and feathers. Brazil is well calculated for
-growing sugar, having every convenience of situation, and all the
-materials requisite for machinery. To the above may be added some
-peculiar woods; that beautiful species, called _jacarandá_, in England
-denominated rose-wood, is generally in demand. I do not say any thing
-of indigo, as it is of inferior quality. Rice is cultivated to great
-extent. Tobacco, it is to be hoped, will be better cured, to suit the
-English market; for no where can a soil and climate be found more
-favorable to the production of that plant than in Brazil.
-
-In offering, by way of conclusion, a more detailed account of the
-resources of this rich and extensive country, I shall for obvious
-reasons avoid all speculation on the political changes now operating in
-the mother country, as well as in her colonies, and direct my remarks
-solely to commercial matters. According to recent estimates the annual
-value of British goods imported into Brazil exceeds three millions
-sterling, one half of which may be assigned to Rio de Janeiro, from
-whence the returns are made generally in produce, consisting of gold,
-diamonds, and precious stones, sugars, cottons, hides, tobacco, tallow,
-wax, indigo, woods, and many other articles.
-
-The commerce of Bahia ranks next in importance to that of Rio, and a
-considerable proportion of it is conducted by English merchants. The
-returns are principally made in produce, and this circumstance secures
-to the native cultivator an eminent advantage over the foreign trader.
-The main articles of produce are sugar, cotton, and tobacco. The annual
-exports of the cotton, may be stated at from 30,000 to 36,000 bags.
-Its quality varies according to the district in which it is produced;
-that which is brought hither from the southern parts of the province
-of Pernambuco, is called _foras_, in contradistinction with the cotton
-of Bahia, which is denominated _dentros_. The former is considered of
-superior staple, being stronger and more silky, but it seldom arrives
-in a clean state, or free from seeds and other substances negligently
-left by the planters. The _dentros_, though neither so strong nor so
-silky as the _foras_, are generally much better dressed, and hence they
-are considered of almost equal value. Much of this cotton is grown in
-the extensive plantations near Villa Nova do Principe. Eight ninths of
-the cotton shipped at Bahia is exported to England, and principally to
-the port of Liverpool.
-
-The quantity of sugar annually exported from hence is very
-considerable, and in some years has exceeded a million of
-_arrobas_[82]. The growth of tobacco varies according to the season;
-an average crop has been estimated at 600,000 _arrobas_. One third,
-and frequently one half of a crop is rejected as unfit for shipment to
-Europe. The refuse is sent to the Portuguese possessions in Africa,
-but the demand for it has greatly diminished since the abolition of
-the slave trade in that continent, north of the equator, that being
-the quarter in which it was principally consumed. A great quantity is
-exported to the Plata, and from thence is sent to various parts of the
-interior.
-
-Upwards of 150 sail of vessels have been dispatched from hence in the
-course of one year, of which number one third was destined for the
-ports of the mother country, and little short of one third for those
-of Great Britain; besides the staple articles of cotton, sugar, and
-tobacco, the exports include large quantities of hides, molasses, rum,
-and woods. Many large and most excellent ships have been built at this
-place, the timber of which is of a superior quality.
-
-Pernambuco is celebrated for producing the best cotton in Brazil, and
-it owes this distinction to the careful scrutiny which that article
-undergoes. After inspection it is divided into three qualities; the
-second quality is allowed to pass with the first, and the purchaser
-receives for it an allowance of 500 _reas per arroba_ from the planter;
-the third quality is wholly rejected[83]. The bags are then weighed,
-and the export duty charged on them. About eighty thousand bags are
-annually exported, of which sixty thousand may be considered as
-destined for Great Britain, and the residue principally to Lisbon. The
-annual export of sugar has been estimated at 25,000 cases, of which
-nearly one half goes to England, and the rest to the mother country.
-This product is considerably on the increase.
-
-The principal exports from Maranham are cotton, rice, hides, and Indian
-corn. Its cotton ranks next in quality to that of Pernambuco, and
-obtains a price very little inferior. The quantity annually exported
-has been estimated at sixty thousand bags, of which more than three
-fourths may be considered as destined for the English market. The
-annual export of rice exceeds three hundred thousand _arrobas_. It is
-calculated that the trade of this port employs yearly upwards of one
-hundred sail, of which one half are destined for England. Sugar is
-beginning to form a considerable article of commerce at this port, many
-extensive plantations having been made. Sweetmeats and confectionery
-are cured here, and at the above mentioned places in great perfection,
-and are exported in quantities almost beyond credibility.
-
-The foreign commerce of Para may be considered still in its infancy,
-as its principal city, Belem, is accessible only to vessels of small
-burthen. Its cottons are considered little inferior to those of Bahia.
-Its other exports consist of excellent cocoa, coffee, rice, in great
-quantities, sarsaparilla, raw and tanned hides, gums, various drugs,
-some sugar, molasses, timber, and curious woods. The vast territories
-of this _capitania_ are but little known, and very thinly peopled.
-
-In terminating the present work, the author cannot but express his
-earnest hope, that the new order of things now instituted in the
-mother country may tend to the permanent welfare of Brazil, to the
-developement of its rich and various resources, to the intellectual,
-moral, and social improvement of its people, to the extension of their
-commerce, and to the continuance of that connection with Great Britain,
-which has hitherto contributed, and may henceforth more largely
-contribute, to the prosperity of both nations.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-IN page 368 of this work, I have stated, that it was my intention to
-enquire into, and to make some observations on the present regulations
-relative to diamonds. These beautiful gems have been found in such
-abundance in Brazil, as to supply not only Europe, but Asia; as those
-of India are become extremely scarce, diamonds from Brazil have been
-often sent thither, and have usurped their name. The question we are
-at present about to examine is, how far it would be consistent with
-the interest of the Portuguese Government to permit the searching
-for diamonds, in the same way as for gold, under peculiar laws. The
-monopoly is ineffectual, because the diamonds are found in so many
-parts widely distant from each other, that it is impossible to prevent
-the searching for them. The attempt to preserve grounds known to
-contain these riches, by forming a _distacamento_, has not produced
-any good effect; and it is by no means improbable, that the best of
-these (supposed) preserved lands are already worked, therefore the
-soldiers are guarding the casket after the jewels have been taken away.
-How many places might be mentioned (out of the district of Cerro do
-Frio), where troops of negroes daily work! It has been stated, that
-government probably receive little more than a moiety of the gems
-found at their own expense; if so, it is certainly time to abandon
-a trade so exposed, or to change the system altogether. Is it the
-interest of Brazil to keep her enterprizing subjects in continual
-torture and fear respecting these precious gifts, which the bounteous
-hand of Providence has placed there? But indeed as his majesty’s
-subjects increase and become more enlightened, this severe monopoly
-will destroy itself and soon begin to give way to a wise and political
-government, which will prefer a rich and powerful population in the
-very heart of the colony to a few individuals. How happens it, that
-diamonds, in the hands of private persons, meet a more ready sale than
-those of government? Because they are better stones, and are offered
-in quantities more convenient for the purchasers: next, because they
-can be sold cheaper since they cost less. If diamonds were subject to
-pay a fifth, government would have such power as to enable them to
-command the market; and if they should become cheaper in Europe, the
-demand for them would become more general, therefore their price would
-not be likely to fall in Brazil; and, even if it did, is it not the
-blindest policy for the court to put such a yoke round the neck of
-her valuable subjects, who venture their lives in trackless deserts
-searching for mines, and exposing themselves to every danger? Would it
-have been possible for Portugal to colonize Brazil if there had been
-no gold mines to attract adventurers? To deny men the treasures with
-which nature has enriched the country, is to oppose one great check
-to its population; for the example of one adventurer becoming rich,
-is the means of inducing hundreds to follow him. Under the present
-system, there is so great a struggle between the temptation of becoming
-suddenly rich, and the fear of being ruined by detection, that when a
-man finds a diamond by accident, he knows not whether to appropriate
-it, or to surrender it to the government; even in the latter case,
-he has little prospect of reward, and runs the risk of being accused
-as a smuggler. Instances have not been uncommon of men having found
-diamonds, who have thrown them away[84] rather than involve themselves
-and their families in ruin, either by keeping them, or delivering them
-to government.
-
-It has before been shewn, that Government are the greatest gainers by
-the diamonds which are sold clandestinely; and if individuals were
-allowed to trade in them, the state and the public would undoubtedly be
-benefited by it. For it is certain, that a Brazilian farmer or miner
-would prefer necessaries, such as iron utensils, clothing, &c. which
-add to his comforts and conveniences of life, to articles of ideal
-value, which in reality have come into his hands probably without
-difficulty or expense. Thus the peasantry would draw valuable produce
-from other countries in exchange for what cost them comparatively
-nothing, and, by enriching themselves, would augment the revenues of
-the state.
-
-Is it not possible to make the diamonds liable to pay a fifth, either
-in kind or in value? In this case it is probable that there would be
-less smuggling: and that practice might be still more restrained, by
-something like the following regulation: every person finding diamonds
-should be obliged to register them; also, to take out a certificate
-authorising him to dispose of them in whatever manner he thinks proper.
-It would certainly add to their importance, to make them subject to a
-trivial duty[85], on being lawfully transferred from the buyer to the
-seller, by which means they would come into immediate circulation
-and represent real property: thus, after yielding a very small profit
-to each person through whose hands they passed, they would finally be
-exported; and, as long as diamonds continued an article of distinction,
-ornament, and elegance, Brazil would lay under tribute every court in
-the civilized world.
-
-The Dutch were artful enough to poison the ears of the ministers of
-Portugal against the proposal of making diamonds a free trade, and
-assisted in the persecutions against those unfortunate sufferers who
-were detected in possessing them. But surely that narrow-minded and
-self-interested policy is now done away with; nor would it be credited
-in modern history, that the government of Brazil, for a trivial,
-pecuniary profit, should be the dupes of their own bank and a few
-interested strangers.
-
-
-_View of the State of Society among the Middling Classes, employed in
-Mining and Agriculture._
-
-We are naturally led to imagine, that, in a country where mines of
-gold and diamonds are found, the riches of the inhabitants must be
-immense, and their condition most enviable; the Portuguese themselves,
-who reside in the mining districts, encourage this supposition; and
-whenever they go to Rio de Janeiro, do not fail to make all possible
-show and parade. But let us view them in the centre of their wealth;
-and as a fair criterion of the middling classes of society, let us
-select a man possessing a property of fifty or sixty negroes, with
-_datas_ of gold mines, and the necessary utensils for working them. The
-negroes alone are worth, at the low valuation of 100 _milreis_, a sum
-equal to £1,200, or £1,500 sterling; the _datas_ and utensils, though
-of value, need not be taken into the account. Suppose this man to be
-married, and to have a family: What is the state of their domestic
-concerns, their general way of life? May I be allowed to describe
-them in the language which truth dictates, without exaggeration or
-extenuation? Their dwelling scarcely merits the name of a house; it is
-the most wretched hovel that imagination can describe, consisting of
-a few apartments built up to each other without regularity; the walls
-wicker-work, filled up with mud; a hole left for a frame serves as a
-window, or a miserable door answers that purpose. The cracks in the
-mud are rarely filled up; and in very few instances only have I seen a
-house repaired. The floors are of clay, moist in itself, and rendered
-more disagreeable by the filth of its inhabitants, with whom the pigs
-not unfrequently dispute the right of possession. Some _ranchos_, it
-is true, are built upon piles; and underneath are the stables, &c.;
-these are certainly a little superior to the former. They are built so
-from necessity, where the ground is uneven or swampy; but it may be
-easily conceived, that the disagreeable effects produced by want of
-cleanliness, must in these instances be increased by the effluvia from
-the animals underneath, which I have frequently found intolerable.
-
-The furniture of the house is such as might be expected from the
-description above given. The beds are very coarse cotton cases, filled
-with dry grass, or the leaves of Indian corn. There are seldom more
-than two in a house; for the servants generally sleep upon mats, or
-dried hides laid on the floor. The furniture consists of one or two
-chairs, a few stools and benches, one table, or perhaps two, a few
-coffee-cups and a coffee-pot of silver; a silver drinking cup, and, in
-some instances, a silver wash-hand basin, which, when strangers are
-present, is handed round, and forms a striking contrast to the rest of
-the utensils.
-
-The general diet of the family consists of the same articles which have
-already been particularized in treating of S. Paulo. The only beverage
-is water; and nothing can be more frugal than the whole economy of
-the table. So intent is the owner on employing his slaves solely in
-employments directly lucrative, that the garden, on which almost the
-entire subsistence of the family depends, is kept in the most miserable
-disorder.
-
-In the article of dress, they do not appear more extravagant than in
-that of food. The children are generally naked; the youths go without
-shoes, in an old jacket, and cotton trowsers; the men in an old capote
-or mantle wrapped around them, and wooden clogs, except when they go
-from home; and, on those occasions, they appear in all their splendor,
-forming as great a contrast to their domestic attire, as the gaudy
-butterfly does to the chrysalis from which it springs.
-
-It might be expected, that however penuriously the general concerns
-of the family were conducted, at least some degree of attention and
-expense would be bestowed on the dress of the females; for the test of
-civilization among all nations is the regard paid to the fair sex, on
-whom the happiness of domestic life depends. Yet the general poverty
-and meanness of their attire is such, that they reluctantly appear
-before any one, except the individuals of their own family.
-
-In short, in all those departments of domestic economy, which to the
-middle classes of other civilized nations are objects of expense, the
-Brazilians exercise the most rigid parsimony. At first, I was inclined
-to attribute this disposition to a love of money, which prompted them
-to avoid all extravagance; but, on closer observation, I was surprised
-to find that it originated in necessity. They generally take credit for
-the few articles they have to purchase, and sometimes find it difficult
-to maintain their negroes. If they purchase a mule, it is to be paid
-for at the end of one or two years, and, of course, at double its
-ordinary price.
-
-In such a family as that above described, the sons, as might be
-expected, are not brought up to industry; they are merely taught to
-read and write; rarely do they attend to the mining department; they
-learn no trade, nor are they instructed in any useful employment:
-perhaps an ensign or a lieutenant of militia, would think it a disgrace
-to put his son apprentice to a mechanic. Suppose the father of this
-family to die when the sons have just attained the age of puberty.
-They are now for the first time obliged to think of providing for
-themselves. With little knowledge of the world, ill educated, and poor,
-they have learned to think all occupations servile, and their own is
-generally hateful to them. If they agree not to divide the negroes, it
-often happens that they run into debt, and continue in wretchedness; if
-they divide them, each takes his course, and adventures for himself,
-and in a short time, they are generally obliged to part with their
-slaves, and exist in indigence. Every useful pursuit and every comfort
-is neglected for the sake of seeking hidden treasures which very rarely
-are found, and which when found are as rarely employed to advantage,
-but rather serve to increase the wants of the owners.
-
-Few, very few of the numerous class of miners from which the above
-instance is selected are rich, few are even comfortable; how wretched
-then must be the state of those who possess only eight or ten negroes,
-or whose property does not exceed three or four hundred pounds.
-
-Thus situated in one of the finest climates in the world, with rich
-lands full of the finest timber, abounding in rivulets and water-falls
-in every direction, containing, besides precious minerals, iron ores,
-and almost every other useful product, the inhabitants of Brazil,
-though secured from absolute want, remain in indigence. It is true, the
-miner procures his gold by great labor, but this need not preclude him
-from improving his domestic condition. Were his hovel converted into a
-house, his slaves better fed and lodged, and his family better provided
-for, his whole affairs would receive a new impulse, and every part of
-his property would become doubly productive.
-
-
-_Negroes employed as Messengers._
-
-One description of men whom I have omitted to mention before, are
-negroes employed as messengers by the various chiefs in the Capitania
-of Minas Geraes. The men selected for this employment are the most
-trusty and able-bodied that can be found. Their letters are locked up
-in a leathern bag, which they buckle round them, and never take off
-until they deliver its contents. They carry a gun and ammunition with
-them to defend themselves, as well as to provide themselves with food.
-Wherever they halt, they are sure of a kind and friendly reception,
-for nothing can exceed the cordiality with which the negroes welcome
-each other. These men are trusted on very important missions, and are
-despatched to every part of the Capitania. On urgent occasions, some
-of them have performed journeys with astonishing celerity. I was most
-credibly informed, that one of them had been known to travel seven
-hundred miles on a mountainous road in sixteen days, though that
-distance usually occupies twenty or twenty-one days. The men are
-generally tall, and of spare habit; they are accustomed to light food
-and long abstinence.
-
-
-_Diseases peculiar to the Country._
-
-Of diseases I did not hear of any that were contagious, except Psora,
-which sometimes prevails among the lower orders, who rarely use any
-remedy against it, nor will they hear of sulphur, as they believe
-it to be fatal. Colds, attended with fever, are the most general
-complaints; but consumptions are rarely heard of. Among the miners,
-I saw no symptoms of elephantiasis, though that disease is so common
-in many other parts of Brazil, particularly on the sea-coast. The
-sciatica which afflicts travellers after long journeys on mules, is
-attributed by the people of the country to the bodily heat of those
-animals, which is much greater than that of horses, and communicates to
-the loins of the rider, occasioning almost constant excruciating pain,
-which frequently becomes chronic, and sometimes incurable. Being, on my
-return from the diamond district, much tormented with this complaint, I
-was naturally led to make inquiries on the subject, and was informed,
-that a person in the house where I then resided, had returned from a
-long journey in the same predicament, and was about to undergo the mode
-of cure commonly practised in the country. I was desirous of inquiring
-the nature of it, and begged to be introduced to him. On conversing
-with him, I found that his symptoms were similar to mine; he complained
-of great pain in the os sacrum, and down the left thigh to the knee,
-which afflicted him most when in bed, where he could not bear to lie
-in any posture for half an hour together, but was obliged to rise and
-wait until the warmth was abated, when he lay down again. Thus he
-could get no sleep night or day. On asking if he had tried any external
-application as a stimulus, he replied, that neither that nor any other
-remedy was of the smallest avail, except the one peculiar to the
-country. The operation was as follows:—The patient lay down on a bench
-with his back upwards, and a youth, twelve or fourteen years of age,
-knelt upon his loins, and continued to trample them (as it were) with
-his knees for about the space of half an hour, until the muscles were
-entirely bruised. In a few hours afterwards, the part became highly
-discolored. If one operation had not the desired effect, another, and
-even a third, would be had recourse to. It must be confessed, that this
-remedy, in removing one evil, occasions another; but the advantage
-is, that the latter is of short duration, whereas the former endures
-sometimes for life, and gives continual affliction. In some cases the
-remedy has been applied with success, but in others it has entirely
-failed.
-
-
-_On the Use of Mercury in the Mining Department._
-
-The Government of Brazil would find it highly to their interest to
-promote the use of mercury in the gold district. The process of
-amalgamation is so simple, that there would be no difficulty in
-introducing it generally among miners; and it would save much time and
-labor in the last operation of washing, or what is called purifying.
-
-Perhaps it may not be improper, in this place, to describe the method
-pursued in working the silver mines on the coast of Chili, which may be
-estimated to produce about a million of dollars annually. Some of these
-mines are full fifty yards deep; and we are told of one nearly as many
-fathoms. It is probable that they are sunk upon veins of ore; and they
-are so ill secured, that they frequently fill, and bury those within
-them. The metal is generally a sulphuret of silver with antimony, lead,
-and blende: it is brought up on the shoulders of wretched Indians, who
-descend and ascend by insecure posts with notches cut in them. They
-are total strangers to the operations of boring and blasting, and use
-only miserable hammers and wedges. The vein stuff with the metal is,
-in some places, reduced by means of a large stone, ill-constructed,
-rolling on its edge; in others, it is pounded by hand, and, when
-sufficiently fine, it is washed by several operations in a slovenly
-manner, until the metallic part alone remains, which is not unlike lead
-ore dust. This is formed into small heaps, perhaps about 100lb, to each
-of which are added about 20 or 25lb of muriate of soda[86]. This is
-triturated and worked both by hands and feet for three or four days.
-When the salt is judged to be sufficiently incorporated with the metal,
-mercury is used in the proportion of from five to ten per cent. and is
-triturated until it loses its globular form; to prove which, a small
-bit is rubbed upon a horn, or upon the thumb-nail, and if any globules
-appear, however minute, the trituration is continued until they totally
-disappear[87]. To this mixture the workmen frequently add filth, rags
-torn into small bits, &c. place crosses upon the heaps, and use many
-ridiculous ceremonies dictated by folly and a belief in necromancy.
-At length the mercury unites with the silver, and forms with it a
-paste-like mass separating itself from the remainder, which is thrown
-away. This mass is put into goat-skins, and, by twisting and squeezing,
-a great part of the mercury passes through, leaving a portion of nearly
-pure silver, which is afterwards melted. The remainder is sublimed by
-heat, and is condensed with more or less loss, according to the mode
-applied, and the skill of the operator. Some little gold is procured
-from some of the mines on this coast, by a similar process.
-
-In this part of Chili, the state of society is wretched; gambling is a
-general vice, and assassinations are scarcely regarded as criminal. The
-greatest depredations are committed with impunity, nor do the crosses
-placed on the heaps protect them; so that, when a mine proves good, the
-hopes of the proprietor are often frustrated through the poverty and
-envy of his neighbours.
-
-The copper mines of Guasco, Copiapo, and Coquimbo, are wretchedly
-worked, nor would it perhaps be safe to introduce other methods. The
-copper is smelted in a hearth with bellows and wood; and if, when it
-runs into cakes, it has the appearance of copper, they do not smelt
-it again, but if it is so covered and intermixed with slag as not to
-be known, it is broken up and undergoes a second smelting, when not
-unfrequently slag is placed so as to be in the centre. These, and other
-deceptions, have brought the trade into great discredit. The copper is
-sold from eight to eleven dollars per 104lb. It is considered a poor
-trade, though the Spaniards generally think the Chilian copper, and
-even the timber which serves for fuel, _to be full of gold_!!
-
-Of the mines of Chili I have lately received a very particular account,
-from which it appears that they are not under any regulations, and
-are extremely ill worked. They are considered a very bad species of
-property; and almost every metallic vein hitherto discovered, whether
-worked or not, has numerous claimants, who are continually litigating
-with each other, so as totally to prevent their being worked to
-advantage. Chili contains abundance of copper, some lead, a little
-gold, a portion of silver, and a great quantity of iron, and would,
-in the possession of an industrious and civilized people, be, without
-doubt, very productive. The mines in Peru, on the contrary, are subject
-to regular laws, and the property is secured to its owner, particularly
-in Pasco, where they are now working to great advantage, under the
-control of liberal and enlightened men. It must be observed, that
-their proprietors are much richer than those of Chili, where numerous
-individuals claim what is scarcely worth being possessed by one. This
-state of things discourages adventurers; for who would erect an engine
-and free a mine, to be claimed by another? Society there is still in a
-wretched state; the miners are in the lowest state of indigence; and
-though paid for their work, it would be dangerous to prevent them from
-carrying some of the produce away as their own, thefts of this sort
-being very general in this province.
-
-Several Cornish miners have lately been sent out, at very high wages,
-and under very flattering circumstances, but some disappointments
-have occurred in the undertaking to which they were destined. In the
-course of the year 1820, some Derbyshire miners, men of good character,
-were engaged to proceed to Chili for the purpose of instructing the
-natives in the various branches of their art. Since their arrival I
-have received very gratifying accounts from them, announcing that they
-have commenced their labors by clearing the mines of water, and that
-they have immense masses of silver to work upon, some lumps of which,
-weighing above 10lb. each, they have sent over as specimens.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- ABAITE, rivulet, diamonds found in, 344.
-
- Alto do Morro, 231.
-
- Alto de Virginia, 229.
-
- Araguaya, or Grande, river, 409.
-
- Arinos, river, 415.
-
- Armaçao, village of, near St. Catherine’s, 67.
- A fishing station, 68.
-
- Asumpcion, city of, 439.
-
-
- BAHIA, account of, 391.
- Sugar plantations, 395.
- Tobacco, 398.
- Cotton, 400.
- Indigo, 401.
-
- Bandeira de Coelho, 228.
-
- Barbacena, 224.
-
- Barro e Castro, near Villa Rica, visit to the estates of, 258, 261,
- 268, 269.
-
- Barriga Negra, journey to, 22.
-
- Baugre, mode of fishing for the, 59.
-
- Belmonte, 203.
-
- Bertioga, harbour of, 123.
-
- Borda do Campo, village of, 218.
-
- Brazil: arrival at St. Catherine’s, 57.
- Description of the island, 58.
- Arrival at Armaçao, 67.
- Bay of dos Ganchos, 68.
- Garoupas, 72.
- Plain of Coritiva described, 75.
- Port of S. Francisco, 81.
- Santos, 82.
- Journey to S. Paulo, 85.
- Description of S. Paulo, 92.
- Gold washings at Jaragua, 107.
- Manners of the Paulistas, 113.
- Character, 121.
- Coasting voyage from Santos to Sapitiva, 122.
- Journey to Rio de Janeiro, 130.
- City described, 135.
- Trade, 139.
- State of society, 146.
- Visit to Santa Cruz, 148.
- Province of the Rio, 154.
- Journey to Canta Gallo, 157.
- Gold-washing of Santa Rita, 177.
- Rio Grande, 183.
- Reputed silver mine, 185.
- Agriculture, 189.
- Journey to the diamond mines, 195, 206.
- A topaz mine, 233.
- Arrival at Villa Rica, 235.
- Its origin and present state, 243.
- Notice on the Buticudos, 273.
- Villa do Principe, 305.
- Arrival at Tejuco, 311.
- Diamond works on the river Jiquitinhonha, 313.
- Account of Minas Novas and Paracatu, 337.
- Of Tejuco and Cerro do Frio, 349.
- Management of the diamond works, 353.
- Return to Rio de Janeiro, 370.
- General view of Minas Geraes, 376.
- S. João d’El Rey, 384.
- Sabara, 386.
- Bahia, 391.
- Pernambuco, 401.
- Seara, 402.
- Maranham, _ib._
- Pará, 403.
- Matto Grosso, 407.
- Rio Grande do Sul, 442.
- General observations on the trade with England, 450.
-
- Buticudos, Indians, measures of the Brazilian government for
- converting, 274.
- A boy belonging to them described, 299.
-
- Buenos Ayres, its population, 46.
- Races composing it, 47.
-
-
- CAMAPUA, river, 428.
-
- Camara, Dr. his reception of the author at Tejuco, 311.
-
- Camarro, 288.
-
- Canta Gallo, journey to, 157.
- Description of, 170.
-
- Capao, topaz mine near, 232.
-
- Cará, an esculent root, 97.
-
- Carrapato, gold-work at, 323.
-
- Cascalho, a species of gravel containing gold, 107.
- And diamonds, 314.
-
- Catas Altas, 289.
-
- Cerro do Frio, 307.
- Observations on, 349.
- Diamond ground described, _ib._
- Animals peculiar to the district, 368.
-
- Chingu, river, 410.
-
- Clara e Maria, farm of, 214.
-
- Conceiçao, village of, 302.
-
- Corgo do Inficionado, 289.
-
- Coritiva, plain of, 73.
- Its climate, 75.
- Its advantages, 78.
-
- Corolina, visit to a diamond work at, 333.
-
- Cubatao, village of, 85.
-
- Cuiaba, account of, 424.
-
-
- DEVOLUTO, meaning of the term applied to land, 347.
-
- Diamond District, entrance into, 307.
- (See Tejuco).
- Mode of washing for diamonds, 314.
- A view of those deposited in the treasury at Tejuco, 329.
- Observations on the diamond district, 349.
- Illicit trade, 356, 360.
- How to be prevented, 363.
-
- Disperteros, a sort of birds so called, 111.
-
-
- ENGORDA Cavallos, a species of grass, 335.
-
-
- FARINHA de milho, mode of cooking, 280.
-
- Felicio, Senhor, his mansion, 290.
-
- Ferreira, Antonio, fazenda of, 212.
-
- ——, Capt. his plantation, 161.
-
- Flax, culture of, in Brazil, 220.
-
-
- GAMA, fazenda do, 225.
-
- Garoupas, harbour of, 72.
-
- Gaspar Soares, village of, 296.
-
- Goyaz, account of, 405.
-
- Grimpeiros, treated as smugglers, 170.
-
-
- INDIAN Corn, mill for grinding, 190.
-
- Inferninho, river, 69.
-
- Itambe, 294.
-
-
- JACARANDA, rose-wood, common in S. Paulo, 106.
-
- Jaraguá, gold washings at, 107.
- Mode of working, 108.
-
- Jiquitinhonha, river, visit to the diamond works on, 313.
-
- Juruena, river, 416.
-
-
- LAGOS, village of, 297.
-
- Lavras Velhas, 260.
-
- Lichen, from Minas Geraes, containing coloring matter, 382.
-
-
- MACHADO, farm of, 182.
-
- Madeira, isle of, on the coast of Brazil, 129.
-
- Madeiras, farm of, 211.
-
- Mandanga, visit to the diamond works at, 312.
-
- Mandioca, how cultivated, 101.
-
- Mantiqueira, farm of, 217.
-
- Maranham, account of, 402.
-
- Mariana, city of, 257.
-
- Marimbondos, insects so called, 191.
-
- Mate, herb, of Paraguay, 27.
-
- Mathias Barbosa, register of, 210.
-
- Matto Grosso, geographical description of, 407.
-
- Meni, a species of ground-nut, 162.
-
- Minas Geraes, general view of, 376.
-
- Minas Novas, account of, 338.
-
- Monteiro, diamond work at, 323.
-
- Monte Video, arrival at, 1, 3.
- Confinement there, 4.
- Adventure at the signal-house, 8.
- Description of the town, 11.
- Inhabitants, 12.
- Trade, 13.
- Climate, 15.
- Vicinity, 16.
- Farms, 17.
- Fazendas, 18.
- Breeding of cattle, 19.
- Defective state of agriculture, 32.
- Town taken by the British, 40.
-
- Moremim, river, 202.
-
- Morro de St. Anna, 288.
-
- Morro Queimado, fazenda do, 165.
-
-
- NEGROES employed in the diamond works, observations on, 358.
-
-
- OURO Branco, 298.
-
-
- PARA, account of, 403.
-
- Paracatu, account of, 343.
-
- Paraguay, river, 419, 434.
-
- Paraibuna, river, 207.
-
- Parana, river, 431, 441.
-
- Pardo, river, 429.
-
- Pecari, or pig of the woods, 38.
-
- Peons of Paraguay, 28.
- Mode of catching cattle, 29.
- Their habits of life, 34.
- Dress, 36.
- Exploit of a female, 37.
-
- Pernambuco, account of, 402.
-
- Piabunha, river, 204.
-
- Piranga, 276.
-
- Plata, Rio de la, voyage to, 1.
- Origin of the name, 441.
-
- Porto Negro, near Ilha Grande, 128.
-
- Pounding machine for Indian corn, 190.
-
- Purpura, a shell of the murex genus, 70.
-
-
- REGISTRO Velho, 222.
-
- Resequinha, 223.
-
- Rio de Janeiro, arrival at, 133.
- Description of, 135.
- Trade, 140.
- State of society, 146.
-
- Rio do Carmo, 250.
-
- Rio Grande do Sul, account of, 442.
-
- Rio Pardo, visit to the diamond works on, 330.
-
- Rosina de Negra, 209.
-
-
- SABARA, account of, 386.
- Gold-washing, 387.
-
- Santo Antonio, farm of, 182.
-
- Santa Cruz, royal farm of, 148.
-
- St. Catherine’s, isle of, voyage to, 55.
- Arrival, 57.
- Description, 58.
- Trade, 59.
- Its parishes, 61.
-
- St. Francisco, river, described, 346.
- Harbour of, 73.
-
- San Gonzal, diamond work at, 371.
-
- S. João d’El Rey, account of, 384.
-
- San Jose da Barra Longa, 272.
-
- San Paulo, 90.
- Described, 22.
- Population, 94.
- Manufactures, 96.
- System of farming, 100.
- Manners and customs of the inhabitants, 115, 118.
-
- St. Pedro d’El Rey, settlement of, 425.
-
- Santa Rita, gold washing at, 177.
-
- Santos, harbour of, 82.
- Its intercourse with S. Paulo, 84.
- Voyage from, to Sapitiva, 122.
-
- Sapitiva, arrival at, 129.
- Journey from, to Rio de Janeiro, 130.
-
- Savages, measures of the Brazilian government for converting, 274.
-
- Seara, its trade, 402.
-
- Sebollati, river, 23.
-
- Serpents, large, in Minas Novas, 339.
-
- Silver-mine, account of a reputed one, 185.
-
- Sorocaba, 74.
-
- Sugar, process of making, in Bahia, 395.
-
- Sumidouro, river, 415.
-
-
- TAPAJOS, River, 413.
-
- Tapinhoa canga, 303.
-
- Tejuco, capital of the diamond district, arrival at, 310.
- Description of, 326.
- Visit to the treasury, 328.
- Observations on, 349.
- Civil and military establishments at, 352.
- Mode of preventing illicit trade, 363.
- State of society in, 369.
-
- Thomas, father, his farm, 184.
-
- Tiete, river, 431.
-
- Tigreno, river, 69.
-
- Tocaya, advantages of its situation, 341.
-
- Topaz mine near Capao, 232.
-
- Toque Toque, harbour of, 125.
-
-
- URUGUAY, river, 447.
-
-
- VAZ, hamlet of, 292.
-
- Vermelho, river, 429.
-
- Villa do Principe, a pretended diamond found at, 196.
- Arrival at, 305.
-
- Villa Rica, arrival at, 235.
- Description of, 238.
- Its origin and present state, 244.
- Visit to the mint, 252.
- Visit to the estates of Barro e Castro, 258.
- Revisited on returning to the capital, 375.
- Military establishment there, 377.
-
-
- WOODS, species peculiar to Brazil, 188.
-
-
- ZURILLA, description of that animal, 38.
-
-
- FINIS.
-
-
-_W. M’Dowall, Printer, Pemberton Row, Gough Square._
-
-
-
-
- ERRATUM.
-
-
-Page 411, line 13, and note, for _Sutâo_, read _Sertâo_.
-
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] NOTE. Of the objects in the lower compartment of this plate, the
-Pine is mentioned at p. 81; the Aloe at p. 130; the Cara is described
-at p. 97, and the Mandioca at p. 101.
-
-[2] Here I found mint, caraway, balm, wormwood, and many other aromatic
-herbs, growing wild in the greatest luxuriance. The stratum of
-vegetable earth was at least two yards thick.
-
-[3] At a small town called Minas, ten leagues from Maldonado, I was
-informed that there was a lead mine in limestone. A piece of that
-substance was sent to me; it was flesh-colored, granular, and close in
-texture.
-
-[4] The people of Paraguay are a more inactive and listless race than
-any I ever met with. They seem to be conscious of no wants beyond
-those of mere animal existence, and these they choose to supply at the
-smallest possible expense of bodily exertion. Their supreme enjoyment
-is to remain at home in a state of quietism or rather torpor, leaving
-to the negroes the little agricultural toil that is required. They
-are reserved, slothful, and patient, yet, with all their apathy, they
-are friendly and somewhat courteous to strangers, provided they be
-not required to go much into society or to bear an active part in
-conversation. Commerce is almost unknown among them, and there is
-very little specie in circulation. To a stranger, who has mingled in
-the busy scenes of life, they seem absolutely weary of existence as
-of a burthen. Blest with a fine climate and a land flowing with milk
-and honey, they are unable to appreciate and turn to advantage the
-bounties which divine Providence has lavished upon them; and from
-these and other causes the population is very scanty compared with the
-extent of the country. Such is the native land of the Peons of Monte
-Video and Buenos Ayres. The state of society in that remote region is
-deteriorated by the admission of refugees from Europe, who here find
-shelter from justice, and propagate, in safe obscurity and with perfect
-impunity, their vices among a people too much predisposed by indolence
-for such contaminations, and unfitted by the same failing for receiving
-any tincture of civilization, which a more lively and apprehensive
-race of men might imbibe from foreign settlers, however dissolute in
-morals. The Peons, who migrate southward to seek employment, soon
-acquire a taste for ardent spirits, and thus heighten, sometimes to an
-uncontrolable degree, the ferocity engendered by the habit of torturing
-and killing cattle. They have no strong sense of danger to deter them
-from crime, but, on the contrary, are aware, that on any breach of the
-law they can elude its penalties by galloping three or four hundred
-miles into the interior, where their crimes will be unknown, and where
-they can bid defiance to pursuit or detection.
-
-In some parts of Paraguay timber grows in abundance; it is cut, and
-floated down the river to Buenos Ayres, not in rafts but in single
-trees.
-
-[5] A platted lash, about twenty yards long, with an iron ring at one
-end, through which the other end being passed forms a noose.
-
-[6] Such indeed is their excessive propensity to gambling, that they
-frequently carry cards in their pocket, and, when an opportunity
-occurs, form parties, and retire to a convenient place, where one of
-them spreads his _poncho_ or mantle on the ground, in lieu of a table.
-When the loser has parted with his money, he will stake his clothes, so
-that the game generally continues until one of them goes away almost
-naked. This bad practice often leads to serious consequences. I once
-observed a party playing in the neighbourhood of a chapel after mass
-had been said, when the clergyman came and kicked away the cards in
-order to put an end to the game. On this, one of the Peons rose up,
-and retiring a few paces, thus accosted the intruder: “Father, I will
-obey you as a priest; but” (laying his hand on his knife) “you must
-beware how you molest our diversion.” The clergyman knew the desperate
-character of these men too well to remonstrate, and retired very
-hastily, not a little chagrined.
-
-On another occasion a Peon was gambling with a Spanish corporal in the
-prison-yard, when a dispute arising, the latter drew his sword on his
-unarmed antagonist, and wounded him so severely in the arm, that he was
-obliged to undergo amputation the day following.
-
-It is usual for a Peon who has been fortunate at play, to go to Monte
-Video and clothe himself anew in the shop of a slop-seller. While the
-shopman is looking out the articles he calls for, he deliberately
-places his dollars on the counter, in separate piles, assigning each to
-its destined purpose. He then retires to a corner, and attires himself;
-an unfortunate comrade invariably attends him, who examines his cast
-clothes, and, if better than his own, puts them on. After passing a few
-days in idleness, he sets out on his return home, where he appears in
-his new dress.
-
-[7] Among the many daring and active feats performed by the Peons,
-one of the most extraordinary of late years, was the capture of a
-tiger by a female of that tribe. She was a mulatto-woman, brought up
-in the vicinity of Barriga Negra. She was accustomed at an early age
-to ride horses, and prided herself in doing offices which belonged
-to the stronger sex, such as catching cattle with the noose, killing
-them, &c. Her form was masculine, and she became so inured to men’s
-work, that she was hired as a Peon, and fulfilled that office much
-to the satisfaction of her employers. She was noted for selecting
-spirited horses, and for riding them at full speed. One day on her
-return from labor, as she was passing a rivulet, she observed a large
-tiger at no great distance. Surprised that the animal did not steal
-away, as is generally the case when he sees a person mounted, she drew
-nearer, still keeping her horse’s head from him, so as to be ready to
-gallop off if he should make a spring. He was still inattentive and
-motionless; the woman observing this, and thinking he ailed something,
-after some minutes’ pause backed her horse until she came within
-twenty yards of him, loosening at the same time her noose from the
-saddle, which she threw most dexterously over his neck, and immediately
-galloped away with him to a considerable distance. Whether maimed or
-not before, she knew he must now be dead; she therefore alighted,
-flayed him, and carried home the skin as a trophy. The animal was above
-the ordinary size, and not smaller than a calf six weeks old. This
-exploit was long the talk of the neighbourhood, and I have heard the
-woman herself relate the adventure.
-
-[8] _Sus Tajassu._—Lin. _Tajaçu._—Buffon.
-
-[9] One mode which they adopted for displaying their triumph over their
-late conquerors was singular enough; they collected all the sign boards
-belonging to the English warehouses and shops, and made a bonfire
-of them. A great quantity of these boards was from the _pulperias_,
-the masters of which had been obliged to have on them the following
-inscription, painted in large characters, “Licensed to sell liquor.”
-
-[10] The fishery of the _baugre_ here is very considerable, and the
-mode of catching the fish, by means of a curved line of boats, by
-night, (from each of which is held a flambeau of straw to scare the
-fish toward the shore), is singularly picturesque, and might remind the
-imaginative spectator of a crescent of wild fire dancing on the waves.
-The fish is called at Rio de Janeiro the _mulatto velho_; the negroes
-eat it during Lent, and on Fridays and Saturdays.
-
-[11] This very rarely happens.
-
-[12] Forty years ago they caught a whale a day; but they now catch only
-one in the course of a month.
-
-[13] The oil, in consequence of not being well refined, is black and
-_sooty_.
-
-[14] Three leagues from Sorocaba, which is twenty leagues distant from
-the capital. S. Paulo is the famous mountain of Varessoiba. It contains
-such an abundance of iron, _solta e á garnel_, (loose or in heaps),
-that ten foundries, each melting 10,000 quintals _per annum_, would not
-exhaust it in a century; and it has wood for charcoal, which the same
-number would be unable to consume in that space of time. A company of
-Swedish miners was established here in 1810, but the undertaking was
-frustrated by intrigue.
-
-[15] According to a statistical report, dated 1811, the city of S.
-Paulo contains 4017 houses, (_fogos_, hearths); 5219 whites (males),
-6319 whites (females); 377 free negroes, 485 free negresses; 1967
-male, and 1914 female captive negroes; 2394 free mulattoes, 3279 free
-mulattas; 745 male, and 896 female captive mulattoes; making the whole
-population 23,764. In this year (1811), the births were 1301, the
-deaths 785, the marriages 233.
-
-[16] Probably the coloring matter arises from the decomposition of the
-hornblende; I have frequently observed a mass of granite having its
-surface decomposed into a red clay, in which the particles of mica were
-hardly perceptible, while the compact rock below contained a very fair
-proportion. These granites contain hornblende with mica.
-
-[17] In one part of the town is found a beautiful species of decomposed
-granite, consisting of extremely white feldspar, quartz, and very
-little mica.
-
-[18] Mandioca requires a dry hot soil, of a sandy nature.
-
-[19] This generous root requires but little preparation to make it
-serve as a substitute for bread. When taken out of the ground they
-wash and scrape it clean, and then rasp it on a coarse grater of iron
-or copper, press the juice from it, and place it on a hot surface, a
-shallow copper-pan for instance, four or five feet in diameter, or a
-clay one, with a brick fire underneath; while drying it is constantly
-stirred, and when the moisture is completely evaporated, it is
-immediately fit for use. If preserved from wet, it will keep good a
-long time. In broths and soups it becomes gelatinous, and affords rich
-nourishment; it is particularly good when eaten with cheese. The wild
-or spurious mandioca, called _Aipim_, is little inferior, when roasted,
-to fine chesnuts. The Portuguese introduce it at table, boiled as well
-as roasted.
-
-[20] Its leaf is shaped like a heart.
-
-[21] The _Spur-winged Plover_. In the Spanish territories they are
-called _disperteros_ (awakeners), on account of the noise they make
-when disturbed in the night. A flock of them in any plantation answers
-the purpose of an alarm-bell against thieves.
-
-[22] Fr. Gaspar da Madre de Deos.
-
-[23] I may also add their public spirit in resenting injuries done to
-individuals, and in supporting the cause of the oppressed; a singular
-instance of which I have often heard related. Some seventy years ago,
-one of their governors, who was a nobleman, had an intrigue with the
-daughter of a mechanic. The whole town espoused the cause of the
-injured female, and compelled the governor, at the peril of his life,
-to marry her.
-
-[24] Had I approached this city by sea, I might have been enabled to
-give a more animated description of its aspect; but I feel it incumbent
-on me to adhere to veracity, the first duty of a traveller, and to
-describe the impression made on my mind by the view as I approached by
-land on my route from S. Paulo.
-
-[25] Several have been established since the time when this narrative
-was written.
-
-[26] By way of experiment, I had some fat ewes killed, and the mutton
-was acknowledged to be excellent; but the male lambs are never prepared
-for the table.
-
-[27] A name given to those persons who go about the country seeking
-gold-washings, and do not give notice, or solicit a grant when they
-discover any. They are considered and treated as smugglers.
-
-[28] Ere they departed, I saw an instance of that dangerous excess to
-which the passions of savages are liable when once excited; for, on
-presenting a few bottles of liquor, there was a general strife for
-them, and the person, man or woman, who first obtained one, would have
-drank the whole of its contents, had it not been forcibly taken away.
-It is very unsafe to give them ardent spirits, for when intoxicated it
-is necessary to confine them. If preference is given to one, the rest
-are insolent and unruly until they obtain the same mark of favor.
-
-[29] I was well informed that a few hundred pounds, judiciously
-employed, would defray the expense of making a good road from Canta
-Gallo to Porto das Caixas, which loaded mules might travel in two days.
-
-[30] The mode of crossing a river with horses or mules in these parts,
-is to tie one to the canoe, and drive him into the water; the rest
-follow.
-
-[31] The little lime which they use here is made of shells, and is
-brought from Porto das Caixas.
-
-[32] In one part of the road we passed a nest of insects (called
-_marimbondos_), which are extremely troublesome to cattle, and cause
-the mules to be very violent and unruly. They attack with great
-pertinacity, and pursue to a considerable distance; we took a devious
-route to get rid of them, but I was followed by some which stung me as
-painfully as an irritated wasp could have done. There is a singular
-variety of them, having a horny pointed proboscis, with which they
-pierce most keenly and give intolerable pain.
-
-[33] No person can be permitted to see the diamonds in the Treasury
-without a joint order from the ministers to that effect.
-
-[34] This name is given to what we should call a huckster’s shop,
-where various articles, such as liquors, Indian corn, and sometimes
-sugar, are sold. Though they profess to answer the purpose of inns,
-they are destitute of conveniences; travellers who carry their beds and
-cooking utensils with them, generally prefer lodging in a _rancho_ or
-_estallage_. Shelter from rain and night air is the only convenience
-which a lodging in these districts can be expected to afford.
-
-[35] In this country the practice of cutting flax is attended with
-great success, and is preferred to that of pulling it, which prevails
-elsewhere. The fibres, though cut, are considered sufficiently long to
-be spun and made into good common linen. The old roots produce fresh
-shoots incredibly soon.
-
-[36] They also informed me that green topazes were sometimes found,
-which I very much doubted. If any substance of that color, resembling
-topaz, did occur, it was most probably _Euclase_. It is now known that
-Euclase is found with topazes.
-
-[37] Our mules required at least six penny-worth each per day,
-exclusive of their corn.
-
-[38] In England I once knew an instance in which an ingot with mercury
-adhering to it, in the possession of a person ignorant of metallurgy,
-was sold at a reduced price, as if the discolored part had really been
-lead; the purchaser also supposing that to be the case.
-
-[39] The finest parts of these tracts, in the best season, are by no
-means so rich in grass as an English meadow.
-
-[40] This species of sublimation on a small scale interested me
-greatly. Could it proceed from any glimmering of science in the minds
-of the negroes, or was it merely an accidental discovery?
-
-[41] This substance contains fine-formed octahedral crystals of
-magnetic iron.
-
-[42] An owner of mules, who travels with a number of them, carrying
-goods for other persons, as well as on his own account.
-
-[43] _Canga_ is the name of ferruginous quartz, fragments of which
-abound in this town, and are used for paving the streets.
-
-[44] Four _vintens_ are nearly equal to a shilling of our money. When
-this rivulet was first washed for gold, the quantity produced by
-each _gamella_ amounted in value to that sum. As the _cascalho_ then
-lay near the surface, and required very little trouble to get at,
-one washer could clear about twelve bowls-full per hour, which was
-considered a comparatively rich return.
-
-In the mines they have two methods of estimating the quantity produced:
-for example; _Quatro Vintens_, here mean four _vintens_ of gold, which
-is equal to eight of copper; whereas, in Rio de Janeiro, the same
-expression implies four _vintens_ of copper.
-
-[45] In order to insure the vigilance of the overseers, these chairs
-are constructed without backs or any other support on which a person
-can recline.
-
-[46] The negroes employed in these works are the property of
-individuals, who let them to hire at the daily rate of three _vintens_
-of gold, equal to about eight-pence, Government supplying them with
-victuals. Every officer of the establishment is allowed the privilege
-of having a certain number of negroes employed.
-
-[47] The negroes are constantly attending to the _cascalho_ from the
-very commencement of the washings, and frequently find diamonds before
-this last operation.
-
-[48] Probably fugitive negroes, who subsist in this remote district by
-plunder and smuggling.
-
-[49] It was then in seed, of which I collected a small quantity; since
-my return, I have sent part of it to the Agricultural Society, and
-the remainder I have distributed among gentlemen who endeavoured to
-promote its growth in this country, but without effect. It is rather a
-hardy grass, as it grew in situations which were all so cold, that the
-bananas and coffees were frequently blighted.
-
-[50] The ladies particularly wished to have the cheese of a fine color,
-like that sent thither from England; and I was at no loss for an
-ingredient for tinging the milk, as the tree, which produces the seed
-from which annatto is made, grew spontaneously in the neighbourhood.
-
-[51] On the road there are numerous farm houses, which afford
-sufficient accommodation for a traveller. They in general belong to
-persons resident in Tejuco, where their produce is sold.
-
-[52] In some of the low swampy tracts large serpents are not uncommon.
-At Tejueo I was shown the skin of a young one, of the Boa Constrictor
-genus. It was twenty-four feet in length, and about twenty inches in
-circumference. These formidable reptiles have been killed forty feet
-long! The strength of such a serpent is not easily to be imagined; they
-have an undulating motion, and carry their head erect four or five
-feet from the ground; their jaws, &c. are capable of inconceivable
-dilatation.
-
-[53] Since my return, His Excellency the Conde de Funchall, ordered a
-model of a ballast-lighter, which I got constructed for him, and which
-will one day or other be found extremely useful.
-
-[54] It may become useful at Villa Rica; but the quantity required
-there at present is so trivial as scarcely to merit attention.
-
-[55] If salt were cheaper they might be cured, and would become an
-article of commerce, particularly during Lent.
-
-[56] Exclusive of this amount there is a vast quantity smuggled.
-
-[57] One Sunday morning during my stay, an owner of a washing came to
-the house of the Intendant, and brought him two miserable diamonds of
-bad color, which did not weigh together above five grains, and these,
-he said, were all which his ten negroes had found in six weeks. In the
-course of conversation, the Intendant observed that all the smugglers
-were either imprisoned or dispersed, when the man immediately assumed
-an appearance of great disgust at the mention of persons of so vile
-a description, and was liberal in his epithets of abuse on them. If
-I durst have enquired how it happened that his negroes in six weeks
-could find only two _bad-colored_ diamonds, what emotions would this
-immaculate miner have manifested!
-
-[58] From all accounts relative to the Indians, either by the officers
-employed against them, and better acquainted with their habits than
-other men, or from any of the settlers who live near the coast, it does
-not appear that they have the smallest knowledge of gold or of precious
-stones; hence they can in no degree have contributed to the discovery
-of those treasures in the district.
-
-[59] At a place called Caldeiroens, near to Ouro Branco, I received two
-bits of this metal, but they were so small and disfigured, as to leave
-strong doubts respecting their being natural; the more so, by reason
-of the many impositions that were attempted to be practised upon me by
-false specimens of copper-ores, silver, &c.
-
-[60] A part of the lichen which I brought home with me I presented to
-a gentleman who was fond of chemical experiments: he obtained from the
-small quantity of three grains as much coloring matter as imparted to
-an ounce of fluid a deep purple, sufficiently strong for every purpose
-of dying.
-
-The following are the results of some experiments which he did me the
-favor to make:
-
-White sewing-silk, put into an alcoholic solution only once, received a
-fine strong purple.
-
-Part of a skein of the same material, was put into a solution of
-potash, which produced a purple deeper in hue than the former.
-
-Cotton thread and worsted yarn, immersed only once in the same
-solution, produced very nearly the same colors.
-
-The part of a skein of silk died in the alcoholic solution was immersed
-in a solution of muriate of tin, which produced a beautiful lilac,
-approaching to dove-colored blue. The same substance died in a solution
-of potash, and immersed in a solution of muriate of tin, became a few
-shades darker, and rather more of a pink hue. These are not unfavorable
-results from a quantity so minute; and I feel confident that this
-substance may be rendered a very valuable article of trade.
-
-A few weeks ago, I received another sample of excellent lichen, very
-full of color, which I hope may be turned to some advantage.
-
-[61] In many parts of the coast, the plant which produces the barilla
-would probably florish abundantly, if introduced, and would form an
-excellent article of commerce, not only for exportation, but for home
-consumption.
-
-[62] There are several rivulets in various parts that bear this name.
-
-[63] If necessary, another channel might be made at a convenient
-distance from the first.
-
-[64] It cannot be too much recommended to Government to introduce the
-process of amalgamation generally throughout the mines.
-
-[65] _Bucking-irons_, are pieces of cast-iron with wood handles, used
-at the lead mines, to break the ore from what it adheres to.
-
-[66] A lixivium of strong ashes is made, and a quantity of lime is put
-into it: or sometimes the ashes are mixed with a larger proportion of
-lime, and the clear fluid running from the mixture is added to the
-juice in various quantities, at the discretion of the negro who manages
-the process: respecting this _temper_ various opinions prevail. Every
-negro has his peculiar mode of making, mixing, and applying it.
-
-[67] In skimming, lading, and managing the syrup during the operation,
-the negroes display great dexterity.
-
-[68] Large trees are cut into planks of these dimensions for making the
-cases, which are preferred to hogsheads.
-
-[69] The West India sugars are not clayed, consequently much stronger
-and fit for refining and making loaves.
-
-It is much to be desired that the very excellent work, written by Bryan
-Edwards, upon sugar making, and distilling rum, was introduced in
-Brazil.
-
-[70] It is considered bad policy to subject the raw material, as
-cotton, to a heavy duty, and very discouraging to planters, who must
-have large capitals employed, and who are greatly exposed to loss if
-the crops fail. Too much stimulus cannot be given to the growers; and
-they ought to be encouraged by a premium, rather than to pay a tax on
-the unmanufactured article.
-
-[71] During the past few years, the Governors of Matto Grosso have
-used every effort to shorten the distance from these remote provinces
-to the sea ports, by making roads, cutting down woods, and forming
-establishments to accommodate passengers, so that canoes, &c. may be
-transported over land, and make straight-forward communications from
-one river to another, which has shortened this journey at least two
-months.
-
-[72] Sutaò. This is a place understood to be uninhabitable for
-Europeans, being the residence of uncivilized Indians, and covered with
-almost impenetrable woods.
-
-[73] So called, because they abound with these animals.
-
-[74] This river being the grand channel of communication from Rio
-de Janeiro, Santos, S. Paulo, and other places, to the interesting
-districts of Cuiaba, Matto Grosso, the whole of Paraguay, the river
-Plata, Potosi, Chiquisaca, and a great part of Peru, I have preserved
-the particular detail given in this paper, of its numerous falls, and
-the difficulties of its navigation, as it is now well known, and there
-is great reason to suppose, that it will soon be much more frequented.
-
-[75] The labor of dragging the canoes over-land to avoid the cataracts
-might be much lessened (where the finest timber is in such abundance),
-if Government were to order rail-ways to be made, upon which loaded
-canoes might easily be drawn on wheels. This would more facilitate the
-intercourse than any other measure, and, from the present enterprising
-spirit and wisdom of his Majesty’s ministers, we may soon hope to see
-it put in practice.
-
-[76] The Silver from Potosi, which some years has exceeded twenty
-millions of dollars, came down the Rio de la Plata to Buenos Ayres.
-
-[77] Some English settlers, disappointed in the river Plata, went to
-Rio Grande to establish concerns for curing beef, refining tallow, &c.
-which they soon abandoned from the want of practical knowledge.
-
-[78] Almost every vessel brings a greater or smaller number of negroes,
-it being the practice at Rio de Janeiro to ship off all those who are
-ill-disposed and troublesome for Rio Grande, whence, if they continue
-refractory, they are frequently sold into the neighbouring colony.
-
-[79] It has been found, however, from modern surveys, that those rocks
-are by no means so dangerous as they have been represented.
-
-[80] In Brazil and the Plata the bridle is made of sufficient length to
-serve the purpose of a whip.
-
-[81] Delicate connections were soon formed, and females of the
-obscurest class appeared dressed in the most costly extreme of English
-fashion.
-
-[82] An _arroba_ is equal to 32lbs. avoirdupois.
-
-[83] Cotton of third quality is manufactured in the country into coarse
-cloth for bags, negroes’ dresses, &c. and exported to the Spanish
-colonies in large quantities.
-
-[84] Formerly, if any diamonds were found in a gold-washing, the owner
-was obliged to desist from working it, and the ground was appropriated
-by government. This law is now no longer in force.
-
-[85] It is reasonable to suppose, that few persons would hazard the
-penalty incurred by dealing in diamonds clandestinely, when, by paying
-a duty, they could bring them fairly into circulation.
-
-[86] Bay salt.
-
-[87] It would be interesting to enquire, in what manner the salt acts
-upon the ore containing silver, for without it the mercury has no
-effect.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Travels in the interior of Brazil, by John Mawe
-
-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: Travels in the interior of Brazil
- with notices on its climate, agriculture, commerce,
- population, mines, manners, and customs: and a particular
- account of the gold and diamond districts.
-
-Author: John Mawe
-
-Release Date: December 9, 2015 [EBook #50653]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAVELS IN THE INTERIOR OF BRAZIL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Giovanni Fini 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 class="limit">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="transnote p4">
-<p class="pc large">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-<p class="ptn">&mdash;Obvious print and punctuation errors were corrected.</p>
-<p class="ptn">&mdash;The transcriber of this project created the book cover image
-using the front cover of the original book. The image is placed
-in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1 class="p4">TRAVELS</h1>
-
-<p class="pc1">IN THE</p>
-
-<p class="pc1 large"><b>INTERIOR OF BRAZIL;</b></p>
-
-<p class="pc1 reduct">WITH NOTICES ON ITS</p>
-
-<p class="pc1">CLIMATE, AGRICULTURE, COMMERCE, POPULATION,<br />
-MINES, MANNERS, AND CUSTOMS:</p>
-
-<p class="pc2">AND</p>
-
-<p class="pc2"><i>A PARTICULAR ACCOUNT</i></p>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct">OF</p>
-
-<p class="pc1 large">THE GOLD AND DIAMOND DISTRICTS.</p>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct">INCLUDING</p>
-
-<p class="pc1 mid"><i>A VOYAGE TO THE RIO DE LA PLATA</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="pc2">BY</p>
-
-<p class="pc1 large">JOHN MAWE.</p>
-
-<div class="figd1">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc reduct">SECOND EDITION.</p>
-
-<div class="figd2">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc1">ILLUSTRATED WITH COLORED PLATES.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d2.jpg" width="120" height="89"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc font30">London:</p>
-
-<p class="pc reduct">PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN,<br />
-PATERNOSTER ROW;<br />
-AND SOLD BY THE AUTHOR, 149, STRAND.</p>
-<p class="pc">1822.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="limit2 p4">
-
-<div class="figd1">
- <img src="images/d3.jpg" width="100" height="21"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc reduct"><i>W. M’Dowall Printer, Pemberton Row
-Gough Square.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="p4">&nbsp;</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-004.jpg" width="400" height="272" id="fr"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc">PALACE &amp; GREAT SQUARE IN RIO DE JANEIRO.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4"><span class="ls1">PREFAC</span>E.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pn2">SINCE the first appearance of this work, nine
-years have elapsed, during which period translations
-of it have been published in France, Sweden,
-Germany, and Russia, as well as in Portugal and
-Brazil, and two editions of it have been given in
-the United States of America. Encouraged by
-these unequivocal proofs of approbation, and by
-the kind offers of assistance from several eminent
-persons in Brazil, and from others attached to the
-Portuguese interests in this country, I have at
-length, and I trust not prematurely, ventured
-again to submit it to the notice of the Public.
-In its present form, it is divested of some details,
-which however interesting at the period of its
-first publication, have ceased to be so; and their
-place has been supplied by matter of higher and
-more lasting importance, collected from official
-documents relative to Brazil, and from private<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span>
-memoranda communicated by persons well acquainted
-with the present state of that interesting
-country. For the opportunity of making many
-of these improvements, I have to offer my grateful
-acknowledgments to the Conde de Funchal,
-late ambassador from Portugal at the British
-Court; and I have also to express my sincerest
-thanks to A. F. J. Marreco, Esq. for the access
-which he has afforded me to various authentic
-and valuable sources of information, and for his
-kind and judicious suggestions to me while preparing
-the present edition for the press. How
-far I have profited by these estimable advantages,
-will best appear from the work itself, which I now
-submit to the equitable judgment of the Public.
-Conciseness, as far as is consistent with fidelity
-of description, has been my principal aim; and I
-trust that the reader will not think that I have
-trespassed too much on his time, when he compares
-this with the more voluminous productions
-which have recently been published on the same
-subject.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<table id="toc" summary="cont">
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER I.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Voyage to Cadiz and thence to the Rio de la Plata.&mdash;Adventures
-at Monte Video.&mdash;Character of the
-Inhabitants.&mdash;Trade.&mdash;Climate.&mdash;Geological Remarks.&mdash;Recent
-Changes.&mdash;Monte Video under the
-Portuguese.&mdash;Agriculture and Trade of the Rio de
-la Plata.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER II.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Journey to Barriga Negra.&mdash;Geology of the Country.&mdash;Limestone,
-and mode of burning it.&mdash;Horned Cattle.&mdash;Peons.&mdash;Horses.&mdash;Defective
-State of Agriculture.&mdash;Manners
-of the Inhabitants.&mdash;Dress.&mdash;Wild Animals.&mdash;Monte
-Video taken by the British.&mdash;My return
-thither.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c2">22</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER III.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Expedition against Buenos Ayres.&mdash;Account of the
-Population of the Country, and Classes which compose it.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c3">46</a></td>
- </tr>
-
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER IV.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii"><span class="small">[viii]</span></a></span></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Voyage to St. Catherine’s.&mdash;Description of that Island,
-and of the Coast in its Vicinity.&mdash;Arrival at Santos,
-and Journey thence to S. Paulo.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c4">55</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER V.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Description of S. Paulo.&mdash;System of Farming prevalent
-in its Neighbourhood.&mdash;Excursion to the Gold
-Mines of Jaraguá.&mdash;Mode of working them.&mdash;Return
-to Santos.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c5">92</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER VI.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Coasting Voyage from Santos to Sapitiva, and Journey
-thence to Rio de Janeiro.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c6">122</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER VII.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Description of Rio de Janeiro.&mdash;Trade.&mdash;State of Society.&mdash;Visit
-to the Prince Regent’s Farm at Santa
-Cruz.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c7">135</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER VIII.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Journey to Canta Gallo.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c8">157</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER IX.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Description of Canta Gallo.&mdash;Of the Gold-washing of
-Santa Rita.&mdash;Account of the supposed Silver-Mine.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c9">170</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER X.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix"><span class="small">[ix]</span></a></span></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Permission obtained to visit the Diamond Mines.&mdash;Account
-of a pretended Diamond presented to the
-Prince Regent.&mdash;Journey to Villa Rica.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c10">195</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XI.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Origin and present State of Villa Rica.&mdash;Account of
-the Mint.&mdash;Visit to the City of Mariana.&mdash;Excursion
-to the Fazendas of Barro and Castro,
-belonging to His Excellency the Conde de Linhares.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c11">243</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XII.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Journey from Villa Rica to Tejuco, the Capital of the
-Diamond District.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c12">287</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XIII.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Visit to the Diamond Works on the River Jiquitinhonha.&mdash;General
-Description of the Works.&mdash;Mode of Washing.&mdash;Return
-to Tejuco.&mdash;Visit to the Treasury.&mdash;Excursion
-to Rio Pardo.&mdash;Miscellaneous Remarks.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c13">311</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XIV.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Some Account of the Districts of Minas Novas and
-Paracatu.&mdash;Of the large Diamond found in the
-River Abaite.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c14">337</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XV.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x"><span class="small">[x]</span></a></span></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Observations on Tejuco and Cerro do Frio.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c15">349</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XVI.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>General View of Minus Geraes.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c16">376</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XVII.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Brief Notices on the Capitanias of Bahia, Pernambuco,
-Seara, Maranham, Para, and Goyaz.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c17">391</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XVIII.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Geographical Description of the Capitania of Matto
-Grosso.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c18">407</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XIX.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Account of the Capitania of Rio Grande.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c19">442</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdch">CHAPTER XX.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>General Observations on the Trade from England to
-Brazil.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#c20">450</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Appendix.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#app">473</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdt"><i>Index.</i></td>
- <td class="tdrl"><a href="#ind">487</a></td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">DESCRIPTION OF THE PLATES,</h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct">WITH</p>
-
-<p class="pc1">DIRECTIONS TO THE BINDER.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<table id="toi" summary="illus">
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">1.</td>
- <td class="tdt">View of the Square at Rio de Janeiro</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#fr"><i>to face the Title</i></a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td class="tdt">Peon catching Cattle</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i32">Page 32</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">3.</td>
- <td class="tdt">Horizontal Corn Mill and Pounding Machine<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i190">190</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">4.</td>
- <td class="tdt">Map of the Author’s Route</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i195">195</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">5.</td>
- <td class="tdt">Topaz Mine (described p. <a href="#Page_232">232</a>) and Diamond-washing</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i314">314</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">6.</td>
- <td class="tdt">Negroes washing for Diamonds, Gold, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i317">317</a></td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a><br /><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="pc4 large"><b><span class="ls1">TRAVEL</span>S,</b></p>
-
-<p class="pc1 mid"><i>&amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="c1" id="c1">CHAPTER I.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Voyage to Cadiz and thence to the Rio de la Plata.
-Adventures at Monte Video.&mdash;Character of the
-Inhabitants.&mdash;Trade.&mdash;Climate.&mdash;Geological
-Remarks.&mdash;Recent Changes.&mdash;Monte Video under
-the Portugueze.&mdash;Agriculture and Trade at
-the Rio de la Plata.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">IN the year 1804, I was induced to undertake a
-voyage of commercial experiment, on a limited
-scale, to the Rio de la Plata. On my arrival at
-Monte Video, the ship and cargo were seized; I
-was thrown into prison, and afterwards sent into
-the interior, where I was detained until the taking
-of that place by the British troops under Sir
-Samuel Auchmuty. I afterwards obtained leave
-to accompany the army under General Whitelocke,
-which was sent against Buenos Ayres, and
-I rendered such services to the expedition, as my
-two years’ residence in the country enabled me
-to perform. At the termination of that expedition,
-I went to Rio de Janeiro. A letter of introduction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-to the Viceroy of Brazil, which was
-given me by the Portugueze Minister at London,
-gained me the notice and protection of his
-brother, the Condé de Linhares, who had then
-just arrived with the rest of the Court, and who
-recommended me to the Prince Regent, as a person
-devoted to mineralogical pursuits, and desirous
-of exploring the ample field for investigation
-which his rich and extensive territories presented.
-His Royal Highness was graciously
-pleased to further my views, not only by granting
-me letters to the public functionaries of the various
-places I wished to visit, but by ordering an
-escort of soldiers, and every other necessary provision
-for performing the journey. I had the
-more reason to be grateful for this munificent
-patronage, because I knew that a decree existed,
-prohibiting all foreigners from travelling in the
-interior of Brazil, and that no other Englishman
-had ever begun such an undertaking with those
-indispensible requisites to its success, the permission
-and sanction of the Government.</p>
-
-<p>Observations, made, in the course of these Travels,
-on the country and its inhabitants, constitute
-the main part of the volume now offered to the
-public. Whatever be their faults or their merits,
-they relate to a subject at present extremely interesting,
-both in a political and a commercial
-point of view; they profess to develope the physical
-resources of a colony, which, through recent
-changes, is likely to become an empire; and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-part, to portray the character of a nation which
-is now the most ancient, and has ever been the
-most faithful, ally of Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>As the recital of a voyage is proverbially tedious
-and superfluous, I shall forbear to trouble
-the reader with any detail of mine, and shall
-merely state, that, after encountering many difficulties
-at Cadiz, in consequence of the rupture
-with Spain, I sailed for the Plata, and having
-narrowly escaped shipwreck from a tremendous
-storm near the mouth of that river, entered the
-harbour of Monte Video.</p>
-
-<p>The hardships I experienced in reaching this
-ill-fated port, were a fit prelude to the misfortunes
-that awaited me there. We were bound
-for Buenos Ayres, but my captain, who in London
-and at Cadiz had assured me that he had the experience
-of a pilot in the Rio de la Plata, proved
-totally ignorant of its navigation, and urged this
-circumstance as his reason for putting into Monte
-Video. Happy should I have been, if this had
-been the only instance of his ignorance; he gave
-an ill-judged and blundering report of me to the
-governor, and the sailors affirmed that I was an
-Englishman, declaring at the same time that we had
-passed an English squadron under Spanish colors.
-This statement was enough to whet the avarice
-of the governor, who, notwithstanding I had
-served the colony, in bringing a cargo which was
-then much wanted, and every article of which had
-paid legal duty in Cadiz, ordered me to be thrown<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-into prison. I was placed in close confinement
-on board a wretched sloop of war; and though
-my health was much impaired in consequence of
-exertion during the voyage, I was denied every
-comfort, except such indulgences, as the officers,
-who lived on shore, could at times clandestinely
-allow. Unprovided with letters of recommendation
-to any person in the town, and destitute of
-the means of making myself known, I had the
-mortification to see the property I had brought
-with me seized, and my papers taken away to
-be searched and examined. I was enjoined to
-make declarations, and to give evidence against
-myself, to men whose sole wish was to find a pretext
-for criminating me. After three or four
-examinations, it was found that I had sailed from
-Cadiz with a cargo of goods, marked, manifested,
-and duly registered, as Spanish; nor could any
-circumstance be discovered as a ground of accusation
-against me, but the strong suspicion that I
-was an Englishman, and on that account could
-not be too harshly treated. I had no lenity to
-expect from the governor, nor indeed from any of
-his advisers, who were, for the most part, men of
-the lowest order, refugees from Old Spain in consequence
-of criminal prosecutions. The rest of
-his associates were the captains and officers of two
-Spanish privateers, all Frenchmen, whose natural
-prejudices, no doubt, contributed to foment his
-antipathy against me. My sole reliance was on
-the consignee of the cargo, who at length arrived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-from Buenos Ayres; but, instead of clearing up
-the affair, he joined my persecutors, knowing that
-if he gave security he should have the cargo delivered
-to him. This favorable opportunity he
-failed not to embrace; he sold the property, and
-withheld the proceeds, under the pretext, that he
-could not pay them over to me while I remained
-a prisoner. This conduct to one who had depended
-on him for support, and who relied on his
-continually delusive promises of assistance, proved
-him to be one of those mean and spiritless beings
-whose station in society is mid-way between the
-simpleton and the knave.</p>
-
-<p>My confinement would probably have been long,
-but for the good services of a Limenian, who attended
-me during my illness in Cadiz, and who
-had come over in the vessel with me. He was
-the only person I was permitted to see; and he
-interested himself so much in my behalf, that an
-old gentlewoman, with whom he had formed an
-acquaintance, determined, on hearing my story,
-to procure my liberation, and never rested until
-she had procured two bondsmen to answer for my
-appearance when called for.</p>
-
-<p>The treatment I experienced, while in prison,
-was one of the many instances of oppression which
-disgraced the administration of the governor, Pasqual
-Ruiz Huidobro. It is well known that his
-political conduct was entirely subservient to the
-interests of the French, and that he lost no opportunity
-of evincing his attachment to their cause.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-As a further proof of this, I may state, that he
-caused all the captured English seamen to be
-confined in the prison, and, although its spacious
-court was doubly grated and guarded, he
-debarred them the use of it, and ordered them to
-be shut up, night and day, in a small room, the
-door of which was never opened except when
-victuals were given them. Aware of his severity,
-and knowing that I was the only prisoner
-at large, I was very circumspect, and strove
-to guard my conduct and discourse against artful
-misconstruction; but I had the misfortune
-to incur his displeasure at a moment when
-I least suspected it, by a very trivial, and certainly
-unintentional offence. Some written papers
-had been stuck up in various parts of the
-town, by order of Government, inviting foreign
-seamen to enter the service. Returning home at
-midnight from a visit, I observed one of these
-placards; the rain, which was pouring very fast,
-had partly detached it from the wall, and it was
-blown to and fro by the wind. Curious to examine
-the contents of a paper that had attracted
-the attention of many persons in the course of the
-day, I took it down and carried it home with me;
-this was observed by an old Spaniard of the name
-of Dias, who gloried much in having it in his
-power to injure me, though a perfect stranger to
-him, and unconscious of having done any thing to
-excite his malice. At the instance of this man
-an order was issued by the governor for my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-arrest; I was roused from my bed by the officers,
-and again hurried to prison. What charges were
-brought against me I could learn only by report;
-they were vague and indefinite, and no opportunity
-of answering them was allowed me. After a
-close confinement of six weeks, during which
-period my case was laid before the Viceroy of
-Buenos Ayres, I was again suffered to be at large,
-on payment of a fee of three hundred dollars. It
-was to the humane exertions of my advocate,
-seconded by those of the Limenian and the lady
-before-mentioned, that I owed this mitigation of
-my captivity, and I gratefully acknowledge that
-they made every provision in their power to render
-my situation comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>During my stay at Monte Video another adventure
-befel me, which had well nigh cost me my
-life; I am induced to relate it, by reason of the
-insight it gives into the character of a certain class
-of the people. I had gone on a shooting excursion
-to the promontory opposite Monte Video,
-with my much-valued friend Captain Collet, owner
-of two or three large American ships, and M.
-Godefroy, a merchant, resident in the town. After
-some hours’ sport we met a party of four Spaniards,
-among whom were Mr. Ortiga, the consignee
-of Captain Collet, and a person called Manuel
-d’Iago. Our friend M. Godefroy had some
-conversation with them at a short distance from
-us, and on his return gave us to understand, that
-d’Iago had said it would not cost him above five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-hundred dollars to send a pair of bullets through
-me, and that had I been alone he would not have
-scrupled to do it. For this blood-thirsty insinuation
-I was at a loss to conjecture any motive, nor
-knew I the man, except by report, which designated
-him as a captain of militia, extremely rigorous
-in his treatment of the unfortunate English,
-whenever his turn to mount guard at the prison
-subjected them to his authority.</p>
-
-<p>We pursued our diversion; he and his party
-meanwhile arrived at the Signal-house, about three
-miles above us, where they took refreshment.
-Some space of time afterward we observed a
-horse-soldier ride down towards us, who on approaching
-eyed us with a look of great suspicion.
-I had some little talk with him, having frequently
-seen him there before. He returned directly to
-the Guard-house, and an hour afterwards five
-<i>blandengues</i>, or horse-soldiers, sallied from the
-place at full speed, and, surrounding us, demanded
-our arms at the peril of our lives. Each of us
-obeyed, by surrendering his fowling-piece, M. Godefroy
-at the same time enquiring the cause of
-this extraordinary treatment; but they ordered
-him to be silent, and to march on along with
-us, or they would tie him on horseback. We
-were conducted to the Guard-house, and delivered
-(the officer being absent) to the corporal
-on guard, a fiery old Spaniard, who ordered us
-into an inner room, and placed two centinels at
-the door. The fellow was so stifled by passion,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-that we could not get an answer from him; at
-every moment he was drawing a long sabre which
-hung at his side, and venting his fury in the most
-abusive language. After a full half-hour of expostulation
-on our part, and menace on his, M.
-Godefroy obtained a hearing from him, and, declaring
-he was a merchant, married and actually
-settled in Monte Video, begged to know by what
-authority and under what pretext he was imprisoned.
-The corporal, on learning this, sent a
-soldier to the officer on guard, and while waiting
-his return, related that D’Iago had described us
-as Englishmen belonging to a privateer, who had
-landed with an intention to blow up the powder-magazines,
-kill bullocks, and plunder the natives.
-It was evident from his manner that he was very
-willing to believe this account, and that by treating
-us with severity he hoped to display his zeal
-for the service, and obtain promotion. M. Godefroy’s
-testimony being at length attended to, another
-soldier was dispatched to D’Iago’s party,
-who were not yet embarked, with notice that one
-of us affirmed himself to be a resident in Monte
-Video. This they did not contradict, but persisted
-in their accusations of the rest of our party;
-Mr. Ortiga denied any knowledge of Captain Collet,
-probably imagining that, in case of our conviction,
-he should benefit by the cargoes which
-the latter had consigned to him; and for me,
-whom they denounced as a spy, no punishment in
-their opinion could be too ignominious. On the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-return of the soldier, the corporal thought proper
-to release M. Godefroy, who took our boat to
-cross the port to Monte Video, with the intention
-of procuring an order for our liberation; but they
-had scarcely sailed, when a gust of wind arose, and
-as he and two boys he had with him could not
-manage the sails, they were nearly overset, and
-after considerable danger were picked up by a
-ship in the road. Meanwhile Captain Collet and
-I remained in strict custody, and at every syllable
-of complaint we uttered, the corporal brandished
-his sabre over our heads, roared out for the guard,
-and vociferated the most opprobrious language
-against the English. Thus threatened at every
-moment with assassination, we withdrew into a
-corner of the room, and quietly waited until the
-officer on guard arrived, when we were conducted
-in great form, between two men with drawn
-swords, into the room where he sat to receive us.
-Nothing could exceed my joyful surprise at recognizing
-in the officer an excellent and worthy
-friend, whom I had often visited at his farm,
-and who had given me repeated proofs of his
-liberal disposition and intelligent mind. His surprise
-exceeded mine; for instead of plunderers
-or spies, such as report had described us, he
-found an American merchant and a prisoner at
-large under bail. He was deeply grieved and
-ashamed at the treatment we had met with, liberated
-us immediately, mounted us on his own
-horses, and appointed a trusty person to attend<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-us to Monte Video, where we arrived at eight in
-the evening. The disappointment of the corporal
-appeared as deep as his rage had been violent;
-and the recollection of his conduct operated on us
-as a warning against persons of his class, who
-rarely see an opportunity of doing mischief to a
-stranger, without a strong inclination to avail
-themselves of it.</p>
-
-<p>During the time I was at large, I had leisure to
-acquire some knowledge of Monte Video. It is a
-tolerably well-built town, standing on a gentle
-elevation at the extremity of a small peninsula,
-and is walled entirely round. Its population
-amounts to between 15,000 and 20,000 souls.
-The harbour, though shoal, and quite open to the
-<i>pamperos</i>, or south-west gales, is the best in the
-Rio de la Plata; it has a very soft bottom of deep
-mud. When the wind continues for some time at
-north-east, ships drawing twelve feet water are
-frequently a-ground for several days, so that the
-harbour cannot be called a good one for vessels
-above three hundred or four hundred tons.</p>
-
-<p>There are but few capital buildings; the town
-in general consists of houses of one story, paved
-with bricks, and provided with very poor convenience.
-In the square is a cathedral, very
-handsome, but awkwardly situated; opposite to
-it, is an edifice divided into a town-house, or <i>cabildo</i>,
-and a prison. The streets, having no pavement,
-are always either clouded with dust or
-loaded with mud, as the weather happens to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-dry or wet. In seasons of drought the want of
-conduits for water is a serious inconvenience, the
-well, which principally supplies the town, being
-two miles distant.</p>
-
-<p>Provisions here are cheap and in great abundance.
-Beef in particular is very plentiful, and,
-though rarely fat or fine, makes excellent soup.
-The best parts of the meat may, indeed, be called
-tolerable, but they are by no means tender. The
-pork is not eatable. Such is the profusion of
-flesh-meat, that the vicinity for two miles round,
-and even the purlieus of the town itself, present
-filthy spectacles of bones and raw flesh at every
-step, which feed immense flocks of sea-gulls, and
-in summer breed myriads of flies, to the great annoyance
-of the inhabitants, who are obliged at
-table to have a servant or two continually employed
-in fanning the dishes with feathers, to
-drive away those troublesome intruders.</p>
-
-<p>Of the character of the inhabitants of Monte
-Video, I am perhaps not qualified to speak impartially,
-having been treated with unmerited
-harshness, deprived of my property, and repeatedly
-persecuted on the most groundless suspicion.
-These abuses, however, are solely chargeable on
-the governor and on the persons immediately under
-his influence; and I am bound in fairness to
-avow, that I did not perceive any disposition in
-the generality of the people to injure or oppress
-me. From individuals in the town I received all
-the assistance which disinterested benevolence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-could afford to a person in my critical situation;
-and were I, from the impulse of gratitude, to judge
-of the whole by a part, I should say, that the inhabitants
-of Monte Video, particularly the Creolians,
-are humane and well-disposed, when not
-actuated by political or religious prejudices.
-Their habits of life are much the same with those
-of their brethren in Old Spain, and seem to proceed
-from the same remarkable union of two opposite
-but not incompatible qualities, indolence
-and temperance. The ladies are generally affable
-and polite, extremely fond of dress, and very
-neat and cleanly in their persons. They adopt
-the English costume at home, but go abroad
-usually in black, and always covered with a large
-veil or mantle. At mass they invariably appear
-in black silk, bordered with deep fringes. They
-delight in conversation, for which their vivacity
-eminently qualifies them, and they are very courteous
-to strangers.</p>
-
-<p>The chief trade of Monte Video consists in
-hides, tallow, and dried beef; the two former of
-these articles are exported to Europe, and the
-latter is sent to the West Indies, especially to the
-Havannah. Coarse copper from Chili, in square
-cakes, is sometimes shipped here, as well as an
-herb called <i>Mate</i> from Paraguay, the infusion of
-which is as common a beverage in these parts as
-tea is in England.</p>
-
-<p>Sugar, coffee, and sweetmeats, are supplied from
-Rio de Janeiro and other parts of the Brazilian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-coasts by small traders. Some articles of jewellery
-are also brought from thence, and the returns
-are made in dollars, hides, and tallow, which are
-forwarded generally to Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The inhabitants were by no means opulent before
-the English took the garrison, but through
-the misfortunes of the latter at Buenos Ayres,
-and the losses of our commercial adventurers by
-ill-judged and imprudent speculations, they were
-considerably enriched. The great prospects indulged
-in England, before the expedition to the
-Plata, of immense profits by trade to that river,
-have generally ended in ruin; very few, indeed,
-of the speculators have escaped without considerable
-loss. Property, once litigated, might be considered
-in a fair way for confiscation; and in case
-of its having been deposited until certain questions
-were decided, restitution was generally obtained
-at the loss of one half. It frequently happened
-that goods detained in the Custom-houses, or
-lodged in private stores in the river, were opened,
-and large quantities stolen. The party on whom
-suspicion seemed most reasonably to fall was the
-consignee, who, even with a few cargoes, was generally
-observed to get rich very rapidly. Not
-contented with the profits accruing from his commission,
-he seldom scrupled to take every advantage
-which possession of the property afforded
-him, to further his own interests at the expence of
-his correspondent. The dread of a legal process
-could be but a slight check upon him, for in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-Spanish courts of justice, as well as in others,
-a native and a stranger are seldom upon equal
-terms. Other circumstances have occurred to
-enrich the inhabitants of Monte Video. It is a
-fact, which I afterwards ascertained, that the
-English exported thither, goods to the amount of
-a million and a half sterling, a small portion of
-which, on the restoration of the place to the
-Spaniards, was re-shipped for the Cape of Good
-Hope and the West Indies; the remainder was
-for the most part sacrificed at whatever price the
-Spaniards chose to give. As their own produce
-advanced in proportion as our’s lowered in price,
-those among them who speculated gained considerably.
-The holders of English goods sold their
-stock at upwards of fifty per cent. profit immediately
-after the evacuation of the place.</p>
-
-<p>The climate of Monte Video is humid. The
-weather, in the winter months (June, July, and
-August), is at times boisterous, and the air in that
-season is generally keen and piercing. In summer
-the serenity of the atmosphere is frequently interrupted
-by tremendous thunder-storms, preceded
-by dreadful lightning, which frequently damages
-the shipping, and followed by heavy rain, which
-sometimes destroys the harvest. The heat is
-troublesome, and is rendered more so to strangers
-by the swarms of mosquitoes, which it engenders in
-such numbers that they infest every apartment.</p>
-
-<p>The town stands on a basis of granite, the feldspar
-of which is for the most part of an opaque<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-milk-white color, in a decomposing state; in
-some places it is found of a flesh-red color and
-crystallized. The mica is generally large and
-foliated, in many places imperfectly crystallized.
-It is obvious that the excessive quantity of mud
-in the harbour and throughout the banks of the
-river cannot have been formed from this stratum.
-The high mount on the opposite side of the bay,
-which is crowned with a Light-house, and gives
-name to the town, is principally composed of clay-slate,
-in laminæ perpendicular to the horizon.
-This substance appears much like basalt in texture,
-but its fracture is less conchoidal; it decomposes
-into an imperfect species of wacké, and
-ultimately into ferruginous clay, from beds of
-which water is observed to flow in various parts
-of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>The vicinity of Monte Video is agreeably diversified
-with low gently sloping hills, and long
-valleys watered by beautiful rivulets; but the
-prospects they afford are rarely enlivened by
-traces of cultivation; few enclosures are seen except
-the gardens of the principal merchants. The
-same defect appears in a north-east direction from
-the town, where similar varieties of hill, valley,
-and water prevail, and seem to want only the
-embellishment of sylvan scenery to complete
-the landscape. Some wood, indeed, grows on
-the margin of the <i>Riachuelo</i>, which is used for
-the building of hovels and for fuel. There is a
-pleasant stream about ten leagues from Monte<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-Video, called the Louza, the banks of which
-seem to invite the labor of the planter, and would
-certainly produce abundance of timber<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>. It is to
-be remarked that the almost entire want of this
-article here, occasions great inconvenience and
-expense: wood for mechanical purposes is extremely
-scarce, and planks are so dear that hardly
-one house with a boarded floor is to be found.</p>
-
-<p>In this vicinity the farms are of great extent;
-few are so small as six miles in length, by a league
-in width. Such is the scarcity of wood, that the
-land-marks, when not already designated by nature
-in a chain of hills, a rivulet, or a valley, are made
-by ranges of stones of a peculiar form. The
-<i>quintas</i> (or farms owned by gentlemen), with the
-country houses built upon them, as rural retreats
-for their proprietors, resident in Monte
-Video, were extremely pleasant and agreeable;
-the gardens were full of fine flowers and fruits,
-and every thing about these establishments indicated
-so much peace, harmony, and good neighbourhood,
-as to make an impression on the mind
-of a stranger equally pleasing and indelible. But
-the scene, alas! has been changed through the intestine
-discords produced by a revolutionary war;
-and the colony has been reduced from a state of
-happiness to one of distress and wretchedness.
-The inhabitants of the interior, having been instigated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-to plunder each other until nothing remained,
-ranged themselves under the banners of
-the predatory chieftain Artigas, and formed a
-desperate banditti, who robbed and frequently
-murdered all they met; drove the peaceable inhabitants
-from their farms, plundered their houses,
-took away their cattle, reduced the rich to poverty,
-and the poor to wretchedness, almost so as to desolate
-this once florishing colony. A man, who
-but a few months before possessed 100,000 head
-of cattle, was driven from his estate, and obliged
-to purchase, at the price of one shilling per pound,
-the meat which he had formerly left in the
-slaughter-house, having killed his beasts merely
-for their hides; so that the necessaries of life
-which were once to be procured almost gratuitously,
-became extravagantly dear; and the horrors
-of approaching famine were superadded to those
-of anarchy and spoliation.</p>
-
-<p>Reverting to the former order of things, I
-could name more than fifty individuals of Monte
-Video, whose estates were from twenty to fifty
-miles in length, by ten or twenty in breadth,
-with cattle in such numbers as are almost incredible.
-An estate of this kind, consisting
-of a varied extent of hill, plain, and valley, is
-called a <i>fazenda</i>, as distinguished from the <i>quinta</i>,
-which bears a closer resemblance to the English
-farm, being a portion of land, generally selected
-near the house, for the culture of wheat, beans,
-Indian corn, melons, fruit trees, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The farm house is almost destitute of furniture;
-the couch consists of a raw hide, stretched and
-suspended, on which is placed a flock bed;
-strangers most commonly sleep on a mat, or dried
-hide, spread upon the ground.</p>
-
-<p>At a small distance from Monte Video, herds of
-deer, and flocks of ostriches are to be met with;
-the eagle is often seen, and sometimes the tiger.
-Soon after the time when the troops of Artigas drove
-the cattle from the mountain opposite, two tigers
-swam across the bay, penetrated at night into the
-town, and killed two or three of the inhabitants
-ere they were attacked and destroyed. They were
-supposed to have been driven by hunger in search
-of food.</p>
-
-<p>The country which was formerly so peaceable
-and so safe, that a traveller might go to almost
-any distance, and meet with nothing but hospitality,
-has been latterly so infested with banditti, that
-to wander a mile or two from the town exposes a
-man to the danger of being robbed and murdered;
-so that while anarchy and confusion prevail within,
-there is nothing but plunder and destruction
-without the walls of Monte Video. It has however
-fallen into the possession of the Portuguese,
-who cannot be dislodged from so strong a fortress
-by any force which their neighbours are able to
-bring against them. Indeed, the Potuguese, availing
-themselves of the advantages afforded by
-the disorganized state of Buenos Ayres, will, no
-doubt, incorporate the northern part of the Plata<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-with the captaincy of Rio Grande, and thus extend
-to that distracted country the blessings of
-their own mild and beneficent government. Artigas
-being at length taken prisoner, public confidence
-will be restored in Monte Video, and the
-reign of peace and security be there re-established.</p>
-
-<p>The operation of ploughing, consists here of little
-more than forming a small furrow, by running a
-sharp pointed stick through the soil. There are
-no dairy farms, and scarcely is any butter or cheese
-made. Mining is unknown; and little notice is
-taken of the small quantity of lead ore which appears
-in limestone at Maldonado.</p>
-
-<p>An estate, however large, seldom contains more
-than from ten to twenty men, who are employed
-in domesticating cattle; and scarcely a woman is to
-be seen, except the domestic negresses. Sheep are
-kept solely for their wool, and pigs for their fat, an
-article much in request for culinary preparations.
-The usual mode of travelling is on horseback, and
-there are very few carriages in Monte Video.</p>
-
-<p>The breeding of horses is less attended to than
-that of cattle, as their hides sell at an inferior
-price. Herds of 500 or 1000 horses are not often
-seen in this district, though those of oxen sometimes
-amount to ten times the latter number.
-Cows are but seldom domesticated, and then very
-few, and it is by mere stratagem in managing the
-calf that any milk can be procured. Every kind
-of handicraft trade is ill conducted. Though the
-Monte Videans have hides, they procure their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-leather from Europe, as that which they make
-themselves is comparatively worthless. Their
-carpenters and other artisans are bad workmen;
-but I am told their barbers are men of superior
-skill in their calling, and this distinction may,
-perhaps, be attributed to the great beards of the
-Spaniards; the men of Paraguay having a stinted
-portion of that natural ornament. The silversmiths
-are of so inferior a stamp, that they might
-with greater propriety be called coppersmiths.
-The common people excel most in catching cattle,
-either with the noose, or the balls.</p>
-
-<p>In the neighbourhood of Buenos Ayres and
-Monte Video, wheat alone is grown. It is stored,
-until wanted, in hides; and when there is a great
-demand for grain in Brazil, it is sometimes exported
-to Rio de Janeiro. But of late years the
-inhabitants of the provinces of La Plata have paid
-less attention than ever to this branch of agriculture;
-and the supplies to Brazil have been chiefly
-derived from the Cape of Good Hope.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c2" id="c2">CHAP. II.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Journey to Barriga Negra.&mdash;Geology of the
-Country.&mdash;Limestone, and mode of burning it.&mdash;Horned
-Cattle.&mdash;Peons.&mdash;Horses.&mdash;Defective
-State of Agriculture.&mdash;Manners of the Inhabitants.&mdash;Dress.&mdash;Wild
-Animals.&mdash;Monte Video
-taken by the British.&mdash;My return thither.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">ON the arrival of General Beresford’s expedition
-in the river, I was again ordered into close confinement,
-but my advocate obtained permission
-for me to be sent into the interior, under a stipulation
-not to approach within forty leagues of
-Monte Video. This removal seemed for the moment
-to shut out all hope of obtaining my liberty,
-and at the same time threatened to expose me to
-fresh dangers, but I derived some consolation
-from the generous offers of shelter and protection
-made to me by a worthy Spaniard named Don
-Juan Martinez, whose establishment, not more
-than fifty leagues from the lake of Meni, was situated
-at the full distance prescribed in the orders
-respecting me. A retreat so remote and unfrequented
-offered few amusements to relieve the
-tediousness of banishment, but it at least afforded
-the prospect of a wider range for mineralogical
-observation, and of ampler leisure to attend to this
-my favorite pursuit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the course of the journey thither, my attention
-was principally engaged by the wild and solitary
-aspect of the country. About twenty-five
-leagues north-east from Monte Video, I observed
-an irregular ridge of granite mountains, in a direction
-nearly north and south, and the country from
-this distance gradually assumes a rugged appearance.
-Mica is very common upon the road, and
-in some places quartz; on one hill I gathered
-several detached crystals of the latter substance.
-The ravines of these stony wilds and the wooded
-margins of the rivers afford shelter to many ferocious
-animals, such as jaguars, (here called tigers),
-lions, and ounces. Here are also great numbers
-of wild dogs which breed in the rocks, and at
-times make great havoc among the young cattle.
-The farms in this district, for the most part, include
-tracts of land from twenty to thirty miles
-in length by half that extent in breadth, watered by
-pleasing streams. Vast herds of cattle are bred
-upon them; it is calculated that each square
-league sustains one thousand five hundred or two
-thousand head.</p>
-
-<p>At the distance of about forty leagues from
-Monte Video, in the direction above mentioned,
-the range of hills gradually lessens and disappears;
-the country opens finely on the left, and is
-intersected by numerous rivulets. After crossing
-several of these we arrived at the head of a little
-brook called Polancos, which a few miles below,
-assumes the name of Barriga Negra. It there receives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-several small streams, and in the course of
-ten leagues is augmented by the confluence of
-some others; becoming thus a considerable river,
-about as large as the Trent at Gainsborough, it is
-denominated Godoy, but, on passing into the
-Portugueze territories, it changes its name to that
-of Sebollati, and flows into the Lagun Meni.
-Near the junction of two rivulets that form the
-Barriga Negra, stands the great lime-kiln of my
-friend, in whose house I took up my residence, and
-was received with that kindness and sincere hospitality
-which in an instant dispelled every doubt from
-my mind, and excited in me sentiments of gratitude
-that were every day more deeply impressed
-in my heart.</p>
-
-<p>Having become thoroughly domesticated in my
-new abode, I began to make excursions into the
-surrounding district and the parts beyond it.
-The country in general may be termed stony and
-mountainous, though its inequalities do not exceed
-those of Derbyshire. No traces of either
-volcanic or alluvial matter are to be found; the
-solid rock frequently appears on the surface, and
-in many places projects in masses of various sizes.
-The mountains and rocks are of granite; no veins
-of metallic substance have hitherto been discovered,
-but fine red and yellow jasper, chalcedony,
-and quartz, are not unfrequently found loose on
-the surface. Some fossils of the asbestos kind, and
-some very poor oxides of iron are likewise to be
-met with occasionally. The bases of many of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-conical mountains are overlaid with limestone of
-a dull blue color; I found in this substance many
-capillary veins of calcareous-spar, and sometimes
-crystals of pyrites. In one part of the vicinity there
-is a plain about half a mile square, on the surface of
-which are found large quantities of white stone in
-nodules; it is of a very close texture and proves to
-be gypsum without water (Anhydrite). The summits
-of these mountains are no where calcareous,
-excepting those of one ridge, the singular appearance
-of which induced me to trace it as far as was
-practicable. The limestone on these summits is
-of a close compact kind, united to transparent
-quartz in a tabular form, standing, as it were, in
-laminæ perpendicular to the horizon, and thus
-presenting to the view a number of upright slabs,
-somewhat similar to the grave-stones in a country
-church-yard. This singular ridge apparently commences
-at a mountain of very unusual form, and,
-extending about two miles, in which it crosses two
-or three valleys, and terminates in a ravine of considerable
-depth. No vestige of calcareous crystallization
-appeared in this limestone<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>. It is
-singular to remark, that the cavities formed by the
-laminæ afford refuge for reptiles, particularly rattle-snakes;
-the person employed by Mr. Martinez
-in getting the stone, destroyed upwards of twenty-seven<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-serpents of that species in the course of a
-few weeks.</p>
-
-<p>The limestone is loosened by the wedge and
-lever, and brought away in large slabs to the
-kilns, where it is broken into fragments of a convenient
-size, and burnt with wood. The kilns are
-very capacious, but so badly constructed that the
-process of calcination is very slow and tedious. The
-lime, when slaked, is measured, put into sacks
-made of green hides, and sent in large carts,
-drawn by oxen, principally to Colonia del Sacramento,
-Monte Video, and Buenos Ayres.</p>
-
-<p>Barriga Negra is distant about 160 miles north-east
-from Monte Video, about 120 from Maldonado,
-and 90 from the town of Minas. The
-country around it is mountainous, well watered,
-and not destitute of wood. The banks of the
-streams are thickly covered with trees, rarely,
-however, of large size, for the creeping plants, interweaving
-with the shoots, check their growth
-and form an impenetrable thicket. Here are
-numbers of great breeding estates, many of which
-are stocked with from 60,000 to 200,000 head of
-cattle. These are guarded principally by men
-from Paraguay called Peons, who live in hovels
-built for the purpose at convenient distances.
-Ten thousand head are allotted to four or five
-Peons, whose business it is to collect them every
-morning and evening, and once or twice a month
-to drive them into pens, where they are kept for a
-night. The cattle by this mode of management<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-are soon tamed; a ferocious or vicious beast I
-never saw among them. Breeding is alone attended
-to; neither butter nor cheese is made, and
-milk is scarcely known as an article of food. The
-constant diet of the people, morning, noon, and
-night, is beef, eaten almost always without bread,
-and frequently without salt. This habitual subsistence
-on strong food would probably engender
-diseases, were it not corrected by frequently taking
-an infusion of their favorite herb <i>Mate</i>, at all
-times of the day, when inclination calls for it.</p>
-
-<p>The dwellings of the Peons are in general very
-wretched, the walls being formed by a few upright
-posts interwoven with small branches of trees,
-plastered with mud inside and out, and the roof
-thatched with long grass and rushes. The door
-is also of wicker-work, or, in its stead, a green
-hide stretched on sticks and removable at pleasure.
-The furniture of these poor hovels consists
-of a few skulls of horses, which are made to serve
-for seats; and of a stretched hide to lie upon.
-The principal if not the sole cooking utensil is a
-spit or rod of iron, stuck in the ground in an
-oblique position, so as to incline over the fire.
-The beef when spitted is left to roast until the
-part next the fire is supposed to be done enough,
-then its position is altered, and the change is
-occasionally repeated, until the whole is cooked.
-The juices of the meat, by this mode of roasting,
-help to mend the fire, and indeed the
-people seem to think that they are fit for nothing
-else. The meat, which is naturally poor and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-coarse, being thus dried to a cake, bears little affinity
-to the boasted roast beef of England. Fuel,
-in some parts, is so extremely scarce that the following
-strange expedient is resorted to for a supply.
-As the mares in this country are kept solely
-for breeding, and are never trained to labor, they
-generally exceed, in a great degree, the due proportion;
-a flock of them is frequently killed, and
-their carcasses soon becoming dry, are used as
-firing, (with the exception of the hides and tails),
-which, when properly prepared, are packed for
-exportation.</p>
-
-<p>The Peons are chiefly emigrants from Paraguay<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>,
-and it is a singular fact that, among the
-numbers that are here settled, very few women<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-are to be found. A person may travel in these
-parts for days together without seeing or hearing
-of a single female in the course of his journey.
-To this circumstance may be attributed the total
-absence of domestic comfort in the dwellings of
-these wretched men, and the gloomy apathy observable
-in their dispositions and habits. It is
-true that the mistress of an estate may occasionally
-visit it for a few months, but she is obliged
-during her stay to live in great seclusion, on account
-of the dreadful consequences to be apprehended
-from being so exposed.</p>
-
-<p>The dexterous mode in which the Peons catch
-their cattle, by throwing a noose over them, has
-been frequently detailed, but certainly no description
-can do full justice to their agility. They
-throw with equal precision and effect, whether at
-full gallop or at rest. Their method of catching
-horses, by means of balls attached to leather thongs,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-is similar to the former but more unerring; scarcely
-an instance has been known of its failure, except
-in those frequent trials which are requisite to
-acquire perfect skill in the practice.</p>
-
-<p>They have a very singular and simple way of
-training mules and horses to draw light carts,
-coaches, &amp;c. No harness is used; a saddle or pad
-is girted on, and a leather thong is fastened to the
-girth on one side, so that the animal moving forward,
-with his body in a rather oblique direction,
-keeps his legs clear of the apparatus which is attached
-to him, and draws with a freedom and an
-agility that in a stranger excite great surprise. A
-similar contrivance is used in the catching of cattle.
-The Peon fastens one end of his <i>lazo</i><a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> to the girth
-of his horse, who soon learns to place himself in
-such an attitude as to draw the ox which his rider
-has caught, and even, should the latter dismount,
-to keep the thong on the stretch.</p>
-
-<p>The horses in this country are very spirited,
-and perform almost incredible labor. They seldom
-work longer than a week at a time, being then
-turned out to pasture for months together. Their
-sole food is grass, and the treatment they endure
-from their masters is most harsh and unfeeling.
-They are frequently galloped until their
-generous fire is spent, and they drop through exhaustion
-and fatigue. The make of the bridle is
-alone sufficient to torture the animal, being of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-heavy Spanish fashion. They are never shod.
-The girths of the saddles are of a curious construction;
-they are generally formed of shreds of
-green hide, or of the sinew of the neck; the middle
-part is twenty inches broad, and each end is terminated
-by an iron ring. One of these ends is made
-fast to the saddle by its ring; to the other side of
-the saddle is attached a third ring and a pliable
-strap, which, being passed through it and the
-girth-ring three or four times, affords the rider
-great purchase, and enables him to gird the saddle
-very tight, which is thus kept so firm in its place
-that a crupper is unnecessary, and indeed is never
-used.</p>
-
-<p>Trained horses sell here at from five to seven dollars
-each; horned cattle, in good condition, by
-the herd of a thousand, at two dollars a head;
-mares at three rials (1s. 6d. sterling) each. Sheep are
-very scarce and are never eaten; they are kept by
-some families merely for the sake of their wool,
-which is made into flocks for bedding. It is worthy
-of remark, that, in the remote parts of the
-interior, where no settlements have been made,
-the cattle are found of a dark brown color,
-except on a small part of the belly, which is white,
-but when they become domesticated, they produce
-breeds of a lighter color, with hides beautifully
-spotted and variegated. The fine herds bred in
-many parts of this district, have often tempted the
-Portugueze to make predatory incursions; and the
-country being accessible by fine open passes to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-the frontier, as well as to the north side of the
-Plata, these violations of territory have been carried
-on to a very serious extent. So frequent
-were they at one period, that it became necessary
-to appoint a military force to parade the boundaries
-and to defend the Spanish settlements against
-these inroads.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc">PEON CATCHING CATTLE.</p></div>
- <img src="images/ill-045a.jpg" width="400" height="275" id="i32"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-045b.jpg" width="400" height="276"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc">PLOUGHING FOR WHEAT.<span class="vh">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</span>OSTRICH NEST.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In taking a general view of the country, a
-stranger cannot but observe, with regret, that
-while nature has been profuse in her blessings, the
-inhabitants have been neglectful in the improvement
-of them. Here is, for instance, abundance
-of excellent clay and plenty of wood on the margin
-of the rivers, yet it is rare to meet with an inclosure,
-even for a kitchen garden, much more so
-for a corn-field. They generally choose their
-grounds for tillage by the banks of a rivulet, so as
-to have one side or sometimes two sides bounded
-by it; the remainder is fenced in the most clumsy
-and bungling manner imaginable. Ploughing is
-performed by the help of two oxen yoked to a
-crooked piece of wood, about four inches in diameter,
-and pointed at the end. After the ground
-has been rooted up, the wheat is sown, without
-any previous attempt to clear it from noxious
-seeds. While it grows up, it is never weeded; so
-that wild oats, poppies, and other pernicious herbs,
-thriving among it in wild luxuriance, obstruct
-the sun’s rays and hinder it from ripening kindly.
-Indian corn, beans, melons, &amp;c. are all treated in
-a similar way. The wheat, when ripe, is cut down
-with sickles, and gathered into heads or sheaves.
-A circular pen of from forty to sixty yards in diameter
-is then formed with rails and hides; in the
-centre of this enclosure is placed a quantity of about
-one hundred or two hundred quarters of wheat in
-the straw. The pile is so formed as to have the
-ears on the outside as much as possible. A small
-quantity is pulled down towards the circumference
-of the circle, and a herd of about twenty mares
-is driven in, which, being untamed, are easily
-frightened and made to gallop round. At this
-pace they are kept by means of whips for four or
-five hours, until the corn is trod out of the ears,
-and the straw is completely reduced. Another
-parcel of the sheaves is then pulled down, and a
-fresh herd of mares is let in, and this operation is
-repeated until the whole heap is reduced, and the
-straw is broken as small as chaff. In this state it
-is left until it blows a brisk gale; and then
-the winnowing is performed by emptying baskets
-of the mixed grain and chaff at an elevation of
-eight feet from the ground. While the chaff is
-borne away by the current of air, the grain falls,
-and at the close of the operation, is sewed up in
-green hides. In this state it is sent to Monte
-Video, where it is ground for consumption, or
-exported. It is obvious, that by the above mode
-of separating the grain, a considerable quantity
-must be lost by abrasion, and by mixture with a
-large portion of earth which cannot be blown
-away by the wind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The climate and soil are equally favorable for
-the growth of grapes, apples, peaches, and in short
-every species of fruit belonging to the temperate
-zone, but these are known here only as rarities.
-That inestimable root, the potatoe, would thrive
-abundantly, if once introduced; but, though much
-has been said in recommendation of it, the people
-remain totally averse to this or any other proposal
-for improving their means of subsistence, and
-seem to wish for nothing beyond the bare necessaries
-of life. Indeed the state of society among
-them weakens those ties which naturally attach
-men to the soil on which they are accustomed to
-subsist. The Peons, brought from Paraguay in
-their infancy, grow up to the age of manhood in a
-state of servitude, uncheered by domestic comfort;
-at that period they generally wander, in search of
-employment, toward the coast, where money is
-in greater plenty. There is no specie in circulation
-in the interior; their wages are paid
-monthly in notes on Monte Video. The men,
-for the most part, are an honest and harmless
-race, though quite as liable, from the circumstances
-of their condition, to acquire habits of
-gambling<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>, as the higher classes of the people, numbers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-of whom fall victims to that seductive vice.
-The various evils hence resulting are multiplied
-by the lax administration of the laws; even in case
-of murder the criminal has little to fear if he can
-escape to a distance of twenty or thirty leagues;
-he there lives in obscurity, probably for the remainder
-of his life, without ever being brought to
-justice. I know not whether this want of vigilance
-in the magistracy be not a temptation for the
-numerous refugees who seek shelter here, such as
-European Spaniards, who have deserted from the
-service or have been banished for their crimes.
-These wretches, loaded with guilt, flee into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-interior, where they seldom fail to find some one
-or other of their countrymen who is willing to
-give them employment, though frequently at the
-peril of his life. By the corrupt example of these
-refugees, the innocent Creole is soon initiated in
-vice, and becomes a prey to all those violent passions
-which are engendered and fostered by habitual
-idleness.</p>
-
-<p>The common dress of the people is such as
-might be expected from their indolence and
-poverty. They generally go without shoes and
-stockings; indeed as they rarely go on foot, they
-have seldom occasion for shoes. Some of them,
-particularly the Peons, make a kind of boots from
-the raw skins of young horses, which they frequently
-kill for this sole purpose. When the animal
-is dead, they cut the skin round the thigh,
-about eighteen inches above the gambrel; having
-stripped it, they stretch and dress it until it loses
-the hair and becomes quite white. The lower
-part, which covered the joint, forms the heel, and
-the extremity is tied or sewed up to cover the
-toes. These boots, when newly finished, are of a
-delicate color, and very generally admired. The
-rest of their apparel consists of a jacket, which is
-universally worn by all ranks, and a shirt and
-drawers made of a coarse cotton cloth brought
-from Brazil. Children run about with no dress
-but their shirts until their fifth or sixth year.
-Their education is very little attended to, and is
-confined to mere rudiments; a man who is able<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-to read and write, is considered to have all the
-learning he can desire.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many natural advantages which this
-district possesses, are the frequent falls in the rivulets
-and larger streams, which might be converted
-to various mechanical purposes, if the
-population were more numerous and better instructed.
-Some of these streams, as was before
-stated, join the various branches of the Godoy,
-and flow into the lake Meni; those on the other
-side of the mountains in a northerly direction empty
-themselves principally through the Riachuelo and
-the St. Lucia, into the Plata.</p>
-
-<p>The want of cultivation in this vast territory
-may be inferred from the numbers and varieties
-of wild animals which breed upon it. Tigers,
-ounces, and lions are common. The former are
-heavy sluggish animals; their chief prey is the young
-cattle, which they find in such abundance, that
-they rarely attack a man. Hence little danger is
-to be apprehended from them by any person travelling
-on horseback<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>, unless when inadvertently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-approaching the haunt of a female with young.
-The ounce has the same character, and the lion is
-considered less vicious than either. There is an
-animal of the pig kind, called the pig of the woods,
-(<i>Pecari</i>),<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> which has an orifice on its back, whence
-it emits a most intolerable stench when closely
-pursued. If on killing the animal, the part be instantaneously
-cut out, the flesh affords good eating,
-but should that operation be neglected, even
-for a short period, the taint contaminates the
-whole carcass. The domestic pigs are by no
-means good; they feed so much upon beef, that
-their flesh is very hard and coarse. There is an
-animal of the opossum kind, about the size of a
-rabbit, called a <i>zurilla</i>, the skin of which is streaked
-black and white, and is considered of some value.
-When attacked, it ejects a fetid liquor, which is
-of so pungent a nature, that if it falls on any part of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-the dress of its pursuers, there is no possibility of
-getting rid of the stench, but by continual exposure
-to the weather for some months. The <i>zurilla</i>
-is very fond of eggs and poultry, and sometimes
-enters a house in quest of its prey; the inhabitants
-immediately hasten out and leave their
-unwelcome visitant in quiet possession, as long as
-she chooses to stay; well aware that the slightest
-attempt to drive her out, would expose them to
-an ejectment from the premises for ever. Eagles
-both of the grey and blue species, as well as
-other birds of prey, are found in great numbers.
-Here are also parroquets in immense flocks,
-pigeons, great red-legged partridges, small partridges,
-wild ducks, and wild turkies. Ostriches
-of a large species are very numerous; they are so
-fleet and active, that even when well mounted I
-could never get near them but by surprise; the
-stroke of their wing is said to be inconceivably
-strong.</p>
-
-<p>Here are considerable herds of small deer,
-which in this fine country would afford the sportsman
-excellent diversion; but unfortunately the
-dogs are good for nothing, as there is no attention
-paid to the preservation and improvement
-of the breed. The rivers produce tortoises and
-other amphibious animals, but they are chiefly
-noted for a variety of singularly ugly fish, which
-afford tolerable but by no means good eating.</p>
-
-<p>During a residence of six months in this remote
-district, as a prisoner at large, or in fact as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-a welcome guest at the house of a most hospitable
-man, my life passed away in an equable tenor,
-uninterrupted by those vicissitudes that elsewhere
-befel me, and therefore a narrative of it is little
-calculated to interest the reader. Rather than
-occupy his attention by relating my various hopes
-and disappointments, as the prospect of liberation
-became more or less favorable, I have chosen to
-present him with the result of some general observations
-on the country, made during the daily
-excursions which I enjoyed through the liberality
-of my friend. The longer I resided in his house,
-the greater was his kindness to me in allowing
-me those indulgences, and the more did he and
-his family strive to render my exile agreeable.
-An event at length occurred which at once
-delighted and distressed me; because while it
-afforded me hopes of immediate deliverance, it destroyed
-for a time the harmony which had so long
-subsisted between me and my protector. I allude
-to the taking of Monte Video by the British
-troops under Sir Samuel Auchmuty.</p>
-
-<p>On hearing of the surrender of the place, I
-solicited Mr. Martinez to liberate me, as I thought
-myself no longer a prisoner. He seemed much
-astonished at this, and gave me to understand
-that I continued a prisoner, because, not being
-actually at Monte Video, I was still in the power
-and under the jurisdiction of the Viceroy of
-Buenos Ayres. This worthy man’s mind was so
-distracted by the fall of the town, and by the disgrace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-of the Spanish arms, that he secluded himself
-from society, and avoided all communication
-with me. In these circumstances I was advised
-to attempt my escape, but I felt great repugnance
-at the idea of thus wounding the feelings
-of a man who had humanely released me
-from confinement, and had ever treated me as
-a brother. Averse to such an act of ingratitude,
-I intreated his amiable wife to intercede for me,
-and to suggest that, on returning to Monte Video,
-it might be in my power to be of service
-to him. But he rejected the proposal in the
-most vehement manner, and forbade any one to
-talk to him on the subject. I now thought that
-my liberty was unreasonably denied me, and as I
-saw no probability of obtaining it but through my
-own exertions, I determined at all events to make
-the attempt. After deliberating for some days,
-and consulting with two men who had frequently
-mentioned the subject to me, I decided on my
-plan of escape, and gave them six ounces of gold
-to provide horses and every thing necessary. On
-the appointed night, all was in readiness, the
-horses were saddled, and the men waiting to
-escort me. This moment was one of the most
-melancholy in my life; I reflected with compunction,
-that, while striving to regain my freedom, I
-was apparently abusing the confidence of a man
-of honor, who had done all in his power to merit
-my friendship. Agitated by these emotions, and
-oppressed by a sadness which the thick gloom of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-the night rendered more heavy, I was walking to
-and fro in the neighbourhood, on the spot appointed
-for my guides to meet me, when a voice,
-with which I was familiar, accosted me. The person
-was very near me, but owing to the extreme darkness
-I could not see him. He asked me what I
-was doing there. I replied, “only walking about.”
-“Don Juan,” said he “you are going to escape to-night.”
-I answered, “indeed I am not.” He replied,
-“you are; and the men whom you have
-chosen for your guides are to murder you, to
-seize your money, and to bury you in a ravine
-about a league distant. The man in whom you have
-most confided has a knife concealed in his saddle,
-with which he is to give you the fatal blow.” This
-so staggered me, that I was unable, at the moment,
-to make any answer. I felt confident that
-no one knew of my intended departure, except
-the two men and myself. On asking, “how do
-you know this?” he replied, “I overheard them
-talking of it.” He added, “you know they are
-both gamblers, and one of them killed two men
-last year.” Ere I had recovered my surprise, so
-as to speak again, the man went away. While
-meditating on the choice of evils, namely, whether
-to run the risk of being murdered and thrown
-into a ravine, or to abandon my design and remain
-a prisoner, one of my hired Peons came to inform
-me that the horses were waiting. I told him I
-had a violent pressure at my stomach and could
-not ride. He treated this very lightly, and urged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-me with great earnestness to mount at all events.
-Considering at this moment that money was of
-little value in comparison with my life and liberty,
-I offered to give him two ounces of gold if he
-would perform a piece of service for me, which I
-would explain to him through my room-window
-at midnight. He still used every argument to
-persuade me immediately to set out, but finding
-that I persisted in alleging my indisposition as an
-excuse, he at length acceded to my proposal.
-Having reached my chamber, I wrote to a magistrate
-at Monte Video, who, I knew, would, if he
-had survived the assault of the town, send an
-order for my liberation. When I had finished writing,
-the man appeared at the window according to
-agreement; I gave him the letter, charged him to
-convey it to Monte Video, and presenting him
-with two ounces of gold, promised him another
-ounce if he should bring me an answer. He departed
-unknown to any of our good family, and
-on the fifth day following, in the forenoon, returned,
-to my inexpressible joy, with a paper
-signed by Don Francisco Juanico, the magistrate
-to whom I had written, stating that I was free,
-and ought immediately to proceed thither. On
-receiving this welcome intelligence, I hastened to
-Mr. Martinez, and joyfully embracing him, gave
-him the paper to read; after examining its contents,
-he observed, that it was nothing official,
-but would avail me as a reasonable pretext for
-going away, to which he cordially acquiesced.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-He immediately ordered three Peons and a trusty
-old Creole to accompany me, with twenty-five
-horses, that we might perform the journey with
-greater expedition. The best dinner was provided
-which the time would allow, and while partaking
-of it I received the sincerest congratulations
-on my liberation from my worthy host and
-his amiable lady. I then took an affectionate
-leave of every branch of this good family, expressing
-my warm acknowledgments of the many obligations
-they had conferred on me. Having joined
-my guides, we each mounted a horse, and, at
-three in the afternoon, set off at full speed, driving
-the rest of the cattle before us. My first horse
-bore me forty miles, and I changed him at ten
-o’clock. The night was fine, and after a rapid
-but pleasant journey, we forded the river St. Lucia
-and halted at two in the morning, half way on
-the route to Monte Video. At the house, into
-the <i>corral</i> of which our horses were driven for
-the purpose of changing them, I procured a
-slight repast of dried figs, after which we again
-mounted and travelled tolerably fresh until six in
-the morning, when we were again obliged to
-change, having proceeded about one hundred
-English miles. Our horses now began to lose
-their generous spirit, and were much distressed.
-As our progress became slower and our changes
-more frequent, my anxiety increased, because I
-was aware there were Spanish parties scouring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-the country about Monte Video, and stopping the
-passage of all provisions from the interior. To
-avoid suspicion, I rode in the dress of a Peon,
-with the lazo coiled up and hung at my saddle.
-At eleven o’clock the heat of the day became oppressive,
-and our horses flagged exceedingly. To
-add to my distress I had a violent hæmorrhage
-from the nose, and could obtain no water to drink
-or wash with, so that, through thirst and the coagulation
-of the blood, I was nearly suffocated.
-On arriving within six miles of Monte Video,
-our horses were nearly worn out; but no rest
-could be allowed for either them or the men. At
-noon we reached an English piquet-guard on the
-out-posts; after the usual questions I was conducted
-by a soldier to the officer on guard, and having
-explained some particulars to him, I rode to
-General Lumley’s tent, and afterwards into the
-town.</p>
-
-<p>No language can describe my emotions on beholding
-an English flag on that tower in which
-I had been so often confined, and, on seeing English
-soldiers in possession of a place where I had
-experienced so much injustice and oppression.
-The joy I felt made me forget my fatigue and the
-dangers I had passed through. I rode up to my
-friend’s house; all was barricadoed, and I feared
-the worst might have happened; but, on advancing
-to the window, I observed one of the ladies,
-who instantly recognized me. All the family
-welcomed me most cordially, and invited me to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-dinner, after which I went, in my Peon’s disguise,
-to visit some of my friends. On taking possession
-of Mr. Martinez’s house, I found my chests, &amp;c.
-undisturbed, (although the town was taken by
-storm), and in the same condition as when I left
-them on going into the country.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c3" id="c3">CHAP. III.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Expedition against Buenos Ayres.&mdash;Account of
-the Population of the Country, and of the various
-Classes which compose it.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">WHEN the expedition against Buenos Ayres was
-ready to sail, I obtained General Whitelocke’s
-permission to go with the army, under the hope of
-recovering the property I had in that city, and
-offered my service to the commissary-general,
-whom I accompanied. As the details of that
-disastrous enterprise have been long before the
-public in an official form, and as my own observations
-on the occasion are of no general interest,
-the reader will excuse me if I forbear all mention
-of them, and confine myself to some general remarks
-on the colony.</p>
-
-<p>The population of Buenos Ayres and its immediate
-suburbs, exclusive of the country in its vicinity,
-has been ascertained to amount to upwards
-of sixty thousand souls. The proportion of females<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-to males is said to be as four to one, but if
-we take into consideration that many men are
-almost daily arriving from Europe, as well as
-from the South American provinces, and that
-under the old government neither the militia nor
-the marine was recruited from the mass of the
-population, we shall find reason to conclude that
-the proportion of the sexes is not so unequal. In
-the interior, the excess of males is very great, for
-as the lands are granted in large tracts only, and
-but poorly cultivated, there is no encouragement
-for the laboring classes to marry and settle upon
-them. The poor are compelled to remain single,
-from the very bare resources on which they depend
-for subsistence, and are accustomed to consider
-the married state as fraught with heavy
-burthens and inevitable misfortunes. It is not
-uncommon to find estates, larger than an English
-county, with hardly more than an hundred laborers
-upon them, who subsist upon the sale of a
-little corn, which each is permitted to grow for
-himself, but only to such an extent as a single
-man can plough.</p>
-
-<p>The various races which compose the population
-are as follow:</p>
-
-<p>1. Legitimate Spaniards or Europeans. In
-Buenos Ayres there are about three thousand;
-in the interior the number is very trifling, except
-in Potosi, which, being a mining country, contains
-many.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>2. Creoles; legitimate descendants from Spaniards
-or Europeans.</p>
-
-<p>3. Mestizos, the offspring of European and Indian
-parents.</p>
-
-<p>4. Indians, almost all of whom have some mixture
-of Spanish blood.</p>
-
-<p>5. Brown mixtures of Africans and Europeans.</p>
-
-<p>6. Mulattos of various degrees.</p>
-
-<p>All these races intermix without restraint, so
-that it is difficult to define the minor gradations,
-or to assign limits to the ever-multiplying varieties.
-Few families are entirely exempt from
-characteristics of Indian origin, physical as well as
-moral. It is well known that in the Spanish colonies
-little regard is now paid to purity of blood;
-the various regulations for preserving the races
-distinct have gradually become obsolete. This
-may be regarded as a momentary evil; but may it
-not be conducive in the long-run to the good of
-society, by concentrating the interests of the various
-classes, which, in remaining separate, might
-one day endanger the stability of the government,
-as has been the case in the French colony of St.
-Domingo?</p>
-
-<p>In describing the orders of society in Buenos
-Ayres, it is necessary to premise that I mean to
-class them, not by degrees of birth, rank, or profession,
-but by the relative estimation in which
-they stand in point of property or public usefulness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>According to this scale, the first which comes
-under consideration is the commercial class. Every
-person belonging to it, from the huckster at the
-corner of the street, to the opulent trader in his
-warehouse, is dignified by the appellation of merchant;
-yet few individuals among them can lay
-just claim to that title, as they are wanting in
-that practical knowledge so essential in commercial
-dealings. They are averse to all speculation and
-enterprise; the common routine of their business
-is to send orders to Spain for the articles they
-need, and to sell by retail, at an exorbitant profit;
-beyond this they have hardly a single idea, and it
-has been said that their great reason for opposing
-a free trade with foreign nations, is a consciousness
-of their own mercantile inexperience. The more
-considerable houses are almost all branches of
-some European establishment; few of the Creoles
-have any regular trade. Those among them, however,
-who engage in it, are much more liberal in
-their transactions than the old Spaniards, and are
-observed to make less rapid fortunes, for their
-manly and independent character makes them
-spurn a miserable economy, and disdain to assume
-that church-going hypocrisy which must be practised
-twice or thrice a-day by those who would
-enrich themselves through the patronage of the
-opulent families. Among the inferior tradesmen,
-those who gain most are the <i>pulperos</i>, the warehousemen,
-and the shopkeepers. The <i>pulperos</i>
-retail wine, brandy, candles, sausages, salt, bread,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-spices, wood, grease, brimstone, &amp;c. Their shops
-(<i>pulperias</i>) are generally lounging-places for the idle
-and dissipated of the community. In Buenos Ayres
-there are about seven hundred of them, each more
-or less in the interest of some richer individual.
-The warehousemen sell earthen and glass ware,
-drugs, various articles of consumption, and some
-goods of home-manufacture, wholesale and retail.
-The shopkeepers amount to nearly six hundred
-in number; they sell woollen cloths, silks, cotton
-goods of all sorts, hats, and various other articles
-of wearing apparel. Many of them make considerable
-fortunes, those especially who trade to
-Lima, Peru, Chili, or Paraguay, by means of
-young men whom they send as agents or factors.
-There is another description of merchants, if such
-they may be called, who keep in the back-ground,
-and enrich themselves by monopolizing victuals,
-and by forestalling the grain brought to market
-from the interior, much to the injury of the agricultural
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>The second class of inhabitants consists of the
-proprietors of estates and houses. They are in
-general Creoles, for few Europeans employ their
-funds in building, or in the purchase of land, until
-they have realised a fortune to live upon, which
-commonly takes place when they are far advanced
-in life, so that their establishments pass immediately
-into the hands of their successors. The
-simple landholders derive so little revenue from
-their possessions, that they are generally in debt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-to their tradesmen; their gains are but too commonly
-engrossed by the monopolists, and having
-no magistrate to represent them, they find themselves
-destitute of effectual resources against
-wrong and extortion. So defective and ill-regulated
-are the concerns of agriculture in this country,
-that the proprietor of an estate really worth
-20,000 dollars can scarcely subsist upon it.</p>
-
-<p>Under the class of landed proprietors, I may
-reckon the cultivators, here called <i>quinteros</i> or
-<i>chacareros</i>, who grow wheat, maize, and other
-grain. These men are so depressed and impoverished,
-that, notwithstanding the importance
-of their calling, and the public usefulness of their
-labors, they are ranked among the people of
-least consequence in society.</p>
-
-<p>The third class is composed of handicraftsmen,
-such as masons, carpenters, tailors, and shoe-makers,
-who, although they work hard and receive
-great wages, seldom realize property. The journeymen
-are usually people of color; the masters
-for the most part Genoese, and universally foreigners,
-for the Spaniards despise these trades,
-and cannot stoop to work along with negroes or
-mulattos. Many of the lower orders derive subsistence
-from these and other employments of a
-similar nature; here are lime-burners, wood-cutters,
-tanners, curriers, &amp;c. The free porters constitute
-a numerous body of men; they ply about
-the streets to load and unload carts, and carry
-burdens, but they are so idle and dissolute, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-no man can depend on their services for a week
-together; when they have a little money, they
-drink and gamble, and when pennyless, they sometimes
-betake themselves to pilfering. These habits
-have long rendered them a public nuisance,
-but no corrective measures have hitherto been
-taken, nor does there appear, on the part of the
-higher orders, any disposition to reform them.</p>
-
-<p>Persons employed in public offices may be
-comprehended under the fourth class. The best
-situations under Government are held by native
-Spaniards; those of less emolument by Creoles;
-the former are regarded as mere sinecures, and
-the persons enjoying them, are considered as in
-no way serviceable to the community, except by
-spending their large salaries within it.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth class is the militia or soldiery. Previous
-to the invasion of the English, the officers
-were not much noted for military science, or for
-that ardor which leads to the acquisition of it;
-their chief ambition was to obtain commands in
-towns and villages, especially those on the Portuguese
-frontier, where they might enrich themselves
-by smuggling. The privates were ill-disciplined,
-badly dressed, and badly paid. The effective
-force which the crown of Spain maintained
-in these possessions, was one regiment of
-the line, which was to consist of 1200 men, but
-was reduced to less than half; one regiment of
-dragoons, amounting to 600, two of cavalry called
-<i>blandengues</i>, 600 each, and one or two companies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-of artillery. With the exception of the <i>blandengues</i>,
-all the troops were originally sent from
-the Peninsula, but not having for the last twenty
-years been recruited from thence, their ranks
-were gradually filled by natives. By eminence
-they were called veterans, but they have been of
-late disbanded, and their officers have passed to
-the command of the new corps which were formed
-on the English invasion. The force of these corps
-may be estimated at nine thousand men.</p>
-
-<p>The sixth class is the clergy, in number about
-a thousand. The seculars are distinguished by
-their learning, honor, and probity from the
-friars, who are in general so grossly ignorant and
-superstitious, that they render no real service to
-the public in any way, but rather tend to disturb
-the minds of the honest and well-disposed.</p>
-
-<p>Every observation I was able to make, gave me
-a favorable idea of the general character of the
-people; they are tractable, prudent, and generous;
-and doubtless, had they been under a
-milder and more beneficent government than that
-of the Spaniards, they might have become a model
-to other colonies; but it is lamentable to add,
-that, in points of morality, they cannot be considered
-as much superior to the other inhabitants
-of America. This is attributable to the want of
-a proper system of education for youth, to the
-pernicious example afforded by the vices of the
-Europeans, and, in a word, to the prevalence of
-an intolerant system, which, by aiming to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-men what they cannot be, causes them to become
-what they ought not to be. The intolerant
-rigor exercised by the ministers of worship as well
-as by the government, for the suppression of immorality,
-defeats its own end; it is like the unskilful
-practice of a physician, which, directed
-solely against the external symptoms, aggravates
-instead of removing the disease. Thus, while open
-profligacy is discountenanced in Buenos Ayres,
-libertinism of a more dangerous kind is connived
-at, if not tolerated; the peace of the most respectable
-private families is liable to be destroyed
-by votaries of seduction, who respect neither the
-purity of female virtue, nor the sacred rights of
-matrimony. This evil pervades all classes of society,
-and is the source of domestic disputes,
-which often lead to serious consequences.</p>
-
-<p>In thus attempting to describe the state of
-Buenos Ayres, as I found it in the year 1807,
-I have purposely avoided all discussions of a political
-nature, and have declined entering into a
-detail of the events which led to the present
-struggles of the people for independence.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c4" id="c4">CHAP. IV.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Voyage to St. Catherine’s.&mdash;Description of that
-Island, and of the Coast in its Vicinity.&mdash;Arrival
-at Santos, and Journey thence to S.
-Paulo.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">ON my return to Monte Video, I lost no time in
-putting in execution my purposed voyage to Rio
-de Janeiro; and as advices had arrived, stating
-that considerable difficulty might attend the entrance
-of an English ship into that port, I bottomried
-a Portuguese vessel, called the Vencedor,
-and was joined by a party of gentlemen, whose
-business required them to visit the capital of
-Brazil.</p>
-
-<p>In the beginning of September 1807, we had
-just embarked our stock for this voyage, when an
-order for the immediate evacuation of Monte
-Video by our troops was unexpectedly issued.
-As it had been generally believed that a prolongation
-of the time for giving up the place had been
-agreed on, the greatest hurry and confusion prevailed
-in embarking the troops and stores, as well
-as the baggage of individuals. About mid-day
-the whole was on board; a signal-gun was then
-fired for the Spanish troops to enter, and about
-three in the afternoon we had the mortification to
-behold their flag hoisted on the ramparts of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-important military post and commercial depôt,
-which the British forces had, a short period before,
-so bravely and so dearly won.</p>
-
-<p>Having still some purchases to make, I returned
-on shore, with two of my friends, about four
-o’clock, but we had soon reason to repent of our
-temerity, for on passing the mole we were noticed
-as enemies and threatened severely, so that we
-found it necessary to pass into the more private
-streets, in order to avoid the malignant and hostile
-taunts of those very men who had of late expressed
-themselves our friends and well-wishers.
-Desirous of expediting our several affairs as much
-as possible, we separated, and I was not able to
-rejoin my companions until eight in the evening.
-I found them in great anxiety for my safety; the
-Spaniards had fired a feu-de-joie from the citadel
-and fort St. Joseph, and were now preparing for
-bonfires<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> and illuminations, and my friends, though
-they did their utmost to avoid the riotous crowds
-that paraded the town, had several narrow escapes
-from being plundered and stripped by the soldiery.
-We all got safely on board by ten o’clock, congratulating
-each other on having happily avoided<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-the dangers to which our rash confidence in the
-amicable disposition of the inhabitants had exposed
-us.</p>
-
-<p>On the 11th of September we sailed from the
-Rio de la Plata; the vessels bound for the Cape
-of Good Hope were then nearly out of sight, and
-as we beheld them we felt a melancholy but proud
-delight in reflecting that, after such grievous and
-unexpected reverses, our brave countrymen were
-once more within their wide undisputed empire,
-the ocean. After a voyage, in which nothing worth
-relation occurred, we made the island of St. Catherine’s,
-on the 29th, at sun-rise, and we were
-delighted with a grand and picturesque view of its
-conical rocks rising abruptly from the sea, embellished
-with the lofty mountains of Brazil, covered
-with wood, in the back-ground. This sublime
-scenery interested us the more from the contrast
-it formed with the extensive and woodless plains
-of Buenos Ayres. This island is situated in 27°
-29′ south latitude, and is separated from the
-continent by a strait, in some places not half a
-league wide.</p>
-
-<p>Entering the port of St. Catherine’s by the
-north, we passed several islands, on one of which,
-westward of the entrance, stood the respectable
-fort of Santa Cruz. After running a few miles in
-shoal water, we sailed into a narrow passage,
-guarded by two forts, which forms the harbour.
-From the anchorage, and more particularly from
-the landing-place, which is at the bottom of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-verdant slope of about five hundred yards, the
-town has a most beautiful appearance, and the
-perspective is nobly crowned by its fine cathedral.
-The green is interspersed with orange-trees, and
-forms an agreeable parade. Immediately on entering
-the town, we discerned in its general appearance,
-and in the manners of its inhabitants,
-a striking superiority over those which we had of
-late visited. The houses are well built, have
-two or three stories, with boarded floors, and are
-provided with neat gardens, well stocked with
-excellent vegetables and flowers. The town consists
-of several streets, and may contain from five
-thousand to six thousand inhabitants. It is a free
-port. The produce of the island consists in
-rice, maize, mandioca, coffee of excellent quality,
-oranges, perhaps the finest in the world, and a
-variety of other fruits. Sugar and indigo are
-likewise produced, but in small quantities. A
-profusion of the finest flowers indicates the genial
-nature of its climate; the rose and the jessamin
-are in bloom all the year round.</p>
-
-<p>The surface of the island is varied with mountains,
-plains, and in some places swamps; here is
-found a stratum of excellent red clay, which is
-manufactured into jars, culinary vessels, large
-water-pots, &amp;c. which are exported in considerable
-quantities to the Plata and to Rio de Janeiro.
-The lands capable of cultivation are under considerable
-improvement; a great extent of them
-was formerly covered with large trees, but as great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-quantities have of late years been cut down and
-used for ship-building, good timber may now be
-considered scarce. They grow flax here of a very
-fair quality, of which the fishermen make their
-lines, nets, and cordage. The sea hereabouts produces
-an abundant variety of excellent fish, and
-some fine prawns; so large is the supply to the
-market, that a quantity of fish<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>, sufficient to
-dine twelve persons, may be had for a shilling.
-Meat is much the same in quality as at Monte
-Video, being rather hard and lean; its general
-price is about three halfpence per pound. Pigs,
-turkies, ducks, poultry, and eggs, as well as fine
-vegetables and excellent potatoes, are plentiful
-and cheap.</p>
-
-<p>The trade of this place is inconsiderable, as the
-produce does not much exceed the consumption
-of the inhabitants, who are in general far from
-rich. It affords an agreeable retirement to merchants
-who have discontinued business, masters of
-ships who have left off going to sea, and other
-persons, who, having secured an independence,
-seek only leisure to enjoy it. Few places are better
-calculated for such a purpose than this; it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-enlivened by the numerous coasting-vessels from
-Bahia, Pernambuco, and other ports, bound for
-the Plata, which frequently touch here; and it is
-amply provided with artisans of all descriptions,
-such as tailors, shoe-makers, tin-workers, joiners,
-and smiths. The inhabitants in general are very
-civil and courteous to strangers; the ladies are
-handsome and very lively, their chief employment
-is making of lace, in which they display great ingenuity
-and taste.</p>
-
-<p>The mountains of the interior, and the rocks
-on the coast, are of granite. Close to the fort,
-on the left hand of the entrance to the harbour,
-is a vein of green-stone in various states of
-decomposition, which ultimately migrates into clay
-of a superior quality to that generally found in the
-valleys. The soil in the interior, being rather
-humid, is surprisingly fertile. It consists principally
-of a rich vegetable decomposition, on which
-shrubs and plants grow in great luxuriance.
-Myrtles appear in all parts, and a most beautiful
-variety of the passion-flower is found in equal
-abundance. Here is also a profusion of roses,
-pinks, rosemary, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>The animals are chiefly opossums, monkeys, and
-armadillas; there are various serpents, among
-which is the beautiful coral snake. Of birds,
-there are cranes, hawks, parrots, of various species,
-humming birds and toucans, the latter of every
-variety in great numbers.</p>
-
-<p>The climate is serene and wholesome, its solstitial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-heats being moderated constantly by fine
-breezes from the south-west and north-east, which
-are the winds that generally blow here; the latter
-prevails from September to March, and the former
-from April to August, so that a voyage to the
-north, during one half of the year, is slow and
-tedious.</p>
-
-<p>The island is divided into four parishes: 1st,
-Nossa Senhora do Desterro; 2d, St. Antonio; 3d,
-Laguna; and 4th, Ribeiraõ. The divisions of the
-opposite part of the continent are likewise under
-the jurisdiction of the governor of St. Catherine’s,
-who is subject, in certain cases, to the captaincy
-of S. Paulo, and in others to the government of
-Rio de Janeiro. These divisions, are 1st, St.
-José; 2d, St. Miguel; and 3d, Nossa Senhora do
-Rosario; the entire population of the island and
-its dependencies amounts to about 30,000 souls.</p>
-
-<p>Of the fortresses which defend this island, the
-most considerable is Santa Cruz before mentioned;
-there are four others, Porto Groed, Ratoé, Estreito,
-and Conceição. Off the former there is safe anchorage
-for a fleet of men of war, and the harbour
-which it protects may be entered by ships of 300
-tons, if not of a heavy draught of water. Ships
-passing the channel are required to send a boat on
-shore at Santa Cruz before they proceed.</p>
-
-<p>To the west of the island, on the opposite coast,
-is an almost inaccessible barrier of lofty mountains,
-thickly covered with trees and underwood.
-At a small port in the vicinity, called Piripi, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-has a very pretty river, an immense quantity of fish
-is caught, dried, and exported. They are extremely
-fat, and very soon become rancid.</p>
-
-<p>On the continent, opposite the town of St. Catherine’s,
-stands the pleasant village of St. José,
-the inhabitants of which are principally occupied
-in sawing timber into planks, making bricks, and
-growing rice. The net gains of a poor family
-here are incredibly small, but the necessaries of
-life are cheap, and they have few incentives to
-curtail their present enjoyments for the sake of
-improving their future fortunes. Near this village
-is a lovely vale called Picada, thickly studded with
-white cottages, embosomed in orange-groves and
-plantations of coffee. The gently-sloping hills
-which enclose this spot, give a picturesque effect
-to the bold rugged scenery beyond them. This
-valley, and others contiguous to it, form the extremities
-of the territory habitable by the Portuguese,
-for on the land to the westward, though
-at a considerable distance, dwell the Anthropophagi,
-here called Bugres. These savages live entirely
-in the woods, in wretched sheds made of palm-branches,
-interwoven with bananas. Their occupation
-is chiefly hunting with bows and arrows,
-but they frequently employ these weapons in hostilities
-against their neighbours. A party of them
-will sometimes way-lay a Portuguese<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>, whose
-residence is solitary; they have even been known<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-to attack and destroy whole families. No regard
-to humanity seems indeed to be paid by either
-party in their encounters; they are mutually bent
-on a war of extermination.</p>
-
-<p>There is much low swampy land in the island,
-over which causeways, supported by piles, are
-made to a considerable extent. These lands, on
-account of their humidity, are very favorable to
-the growth of rice. The palm-trees, seen at intervals
-in every direction, have a very pleasing
-effect. The whole coast may be said to be almost
-uninhabited. There are, indeed, some few settlements;
-but families scattered at the distance of
-ten or fifteen miles from each other can scarcely
-be called a population.</p>
-
-<p>Our stay at St. Catherine’s was prolonged by
-some unforeseen circumstances, and we had time
-to make various excursions into the interior of the
-island and to the adjacent continent. On one of
-these occasions I happened to be absent, but the
-adventures which attended it being rather amusing,
-I am tempted to relate them in the words of
-one of my friends who formed the party. “Having
-hired horses and negroes we set out early in
-the morning for the river Tavarinha. The road
-for three leagues lay through thick woods, along
-which we passed without any material accident,
-and arrived at the end of our journey about two
-in the afternoon. We dined with Captain Leaõ,
-who entertained us very hospitably, and would
-have persuaded us to prolong our visit, but we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-determined to return that evening over the mountains.
-We travelled for a league through a level,
-well-cultivated country, clothed with orange-groves
-and coffee-plantations, and tolerably populous.
-At sun-set we arrived at the foot of the
-mountains, and began to ascend a steep and dangerous
-road, in the intricacies of which we were
-soon bewildered, and had great difficulty to regain
-the most beaten path, which led homewards.
-Night suddenly overtook us, and we had still
-three hours’ journey over the mountains, without
-guide or attendant, along a perfectly alpine road,
-winding on the edge of horrible precipices. In
-this part of the journey two of us, having advanced
-a little, the rest of the party were suddenly
-alarmed by a dreadful shriek, which excited great
-apprehension lest some one should have been precipitated
-down the gulph, but we were agreeably
-undeceived soon after by the whole of the party
-joining us. We now heard a noise like hammers,
-which proceeded from persons beating cotton, and
-in a little time arrived at a house, where, on enquiry,
-we were informed that the town was ten
-miles distant. We were proceeding, when a voice
-cried out in English, ‘but will not you stop and
-have some grog?’ It may be easily imagined that
-to be thus suddenly hailed with one of the most
-familiar phrases of our native English, while benighted
-in a strange land, operated like an electric
-shock upon us; we immediately alighted at the
-house whence the voice seemed to proceed, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-found a Mr. Nunney, the English interpreter, who
-furnished us with a guide; we now continued our
-way with greater confidence, and reached the
-town about midnight. This Mr. Nunney, as we
-afterwards learnt, receives a dollar <i>per diem</i> during
-the stay of every English or American ship that
-touches at this port, whether his services are
-wanted or not, and by these means, with the profits
-of the sales of provisions which he makes to
-such ships, he has acquired a little fortune and a
-pretty estate. His profits, indeed, are exorbitant,
-for he charges the articles 100 per cent. higher
-than they can be procured at from any other
-dealer in the place.”</p>
-
-<p>While at the town of St. Catherine’s, we visited
-some of the gardens with which its vicinity is embellished.
-They are laid out with great taste,
-particularly one belonging to the vicar, another
-in the estate of the late excellent and able General
-Soares Coimbra, and a third the property of
-Colonel Gama. At Barragros, near the village of
-St. José, we visited a gentleman of the name of
-Caldwin, who collects and preserves insects. He
-showed us his grounds, which occupy a space of
-eighty-five fathoms along the beach, and extend a
-mile inland, containing orangeries, coffee, rice, and
-mandioca, in a fine state of culture. These well-watered
-plantations, together with a neat house
-and garden, he offered to sell for a thousand crusados
-(about £125 sterling).</p>
-
-<p>This was not the only instance we remarked of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-the low value of landed property here. About
-two miles from the town of St. Catherine’s, a neat
-house, a small orangery and ground clear of brush
-wood, capable of forming a pretty plantation, was
-offered at 100 dollars. An excellent house, in
-one of the best situations in the environs of this
-town, with a garden of about two acres well and
-tastefully planted, was offered to be sold for £400
-sterling. The building of the house must alone
-have cost that sum and it was in perfect condition.
-In short, money appeared so valuable, that a large
-landed estate might be purchased for a mere
-trifle.</p>
-
-<p>On contemplating the many natural advantages
-of this island, I could not but be struck with its
-importance, and was tempted to wish that it were
-annexed by treaty to the dominions of Great
-Britain. Emigrants might subsist here at a
-very cheap rate; and the isle is tenable against
-any force so long as we remain masters of the
-sea. Ships would trade to it from the western
-coast of America, and from the eastern coast of
-Africa, and in our hands it would soon become an
-emporium of commerce. It is adapted to almost
-every variety of produce; the highlands are capable
-of cultivation, and the plains and valleys are
-fertile even to luxuriance. The climate is humid,
-but its general temperature is moderate and salubrious.
-If colonized by English, the isle might
-be made a perfect paradise. Though not situated
-within the tropics, it produces indico, rice, sugar-cane,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-pulse, and the finest oranges in the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>Our excursions to the main land were not confined
-to the districts immediately within the jurisdiction
-of St. Catherine’s. Proceeding northward
-from St. José, we entered some fine bays, the
-shores of which were studded with houses pleasantly
-situated amid bananerias, orangeries, and
-plantations of rice, coffee, and mandioca. After
-having passed several well-peopled parishes, we
-arrived at Armação, a village at the extremity of
-a bay about nine leagues distant from St. José,
-and four leagues north of Santa Cruz. This village
-is a fishing station for whales, which were
-formerly very numerous on that coast, and in the
-bays that indent it. The fishery is farmed by
-government to a company under the superintendance
-of a <i>Capitao Mor</i>, and a number of inferior
-officers. About 150 negroes are employed on this
-station, but the number of whales now caught is
-not so great as formerly, when the average was
-three or four hundred in a season<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>. Their conveniences
-for flinching or cutting up the fish are
-extensive and well-contrived<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>. Several fine piers
-project from the shore into eighteen to twenty
-feet depth of water, on which are erected capstans,
-cranes, and other requisite machinery.
-Hither all the fish caught on the coast are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-brought. The boiling-house, tanks, &amp;c. are far
-superior to any thing of the kind at Greenland-dock,
-and indeed to all similar establishments in
-Europe. To give an idea of their magnitude, it is
-sufficient to say, that in one range there are
-twenty-seven very large boilers, and places for
-three more. Their tanks are vast vaults, on some
-of which a boat might be rowed with ease. We
-obtained a view of these great works through the
-civility of the commander of the place, Capitaõ
-Mor Jacinto Jorge dos Anjos, who lives here
-in a princely style, and possesses a very considerable
-property, which he diffuses with great
-public spirit and liberality. All who have visited
-Armação can bear witness to his, affability and
-urbanity to strangers.</p>
-
-<p>We crossed this peninsula by a mountainous
-road of four leagues to the Bay of dos Ganchos,
-commonly known by the name of Tejuco. Here
-land is of little or no value; any one may take as
-much as he pleases of what is unappropriated,
-provided he make a proper application for it to
-the government. We passed two sugar plantations
-with conveniences for making rum; and observed
-numerous huts interspersed in the vicinity.
-The contrary side of this peninsula forms the bay
-before named. The poor cottages of the people
-here present a curious picture of rural irregularity;
-some are built on the summit of conical
-mountains, the passage to which is frequently
-obstructed by clouds; others stand on the sides of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-gentle acclivities; but the greater number of them
-is situated almost in contact with the ocean, which
-often flows to their very doors. The bay is from
-two to three leagues across, and extends about
-the same distance inland; it is well-sheltered, and
-affords good anchorage, and fine situations for
-loading timber, with which the mountainous country
-around is thickly clothed, and large quantities
-of which are felled and embarked for Rio de Janeiro
-and the Plata. Canoes are made here, at a
-cheaper rate and in greater numbers than in any
-other part of Brazil. The inhabitants grow rice
-in considerable quantities, as well as some coffee
-and sugar; but such is their indolence and poverty
-that they use only hand-mills, consisting of two
-horizontal rollers, in manufacturing the latter
-article.</p>
-
-<p>Into this bay fall several streams formed by the
-mountain-torrents and springs, and two tolerable
-rivers, the less called Inferninho, and the larger
-Tigreno. They both flow through low swampy
-land, subject to inundation, and overgrown with
-mangroves and an immense variety of trees. The
-insalubrity of this tract might be corrected by
-clearing away the underwood and draining the
-soil, but the arduousness of such an undertaking
-might deter a more active and skilful people than
-this. In the rainy season it is inundated to a great
-extent, and in summer it is infested with terrible
-swarms of mosquitos and burachala flies, which
-render it almost uninhabitable. The bay of dos<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-Ganchos is a most desirable place. The timber
-cut and shipped for Rio de Janeiro might form,
-together with some of the sugars and spirituous
-liquors made here, an advantageous article of export
-to the Cape of Good Hope; but unfortunately
-there exists no stimulus to this sort of commercial
-speculation. Here are no small vessels fitting
-out for cargoes, nor will any person risk the
-equipment of a vessel to a distant part, where
-there is so little certainty of returns. So common
-an enterprize as that practised by ship-owners,
-in England, of sending out vessels to wait for
-cargoes (up the Baltic for instance) is here unknown;
-and this is a sufficient proof of the low
-state of commerce and shipping.</p>
-
-<p>Along the beach of this bay I found the shell of
-the murex genus, which produces that beautiful
-crimson dye, so valued by the ancients. It is here
-called <i>purpura</i>, and to my great surprise, its use
-is in some degree known to the natives, one of
-whom shewed me some cotton fringe, dyed with
-an extract of it, though ill-prepared. The shell
-is about the size of the common whelk, and contains
-a fish, on whose body appears a vesicle full
-of a pale yellow, viscid, purulent substance, which
-constitutes the dye. The mode of extracting it,
-is to break the shell carefully with a hammer, so
-as not to crush the fish, and then let out the
-liquor in the vesicle with a lancet or other sharp
-instrument. I, for greater convenience, used a
-pen, and immediately wrote my initials, &amp;c. on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-handkerchief; the marks in half an hour after
-were of a dirty green color, and on being exposed
-to the air a few hours longer, changed to a most
-rich crimson. The quantity produced by each
-is very small, but quite sufficient for such
-an experiment. The best time for making it,
-is when the animal is in an incipient state of putrescency.
-I have not a doubt that if a sufficient
-quantity of them were taken, and the dying matter,
-when extracted, were liquified in a small degree
-with gum-water, a valuable article of commerce
-might be produced. At least the trial is
-worth making. The liquid is a perfect substantive
-dye, and of course resists the action of
-alkalies.</p>
-
-<p>On the rocks, and in greater abundance on the
-trunks of old trees, I observed a variety of lichens,
-some of which produced tints of several shades of
-colors. The continual decomposition of vegetables
-here adds greatly to the richness of the
-soil; it is not uncommon to find trees lying on
-the ground with their interior substance entirely
-decomposed, and a great diversity of plants growing
-on them in high luxuriance. Among the numerous
-tribes of birds that frequent this region, the
-aquatic afford good eating, as do also the smaller
-parrots. The woods are filled with monkeys;
-and on the banks of the rivers are found capivaras
-in considerable numbers.</p>
-
-<p>In coasting along this shore, it is customary for
-strangers to visit the chief person in command at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-every station, whatever may be his degree or
-rank; he, on being requested, will furnish guides,
-and afford every assistance in his power. I always
-experienced the greatest attention and civility
-from these gentlemen, and have reason to
-believe that they uniformly pay the same regard
-to all who visit them for permission to see the
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Ten leagues north of this place is the fine and
-capacious harbour of Garoupas, with its handsome
-town; the anchorage is equally good as in that of
-dos Ganchos. The inhabitants here pursue the
-same mode of living as their neighbours in Tejuco.
-They have a fine climate, and a soil which
-yields a hundred-fold for whatever is sown or
-planted in it, and is noted for its delicious fruits.
-The cotton of which their common clothes are
-made, is grown, spun, and woven among them;
-they build their own houses, and form their own
-canoes, which they are dexterous in managing,
-and prefer to boats. It may indeed be said that
-every man is more or less an artisan; but I am
-sorry to observe that they prefer ease to care and
-industry, and are by no means so good husbandmen
-as those of Tejuco. This bay, as far as I
-could observe, during my short visit to it, presents
-to the view a greater diversity of hills, valleys,
-and plains, than the one before mentioned.
-Both are esteemed fine fishing-ground during
-the whale-season, which is from December to
-June.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From hence northward is the fine harbour of
-San Francisco, in the bay of the same name. It
-has three entrances defended by forts; that to the
-south is most frequented. The land here is very
-flat for several miles, and the rivers which intersect
-it are navigable for canoes as far as the base
-of the great chain of mountains, where a public
-road, begun at incredible labor and expense,
-leads over that almost impassable barrier. This
-road will soon be a work of national importance
-to Brazil, as through it the finest district in that
-country, and indeed one of the finest in the world
-in point of climate, the rich plain of Coritiva,
-will be connected with the ocean. The ridge of
-mountains is more than four thousand feet above
-the level of the sea, and there is a regular ascent
-for twenty leagues from their inland base, to Coritiva.
-On this fertile tract are fed large herds
-of cattle for the supply of Rio de Janeiro,
-S. Paulo, and other places; here are also bred mules
-in great numbers. Its soil and air are so genial,
-that olives, grapes, apples, peaches, and other
-fruits, grow to as rich a maturity as in Europe,
-though they are here almost in a wild state. It
-is divided into many parishes, but its population
-is small, compared with its extent; a circumstance
-rather surprising, since every necessary of life is
-here so cheap and in such great plenty. Its distance
-from the coast and from the chief towns,
-and the hitherto bad road, may have contributed
-to deter settlers; it is principally occupied as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-breeding district, and supports no more inhabitants
-than what are barely competent to manage
-and tend the cattle, which are chiefly purchased
-by private dealers, and sometimes by commissioners
-from government, who come hither occasionally
-for the purpose. The road from hence
-to the city of S. Paulo, distant about 80 leagues,
-is tolerably inhabited, especially in the vicinity of
-Sorocaba, something more than half way, which
-is a great mart for mules and horses<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>. Near
-this place is a well-wooded country called Gorosuava,
-abounding with fine limestone, where a
-considerable quantity of rich iron ore is found.
-How deplorable is it that the people should yet
-have to learn the application of such valuable resources!</p>
-
-<p>The neighbourhood of Coritiva is watered by
-fine rivers, which flow into the Paraná. Many of
-the streams produce gold, particularly the Rio
-Verde; and one called the Tibigi is rich in diamonds,
-as the few good families in its vicinity
-have reason to remember with gratitude. More
-to the westward it is dangerous to travel, since
-in that direction live the Anthropophagi, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-were driven from these boundaries a few years
-ago. The country to the north is very full of
-wood.</p>
-
-<p>From its great elevation above the level of the
-sea, the climate of Coritiva is peculiarly congenial
-to Europeans. Its soil is in general rich, and the
-hills are peculiarly well adapted for the grape,
-which here thrives as luxuriantly as in any part of
-Europe. On the low lands, particularly those
-bordering on rivers and rivulets, are woods of
-considerable extent, containing timber of enormous
-size, and fit for almost any purpose. This
-immense tract of land is thinly peopled; the
-few inhabitants that are scattered over it, occupy
-themselves chiefly in the rearing of cattle,
-which, as it requires little or no trouble, is almost
-the only business which is followed. At Sorocaba
-there are held various market days and fairs, for
-the sale of horses, mules, and horned cattle, which
-are attended by dealers from S. Paulo, Santos,
-and more distant parts of Brazil. From this
-market mules are sent to the Rio, and even to
-Villa Rica. Many smiths are employed at Sorocaba
-in making shoes for the cattle, and a considerable
-number of men gain a livelihood by training
-and domesticating these animals, for which recourse
-is had to very severe methods. A fine
-mule, which has been thus rendered tractable, will
-sell for four or five times the price of one not yet
-“civilized;” the cost of the latter, if the animal be
-full grown, and from two to three years old, will be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-about four dollars. The horses, which are usually
-of the same value, are in general handsome, with fine
-manes and tails, short necks, and in height about
-fourteen hands. They are trained solely to the
-saddle, and are not used as mere beasts of draught
-or burden.</p>
-
-<p>At the Rio, a good pair of carriage-mules will
-often sell at the enormous price of 150 or 200 dollars;
-such is the difficulty of rendering these animals
-tractable. Horses alone are used for the
-saddle, the mares being reserved for breeding.</p>
-
-<p>Coritiva is not reported to contain gold or diamonds,
-yet, both these valuable products are
-found in some parts of the district; a fact known
-to but a few persons, who have profited greatly
-by keeping it secret. This fine country, therefore,
-offers few attractions to the great mass of
-emigrants to Brazil, who are commonly tempted
-by the very name of the gold mines to settle in
-them, or are allured by the profits accruing from
-plantations of cotton, sugar, or coffee, and look
-with indifference on the pursuits of what is termed
-common agriculture.</p>
-
-<p>Although the soil of Coritiva is capable of
-producing the finest wheats, the inhabitants, for
-obvious reasons, persevere in cultivating mandioca.
-Wheat requires a series of preparations before it
-can be fit for food; it must be thrashed or trampled
-from the straw; it must be ground to flour,
-and afterwards divested of the bran, and must
-then undergo the elaborate process of panification.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-Mills and ovens are not among the first
-articles of convenience introduced into a territory,
-newly colonized and thinly peopled; but on
-the contrary, any substitute for the food, which
-they are instrumental in preparing, will be preferred,
-if it demand less care and labor. Hence
-the mandioca obtains the preference; it requires
-less culture than wheat, and when ripe, may be
-converted into nutritious <i>farinha</i> in half an hour;
-indeed I have gathered, prepared, and eaten it as
-food in a less space of time. It is therefore no
-matter of wonder, that the inhabitants should continue
-to subsist on this aliment, and on pounded
-maize, rather than on bread made of wheat, which
-demands so much greater a share of attention and
-industry. Maize, or Indian corn, is grown in
-considerable quantities, for the express purpose of
-feeding pigs, which constitute a staple article for
-consumption. In every <i>fazenda</i>, salt pork, as well
-as fowls, is invariably to be found; and bacon is
-cured in large quantities, and sent to S. Paulo.</p>
-
-<p>The breeding of horned cattle, is left in a great
-measure to nature, and is much less attended to than
-that of mules. Few cows are domesticated; and
-the little cheese that is made, if I may judge of
-the specimens I saw at S. Paulo, is of a quality
-almost disgusting. I did not see any butter made
-here, and indeed the few products of the dairy
-that are obtained, are considered of no manner of
-importance.</p>
-
-<p>The inhabitants lead an easy kind of life, in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-great measure free from the molestation of fiscal
-and municipal officers; they pay their tythes with
-great cheerfulness, in kind, specie being rarely seen.
-Their sole wants seemed confined to salt and iron;
-and it is much to be lamented, that from the distance
-of the nearest sea port, and the badness of
-the roads, these commodities are with difficulty
-procured. From the same causes, the improvements
-which this delightful country might derive
-from commerce have been retarded, and it is as
-yet very inadequately provided with the means of
-exchanging its superfluities, for articles of the first
-necessity.</p>
-
-<p>The chain of mountains which bounds the plain
-of Coritiva, is washed at the base by a lagoon,
-communicating in a direct line with the fine
-harbour of San Francisco, where many merchant-ships
-have been constructed of the finest timber.</p>
-
-<p>In this place, although rather in anticipation of
-the regular course of the narrative, it may not be
-improper to state, that, at the request of his Excellency
-the Condé de Linhares, I submitted to
-the Court a paper on the advantageous situation
-of Coritiva and the sea-port above mentioned.
-Among other points, I suggested that an establishment
-might there be formed for the joint purposes
-of rearing live-stock, and of salting and
-curing beef and pork for the royal navy; that the
-culture of wheat, and the manufacture of bread
-might be encouraged; and that a depôt might be
-formed at San Francisco, from whence grain with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-other articles of consumption might be shipped to
-any part of Brazil. Indeed no other part of the
-country offers such temptations to agriculturists;
-nor could a colony of them planted here fail to
-florish, if directed by common prudence and moderate
-industry. The climate is salubrious; the
-land consists of a beautiful diversity of hill, mountain,
-dale, ravine, and woodland, watered by
-numerous streams, which take their course, not
-toward the sea, but in an easterly direction, and
-flow into the great river Paraná. Here are beasts
-of burden in unlimited numbers, and a sea-port
-within two or three days’ journey. Here is land
-of the finest quality where a plough was never
-used; here are mules and horned cattle to be had
-on the cheapest terms; and yet the operations of
-making butter and cheese are either unknown, or
-are practised in such a slovenly manner, as to
-render the articles unpalatable. Here is the
-finest timber; here are fruits of every kind, except
-those peculiar to the tropical climates.
-What more then is wanted? An enlightened and
-industrious population to improve the blessings
-which nature has lavished on this district with
-so bounteous a hand. If agriculture, in the
-miserable way in which it is now practised, produces
-sufficient to exempt the people from want,
-what wonders might it not produce in Coritiva,
-if followed according to the improved system of
-Europeans! A numerous and industrious population
-would soon adopt this, and all the other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-useful arts of life; the silk worm would be propagated;
-the hidden stores of the precious products
-would be explored, and the interest of
-posterity might be excited by the exhibition of
-silk, gold, and diamonds, from the banks of the
-same river. Another luxury might be superadded;
-since, from what I have seen of the grapes
-grown here, there can be no doubt, that, where
-rocky lands occur, “the generous vine” would thrive
-in great abundance, and Coritiva might in no long
-period of time become the vineyard of this vast
-continent.</p>
-
-<p>The cattle at Coritiva sell at various prices;
-oxen, much fatter and in better condition than
-those of the Rio de la Plata or of the Rio Grande
-de S. Pedro, may be bought for about 14s. or
-18s. a head. The horses are in general finer than
-those of Buenos Ayres; mules for the pack-saddle
-sell at about 40s. and those for riding at from
-three to six pounds. There is, however great
-fluctuation in the prices, owing to the occasional
-scarcity as well as the occasional abundance of
-specie.</p>
-
-<p>But to return from this digression to San Francisco.
-The chief occupations of the inhabitants
-are the cutting of timber, and other labors connected
-with ship-building. Vessels of large dimensions,
-and a number of small craft for coasters,
-have been built here by merchants of Rio de
-Janeiro, Bahia, and Pernambuco. When this
-trade is brisk, there is a great demand for the various<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-classes of artisans whom it requires, and
-many negroes are employed. The wood used is
-so strong, and holds the iron so firmly, that ships
-built of it endure many years, and are in greater
-esteem with the Portuguese and Spaniards than
-those built in Europe. On this account, the harbour
-of San Francisco is likely to become of considerable
-value to Brazil; and as it is connected with
-Coritiva, the cattle of which have been found superior
-to those of Rio Grande, there is every probability,
-that at no distant period the Portuguese
-navy will be here supplied with salt provisions.
-This must, however, depend on the completion
-of the great road over the mountains, to which
-the present administration have laudably directed
-their attention, with a degree of zeal commensurate
-to the importance of the work in a national
-point of view.</p>
-
-<p>I must not omit noticing another production in
-this district, which will rise in utility and value
-as the port of San Francisco improves. Toward
-the north there are woods of fine large pines, exceedingly
-hard, tough, and full of resin. They
-constitute a singular variety of the genus Pinus;
-the boughs branch off from the upper part of the
-tree only, and have tussocks of leaves at each extremity.
-A tree eighty feet high, for instance, will
-appear without branches to the height of about
-fifty-five feet; the branches there extend horizontally
-in every direction, with leaves at their extremities,
-the lowest and largest to a distance of fourteen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-or fifteen feet from the stem, and the higher
-ones gradually diminishing in length towards the
-top, which ends in a tuft of leaves, as a crown for
-the whole. These trees are very picturesque, and
-indeed beautiful; they grow to a sufficient size to
-serve as masts for ships of two or three hundred
-tons; I was told there were much larger ones to
-be found.</p>
-
-<p>Resuming our voyage, we left San Francisco,
-and, passing the port of Cananea, arrived near
-the entrance of the harbour of Santos. The coast
-along which we sailed is low and flat, and on its
-verge are some poor fishing-huts, which rather add
-to the dreariness of its appearance. It is covered
-with lofty trees, which also fringe the mountainous
-scenery beyond it. Several rivers occur, of
-little note in geography, but highly advantageous
-to the settlers, as they pass the very doors of the
-dwellings, and afford easy means for the transport
-of produce from the interior. On nearing Santos,
-we passed several bold rocks, called the Alcatrazes,
-and a ledge or reef on which the sea broke furiously.
-The main land is very elevated and mountainous,
-so much so that the low grounds which
-extend from its base are scarcely perceptible from
-the heights next beyond them.</p>
-
-<p>The harbour of Santos has a safe entrance, and
-is very secure; it is a strait, having the island of
-S. Vicente to the left, for the extent of half a
-mile, when it takes a different direction. Here is
-situated the port, which has good anchorage, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-regular soundings towards the shore, which shoals
-gradually. The currents and eddies cause some
-inconvenience, and the high land occasions much
-variation in the winds, which perplexes mariners
-on their entrance into the narrows, but as the
-water is not deep, and the current far from strong,
-a ship is safe the moment her anchor is let go, and
-by means of a boat and kedge she may be placed
-in any situation the pilot chooses. The part called
-the narrows, is defended by two forts, on passing
-which there is a kind of lagoon of three or four
-leagues in length, almost full of mangroves, terminated
-by the town of Santos, one of the oldest
-European settlements in Brazil. In common with
-S. Paulo, it owes its origin to the first shipwreck
-on the island of S. Vicente. The river or lagoon
-has three or four fathoms water and a muddy bottom.
-Santos is a place of considerable trade, being
-the storehouse of the great captaincy of S.
-Paulo, and the resort of many vessels trading to
-the Rio de la Plata. It is tolerably well built,
-and its population, consisting chiefly of merchants,
-shopkeepers, and artificers, amounts to six or
-seven thousand souls. The situation is by no
-means healthy, as the country around it is low,
-woody, and frequently deluged with rain, by reason
-of the high mountains in its vicinity, which
-impede the passage of the clouds. Several rivulets
-flowing from the foot of these mountains intersect
-the land in various directions, and unite
-in one great river a little above the town of Santos.
-The rice of this district, which is grown in great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-quantities, is considered the best in Brazil, and the
-bananas are equally noted.</p>
-
-<p>From this port the Spanish territories, as well
-as Rio Grande, receive several vessels loaded
-with sugar, coffee, rice, mandioca, &amp;c. in return
-they bring chiefly hides and tallow, which are
-generally exported hence to Europe. The Portuguese
-send much of their produce to the Spanish
-colonies, and are generally ill paid, but the
-shortness of the voyage, and the want of other
-markets, tempt many young men to speculate,
-notwithstanding the heavy duties and the numberless
-petty obstacles with which their neighbours
-have impeded and encumbered this commerce. A
-Spaniard in his own country rarely allows even a
-shadow of justice to a Portuguese; he uses a
-thousand artifices for procrastinating the decision
-of a cause at issue between them, till the latter,
-when his patience is completely exhausted, finds
-that he is likely to derive nothing from the contest
-but immense piles of law-papers, frequently written
-on the most trivial points in litigation, and
-paid for at an exorbitant price. If he persevere
-after all this disappointment, it generally happens
-that another <i>alcalde</i> or judge is appointed, and
-then the business is laid on the shelf. The injured
-Portuguese, after so much waste of time and money,
-is threatened with worse consequences, and
-frequently is obliged to leave the country in ruin
-and disgust.</p>
-
-<p>As Santos is the embarking port of S. Paulo,
-its intercourse with that town is very considerable.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-In the course of a day several hundred mules frequently
-arrive, loaded with the produce of the
-country, and return with salt, iron, copper, earthen
-wares, and European manufactures. For the
-traffic of it’s immediate vicinity, it has the convenience
-of water-carriage, its river being navigable
-about twenty miles, up to Cubataõ, where an officer
-with a guard of soldiers is stationed to receive
-the king’s duties for the repair of the roads and
-other public purposes.</p>
-
-<p>The governor of Santos being subject in all
-cases to the governor of S. Paulo, we applied to
-him for permission to go thither, which was immediately
-granted. It was now eight in the
-evening, and we were without an asylum for the
-night. I had several letters of recommendation,
-not one of which procured us any civility, and we
-found that the inhabitants were far from being
-courteous to strangers. We were willing to impute
-this to want of convenient accommodations,
-but it may be generally observed, that along the
-whole coast the same shyness prevails, while in
-the interior the people vie with each other in acts
-of hospitality. Perhaps in all countries this duty
-is most practised where the occasions for its exercise
-most rarely occur.</p>
-
-<p>Being unable to procure a bed at Santos, we
-were obliged to engage a canoe to convey us up
-the river to Cubataõ, where we arrived at two in
-the morning, and were introduced into the guard-house
-for a lodging. The corporal being called,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-he accommodated us as well as he was able; we lay
-down on the softest planks we could find, and
-made pillows of our portmanteaus, but though
-much wearied we found ourselves little disposed
-to sleep on so uneasy a couch. At sun-rise, when
-we got up, an extraordinary and busy scene presented
-itself; before the guard-house was a large
-space of ground enclosed by the storehouse and
-other out-buildings, and here a hundred mules
-were in the act of being harnessed and loaded; the
-gentleness and tractability of these fine large animals
-pleased us much, and the expertness of their
-masters, particularly of the negroes, in placing and
-replacing the burdens, was truly surprising.</p>
-
-<p>From the good corporal, who was commanding
-officer here, we received every attention, and
-much more civility than we had reason to expect
-from having experienced the unaccommodating
-disposition of the people in Santos, in much
-better circumstances than himself. He procured
-us a good breakfast, and furnished us with saddle-mules
-for our journey, at the rate of ten shillings
-each, the distance being eight leagues. Having
-obtained a guide we mounted, and proceeded
-about half a mile, when we reached the foot of the
-stupendous mountains we had to cross. The road
-is good and well paved, but narrow, and, on account
-of the rugged acclivities, is cut in a zig-zag
-direction, with very frequent and abrupt turnings,
-continually on the ascent. The trains of loaded
-mules which we met on their way to Santos rendered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-the passage disagreeable, and at times dangerous.
-In many places the road is cut through
-the solid rock for several feet, in others along the
-perpendicular sides, and it leads frequently over
-the tops of conical mountains, along the edge of
-precipices, down which the traveller is liable to be
-thrown into an impervious thicket full thirty yards
-below. These dangerous places are secured by
-parapets. After ascending for an hour and a half,
-during which time we made innumerable turnings,
-we arrived at a resting place, near which, at a spot
-a little lower than the road, we found water. This
-place, as our guide informed us, was only half-way
-to the summit; we were astonished at the intelligence,
-as the clouds were already so far below us
-that they obstructed our prospect. During our
-progress hither, we observed that the mules travel
-as quick on an ascent as on level ground; they
-much excel the horse in uneven roads with sharp
-turnings, and still more so in bad roads.</p>
-
-<p>To attempt the geology of mountains so covered
-by vegetable matter would be a difficult task; the
-component parts of those along which we passed
-appeared to be granite, and frequently soft,
-crumbling, ferruginous sand-stone. Some picturesque
-streams bursting from their high sources
-form fine cascades, and in crossing the road force
-their way through many detached and round
-masses of granite. The woods are so thick in
-every part, except where the mules tread, that no
-soil can be seen; the branches of the trees in some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-places meet and form an arbor over the road,
-which shades the traveller from the heat of the
-sun, and shelters him from rain.</p>
-
-<p>After resting for about twenty minutes we
-again mounted and resumed our ascent. The
-road presented at times four or five zig-zags above
-us at one view, and gave us fresh reason for
-astonishment at the completion of a work so
-fraught with difficulties. The millions of crowns
-which must have been expended in clearing the
-woods and thickets in its course, and in cutting
-through the solid rock for a considerable distance,
-as well as in paving it through the whole extent of
-the ridge, afford no mean idea of the enterprising
-spirit of the Brazilians. Few public works, even
-in Europe, are superior to it; and if we consider
-that, by reason of the scanty population of the
-district through which it passes, the labor bestowed
-on it must have been purchased most
-dearly, we shall hardly find one in any country so
-well completed under similar disadvantages.</p>
-
-<p>In three hours we reached the summit, a plain
-of considerable extent, the lowest estimated height
-of which is six thousand feet. The surface is
-chiefly composed of quartz covered with sand.
-The sea, though distant twenty miles, seemed to
-us as if it washed the foot of the mountains; the
-level part of the coast and the port of Santos below
-us came not within the angle of vision. While
-we enjoyed this sublime prospect, we were refreshed
-by a cool breeze, which renewed our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-strength and spirits, and enabled us to pursue our
-journey with alacrity. Advancing about a mile
-and a half, we came to a part of the road which
-was cut several feet deep through the rock, and
-observed in this quarter many small streams, which,
-though contiguous to the sea, all flow in a south-west
-course to an immense distance, and, uniting,
-form the great river Correntes, which joins the
-Plata. This circumstance will sufficiently explain
-the form of this mighty ridge of mountains,
-namely, that the highest and steepest side fronts
-the sea, and that the other shelves more gradually
-and with more frequent outlets to the plains of the
-interior. This part of the road is lined by fine
-trees and large thickets on both sides. The heavy
-rains of the season (December) had damaged it in
-various parts; the readiest mode of repairing these
-breaks is to cut down several trees, about seven
-inches diameter, place them across, and fasten
-them down with hooked stakes. The mules which
-travel these rugged declivities, though far more
-hardy than horses, frequently fall victims to fatigue;
-we observed some dead by the way-side.
-In the course of our route we passed several parties
-of negroes and some of Indians, working at repairs
-in the road, or making new branches from
-it. Some of them I noticed with swellings in the
-neck, though very different from those I have observed
-in Derbyshire and other mountainous countries.
-In the case of these Indians there not only
-appeared that protuberance from the glands commonly
-called a wen, but lumps, of from half an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-inch to three inches in diameter, hung from it
-in an almost botryoidal form. Persons thus afflicted
-are called in the language of the country
-<i>papos</i>.</p>
-
-<p>After crossing several rivulets and passing a few
-houses we arrived at a tolerable inn, belonging
-to an officer of militia, where we were soon provided
-with plenty of milk, coffee, and fowls. It
-is distant sixteen or twenty miles from S.
-Paulo, and may be considered as half-way between
-that town and Santos. The owner, who
-was much surprised to see Englishmen, treated us
-with every civility, and procured us a change of
-saddle-mules. While they were preparing, he
-shewed us a tract of land in front of his house,
-tolerably well cleared, where we took an hour’s
-shooting. We then proceeded through a much
-more open country, which bore the traces of
-former cultivation, and seemed of late to have
-been much neglected. As we drew nearer S.
-Paulo, the road improved, and was enlivened by
-a greater number of habitations in its vicinity.
-We passed two convents, which had the air of
-convenient houses, and were distinguished by
-large crosses erected before them. The land was
-watered by several fine streams; in one part we observed
-a quarry of ferruginous grit-stone, but we had
-not leisure to make much mineralogical research.
-S. Paulo, although on an elevated site, is not observed
-at any great distance in this direction. In
-its immediate neighbourhood the river runs parallel
-to the road, which it sometimes partially<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-overflows, and covers with sand. To our left we
-saw a large <i>estalagem</i>, or inn, where numbers of
-mules are unloaded, and travellers commonly pass
-the night. It consists of a very large shed, supported
-upon upright pieces of timber, with separate
-divisions for receiving the cargoes or burdens
-of the mules, each traveller occupying as many
-as his goods require; and there is a piece of
-ground of about a hundred yards in circumference,
-planted with small upright stakes, at ten or
-fifteen feet distance, to which the bridles of the
-mules are tied while they are fed, saddled, and
-loaded. These <i>estalagems</i> are common in all
-parts of Brazil.</p>
-
-<p>On entering the town, although we had expected
-much from its being the capital of the
-district, and the residence of the governor, yet
-we were struck with the neat appearance of its
-houses, stuccoed in various colors; those in the
-principal streets were two or three stories high.
-Having arrived an hour or two before sun-set, we
-walked to the house of a gentleman, to whom we
-had a letter of recommendation; but he being absent,
-we were obliged to pass the night at the
-<i>estalagem</i>, where our mules had been put up. It
-was a miserable abode. The next morning we
-breakfasted with our friend, and were conducted by
-him to the governor, Brigadier General França
-Horta, who honored us with an invitation to dinner,
-permitted a perishable cargo of my friend’s property,
-which was lying at Santos, to be unloaded, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-gave us a general welcome to his palace. We
-had the good fortune to find that two of his Excellency’s
-aides-de-camp, men of excellent character,
-had been educated in England. They assisted
-us in obtaining lodgings, rendered us every
-service that we stood in need of, and shewed an
-earnest desire to make our stay as agreeable as
-possible.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c5" id="c5">CHAP. V.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Description of S. Paulo.&mdash;System of Farming
-prevalent in its Neighbourhood.&mdash;Excursion to
-the Gold Mines of Jaraguá.&mdash;Mode of working
-them.&mdash;Return to Santos.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">S. PAULO is situated on a pleasing eminence of
-about two miles in extent, surrounded on three
-sides by low meadow land, and washed at the
-base by rivulets, which almost insulate it in rainy
-weather; it is connected with the high-land by a
-narrow ridge. The rivulets flow into a pretty
-large stream called the Tieté, which runs within
-a mile of the town, in a south-west direction.
-Over them there are several bridges, some of
-stone and others of wood, built by the late governor.
-The streets of S. Paulo, owing to its
-elevation (about 50 feet above the plain), and the
-water which almost surrounds it, are in general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-remarkably clean; the material with which
-they are paved, is grit-stone, cemented by
-oxide of iron, and containing large pebbles of
-rounded quartz, approximating to the conglomerate.
-This pavement is an alluvial formation
-containing gold, many particles of which metal
-are found in the clinks and hollows after heavy
-rains, and at such seasons are diligently sought
-for by the poorer sort of people.</p>
-
-<p>The city was founded by the Jesuits, who were
-probably tempted by the gold mines in the vicinity,
-more than by the salubrity of its air, which,
-however, is not excelled by any on the whole continent
-of South America. The medium of the
-thermometer here is between 50 and 80 degrees;
-in a morning I have observed it at 48, and even
-lower, though I was not there in the winter
-months. The rains are by no means heavy or of
-long continuance, and the thunder-storms are far
-from being violent. The cold in the evenings
-was frequently so considerable, that I was obliged
-to shut my doors and windows, put on more clothes,
-and have a pan of embers in the room, there being
-no chimneys.</p>
-
-<p>Here are several squares, and about thirteen
-places of religious worship, namely, two convents,
-three monasteries, and eight churches, the greater
-part of which, as well as of the whole town, is
-built of earth. The mode of erecting the walls
-is as follows: a frame is constructed of six moveable
-planks placed edge-wise, opposite each other,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-and secured in this position by cross pieces bolted
-with moveable pins. Earth is put in by small
-quantities, which the workmen beat with rammers,
-and occasionally moisten with water to give
-it consistency. Having filled the frame or trough,
-they remove it and continue the same operation
-till the whole shell of the house is completed,
-taking care to leave vacancies, and put in the
-window-frames, door-frames, and beams as they
-proceed. The mass, in course of time, becomes
-indurated, the walls are pared perfectly smooth
-inside, and take any color the owner chooses to
-give them; they are generally enriched with very
-ingenious devices. This species of structure is
-durable; I have seen some houses thus built that
-have lasted two hundred years, and most of them
-have several stories. The roofs are made to project
-two or three feet beyond the wall, in order to
-throw off the rain to a distance from the base;
-spouts might be a more effectual preservative
-against wet, but their use is little known here.
-They cover their houses with gutter-tiles, but
-though the country affords excellent clay and
-plenty of wood, very few bricks are burnt.</p>
-
-<p>The population of this place amounts to full
-fifteen thousand souls: perhaps nearer twenty
-thousand<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>; the clergy, including all ranks of religious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-orders, may be reckoned at five hundred.
-They are in general good members of society, free
-from that excessive bigotry and illiberality which
-is the reproach of the neighbouring colonies, and
-their example has so beneficial an effect on the rest
-of the inhabitants, that I may presume to say, no
-stranger will be molested while he acts as a gentleman,
-and does not insult the established religion.
-His Excellency the Bishop is a most worthy prelate,
-and were the inferior orders in his diocese to follow
-his steps in cultivating the sciences and diffusing
-useful information, they would command greater
-respect from their flocks, and by that means further
-the interests of the religion they profess.
-Priests, so ignorant, can hardly escape contempt.</p>
-
-<p>No endemial diseases at present prevail here.
-The small-pox formerly, and indeed of late,
-made great havoc among the inhabitants, but
-its progress has been checked by the introduction
-of vaccine inoculation. Surgeons attended
-at a large hall belonging to the governor, to
-which the public were invited, and the operation
-was performed gratis. It is to be hoped that
-the credit of this preventative will make its way
-among the people here, for they are not competent
-to enter into the merits of that controversy
-which injured it in Europe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Here are few manufactures of any consequence;
-a little coarse cotton is spun by the hand, and
-woven into cloth, which serves for a variety of
-wearing apparel, sheets, &amp;c. They make a beautiful
-kind of net-work for hammocks, which are
-fringed with lace, and form an elegant piece of
-furniture, being slung low, so as to answer the
-purpose of sofas. The ladies are particularly fond
-of using them, especially when the heat of the
-weather disposes them to ease and indolence. The
-making of lace is a general employment for females,
-some of whom excel in it. The shopkeepers
-here are a numerous class, who, as in
-most colonial towns, deal in almost every thing,
-and sometimes make great fortunes. Here are
-few doctors, but many apothecaries; some silversmiths,
-whose articles are equally indifferent both
-in metal and workmanship; tailors and shoe-makers
-in great numbers; and joiners, who manufacture
-very beautiful wood, but are not so moderate
-in their charges as the former classes of tradesmen.
-In the out-skirts of the city live a number
-of Creolian Indians, who make earthenware for
-culinary purposes, large water-jars, and a variety
-of other utensils ornamented with some taste.
-The greatest proportion of the inhabitants consists
-in farmers and inferior husbandmen, who cultivate
-small portions of land, on which they breed
-large stocks of pigs and poultry for sale. With
-these the market is generally well supplied, and
-in the fruit-season is also stored with pines, grapes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-peaches, guavas, bananas, a few apples, and an
-enormous quantity of quinces.</p>
-
-<p>Esculent plants are grown in great profusion
-and variety. Here is a favorite bulbous root
-called the <i>Cará</i>, which is equal to the best potatoe,
-and even more farinaceous than many varieties of
-that plant; it grows to about seven inches in diameter,
-and affords excellent food, either boiled or
-roasted. Fine cabbages, sallad-herbs, turnips, cauliflowers,
-artichokes, and potatoes are in abundance;
-the latter, though very good, are little used: the
-sweet potatoe is in greater request among the
-natives. Maize, beans, green-peas, and every
-species of pulse florish amazingly. Fowls are
-cheap, we bought some at three-pence and sixpence
-each; small pigs from one to two shillings;
-and flitches of bacon, cured after the mode of the
-country, at about two-pence per pound. Turkies,
-geese, and ducks are abundant, and reasonable in
-price; the latter are of the Muscovy breed, enormously
-large, some weighing ten or fourteen
-pounds. Here is a singular breed of cocks; they
-resemble the common English in plumage and
-shape, but they crow very loud, and continue
-their last note for 15 or 20 seconds. When their
-voice is good, they are much esteemed, and are
-sent for as curiosities from all parts of Brazil.
-The cattle are in general good, considering that
-so little attention is paid to feeding them; when
-their pastures are full of grass, they are tolerably
-fat, but when otherwise they become lean. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-drove may be bought at 24s. or 30s. a head; beef at
-about a penny or three-halfpence per pound. The
-curriers have a singular method of blackening
-cow-hides and calf-skins: when they have prepared
-them for that operation, they search for
-some mud-hole at the bottom of a ferruginous
-stratum, a ditch for instance; with the mud they
-cover that side of the skin required to be stained;
-and they prefer this material to the solution of
-copperas, probably with reason, as the sulphate
-of iron formed by the decomposed pyrites acts
-more mildly in this state than when applied in the
-common way.</p>
-
-<p>The horses are very fine, and in general docile;
-when well trained they make excellent chargers.
-Their size is from twelve and a half to fourteen
-and a half hands, and they vary in price from
-three to twelve pounds. Mules, as we have before
-observed, are considered more useful beasts of
-burden. The breed of sheep is quite unattended
-to, and mutton is rarely or never eaten. Here is
-a very fine and large breed of goats, whose milk
-is generally used for domestic purposes. The dogs
-are very indifferent, and of no distinct race.</p>
-
-<p>In my walks round the city, I had frequent opportunities
-of examining the singular succession
-of horizontal strata, that form the eminence on
-which it stands. They lie in the following order:
-first, one of red vegetable earth of variable depth,
-impregnated with oxide of iron; below that, sand
-and adventitious matter of different shades of color,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-as ochre-red, brown, and dusky yellow, together
-with many rounded pebbles, which indicate
-it to be of rather recent formation; it varies in
-depth from three to six feet, or perhaps to seven,
-and its lower part is uniformly yellow: under this
-is a bed of exceedingly fine clay of various colors,
-but for the most part purple; the white and yellow
-is the purest in quality; it is interveined with
-thin layers of sand in various directions. Then
-succeeds a stratum of alluvial matter, which is
-highly ferruginous; it rests on a variety of decomposed
-granite, containing hornblende, the proportion
-of feldspar apparently exceeding that of
-the other constituents<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>. The whole is incumbent
-on fine grained granite. The sides of the mount
-are steep, and in some places nearly perpendicular<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The fertility of the country around S. Paulo
-may be inferred from the quantities of produce,
-with which, as I have stated, its market is supplied.
-About a century ago, this tract abounded
-with gold; and it was not until they had exhausted
-it by washing, that the inhabitants thought of
-employing themselves in husbandry. As they did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-so more from necessity than from choice, they
-were tardy in pursuing those improvements which
-other nations have made in this noble art, and,
-pining at the disappearance of the precious mineral,
-considered their new occupation as vile and
-degrading. Indeed throughout the whole of Brazil,
-the husbandmen have ever been considered as
-forming a class greatly inferior in point of respectability
-to the miners; and this prejudice will in
-all likelihood subsist until the country shall have
-been drained of its gold and diamonds, when the
-people will be compelled to seek in agriculture a
-constant and inexhaustible source of wealth.</p>
-
-<p>I shall attempt to describe the system of farming
-which at present prevails in the neighbourhood
-of S. Paulo. It has been elsewhere observed
-that, in this extensive empire, land is granted in
-large tracts, on proper application; and we may
-naturally suppose that the value of these tracts
-depends more or less on their situation. It therefore
-becomes the first object of a cultivator, to
-look out for unoccupied lands as near as possible
-to a large town; good roads and navigable rivers
-are the desiderata next in point of consequence
-which he attends to. When he has made choice
-of a situation, he applies to the governor of the
-district, who orders the proper officers to mark
-out the extent required, generally a league or a
-league and a half square, sometimes more. The
-cultivator then purchases as many negroes as he
-can, and commences his operations by erecting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-habitations for them and himself, which are generally
-miserable sheds, supported by four posts,
-and commonly called <i>ranchos</i>. His negroes are
-then directed to cut down the trees and brushwood
-growing on the land, to such an extent as
-he thinks they will be able to manage. This done,
-they set fire to all they have cut, as it lies on the
-ground. Much of the success of his harvest depends
-on this burning; if the whole be reduced to
-ashes he expects a great crop; if, through wet
-weather, the felled trees remain only half burnt,
-he prognosticates a bad one. When the ground
-is cleared, the negroes dibble it with their hoes,
-and sow their maize, beans, or other pulse; during
-the operation they cut down any thing very
-much in the way, but never think of working the
-soil. After sowing as much seed as is thought requisite,
-they prepare other ground for planting
-cassada, here called mandioca, the root of which
-is generally eaten as bread by all ranks in Brazil.
-The soil<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> for this purpose is rather better prepared;
-it is raked up in little round hillocks, not
-unlike mole-hills, about four feet asunder; into
-which are stuck cuttings from branches of the
-plant, about an inch thick and six or eight long;
-these soon take root, and put forth leaves, shoots,
-and buds. When enough has been planted for the
-entire consumption of the farm, the owner, if he
-is rich enough, prepares means for growing and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-manufacturing sugar. He first employs a carpenter
-to cut wood, and build a mill with wooden
-rollers for crushing the canes, by means of water,
-if a stream is at hand, if not, by the help of
-mules or oxen. While some of the negroes are
-assisting the carpenter, others are employed in
-preparing ground in the same way as for mandioca.
-Pieces of cane containing three or four joints, and
-in length about six inches, cut from the growing
-stem, are laid in the earth nearly horizontally, and
-covered with soil to the depth of about four inches.
-They shoot up rapidly, and in three months
-have a bushy appearance not unlike flags; in
-twelve or fifteen months more they are ready for
-cutting. In rich virgin soil it is not uncommon
-to see canes twelve feet high and astonishingly
-thick.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian corn and pulse are in general ripe
-in four months or eighteen weeks. The average
-return is two hundred for one; it is a bad harvest
-when it falls short of one hundred and fifty.</p>
-
-<p>The mandioca is rarely ready to take up in less
-than eighteen or twenty months; if the land be
-suitable, it then produces from six to twelve
-pounds weight per plant<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>. They grow very little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-indigo in this neighbourhood, and what they have
-is of indifferent quality. Their pumpkins are of
-enormous size, and small ones are sometimes served
-up as table-vegetables, but more frequently given
-as food to the horses. Melons here are scarcely
-palatable.</p>
-
-<p>In no branch of husbandry are the farmers so
-defective as in the management of cattle. No
-artificial grasses are cultivated, no enclosures are
-made, nor is any fodder laid up against the season
-of scarcity. The cows are never milked regularly;
-they seem to be considered rather as an
-incumbrance to a farm than a valuable part of
-the stock. They constantly require salt, which is
-given them once in fifteen or twenty days, in
-small proportions. The dairies, if such they may
-be called, are managed in so slovenly a manner,
-that the little butter which is made becomes rancid
-in a few days, and the cheese is good for nothing.
-In this essential department the Paulistas are
-deplorably deficient; rarely indeed is there to be
-seen a farm with one convenience belonging to it.
-For want of proper places in which to store their
-produce, they are obliged to lay it in promiscuous
-heaps; and it is not uncommon to see coffee, cotton,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-maize, and beans, thrown into the corners of
-a damp shed, and covered with a green hide.
-One half is invariably spoiled by mould and putridity,
-and the remainder is much deteriorated,
-through this idle and stupid negligence.</p>
-
-<p>They feed their pigs on Indian corn in a crude
-state; the time for confining them to fatten is at
-eight or ten months old; and the quantity consumed
-for the purpose is eight or ten Winchester
-bushels each. When killed, the lean is cut off the
-sides as clean as possible, the fat is cured with
-very little salt, and in a few days is ready for
-market. The ribs, chine-bone, and lean parts are
-dried for home consumption.</p>
-
-<p>The farm-houses are miserable hovels of one
-story, the floor neither paved nor boarded, and
-the walls and partitions formed of wicker-work,
-plastered with mud, and never under-drawn. For
-an idea of the kitchen, which ought to be the
-cleanest and most comfortable part of the dwelling,
-the reader may figure to himself a filthy
-room, with an uneven muddy floor, interspersed
-with pools of slop-water, and in different parts
-fire-places formed by three round stones to hold
-the earthen pots that are used for boiling meat;
-as green wood is the chief fuel, the place is almost
-always filled with smoke, which, finding no chimney,
-vents itself through the doors and other
-apertures, and leaves all within as black as soot.
-I regret to say that the kitchens of many opulent
-people are not in much better condition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It may well be imagined that, in a country like
-this, a stranger finds the greatest comfort and enjoyment
-out of doors. The gardens in S. Paulo,
-and its vicinity, are laid out with great taste, and
-many of them with curious elegance. The jasmine
-is every where a favorite tree, and in this
-fine climate bears flowers perennially, as does the
-rose. Carnations, pinks, passion-flowers, cockscombs,
-&amp;c. grow in great plenty; one of their
-most estimable shrubs is the Palma Christi, which
-gives fruit the first year, and yields abundance of
-castor-oil, which all families possess in such quantity,
-that no other sort is burnt.</p>
-
-<p>Bees are by no means uncommon; they are
-easily domesticated, and, I believe, are perfectly
-harmless. Their honey is pleasant; the wax, particularly
-that generally sold, which is taken from
-their nests in old forest-trees, is very foul, but
-might be purified by a very simple process. The
-woods contain a great variety of animals of the
-monkey kind, and also beasts of prey, some of
-which have tolerably good fur. Among the latter
-may be classed a peculiar species of the otter.
-Insects are numerous, but the musquitos are not
-so offensively so as in the Rio de la Plata. The
-animalculum, called the niagua or jigger, is troublesome;
-it beds itself under the nails of the toes,
-and sometimes of the fingers, but it may easily be
-banished by extracting it and its bag of eggs with
-a needle, and filling the cavity with calomel or
-snuff, for fear any should have remained. Reptiles,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-I was told, were very numerous, but I saw
-few, except toads, which, in the evenings, crawl
-upon the foot-paths, and even infest the streets
-of the city. The <i>sorocucu</i> or <i>jararaca</i> (serpents)
-are said to be very dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>The woods produce large and durable timber,
-well calculated for building. Of their trees, all
-of which retain their Indian names, some yield
-very fine gums. The <i>jacarandá</i>, called in England
-rose-wood, is here very common. Many of
-their shrubs bear beautiful flowers, and are very
-aromatic. Among the innumerable creeping
-plants which clothe the soil of their uncleared
-lands, there are some distinguished as infallible
-antidotes to the bite of venomous reptiles; one in
-particular, called the <i>coração de Jesus</i><a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>, is universally
-esteemed.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the plain which nearly encircles S.
-Paulo, the country is hilly, or rather mountainous.
-Had the period of my stay been longer, I should
-have devoted some time to a geological tour in
-that district; but having urgent reasons to hasten
-my departure for Rio de Janeiro, I had leisure to
-make only one excursion of this kind. The governor
-invited me to visit the old gold-mines of
-Jaraguá, the first discovered in Brazil, which were
-now his property, together with a farm in their
-vicinity, distant about twenty-four miles from the
-city. We travelled along a tolerable, and in some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-places, fine road, in a southerly direction, for
-twelve miles, and crossed the Tieti. This river is
-here considerably larger and deeper than in the
-neighbourhood of S. Paulo; it has an excellent
-wooden bridge, free from toll. On its banks there
-are some situations truly enviable; fine rich virgin
-lands covered with timber, and capable of producing,
-not only the necessaries, but the luxuries
-of life, in a hundred-fold degree, if properly cultivated.
-It was melancholy to behold a territory,
-which, for its teeming soil and genial climate, deserves
-to be called a paradise, neglected and solitary,
-like that of Eden after the fall; while its infatuated
-possessors, like the offspring of Cain,
-hungering for gold, kept aloof from the rich feast
-which nature here spread before them.</p>
-
-<p>After travelling onward four leagues, we arrived
-at the ancient mines of Jaraguá, famed for
-the immense treasures they produced nearly two
-centuries ago, when at the ports of Santos and S,
-Vicente, whence the gold was shipped for Europe,
-this district was regarded as the Peru of Brazil.
-The face of the country is uneven and rather
-mountainous. The rock, where it appeared exposed,
-I found to be granite, and sometimes gneiss,
-containing a portion of hornblende, with mica.
-The soil is red, and remarkably ferruginous, in
-many places apparently of great depth. The gold
-lies, for the most part, in a stratum of rounded
-pebbles and gravel, called <i>cascalho</i>, immediately
-incumbent on the solid rock. In the valleys, where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-there is water, occur frequent excavations, made
-by the gold-washers, to a considerable extent, some
-of them fifty or a hundred feet wide, and eighteen
-or twenty deep. On many of the hills, where
-water can be collected for washing, particles of gold
-are found in the soil, scarcely deeper than the roots
-of the grass.</p>
-
-<p>The mode of working these mines, more fitly
-to be denominated washings, is simple, and may
-be easily explained:</p>
-
-<p>Suppose a loose gravel-like stratum of rounded
-quartzose pebbles and adventitious matter, incumbent
-on granite, and covered by earthy matter of
-variable thickness. Where water of sufficiently
-high level can be commanded, the ground is cut in
-steps, each twenty or thirty feet wide, two or three
-broad, and about one deep. Near the bottom a
-trench is cut to the depth of two or three feet.
-On each step stand six or eight negroes, who, as
-the water flows gently from above, keep the earth
-continually in motion with shovels, until the
-whole is reduced to liquid mud and washed below.
-The particles of gold contained in this earth descend
-to the trench, where, by reason of their
-specific gravity, they quickly precipitate. Workmen
-are continually employed at the trench to
-remove the stones, and clear away the surface,
-which operation is much assisted by the current
-of water which falls into it. After five days’
-washing, the precipitation in the trench is carried
-to some convenient stream, to undergo a second<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-clearance. For this purpose wooden bowls are
-provided, of a funnel shape, about two feet wide
-at the mouth, and five or six inches deep, called
-<i>gamellas</i>. Each workman standing in the stream,
-takes into his bowl five or six pounds weight of
-the sediment, which generally consists of heavy
-matter, such as granular oxide of iron, pyrites, ferruginous
-quartz, &amp;c. and often precious stones. They
-admit certain quantities of water into the bowls,
-which they move about so dexterously, that the
-precious metal, separating from the inferior and
-lighter substances, settles to the bottom and sides
-of the vessel. They then rinse their bowls in a
-larger vessel of clean water, leaving the gold in it,
-and begin again. The washing of each bowlful
-occupies from five to eight or nine minutes; the
-gold produced is extremely variable in quantity,
-and in the size of its particles, some of which are
-so minute, that they float, while others are found as
-large as peas, and not unfrequently much larger.
-This operation is superintended by overseers, as
-the result is of considerable importance. When
-the whole is finished, the gold is placed upon a
-brass pan, over a slow fire, to be dried, and at
-a convenient time is taken to the permutation
-office, where it is weighed, and a fifth is reserved
-for the Prince. The remainder is smelted with
-muriate of mercury, then cast into ingots, assayed,
-and stamped according to its intrinsic
-value, a certificate of which is given with it;
-after a copy of that instrument has been duly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-entered at the mint-office, the ingots circulate as
-specie.</p>
-
-<p>My attention was strongly engaged by the immense
-debris or refuse of old washings, which lay
-in numberless heaps, and contained various substances
-that gave me strong hope of finding some
-interesting and valuable specimens of tourmalines,
-topazes, and other crystallizations, and also a rich
-series of rocks, which form the geognostics of the
-country. So strongly was I prepossessed with
-this hope, that I really fancied I had within my
-reach some of the finest mineral products of Brazil.
-Early one morning, before the sun became too
-hot for work, I set out accompanied by two or
-three men, with iron crows and hammers, whom I
-had engaged to assist me. We broke up immense
-quantities of quartzose and granite-like matter in
-various stages of decomposition, and others of a
-ferruginous kind, but after pursuing the operation
-for three whole days, until my hands could
-no longer wield the hammer, I was obliged to give
-up the search as fruitless; not a grain of gold did I
-find, nor anything of the nature of crystallization,
-except some miserable quartz, a little cubic and
-octahedral pyrites, and some very poor maganese!
-In short the substances presented so little novelty,
-and were in themselves so ordinary, that I hesitated
-whether I should carry them with me to S.
-Paulo. This disappointment at the first gold
-mines I had seen, not a little dejected me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In company with the Governor and his lady, I
-now took a survey of the farm; we walked and
-rode through extensive plantations, the productions
-of which, as well as the mode of culture
-pursued, were similar to those I have already described.
-Our next recreation was hunting the
-deer. Let not the reader imagine that I am going
-to lead him a chase through miles of country with
-a pack of hounds and a joyous company of horsemen;
-the mode of hunting in Brazil affords no
-such diversion. Three or four men go out armed
-with guns and attended by two or three dogs; the
-men separate and wait in some open place; meanwhile
-the dogs quest among the plantations and
-thickets; if they find, they drive the game out,
-which the hunters immediately shoot. The deer
-are small, and of the fallow kind; but their flesh
-is not esteemed.</p>
-
-<p>The wild animals of this district are chiefly
-monkeys, sloths, a variety of the porcupine, and
-opossums. These, and other predatory beasts,
-make great havoc among the poultry. Of the
-feathered tribe there are not many varieties; I shot
-several snipes and beautiful lapwings<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> with red
-horns on each pinion, about half an inch in length.
-Here are great numbers of parrots and parroquets.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The vampire-bat, so often described by travellers,
-is a most formidable foe to the horses and
-mules. If he gets access to them in the night, he
-fixes on the neck-vein, above the shoulder, and
-sucks it to such a degree as to leave the animal
-almost covered with blood, fanning with his wings
-all the while he retains his hold, in order (as it
-should seem) to lull the pain caused by his bite.</p>
-
-<p>The garden has a bed of fine potatoes, which
-were planted three or four years ago by Mr.
-Quarten, from Gibraltar. They are suffered to
-grow and reproduce themselves from season to
-season, none being taken up unless when wanted
-for food. Cabbages and other vegetables for the
-table grow in abundance.</p>
-
-<p>This farm has the advantage of very fine timber
-in its neighbourhood, and when the improvements,
-begun by the governor, are completed, it
-will be well provided with water, brought from a
-distance of six miles, in sufficient quantities to
-wash the hills, and to work the machinery of a
-sugar-mill. On the estate were employed about
-fifty negroes, and half that number of free Indians;
-the latter ate at their master’s expense, and
-earned about sixpence a day; but they appeared
-far less laborious and handy than the negroes.
-They were clearing grounds and making walks in
-a wood, which when finished will render the place
-a most agreeable summer retreat.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many marks of kindness with which
-the governor honored me, I must not omit his repeated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-assurances, that in the event of war between
-our respective countries, which was then
-talked of, he would not detain me. After remaining
-here five days, which were rendered as
-agreeable as possible by the polite civilities of my
-host, we set out on our return in the order in
-which we came: the governor and his lady in a
-carriage drawn by four mules, his aide-de-camp
-and myself on horseback, and six dragoons in
-front, the guard usually attendant on an officer of
-his rank. We arrived at S. Paulo without any
-material occurrence.</p>
-
-<p>This city is seldom visited by foreigners. The
-passes to it from the coast are so singularly situated,
-that it is almost impossible to avoid the
-guards who are stationed in them, to inspect all
-travellers and merchandize passing into the interior.
-Soldiers of the lowest rank on these stations
-have a right to examine all strangers who
-present themselves, and to detain them and their
-property, unless they can produce passports. I
-and my friends in our way hither were thrice
-obliged to exhibit our licence from the governor
-of Santos, which was attested. Our appearance
-at S. Paulo excited considerable curiosity among
-all descriptions of people, who seemed by their
-manner never to have seen Englishmen before;
-the very children testified their astonishment, some
-by running away, others by counting our fingers,
-and exclaiming, that we had the same number
-as they. Many of the good citizens invited us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-to their houses, and sent for their friends to come
-and look at us. As the dwelling we occupied was
-very large, we were frequently entertained by
-crowds of young persons of both sexes, who came
-to the door to see how we ate and drank. It was
-gratifying to us to perceive that this general
-wonder subsided into a more social feeling; we
-met with civil treatment every where, and were
-frequently invited to dine with the inhabitants.
-At the public parties and balls of the governor
-we found both novelty and pleasure; novelty at
-being much more liberally received than we were
-in the Spanish settlements, and pleasure at being
-in much more refined and polished company.</p>
-
-<p>The dress of the ladies abroad, and especially at
-church, consists of a garment of black silk, with a
-long veil of the same material, trimmed with
-broad lace; in the cooler season black cassimere
-or baize. In the same veil they almost always appear
-in the streets, though it has been partially
-superseded by a long coat of coarse woollen,
-edged with velvet, gold lace, fustian, or plush, according
-to the rank of the wearer. This coat is
-used as a general sort of undress, at home, in their
-evening walks, and on a journey, and the ladies,
-whenever they wear it, appear in round hats. The
-appellation of Paulista is considered by all the
-females here as a great honor; the Paulistas being
-celebrated throughout all Brazil for their attractions,
-and their dignity of character. At table
-they are extremely abstemious; their favorite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-amusement is dancing, in which they display much
-vivacity and grace. At halls and other public
-festivals they generally appear in elegant white
-dresses, with a profusion of gold chains about
-their necks, their hair tastefully disposed and fastened
-with combs. Their conversation, at all
-times sprightly, seems to derive additional life
-from music. Indeed the whole range of their education
-appears to be confined to superficial accomplishments;
-they trouble themselves very
-little with domestic concerns, confiding whatever
-relates to the inferior departments of the household
-to the negro or negress cook, and leaving all
-other matters to the management of servants.
-Owing to this indifference, they are total strangers
-to the advantages of that order, neatness, and propriety,
-which reign in an English family; their
-time at home is mostly occupied in sewing, embroidery,
-and lace-making. Another circumstance
-repugnant to delicacy is, that they have no mantua-makers
-of their own sex; all articles of female
-dress here are made by tailors. An almost
-universal debility prevails among them, which is
-partly attributable to their abstemious living, but
-chiefly to want of exercise, and to the frequent
-warm-bathings in which they indulge. They are
-extremely attentive to every means of improving
-the delicacy of their persons, perhaps to the injury
-of their health.</p>
-
-<p>The men in general, especially those of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-higher rank, officers, and others, dress superbly;
-in company they are very polite and attentive, and
-shew every disposition to oblige; they are great
-talkers and prone to conviviality. The lower
-ranks, compared with those of other colonial
-towns, are in a very advanced state of civilization.
-It were to be wished that some reform were
-instituted in their system of education; the children
-of slaves are brought up during their early
-days with those of their masters; they are playmates
-and companions, and thus a familiar equality
-is established between them, which has to be forcibly
-abolished when they arrive at that age, at
-which one must command and live at his ease,
-while the other must labor and obey. It has been
-said, that by thus attaching the slave to his master,
-in early youth, they ensure his future fidelity,
-but the custom seems fraught with many disadvantages,
-and ought at least to be so modified as
-to render the yoke of bondage less galling by the
-recollection of former liberty.</p>
-
-<p>The religious processions here are very splendid,
-grand, and solemn; they have a striking effect,
-by reason of the profound veneration and enthusiastic
-zeal manifested by the populace. On particular
-occasions of this kind, all the inhabitants
-of the city attend, and the throng is frequently
-increased by numbers of the neighbouring peasantry
-for several leagues round. The balconies
-of those houses, which command the best views<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-of the spectacle, are crowded with ladies in their
-gala dresses, who consider the day as a kind of
-festival; the evening is generally concluded by tea
-and card-parties or dances.</p>
-
-<p>We found very little difficulty in accommodating
-ourselves to the general mode of living at S.
-Paulo. The bread is pretty good, and the butter
-tolerable, but rarely used except with coffee for
-breakfast, or tea in the evening. A more common
-breakfast is a very pleasant sort of beans, called
-<i>feijoens</i>, boiled or mixed with mandioca. Dinner,
-which is usually served up at noon or before,
-commonly consists of a quantity of greens boiled
-with a little fat pork or beef, a root of the potatoe
-kind, and a stewed fowl, with excellent sallad, to
-which succeeds a great variety of delicious conserves
-and sweetmeats. Very little wine is taken
-at meals; the usual beverage is water. On public
-occasions, or when a feast is given to a large
-party, the table is most sumptuously spread; from
-thirty to fifty dishes are served up at once, by
-which arrangement a succession of courses is
-obviated. Wine circulates copiously, and toasts
-are given during the repast, which usually occupies
-two or three hours, and is succeeded by
-sweetmeats, the pride of their tables; after coffee
-the company pass the evening in dancing, music,
-or cards.</p>
-
-<p>I may here observe, that neither in S. Paulo,
-nor in any other place which I visited, did I witness
-any instance of that levity in the females of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-Brazil, which some writers allege to be the leading
-trait in their character. I allude to the custom
-which has been said to prevail among them,
-of throwing flowers from the balconies on such of
-the passers-by, as they take a fancy to, or of presenting
-a flower or a nosegay to their favorites,
-as a mark of partiality. The circumstance which
-seems to have given rise to such an ill-founded
-conjecture is this: flowers are here considered an
-indispensable part of the female head-dress, and
-when a stranger is introduced to a lady, it is
-nothing more than an act of common courtesy
-for her to take one from her hair to present
-to him. This elegant compliment he is expected
-to return in the course of the visit, by selecting
-a flower from the profuse variety which adorn
-the garden, or the balcony, and presenting it
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>One singular custom I must not omit to notice,
-that of throwing artificial fruit, such as lemons or
-oranges, made very delicately of wax and filled
-with perfumed water. On the two first days of
-Lent, which are here celebrated with great festivity,
-persons of both sexes amuse themselves by
-throwing these balls at each other; the lady generally
-begins the game, the gentleman returns it
-with such spirit that it seldom ceases until several
-dozens are thrown, and both parties are as wet
-as if they had been drawn through a river. Sometimes
-a lady will dexterously drop one into the
-bosom of a gentleman, which will infallibly oblige<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-him to change his linen, as it usually contains
-three or four ounces of cold water. On these
-days of carnival the inhabitants parade the streets
-in masks, and the diversion of throwing fruit is
-practised by persons of all ages. It is reckoned
-improper for men to throw at each other. The
-manufacture of these missiles, at such periods,
-affords no inconsiderable occupation to certain
-classes of the inhabitants; I have been informed,
-that in the capital of Brazil, many hundreds of
-people derive a temporary subsistence from the
-sale of them. The practice (as I can testify) is
-very annoying to strangers, and not unfrequently
-engenders quarrels which terminate seriously.</p>
-
-<p>During our stay here an unpleasant report was
-circulated, that the port of Lisbon was shut
-against the English, and that war was daily expected
-to be declared between the two powers.
-Had it not been for the kindness of the governor
-in offering to permit our departure before he
-should receive orders to the contrary, we should
-have felt ourselves in a very disagreeable predicament.
-But news soon arrived that his Royal
-Highness the Prince Regent had left Portugal
-with all the court, and that they were embarked
-for the Brazils, under the escort of a British
-squadron, dispatched by Sir Sidney Smith. This
-intelligence was most joyfully received by the
-Brazilians; they considered, indeed, that the occupation
-of Portugal by the French, was a disaster
-very likely to ensue, but they consoled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-themselves with the hope of receiving a Prince,
-in whose praise every tongue was eloquent, and
-to whose cause every heart was loyal. The Brazilian
-empire was considered as established; and
-the worthy bishop consecrated the auspicious era
-by ordaining daily prayers in the cathedral, to invoke,
-from Divine Providence, the safe arrival of
-the Royal Family. News of their having touched
-at Bahia arrived in about ten days, and was welcomed
-by every demonstration of public joy, processions,
-fire-works, &amp;c. Hoping, every day, to
-hear of their arrival at Rio de Janeiro, I made
-all ready for my departure, and devoted the few
-remaining days to a second excursion to the
-gold-mines, and to some farewell visits among
-my friends in the vicinity of S. Paulo. The governor
-and many of the principal inhabitants gave
-us parting invitations, and by their urbanity rendered
-the last hours we passed with them at
-once delightful and melancholy. Some of the
-latter accompanied us two leagues on our way,
-and on separating testified the warmest wishes for
-our welfare.</p>
-
-<p>I never recal to mind the civilities I received at
-this city without the most grateful emotions, in
-which those will best sympathize who have known
-what it is to visit a remote city in a strange country,
-where, according to the narratives of preceding
-travellers, nothing prevailed but barbarism
-and inhospitality, and where they have been agreeably
-undeceived. It may easily be supposed that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-I found it difficult to reconcile the character of
-the Paulistas, such as I beheld it, with the strange
-accounts of their spurious origin, quoted by modern
-geographers. These accounts, founded on
-the suspicious testimony of the Jesuits of Paraguay,
-and at variance with the best Portuguese
-historians, have been of late most ably confuted
-by an enlightened member of the Royal Academy
-of Sciences at Lisbon<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>. He fully exposes the inconsistencies
-of Vaissette and Charlevoix, in ascribing
-the origin of S. Paulo to a band of refugees,
-composed of Spaniards, Portuguese, Mestiços,
-Mulattos, and others, who fled hither from various
-parts of Brazil, and established a free-booting
-republic; and he satisfactorily shews that the first
-settlers were Indians of Piratininga and Jesuits,
-and that the city, from its first foundation, never
-acknowledged any other sovereignty than that of
-Portugal. The veracity of this account is further
-supported by the predominant character of the
-Paulistas, who, far from inheriting the obloquy,
-which an ancestry of rogues and vagabonds would
-have entailed upon them, have long been famed
-throughout all Brazil for their probity, their industry,
-and the mildness of their manners<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c6" id="c6">CHAP. VI.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Coasting Voyage from Santos to Sapitiva, and
-Journey thence to Rio de Janeiro.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">WE left S. Paulo at ten in the morning, and took
-the same road to Santos by which we had come,
-there being no other, fit to travel. On the following
-day, before noon, we arrived at Cubatão,
-where we were detained by rain, until four in the
-afternoon. About seven we arrived at Santos,
-and as we were provided with a letter of introduction
-to a judge, and another to a merchant,
-we relied on a kinder welcome than we had met
-with on our first visit, the more so as we came
-from S. Paulo. We were, however, deceived.
-The judge received us coldly, and when I asked
-him where the person lived to whom our other letter
-was addressed, he seemed quite rejoiced at the
-opportunity for shewing us out of his house. The
-merchant was as frigid as the judge, and made us
-a paltry excuse. We then repaired to an apothecary,
-from whom we had experienced some acts
-of urbanity, and who had attended one of our
-friends, who, having left S. Paulo in a bad state
-of health, had waited here three weeks for a passage
-to Rio de Janeiro. After telling him our
-situation, and stating that the wet weather prevented
-us from passing the night in our canoe, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-kindly offered us his shop-floor for a lodging, it
-being the only place under cover he had to spare.
-We commissioned him to offer four dollars to any
-of his neighbours who would admit us for the
-night, but he said it would be of no avail, as the
-people of Santos were proverbially notorious for
-their want of hospitality. The great influx of
-strangers and renegadoes from all nations into this
-and other towns on the coast, had completely
-steeled the hearts of the people against those claims
-on their good-will, which the inhabitants of the
-interior, less frequently imposed upon, are ever
-ready to acknowledge and to satisfy.</p>
-
-<p>Thus disappointed, we resolved not to wait at Santos
-for a ship, but to proceed to Rio de Janeiro,
-along the coast, in a canoe. Having hired one we
-embarked, and after rowing all night in a strait between
-the continent and the island of S. Thomas,
-which forms one of the passages to Santos from
-sea, we arrived by sun-rise at Bertioga, situated
-at the north end of that island. It is a village,
-consisting of some tolerably good buildings, erected
-for the convenience of the <i>Capitão Mor</i> and
-his attendants, who superintend a fishing establishment
-here, similar to that near St. Catherine’s,
-and belonging to the same company, but very
-much inferior in extent and capacity. At
-both places the most expert of the negroes are
-employed in dressing whalebone, which is a considerable
-article of commerce, though smaller and
-less valuable than that of the Greenland whale.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-Along the coast which we passed, are several fine
-bays, where, in the best times of the fishery, large
-quantities of whales were annually caught. The
-buildings for boiling the blubber and storing the
-oil were conveniently situated.</p>
-
-<p>The fine harbour of Bertioga is well sheltered
-from all winds, and the town itself, being situated
-at the foot of a hill, is protected from the inclemencies
-of the weather, and is at times inconveniently
-warm. The basis of the hill is primitive
-granite, composed of hornblende, feldspar, quartz,
-and mica. Fine springs of water, bursting from
-various parts, give variety to the scenery, and an
-agreeable freshness to the air. Though the place
-bore the appearance of poverty, we observed no
-signs of want; the sea affords great plenty and
-variety of eatable fish, and the soil produces pulse,
-of various sorts, and rice, quantities of which we
-saw loading in boats for Santos. The people with
-whom we had to treat used us civilly, and seemed
-anxious to anticipate and to gratify all our requests.
-As the <i>Capitão Mor</i> was ill, he could not
-render us any assistance in procuring a passage for
-St. Sebastian; we were therefore obliged to hire
-the canoe to go forward.</p>
-
-<p>A strong current setting in-shore detained us
-until midnight; we then took advantage of a calm
-which succeeded, and rowed away for a headland
-to the eastward, near which we arrived about sunrise,
-after a most laborious passage. The shore
-was quite solitary, with the exception of two very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-miserable huts, at which we could procure no better
-a breakfast than muscles. The face of the
-country is low and sandy, covered with underwood
-and groups of trees, and watered by rivulets from
-a range of mountains apparently about two leagues
-distant.</p>
-
-<p>A breeze springing up about mid-day, we again
-embarked, but after contending with both elements
-for four hours, we were obliged again to
-take to our oars, in order to reach Porto d’Una
-before sun-set, which, with considerable exertion,
-we effected. At this place we observed a large
-plantation, belonging to a religious society at Santos,
-who hence derive a great part of their maintenance.
-After waiting till two in the morning
-for a change either of wind or current, we got
-out of port and proceeded on our voyage to Rio
-de Janeiro. We rowed against the wind till day-light,
-and then found ourselves near a bluff headland
-with steep rocks, forming a good harbour for
-boats, called Toque Toque, where we arrived
-about nine o’clock, having passed several conical
-islands, which are not laid down in any chart that
-I have hitherto seen. Off the point of Toque
-Toque, extends the fine island of St. Sebastian;
-the strait between it and the main affords an excellent
-passage, and a good harbour for ships
-of war.</p>
-
-<p>The wind still blowing fresh against us, we
-rested awhile, and were amused by watching some
-fishermen haul their nets ashore with large draughts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-of <i>cavallos</i> in them. These fish weigh from fifteen
-to twenty pounds each, and are caught in
-great numbers along this coast.</p>
-
-<p>Passing point Toque Toque at noon, we entered
-the strait of St. Sebastian. Its width is
-about two leagues; the land on both sides is bold
-and steep, and being well cultivated has a very
-grand and rich appearance. The varied foliage
-of the trees, and the different shades of verdure in
-the enclosures, combined with the romantic situations
-of the houses dispersed among them, presented
-a view worthy the ablest pencil; we had
-full leisure to enjoy it, for the wind being still adverse,
-our progress depended on the toil of our
-wearied boatmen. Several vessels, going the contrary
-way, passed us in full sail, the crews of
-which added to our chagrin by ironically wishing
-us a pleasant voyage. At four in the afternoon
-we arrived at the town of St. Sebastian, situated
-on a low tract of ground about three hundred
-yards from the beach. The inhabitants, amounting
-to two or three thousand, are an indigent and
-not very industrious people; they subsist chiefly
-on fish, which was the only food we could procure
-during the three days we staid among them.
-There are some inconsiderable plantations in the
-neighbourhood, where a little indigo is made, and
-some tolerably good tobacco is grown. This
-town is noted (and formerly was much more so)
-for its very large canoes scooped out of the solid
-timber; some of them I have seen of almost incredible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-dimensions. The civil government is entrusted
-to a <i>Capitão Mor</i>, whose authority is supported
-by a garrison of ten or fifteen soldiers
-under the command of an ensign. At the house
-of the latter we took up our abode, while waiting
-for an opportunity to hire a large canoe to carry
-us to Sapitiva, near Rio de Janeiro. The people
-with whom we had to bargain, used every petty
-means to thwart and impose upon us, and our host
-shewed no disposition to protect us against their
-chicanery, so that we encountered many vexatious
-delays ere we could accomplish our purpose.</p>
-
-<p>This place is by no means a desirable, or indeed,
-a tolerable residence for a stranger; it is
-exposed to all the inconveniencies peculiar to low
-and sandy situations; the hot unwholesome weather,
-seldom refreshed by a breeze, tends to multiply
-the immense swarms of mosquitos, which
-constitute one of the plagues of the torrid zone.
-The neighbouring island, on the contrary, being
-more elevated, has the advantage of a freer air,
-and is therefore less annoyed by these troublesome
-insects. It has the reputation of producing
-the best sugar, rum, and pulse, as well as the
-finest cattle in all Brazil, and these advantages,
-joined to its convenient situation, must render a
-plantation upon it highly valuable. In common
-with the opposite shore, and the rocks observable
-in various parts of the straits, the island appears to
-be composed of the same variety of granite I have
-before described. Near the town of St. Sebastian’s,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-I found some large pieces of green-stone,
-which, when struck, emitted a very clear sound;
-fragments of limestone were abundant on the
-beach, but these probably were part of some vessel’s
-ballast, which had been thrown overboard in
-the bay, and washed ashore.</p>
-
-<p>Having at length hired a canoe, we embarked
-for a village about five miles distant, called Bayro,
-where we arrived safe, and staid all night at the
-house of a fisherman, who undertook the charge
-of our navigation until we should arrive at Sapitiva.
-Bayro is a pretty but poor village, built
-near the beach, and is chiefly noted as being the
-place where most of the earthenware, used at
-Rio de Janeiro, is made. The clay appears to be
-formed by the decomposition of feldspar. Here
-is a large convent, well built, and finely situated,
-fronting the bay and near the sea.</p>
-
-<p>About nine in the morning, we embarked in
-our canoe, which was forty feet long, covered
-with an awning, and rowed by six men. In the
-afternoon we arrived at Porcos, a fine, bold, conical
-island, with good anchorage, but no port. Its
-coasts abound with excellent fish. Here was stationed
-a guard of soldiers to prevent contraband
-trade, and to give information respecting it; the
-officer, an ensign, made us welcome to all he had,
-and treated us with great kindness during our
-short stay. Leaving this place at two in the
-morning, we rowed through an archipelago of
-islets, and arrived at Porto Negro, within four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-leagues of Ilha Grande, and the morning following
-reached a bay in that island. The land is, in general,
-very high and irregular; in the interior it
-is well wooded, and contains some excellent iron
-ore, which is very little known. Its coasts are
-but partially inhabited. The strait, which separates
-it from the main land, is an excellent harbour
-in all its extent, and was the rendezvous
-of some English privateers during our war with
-Spain. The country, in its vicinity, is well clothed
-with large timber, and appears very fruitful, but
-is thinly peopled by a set of men, whose manners
-and pursuits denote them to be outcasts from
-society. In the evening we entered a fine bay,
-and procured some refreshment at a house on the
-beach, where we intended to pass the night, but a
-plan had been laid to rob us, and we were obliged,
-on discovering it, to re-embark before day-break,
-much rejoiced at having narrowly escaped the
-loss of our property and our lives. Pursuing our
-course among the many islands, with which this
-part of the coast is studded, we passed the beautiful
-and fertile island of Madeira, and, at noon,
-crossed two wide bays. A favorable breeze
-now, for the first time, sprung up, which lasted
-until we arrived at Sapitiva, and here ended our
-romantic canoe-voyage.</p>
-
-<p>I would strongly impress on every traveller,
-pursuing a similar course, the expediency of providing
-himself with a soldier commissioned to
-attend him, and to protect his person and property<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-against the evil-minded persons, who prowl
-about the coast in search of plunder, and greedily
-seek every opportunity of securing, by fraud
-or force, the property of defenceless passengers.
-We had more than once occasion to rue the neglect
-of this precaution.</p>
-
-<p>At Sapitiva, we met with excellent accommodations.
-The owner of the house at which
-we put up, furnished us with a plentiful supper
-of fish, fowls, coffee, and excellent sweetmeats,
-which we relished the more from having, for
-eight days, subsisted wholly on fish. Our lodgings
-were tolerably comfortable, and were rendered
-more so by the earnestness with which
-every one in the family strove to please us.
-At sun-rise next morning, after diverting myself
-with shooting a few horned plovers on the beach,
-I took a survey of the romantic scenery around.
-Here are a few poor houses, and some plantations
-of indigo, sugar, and pulse. The beach
-is lined with fine aloes, and presents an interesting
-view of several islets in front of the bay,
-the most conspicuous of which is Madeira, before-mentioned.
-In another direction is seen that
-of Ilha Grande. Four leagues distant from Sapitiva
-is Santa Cruz, formerly the property of
-the Jesuits, and now the royal farm of the Prince
-Regent of Portugal, of which I shall have occasion,
-in the sequel, to speak more at large.</p>
-
-<p>After settling with our host, we hired mules to
-carry us to Rio de Janeiro, distant forty miles.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-Owing to the weight of our baggage, we travelled
-but slowly: this, however, we did not regret, as
-the fatigues of our coasting-voyage rendered us
-rather averse to violent exertion. Proceeding
-through a low sandy country, covered with wood,
-for about three leagues, we skirted the boundary
-of the Prince’s farm, which encloses some of the
-finest and most fertile plains in South America,
-and gives employment to upward of fifteen hundred
-negroes. We soon afterwards reached the
-main road, which in general is very good, but the
-lands about it are little cleared, and seem almost
-destitute of cultivators. In the course of twenty
-miles, we saw only one house that deserved the
-name of a plantation; the only dwellings by the
-way-side were miserable huts and dram-shops, exhibiting
-deplorable symptoms of sloth and poverty.
-Before sun-set we halted at a kind of inn, where
-our mules were turned out to grass, and a supper
-was provided for us of fowls, milk, and coffee. The
-house, though pleasantly situated on an eminence
-among orange-groves and coffee-trees, was miserably
-deficient in those conveniences which its exterior
-had announced. The room where we
-supped was lighted by a small poor lamp, (here
-being no candles,) and the floor was so uneven,
-that our table stood on only two of its four legs.
-Tired with this cheerless gloom, we ordered our
-beds to be unpacked, and retired to rest. The
-want of candle-light is a serious inconvenience to
-travellers in all parts of Brazil, and no one ought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-to undertake a journey without an ample provision
-of candles, with the necessary implements for
-using them. Snuffers are articles of luxury, very
-rarely to be met with, except as curiosities. I
-need not add that beds are an equally indispensable
-part of a traveller’s equipage.</p>
-
-<p>We resumed our journey at an early hour next
-day, along an excellent road in the middle of a
-valley, formed by lofty mountains. After travelling
-about three miles, we came to a house,
-called the <i>Padeira</i> (bake-house), which is reckoned
-half way between Sapitiva and the capital. From
-this place the road gradually becomes more enlivened
-by dwellings and plantations, (but many
-of the former, are wretched hovels erected for the
-sale of bacon, corn, liquors, &amp;c.) and by numbers
-of countrymen bringing produce from every part
-of the south-west, even from the far districts of
-Goyazes, Coritiva, Cuyaba, S. Paulo, and Mato
-Grosso. It is not uncommon to see eight hundred
-or a thousand mules passing and repassing in the
-course of a day, besides numerous droves of fine
-cattle for the use of the city. Our heavy-laden
-and weary mules travelled so slowly, that we did
-not come within sight of Rio de Janeiro, until
-about three in the afternoon. On reaching the
-eminence, which commanded the first prospect of
-this fine city, our joyful sensations banished every
-feeling of fatigue. One of the party, who had advanced
-a few paces, rode back as fast as his mule
-could go, exclaiming, “the English flag.” We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-hastened onward, and beheld one of the most welcome
-sights that ever greeted the eyes of a traveller,
-with a remembrance of his native country&mdash;a
-squadron of our men of war at anchor in the
-bay, which had recently escorted the court of Portugal
-to an asylum in their own dominions, beyond
-the reach of their foes. We no longer felt
-uneasy at the thought of entering a large city inhabited
-by strangers; we knew that the name of
-Englishman would be a passport among them, and
-we anticipated something of that delight which is
-connected with the near prospect of home. I,
-who had for eighteen months lingered in exile,
-and beheld each setting sun close another day of
-almost hopeless captivity, enjoyed this evening-scene
-with indescribable emotion; it was here, that,
-for the first time since my landing in South America,
-I had just reason to promise myself a night’s
-repose in freedom, safety, and peace.</p>
-
-<p>We soon reached the suburbs, which are very
-large and pleasant, being agreeably interspersed
-with gardens and pleasure-grounds. About five
-o’clock we halted in the vicinity of Campo de
-Santa Anna, at an inn, or rather hostelry for
-cattle, whence, having secured our baggage in the
-miserable stall allotted to us, we sallied forth in
-search of the friends who left us at St. Catherine’s.
-Accustomed, as we long had been, to rude and solitary
-scenes, we were forcibly struck with the
-opulence of this city, displayed in its magnificent
-buildings and regular streets. While engaged in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-anxious enquiries after our friends, we accidentally
-met one of them, who, with unspeakable joy, conducted
-us to the rest; and the evening was passed
-most agreeably in relating our several encounters,
-and in asking and answering innumerable questions.
-Returning to our inn at midnight, we remained
-with our luggage until morning, when we
-carted it up to the house of our friends in Rua
-dos Pescadores.</p>
-
-<p>During our journey from Sapitiva to Rio de
-Janeiro, we had not much leisure for geological
-observation. The stratum, in the course of the
-route, appeared to be generally granite, like that
-before described. In some parts we observed large
-stones, approximating to green-stone, and in other
-parts we found fine clay. Nearer to the capital,
-and particularly in the environs of St. Cristovão,
-the Prince’s country-palace, the stratum has a
-gneiss-like appearance, and produces some fine
-specimens of feldspar. In the precincts of the
-city, there is an extensive flat, covered with mangroves,
-and overflowed by the tide. At the foot
-of the mountains which bound it, are quarries of
-granite, large blocks of which are raised for building
-purposes, as well as for paving the streets of
-the city.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c7" id="c7">CHAP. VII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Description of Rio de Janeiro.&mdash;Trade.&mdash;State
-of Society.&mdash;Visit to the Prince Regent’s Farm
-at Santa Cruz.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">RIO DE JANEIRO has been so often described
-by former travellers, that, were I to confine myself
-to the supply of what they have omitted, or to
-the correction of their mis-statements, my task
-would be speedily performed, but, as I have uniformly
-chosen to write freely from my own observation
-rather than follow the track of others, I
-shall trespass on the reader with a more detailed
-account than he might perhaps require. It will,
-however, be recollected that the period at which I
-visited this capital, being a political æra in the annals
-of Brazil, is sufficiently interesting to excuse,
-if not to justify me in the attempt to improve upon
-descriptions of an earlier date, though at the risk
-of a little repetition.</p>
-
-<p>The finest view of the city is from the harbour<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>,
-whence its lofty eminence crowned with convents,
-and the hills in its environs, interspersed with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-villas and gardens, have a rich and magnificent
-appearance. The royal palace skirts the beach,
-and is seen to great advantage from the principal
-landing-place, which is within sixty yards of its
-doors. This palace, though small, is the residence
-of the Prince Regent and the royal family: the
-mint and the royal chapel form parts of the structure.
-Parallel with the beach runs the main street,
-consisting of noble buildings, called Rua Dereita,
-from which the minor streets branch off at right
-angles, and are intersected by others at regular
-distances.</p>
-
-<p>Some idea of the extent of the city may be
-formed from the population, which, including the
-negroes, (its most numerous portion,) is estimated
-at a hundred thousand souls: the dwellings, at
-the out-skirts, are generally of one story only.</p>
-
-<p>The numerous convents and churches are well
-built, and rather handsome; the church of Candelaria,
-now finished, is in a superior style of architecture.
-The streets were formerly incommoded
-by latticed balconies, which had a very heavy appearance
-and obstructed the circulation of the air,
-but they have been taken away by order of Government.
-The greatest nuisances now remaining
-are those which arise from the custom of persons
-of all ranks on horseback to ride on the foot-paths,
-and from the preposterous hanging of shop and
-house-doors, which all open outward into the
-street, to the great annoyance of foot-passengers:
-I may also add the frequent pools of stagnant water,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-which, from the lowness of the site, cannot
-without much labor be drained away, and which,
-through the heat of the weather, often emit the most
-putrid exhalations. Water for the use of the city
-flows from the hills through aqueducts, and is distributed
-to several fountains in various public
-places. It is to be regretted that there are not
-more of these for the supply of the inhabitants<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>,
-numbers of whom live a mile distant from any of
-them, and are obliged to employ persons continually
-in carrying water: many of the poorer
-classes earn a living by selling it. The fountains
-in dry weather are frequently so crowded, that
-the carriers have to wait for hours before they can
-be supplied. The water is good, and, when kept
-in large jars, drinks cool and pleasant. The inns
-and public houses are almost destitute of accommodations,
-and so very uncomfortable that a
-stranger will not reside in them if he can find a
-friend to take him in. House-rent, after the
-arrival of the Royal Family, became equally
-high as in London, owing, it should seem, to
-the dearness of building materials, and the high
-price of masonry. Timber in particular is unaccountably
-scarce, considering the quantity which
-grows in almost every part of Brazil; even firewood
-is dear. Provisions are in general plentiful,
-but not very choice in quality: the beef is very indifferent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-and indeed bad; the pork is better, and,
-if the feeding were properly attended to, might be
-rendered fine; mutton is almost unknown, as the
-natives will not eat it<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>; the poultry of every
-description is excellent, but it is very dear.
-Pulse and vegetables of all kinds are very abundant,
-and the fish-market is not ill supplied. Turtles
-are frequently caught, as well as a great variety of
-fish; there are abundance of very fine large prawns.
-The oysters and muscles, though not equal to
-ours, are very tolerable.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to its low situation, and the general filthiness
-of its streets, Rio de Janeiro cannot be called
-healthful. Improvements are now making which
-will in part remedy these evils; but other causes
-tend to increase the insalubrity of the air, and to
-spread contagious distempers, the principal of
-which are the large importations of negroes from
-Africa, who commonly land in a sickly state, the
-consequence of close confinement during a hot
-voyage. It is much to be regretted that the city
-was not originally built on the plan of those in the
-Netherlands, with canals for brigs and small vessels,
-which might then have been unloaded at the
-doors of the warehouses: such an improvement
-would have also greatly tended to the cleanliness
-and salubrity of the town.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The police is by no means ill regulated; and,
-from the attention which has been paid to it since
-the arrival of the court, there is every hope that
-it will be placed on a footing equally respectable
-with that of any European capital. The prisons
-are loathsome, and require the benevolent genius
-of a Howard to reform them altogether. One
-great step in favor of humanity has been gained:
-the inquisition has been abolished, and with it the
-spirit of persecution, so that no one can now be
-offended for his theological tenets, unless he openly
-insult the established religion.</p>
-
-<p>This city is the chief mart of Brazil, and especially
-of the provinces of Minas Geraes, S. Paulo,
-Goyazes, Cuyaba, and Coritiva. The mining districts,
-being most populous, require the greatest
-proportion of consumable goods, and in return
-send the most valuable articles of commerce, hence
-innumerable troops of mules are continually travelling
-to and from those districts; their common
-burden is about three hundred weight each, which
-they carry to the almost incredible distance of 1500
-or 2000 miles. Their homeward freight consists
-chiefly of salt for the consumption of the cattle,
-and iron for the working of the mines, and goods
-of all descriptions.</p>
-
-<p>No colonial port in the world is so well situated
-for general commerce as Rio de Janeiro. It enjoys,
-beyond any other, an equal convenience of
-intercourse with Europe, America, Africa, the
-East Indies, and the South Sea Islands, and seems
-formed by nature as the grand link to connect the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-trade of those great portions of the globe. Commanding
-also, as the capital of a rich and extensive
-territory, resources of immense amount and
-value, it seemed to require only the presence of
-an efficient government to give it political importance,
-and this advantage it has now gained by
-becoming the chosen residence of the court of
-Portugal. The benefits resulting from this great
-event had but just begun to display themselves at
-the period to which this narrative refers; and the
-commercial relations of Rio de Janeiro, though
-considerably augmented, were still but in their
-germ. I shall proceed to state them according
-to the best information I was then able to procure.</p>
-
-<p>The imports hither from the River Plate, and
-from Rio Grande de St. Pedro, consist in immense
-quantities of dried beef, tallow, hides, and wheat.
-Those from the United States are chiefly salt provisions,
-flour, household furniture, pitch, and tar.
-The North Americans generally send cargoes of
-these articles on speculation, and, as the market
-for them is fluctuating and not to be depended on,
-they frequently take them to other ports. Their
-provisions are commonly sent to the Cape of Good
-Hope. They bring European merchandize, which
-they exchange for specie wherewith to trade to
-China, and also take in necessaries on their voyages
-to the South Seas.</p>
-
-<p>From the western coast of Africa, Rio de Janeiro
-imports wax, oil, elephant’s teeth, gum,
-sulphur, and some woods. The negro trade has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-been restricted to the kingdom of Angola by a decree
-of the Prince Regent, who has declared his
-intention of abolishing it altogether as soon as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>The trade to Mozambique is trivial; but, since
-the capture of the Isle of France by the British
-has cleared that coast from French privateers, it
-may be expected to increase. It affords many valuable
-products, such as gold-dust, brought from
-the interior, ivory, of which the Prince monopolizes
-the largest sort, ebony and other fine woods,
-drugs, oil, excellent columbo-root, and an abundance
-of various gums, particularly of the gum
-<i>meni</i>. The whale fisheries on the coast have proved
-a source of riches to many speculators.</p>
-
-<p>The intercourse of this port with India, in common
-with Mozambique, has been much annoyed
-by the privateers of the Isle of France, and will
-therefore, in all probability, florish equally by their
-suppression. A voyage thither and back is performed
-with great expedition: one large ship of
-eight hundred tons sailed, loaded at Surat, and returned
-within the space of seven months. A voyage
-to China seldom occupies a longer period.
-The trade thither will no doubt be revived, and it
-is not improbable that this port may, at no great
-distance of time, become an entrepôt for India goods
-destined for Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Rio de Janeiro is conveniently situated for supplying
-a great variety of necessaries to the Cape
-of Good Hope and to New South Wales; indeed,
-of late years, English manufactures have been sold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-here so cheap, that it has been found more advantageous
-to ship them hence for those colonies than
-from home. Ships going on the South Sea whale-fishery
-touch here, and lay in large quantities of
-spirituous liquors, wine, sugar, coffee, tobacco,
-soap, and live stock.</p>
-
-<p>The imports from the mother-country consist
-chiefly in vinegar, hardware, coarse linen, hats,
-silks, wine, and oil. From Sweden some iron, also
-pitch and tar are occasionally brought: it is preferred
-to English iron, particularly for mules’
-shoes, on account of its greater ductility.</p>
-
-<p>The exports consist principally of cotton, sugar,
-rum, coffee, rice, ship-timber, various fine cabinet-woods,
-hides, tallow, indigo, and coarse cotton cloths,
-in immense quantities, for clothing the Peons in the
-provinces of the River Plate. Among the more
-precious articles of export may be enumerated
-gold, in chains and other ornaments, diamonds,
-topazes of various colors, amethysts, tourmalines,
-(that are frequently sold for emeralds), chrysoberyls,
-aqua-marinas, and wrought jewelry.</p>
-
-<p>This market has been greatly overstocked with
-English manufactures, in consequence of the sanguine
-speculations to which our merchants were incited
-by the late emigration. The supply exceeded
-the demand in a tenfold degree, and the excess gave
-rise to auctions, where goods were sold at unprecedentedly
-reduced prices. In proportion as English
-merchandize lowered, that of Brazil rose in
-value; and so great was the demand for it, owing
-to the numerous vessels waiting for cargoes, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-within a year after the arrival of the Prince Regent,
-the price of every article of produce was
-doubled. Gold quickly disappeared; for the monied
-Portuguese, perceiving the avidity and impolitic
-eagerness with which the English forced
-their goods upon them, cautiously withheld their
-specie, and, by the alternative of barter, got rid
-of their own produce at a very high price, and obtained
-our merchandize almost at their own valuation.
-The losing party in this unequal traffic,
-though they had chiefly to blame their own imprudence
-in engaging in it, were loud in their
-complaints and remonstrances against the Portuguese
-merchants. A treaty of commerce was
-concluded, by which the duties on English merchandize
-were fixed at fifteen<i>per cent</i>. while other
-nations were to pay twenty-four <i>per cent. ad valorem</i>.
-A judge was appointed to attend solely to the concerns
-of the English, and to see justice done them:
-he was entitled the <i>Juiz Conservador</i> of the
-English nation. The person who now fills this
-important office is one of the most enlightened
-and upright of men; his official conduct, of which
-I have seen much, has secured him the respect of
-all parties, and has done credit to the choice of
-the Prince Regent, confirmed by the approval of
-his Excellency Lord Strangford. Further to cultivate
-and extend the interests of commerce, his
-Royal Highness has established a Board of Trade,
-in which are some experienced and intelligent
-men, to whose consideration every particular case,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-and every new regulation, is referred. One of the
-members of this Board, Dr. José da Silva Lisboa,
-has greatly distinguished himself by his zeal for
-the English nation, displayed in various publications
-on commerce, particularly in one dated May
-1810, which contains a fund of solid argument on
-the principles laid down and acknowledged by our
-most celebrated statesmen and political writers.
-It is to be hoped that the diffusion of views so liberal,
-under the auspices of ministers, will banish
-that narrow-minded jealousy with which certain
-opulent individuals of the Brazilian capital regard
-the English merchants, whom they stigmatize as
-intruders; and that the general interests of commerce
-in this thriving colony will gain, through
-fair competition, what they have heretofore lost
-through overstocked markets.</p>
-
-<p>The business of the custom-house, although still
-shackled with many troublesome and tedious regulations,
-especially with regard to small articles,
-has been considerably simplified; and in all cases,
-where a stranger finds himself at a loss how to
-proceed, he is sure to have every difficulty explained,
-and every obstacle removed, by appealing
-to the judge who presides over this department.
-The liberality and disinterestedness of this
-excellent officer are the more generally felt and acknowledged,
-from an apprehension of the inconveniences
-with which his situation might enable
-him to embarrass the trade, if he were inclined
-to a more rigorous execution of the laws.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In mentioning the advantages which have resulted
-to the English merchants from the liberality
-of the persons in office, I ought not to omit stating
-that much has been effected through the exertions
-of the British minister, who, while pursuing
-that conciliatory and moderate line of conduct,
-which gained him the esteem of the Prince Regent,
-ever firmly upheld the interests of his nation;
-and in all deliberations concerning them, reserved
-to himself the casting vote. With respect
-to individuals, it is true that he declined to be
-troubled on every trivial occasion, and scrupulously
-discountenanced every covert attempt at
-monopoly or peculation, from whatever quarter it
-came; but in great questions he acted with promptitude
-and decision; nor was he averse to use his
-influence in favor of a private individual, when a
-candid and manly appeal was made to him. Considering
-the peculiar circumstances attending his
-embassy, and also the jarring interests he had to
-reconcile, Lord Strangford conducted himself in
-a way highly honorable to his talents and character;
-and in continuing to merit the confidence
-of his own court, secured that of the Prince
-Regent and all his ministers. The treaty of commerce
-is a proof of the harmony which subsists
-between them, and may be regarded on our part as
-the most advantageous that, in the existing posture
-of affairs, could have been procured.</p>
-
-<p>The harbour is easy of entrance and egress, generally
-speaking, at all times, as there is a daily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-alternation of land and sea breeze, the former
-blowing until about noon, and the latter from that
-hour until sun-set. Ships find here every conveniency
-for repairing, heaving down, &amp;c. but it is
-to be hoped that docks will soon be formed, which
-will render the latter troublesome and dangerous
-operation unnecessary. There is an anchorage-duty
-paid, which forms an item in the bill of port
-charges.</p>
-
-<p>Of the state of society in Rio de Janeiro, what
-I have to observe differs little from the description
-of the Paulistas given. The same habits and
-manners prevail at both places, allowing for some
-slight variation, caused by the greater influx of
-strangers to the capital. The Portuguese are in
-general rather punctilious and reserved in admitting
-a foreigner to their family parties; but having
-once received him, they are open and hospitable.
-The ladies are affable and courteous to
-strangers, extremely fond of dress, but less proud
-than those of other nations. In their mixed assemblies
-the utmost gaiety prevails, and is seasoned
-by that finished politeness for which the Portuguese
-are generally distinguished. The conversation
-of the best bred men, however, is more
-lively than instructive; for education is here at a
-low ebb, and comprehends a very limited course
-of literature and science. It is proper to add that,
-since the arrival of the court, measures have been
-adopted for effecting a thorough reform in the seminaries,
-and other institutions for public instruction;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-and that the Prince Regent, in his solicitude
-for the good of his subjects, has zealously
-patronized every attempt to diffuse among them a
-taste for useful knowledge. Under his auspices,
-the college of S. Joaquim has undergone considerable
-improvement: a lectureship on chemistry has
-been instituted, to which our countryman, Dr.
-Gardner, has been nominated by his Royal Highness;
-and it is to be hoped that from this appointment
-may be dated the introduction of experimental
-philosophy in that establishment.</p>
-
-<p>Resuming my narrative, I am bound in gratitude
-to state that the reception I met with here
-exceeded my most sanguine hopes, and far more
-so any individual pretensions on which I could
-ground them. I must attribute it to the letter of
-introduction to the Viceroy, with which the
-Portuguese minister in London honored me
-on my departure thence, and which I presented
-to his noble relative, the Conde de Linhares,
-minister for foreign affairs. This distinguished
-statesman shewed me every attention, and
-granted me every privilege I could ask, so that,
-through his kind condescension, all went well with
-me. I may state this without incurring the imputation
-of vanity, since it is only one among the
-numerous proofs he has given of his disposition
-to serve the English by every means in his
-power.</p>
-
-<p>A few weeks after my arrival, I solicited permission
-of His Excellency the Conde de Linhares<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-to work an iron mine at Guaraceaba, representing
-at the same time the immense advantages which
-might accrue to the state from such an experiment,
-by opening its own resources for the supply
-of that useful metal. He in part assented to
-the proposal, but expressed a wish that I should
-previously devote a few days to an inspection of
-the Prince’s farm at Santa Cruz; and on my return
-make a report of the state in which I found
-it. While preparing for my journey, it was intimated
-to me as the Prince’s particular desire,
-that I should endeavour to establish a dairy on the
-principle of those in England, and direct the people
-in the management of it, to which I readily
-assented. Being provided with horses and a
-soldier to attend me, I set out on the journey accompanied
-by a gentleman named Paroissien,
-whose amiable disposition and scientific pursuits
-rendered him a very useful companion. After
-about fifty miles hard riding, we arrived at the
-farm about six in the evening, much fatigued.
-The accommodations we met with, fully explained
-to me the motive of His Royal Highness’s minister
-in enquiring into the state of his domain.
-Having presented my official letters, I was obliged
-to wait until ten o’clock before the slightest
-refreshment could be procured; not a dish of
-coffee was to be had; the only fare set before us
-was some lean beef half-boiled, certainly the worst
-I had ever tasted in Brazil. The mulatto who attended
-us engaged to have breakfast ready by seven<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-next morning; we were in readiness at the hour, and
-though told it was coming immediately, we waited
-three hours, when just as we were ordering out the
-horses to Rio to avoid being famished, the repast
-was announced, with an excuse that it could not
-come sooner, because no milk could be procured.</p>
-
-<p>I then took a survey of the establishment and
-rode over the grounds. The house, I was informed,
-was once a convent of Jesuits, who possessed
-also the extensive tract of land attached to
-it, which they managed much better than their
-successors, if we may judge by the remains of their
-undertakings. The edifice is neither large nor
-grand: it is built in a quadrangular form, with an
-open court in the centre, and galleries inside to
-the first and second floors. The apartments are
-thirty-six in number, very small, having been
-adapted to the use of the brotherhood, and since
-their departure only in a slight degree altered and
-decorated for the reception of the Royal Family,
-as their summer residence. In front of the house,
-to the southward, extends one of the finest plains
-in the world, two leagues square, watered by two
-rivers navigable for small craft, and bounded by fine
-bold rocky scenery, embellished in many parts with
-noble forest trees. This plain is clothed with the
-richest pasture, and supports from seven to eight
-thousand head of cattle. A considerable part of it
-lies low, and abounds with bogs, which might easily
-be laid dry and rendered susceptible of cultivation
-by proper drainage. The park occupies in its entire
-extent upwards of one hundred square<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-miles, a territory almost as large as some of the
-principalities of Italy, and capable, by its proximity
-and connection with the capital both by
-land and water, of being rendered one of the most
-productive and populous in Brazil. Under the
-present system of management it is in a progressive
-state of deterioration; two small corners, the best
-of the land, one about half a league square, and the
-other more than a league square, have been already,
-through disingenuous artifices, sold off, and
-the rest may in no long time be sacrificed to men
-whose cupidity stimulates them to depreciate its
-value, unless proper means are used to thwart
-their nefarious designs.</p>
-
-<p>The negroes on this estate, including all descriptions,
-amount to about fifteen hundred in
-number. They are in general a very excellent
-class of men, tractable and gentle in their dispositions,
-and by no means deficient in intellect.
-Great pains have been taken to enlighten them,
-they are regularly instructed in the principles of
-the Christian faith, and have prayers publicly read
-to them morning and evening, at the commencement
-and close of their day’s labor. Plots of
-ground, at their own choice, are assigned to each,
-and two days in the week, besides the incidental
-holidays, are allowed them to raise and cultivate
-produce for their own subsistence; the rest of their
-time and labor is devoted to the service of His
-Highness. The system of management, however,
-is so bad, that they are half-starved, almost destitute
-of clothing, and most miserably lodged;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-their average earnings do not amount to a penny
-per day each. A reform in the establishment
-might have been easily effected on the arrival of
-the Prince Regent, but it will now be very difficult,
-as the abuses have been tacitly sanctioned
-by the indifference of those whose duty and interest
-it was to correct them. In this extent of
-fine ground scarcely an inclosure is made; the
-cultivated lands are full of weeds, and the coffee-plantations
-are little better than a mere coppice-wood,
-in which the wild shrubs grow higher than
-the coffee-trees. The cattle are most deplorably
-neglected, and there is not upon the whole premises
-a horse fit for the meanest beggar to ride.
-Such was the state in which I found this rich and
-extensive district, which seems to have been destined
-by nature for the introduction of improvements
-that might produce, through the influence
-of high example, an entire change in the agricultural
-system of Brazil.</p>
-
-<p>A short time after I had taken up my residence
-at Santa Cruz, the Prince came down, and on the
-day succeeding his arrival honored me with a visit,
-after which I frequently rode out with His Royal
-Highness. He one day did me the honor to express
-a wish that I would undertake to govern the farm;
-this proposal I begged leave to decline, on the ground
-of my inability to render such an employ compatible
-with my other concerns, suggesting at the
-same time the superior service I could render by
-working the iron mine. Notwithstanding this,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-the Prince, on the day following, gave me a paper,
-containing an offer of the whole direction of the
-estate, and stating the terms. The repetition of
-the proposal not a little embarrassed me; I was
-aware that, by refusing, I might probably debar
-myself from the prospect of any future favor, yet
-I anticipated enough of difficulty in the undertaking
-to make me decline it at all events. This
-dilemma occasioned me much uneasiness, and in
-order to remove it I applied to Sir Sidney Smith,
-who was then on a visit to Santa Cruz, requesting
-him to explain to His Royal Highness the circumstances
-which rendered it impossible for me
-to settle in Brazil, and to tender him the offer of
-my services during my stay. After some further
-deliberation, however, I was induced to accept
-the appointment, by way of trial, for a few months,
-under the express stipulation that I should act
-without control. On entering upon my charge I
-began by making such new arrangements as appeared
-conducive to the end for which I was appointed,
-but I soon perceived that instead of
-being principal intendant, I had a superior, who
-held me accountable to him for my proceedings,
-and manifested a fixed determination to thwart
-them, as innovations on the established course of
-things. But this was not the only inconvenience;
-it was expected that I should purchase whatever
-was wanted on my own credit; but I quickly discovered,
-that instead of being reimbursed, according
-to agreement, I was trifled with and at length<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-in part defrauded. The person here alluded to,
-was one the managers of the Prince’s household;
-he could not bear that a foreigner should interfere
-in a concern over which he claimed authority, and
-hold a situation where real services might induce
-a comparison unfavorable to those which he contented
-himself with rendering. A detail of the artifices
-and insults which this man employed to disgust
-me with the situation, when he found I would not
-submit to be his servile drudge, would be tedious;
-suffice it to say, that, perceiving no chance of obtaining
-that discretionary power, which alone could
-enable me to be essentially useful, I peremptorily
-refused to act any longer. Alarmed at this determination,
-he at first strove to overawe and then
-conciliate me, but I had seen too much of his conduct
-to be duped by this stratagem, or to suppose
-that any cordiality could in future subsist between
-us. Imagining himself armed with royal power,
-he attempted to play the tyrant, but the reception
-he met with quickly forced him to resume his natural
-character. I did not hesitate to send in my
-resignation, and he had the mortification to find
-that the means he had employed to embarrass and
-enslave me, restored me to liberty.</p>
-
-<p>In the letter which announced my determination
-to give up the employ, I thought proper to
-omit stating to His Excellency the Conde de
-Linhares, the reasons that led me to this step.
-Had that nobleman been apprised of the disagreeable
-circumstances in which I was placed, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-would, I am confident, have done his utmost to
-remove them.</p>
-
-<p>On my return to Rio de Janeiro, the Prince
-sent for me, and desired me again and again to return
-to Santa Cruz; I contented myself with a
-simple excuse; for that was not a time, nor was
-I in a place to enter into explanations. It is well
-known, that a system of intrigue prevailed near
-His Royal Highness’s person, which often tended
-to counteract representations on matters of the
-greatest importance.</p>
-
-<p>In this place, I shall take leave to introduce some
-remarks on the province of Rio de Janeiro, from
-the pen of my friend, the Baron Von Langsdorff,
-His communication is dated November 20, 1820.</p>
-
-<p>“The province of Rio de Janeiro, being situated
-on the confines, and without the tropic of
-Capricorn, is in general, in consequence of that
-situation, less warm than the countries which lie
-near the line. The whole territory extending 90
-leagues in length and 35 in breadth is mountainous,
-with the exception of the district of
-Goytacazes, usually called Campos. It is therefore
-naturally divided into high and low lands.
-In the latter the heat is as great as in the other
-countries between the tropics, and consequently
-favorable to the culture of coffee, sugar, cotton,
-indigo, cocoa, rice, and other colonial productions,
-as well as to the growth of the most valuable
-trees of India, and of its exquisite fruits and
-spiceries, many of which have been introduced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-with success. The mango, the tea-plant, the
-bread-fruit tree, from the islands of the Pacific,
-thrive well here, as well as the camphire of Japan,
-the ginger, the cardamum, and the casawarine of
-New Holland.</p>
-
-<p>“On the mountains, which rise to the height of
-three thousand English feet, which are covered to
-the summit with impenetrable virgin forests, and
-of which the smiling valleys are watered by limpid
-streams, the temperature is as various as the
-productions. The forests abound in game, and
-in every kind of wood for ornamental work. In
-the grounds newly cleared, the fruit-trees and
-plants of Europe, the peach, the fig, the vine,
-the quince, and the strawberry, are cultivated
-with surprising success.</p>
-
-<p>“The fruits of the country are remarkable for
-their variety as well as their abundance. Here
-are bananas, plantains, guyapas, onenas, oranges,
-citrons, lemons, pomegranates, many delicate species
-of the genus <i>Eugenia</i>, as the pitangas, jambas,
-and cromischamas; besides an infinite number of
-other plants, still in their natural state, which require
-only the industry of man to improve and
-add them to the comforts of civilized life.</p>
-
-<p>“In short, by its situation, its climate, and its
-products, indigenous as well as exotic, this country
-claims distinction as the most happy and naturally
-independent, on the face of the globe.</p>
-
-<p>“With regard to climate, there is no winter or
-summer. The heat is never excessive, and there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-is no sensible cold. The whole year appears a
-continual spring. The uninterrupted verdure,
-the vivid and varied color of the flowers which
-cover the highest trees of the forests, and which,
-appearing to change their form and aspect every
-month, constantly surround us with a new world,
-and fill the most insensible minds with astonishment
-and admiration.</p>
-
-<p>“Culinary vegetables and roots, as cabbages,
-radishes, turnips, cucumbers, melons, French-beans,
-potatoes, maize, mandioca, bananas, and
-various other products of the first necessity, may
-be planted and gathered every day of the year
-in the mountains as well as in the plain. As
-heat and humidity exist here in the most favorable
-proportions, it will be readily concluded
-that vegetation must be extremely rapid. Of
-this there are extraordinary instances. Father
-Correia, one of the principal farmers of this province,
-settled at Estrella, has sown a measure of
-rice, and gathered more than 500 in return. The
-writer of these remarks was astonished at seeing
-rice grown on high lands which had not been inundated.
-It appears to be sufficient that the soil
-be humid, and that the rains do not fail. The
-common return for maize is 120 or 130 for one.
-The coffee plant is easily cultivated, and in favorable
-soils begins to bear fruit at the end of
-two years and a half. It is not uncommon to find
-plantations of coffee trees, which yield from ten
-to fifteen pounds of coffee a year. Grafts from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-peaches form, in two years, trees from two to
-three inches in diameter, loaded with fruit. Baron
-Langsdorff saw orange trees loaded with fruit,
-raised within three years from seed. In the government
-nursery at Lagoa de Tristes, may be
-seen alleys of <i>mimosa lebbeck</i>, <i>black wood</i>, the
-seeds of which were brought from the Isle of
-France. Within three years the trees grew to
-the height of from twenty to thirty feet, and in
-thickness from eight to ten inches in diameter.”</p>
-
-<p>The description extends into a multitude of
-details; but enough, it is presumed, has been given,
-to afford an idea of the fine climate, the fertile soil,
-and the richly varied products of this province of
-Brazil.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c8" id="c8">CHAP. VIII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct"><i>Journey to Canta Gallo.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn2">SOME time after my return from Santa Cruz, a
-circumstance of a singular nature took place,
-which occasioned me to undertake a journey to
-a district called Canta Gallo, distant about forty
-leagues from the capital, and one of the latest
-discovered in this part of Brazil. Two men reported
-that they had there found a mine of silver,
-and brought to the mint a quantity of earthy
-matter reduced to powder, from which was smelted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-a small ingot of that metal. This report being
-officially laid before His Excellency the Conde
-de Linhares, I was solicited to go to Canta Gallo,
-and investigate the business on the spot, the two
-men being ordered to meet me there. Before I
-proceed to relate the result of my inquiry, I shall
-briefly describe whatever I observed worthy of
-note in the course of the journey.</p>
-
-<p>Being provided with a passport, and also a
-sketch of the route, taken from a MS. map in the
-archives, I departed from Rio on the 10th of
-April, 1809, accompanied by Dr. Gardner, the
-gentleman already mentioned as lecturer on chemistry
-at the college of S. Joaquim. Having
-to pass to the bottom of the harbour, towards the
-north, we embarked in a small vessel, and being
-favored with a strong sea-breeze, ran down to
-the entrance of the fine river Macacu, which we
-reached after a five hours’ sail. The wind then
-dying, our boatmen took to their oars, and proceeding
-up the river, we reached a house called
-Villa Nova, where numbers of market-boats for
-Rio, were waiting for the land-wind and the turn
-of the tide. After taking some refreshment here,
-we rowed onward until the river became so narrow,
-that the vessel frequently touched the bank
-on each side, and the men were obliged to push
-her along with poles. At day-break we reached
-Porto das Caixas, a place of great resort from the
-interior, being the station where the mules discharge
-their loads of produce from the many
-plantations in the neighbourhood. The town<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-consists of several poor houses, and of stores
-where goods are deposited for embarkation. The
-stratum hereabouts is primitive granite, covered
-with fine strong clay. Leaving this place, we
-proceeded for some distance and came to a large
-swamp, which we navigated in a canoe, with very
-little difficulty, and shortly afterwards arrived at
-the village of Macacu. It stands on a small
-eminence in the midst of a fine plain, watered by
-a considerable stream, over which there are two
-good bridges. Though almost at the base of the
-chain of the mountains that forms a barrier along
-the coast, the neighbourhood affords some fine
-situations; the land, in general, consists of a
-strong clay, but appears much worn out. The
-commander, Colonel Jose, to whom I introduced
-myself, gave me a very polite reception, as did also
-the brethren of the convent, to whom I paid a
-visit. I passed the night at the house of the
-<i>Escrivão</i>, a worthy gentleman, whose hospitality
-I still remember with peculiar gratitude, because
-it seemed to proceed, not from a cold sense of
-duty, but from the impulse of a warm and generous
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day, being accommodated
-by the colonel with a horse and guide, I proceeded
-along the winding banks of the river,
-which, in many places, present most beautiful
-views. Here was more cultivated land than I
-expected to see; but the sugar-plantations, and,
-in general, the low pasture-grounds, are quite
-neglected. We passed several farms belonging<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-to convents, which, from their apparent condition,
-and the accounts we received, do little more
-than maintain the negroes and incumbents upon
-them. There was rarely a milch cow to be met
-with: pigs and poultry were equally scarce. The
-population of these fine valleys is deplorably thin
-and poor; there was a general sickliness in the
-looks of the women and children, which may be
-imputed to their miserable diet and inactive life.
-I ought to state that the manners of the people
-here are mild and gentle; we were every where
-treated with civility, and all our enquiries were
-answered with the most friendly marks of respect
-and attention.</p>
-
-<p>The air, as we drew nearer the mountains, was
-fresh and indeed cold. Towards evening we arrived
-at a farm belonging to a convent of nuns in
-Rio de Janeiro, where we were kindly accommodated
-for the night. This place is most agreeably
-situated, and might, under skilful and industrious
-management, be rendered a paradise.
-It has excellent clay, fine timber, a good fall of
-water, which forms a beautiful rivulet, and runs
-into a navigable river within one hundred yards
-of the house; a fine extent of arable land, and a
-still finer of pasture, which peculiarly qualifies it
-for dairy farming. It is distant only one day’s
-journey from Porto das Caixas, where there is a
-navigable communication with the metropolis.
-What a scene for an enterprising agriculturist!
-At present all is neglected: the house, the out-buildings,
-and other conveniences, are in a state<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-of decay, and all the people who manage the land
-appear, in common with the animals that feed
-upon it, to be half famished.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning we proceeded eastward, and
-crossing the stream, which was at least sixty
-yards broad and full three feet deep, rode along
-the farther margin, which is rather more elevated,
-and presents a view of some fine plains, stretching
-from thence to the base of the mountains. Journeying
-in that direction we reached the fine plantation
-of Captain Ferreira, who received us very
-politely, and shewed us every attention. This
-place, bounded by the alpine ridge behind it, is
-the extreme point to which the river Macacu is
-navigable. It is six or seven leagues from the
-village of that name. The estate maintains about
-one hundred negroes, who are chiefly employed
-in raising sugar, cotton, and coffee; but to me
-the situation appeared much better calculated for
-growing grain and feeding cattle, as the weather
-is at times cold, the evenings are often attended
-with heavy dews, and owing to the proximity
-of the mountains, there are frequent rains,
-accompanied by thunder and lightning. Numbers
-of fine springs burst forth from various parts
-of the hills, and form rivulets with falls, which,
-as here is plenty of fine timber, afford every means
-for working machinery. The owner lives in opulence,
-and is so humane and liberal to his people,
-that they seem to revere him as a father. We
-were much pleased with the air of domestic comfort<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-and contented industry, which we observed
-among them on visiting their dwellings in the
-evening. Some of the negro-children were at
-play; others of more advanced age were assisting
-the women to pick cotton; and the men were
-scraping and preparing mandioca. Their cheerfulness
-was not at all interrupted by our approach,
-nor did they betray any uneasy feeling of
-constraint in the presence of their superiors. In
-lieu of candles, which are seldom to be met with
-but in the capital, they burn oil, extracted from
-the bean of the palm, or from a small species of
-ground-nut, here called <i>meni</i>.</p>
-
-<p>About noon, on the following day, horses being
-provided, and a soldier appointed for our guide,
-we left the <i>fazenda</i>, accompanied by its hospitable
-owner, Captain Ferreira, who conducted us half a
-league on our way. The river, along which we
-passed in an easterly direction, bursts through vast
-masses of rock with great force, and in some
-parts forms considerable falls. The Captain, ere
-we parted, led me to a water-course, in which
-were found pieces of granite covered with manganese
-in a botryoidal form. After crossing the
-river twice, we arrived at what is called the first
-register, or searching-house, distant about two
-miles from the <i>fazenda</i>. This station is guarded
-by a corporal and a private soldier, who are
-charged with the receipt of various tolls, and are
-empowered to search passengers, in order to prevent
-the smuggling of gold-dust. After shewing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-my passport, I took leave of Captain Ferreira,
-who made me promise to pay him a longer visit
-on my return.</p>
-
-<p>We had been warned of the badness of the
-roads, and were by no means agreeably deceived
-in them, for we were nearly four hours
-in going the next six miles. At the close of
-day, after a laborious and dangerous passage
-through abrupt ravines, and along the sides of
-steep hills, our guide announced that we were in
-sight of the second register, where it was proposed
-that we should pass the night. On arriving
-we found it a most miserable place, inhabited by
-five or six soldiers under the command of a serjeant.
-This good man gave us a hearty welcome,
-and with the assistance of his comrades, cooked
-us a supper of fowls, and regaled us with whatever
-else their scanty store afforded. We were
-not without music to our repast, for the house is
-built on the edge of a roaring torrent, which,
-bursting through a ravine, has washed away every
-thing except some huge masses of rock. A bit of
-ground, about ten yards square, is all the garden
-these poor people have, and even this is much neglected,
-for the guards here are so often changed,
-that no one thinks of adding to the comforts and
-conveniences of an abode, which others are to
-enjoy.</p>
-
-<p>At day-break, we found that our mules had
-strayed into a wood adjoining, but as the road was
-stopped, we were under no apprehension of losing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-them, for the thickets on each side were impervious.
-This occurrence gave me an opportunity
-of seeing more of these remote regions; and
-certainly the imagination of Salvator Rosa himself
-never pictured so rude a solitude. On one side
-rose the great barrier of mountains, which we had
-yet to cross, covered to their summits with trees
-and underwood, without the smallest trace of cultivation;
-on the other lay the broken country, between
-this ridge and the plain, presenting the
-same wild features of sylvan scenery. The miserable
-hut at which we lodged, partook of the savage
-character of the neighbourhood, and seemed
-formed for the abode of men cut off from all intercourse
-with their fellows. On our return we were
-provided with a breakfast of coffee and eggs; as
-to milk there was no possibility of procuring any;
-a cow would have been considered here as an incumbrance,
-nor would any one of the six idle soldiers
-have given himself the trouble of milking her
-though they all had been dying of hunger.</p>
-
-<p>On resuming our journey, we entered on a
-road still more steep and rugged than that which
-we had passed. We were often obliged to dismount
-and lead our mules up almost perpendicular
-passes, and along fearful declivities. In
-some places, the thick foliage of the trees, and
-that of the underwood, which grew higher than
-our heads, sheltered us from the sun, and indeed
-scarcely admitted the light. Not a bird did we
-see, nor the trace of any living thing, except some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-wild hogs. We passed several bare granite rocks
-of a gneiss-like formation.</p>
-
-<p>In journeying to the next station, we observed
-nothing worthy of note, except a small saw-mill,
-worked by an overshot wheel, of very clumsy
-construction. The frame, which contains a single
-saw of very thick iron, moves in a perpendicular
-direction; at every stroke, a boy brings the timber
-up, by pulling a cord attached to a crank that
-moves the cylinder on which it rests. How readily,
-thought I, would the meanest Russian peasant
-improve this machine!</p>
-
-<p>We proceeded on our way up an ascent so precipitous,
-that we were obliged to walk more than
-ride; after two hours toiling along the side of a
-granite mountain, in which we observed some
-beds of fine clay, we reached the summit, from
-whence we saw the bay of Rio de Janeiro, the
-sugar-loaf mountain, and the city itself, to all appearance,
-not more than four or five leagues
-distant from us, though, in reality, more than
-twenty. At this elevation, which we may state
-to be at four or five thousand feet above the level
-of the sea, the air was sharp and keen; the thermometer
-stood at 58°. Continuing in a north-easterly
-direction, we passed two poor solitary
-farms, and entered upon a range of scenery tremendously
-grand, composed of bare abrupt conical
-mountains, with immense water-falls in every
-direction. At the close of the day, we arrived at
-a farm-house, called <i>Fazenda do Morro Queimado</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-the manager of which received us hospitably,
-and accommodated us for the night. The
-weather was so cold, that a double supply of bedclothes
-scarcely produced sufficient warmth; in
-the morning the thermometer was at 48° Fahrenheit.
-After the heavy dew had cleared away, we
-took a view of the grounds, in company with the
-manager; they appeared well-suited for a grazing-farm,
-but the temperature of the atmosphere is
-too severe for growing the common produce of
-the country; particularly cotton, coffee, and bananas,
-which are frequently blighted. I was informed
-that some wheat has been grown here,
-though the people are quite unacquainted with
-the European method of farming. Indian corn,
-for the feed of hogs, is the staple article. This
-plantation is infested by ounces, which, at times,
-prey upon young cattle; the manager, who is a
-great hunter, keeps dogs, though of a poor race,
-for the express purpose of destroying them, which
-is thus practised:&mdash;When the carcass of a worried
-animal has been found, or when an ounce
-has been seen prowling about, the news is soon
-proclaimed among the neighbours, two or three
-of whom take fire-arms loaded with heavy slugs,
-and go out with the dogs in quest of the animal,
-who generally lurks in some thicket, near the carcass
-he has killed, and leaves so strong a scent,
-that the dogs soon find. When disturbed he
-retreats to his den, if he has one, the dogs never
-attempting to fasten on him, or even to face him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-but, on the contrary, endeavouring to get out of
-his way, which is not difficult, as the ounce is
-heavy and slow of motion. If he caves, the sport
-is at an end, and the hunters make up the entrance;
-but he more commonly has recourse to a
-large tree, which he climbs with great facility;
-here his fate is generally decided, for the hunters
-get near enough to take a steady aim, and seldom
-fail to bring him down, one of them reserving his
-fire to dispatch him, if required, after he has
-fallen. It generally happens, that one or two of
-the dogs are killed in coming too near, for even
-in his dying struggles, a single stroke of his paw
-proves mortal. The skin is carried home as a
-trophy, and the neighbours meet and congratulate
-each other on the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>This farm, in the hands of an experienced and
-skilful agriculturist, might be managed so as to
-produce amazing returns. Its soil is wet, adapted
-to the growth, not only of Indian corn, but of
-wheat, barley, potatoes, &amp;c. and it is so well irrigated,
-by numerous mountain streams, that the
-pastures are always luxuriant. Here are fine falls
-of water, and abundance of excellent timber, so
-that corn-mills might be erected at little more
-expense than what would arise from the purchase
-of mill-stones. Connected with the nun’s farm below,
-this establishment might be rendered one
-of the most complete and advantageous in
-Brazil.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving <i>Morro Queimado</i> at noon, and descending<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-on the other side of the ridge of mountains,
-we passed through an unequal tract, formed of
-hills and ravines. Onward the land appeared
-finer, and the timber of a superior growth, but
-there were few cultivated spots, and not many
-houses. The first extensive <i>fazenda</i> we reached
-was that of Manoel Jose Pereira, a native of the
-Azores, who managed his agricultural concerns
-much better than the other farmers whom we
-visited. We were shewn a large field of Indian
-corn, ready for cutting; the quantity that had
-been sown was about eleven <i>fangas</i>, or bushels,
-and the produce was estimated at fifteen hundred
-bushels, about one hundred and fifty for one.
-This was an ordinary crop; in good years the
-harvest yields two hundred for one. The corn, as
-before stated, is chiefly consumed in the fattening
-of pigs; the quantity requisite for this purpose is
-six or seven bushels each, and the time, ten or
-twelve weeks. The curing of bacon is performed
-by cutting all the lean from the flitches, and
-sprinkling them with a very little salt. This food
-has the peculiar effect of giving greater solidity
-to the fat, which of itself is not liable to putrefaction.</p>
-
-<p>Though the owner of this farm has occupied it
-not more than five years, and has had only the
-assistance of his two sons, and six negroes, he has
-brought it into a very fair state of cultivation. In
-his coffee plantation we observed five thousand
-trees in full bearing, and the rest of his grounds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-were in an equally prosperous condition. His expenses,
-indeed, are light, and the only difficulties
-he has had to contend with, have been the bad
-roads, which are now much amended. The example
-of this man, it is to be hoped, will stimulate
-the emulation of his neighbours; for it has
-fully shewn the unbounded liberality with which
-nature here crowns the labors of the agriculturist.</p>
-
-<p>On our way hence to the place of our destination,
-we passed through some forests of fine full-grown
-trees; one, which had fallen, I had the curiosity
-to measure; it was full seventy-six inches
-in diameter, at the thick end, and above twenty-five
-yards in length. Such a piece of timber I had
-never before seen. Within about three miles from
-Canta Gallo, we arrived at an excellent farm belonging
-to the <i>Senhor Tenente</i>, or treasurer of the
-district, who treated us very hospitably, and invited
-us to visit him on our return. Our reception
-at Canta Gallo was highly gratifying; the
-Governor, and all the principal inhabitants, overjoyed
-to see Englishmen in these remote parts,
-treated us with great cordiality and friendship; a
-dinner was provided, at which they testified to us
-the great respect they entertained for our nation,
-as being the great ally of a Prince whom they
-adored.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c9" id="c9">CHAP. IX.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Description of Canta Gallo.&mdash;Of the Gold-washing
-of Santa Rita.&mdash;Account of the supposed
-Silver-Mine.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">CANTA GALLO, though so near the seat of
-government, was not known until about twenty
-years ago. It is situated in the midst of a fine well-wooded
-country, abounding in springs, and intersected
-by narrow valleys and ravines. The bottoms
-of some of these ravines formerly contained gold,
-which was accidentally discovered by some <i>grimpeiros</i><a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
-from Minas Geraes, in the course of their
-searches about the great river Paraiba, and the
-Rio Pumba. The richness of these beds of gold,
-and the fertility of the circumjacent country, attracted
-numbers of adventurers, who placed themselves
-under the direction of an able chieftain,
-named Mão de Luva, on account of his having
-lost one hand, and his wearing a stuffed glove in
-its place. The band soon amounted to two or
-three hundred persons, who washed every part in
-the neighbourhood worth washing, before they
-were discovered. Being very determined men,
-they lived free of control, and bade defiance to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-laws. It was not until about three years after
-their first settlement, that the existing government
-was apprised of them; when, alarmed at the
-report of their numbers, which was doubtless exaggerated,
-they sent out spies to discover their
-rendezvous. This, after much time and great
-difficulty, was effected; the spies, in wandering
-through the solitary woods and fastnesses in the
-neighbourhood, were attracted toward the place,
-by the crowing of a cock:&mdash;hence the name of
-Canta Gallo, which was subsequently given to it.
-They introduced themselves as smugglers, who
-wished to belong to the fraternity, and after living
-there some time, found means to give information
-to government, at Rio de Janeiro, who
-issued proclamations, offering pardon if the whole
-body would surrender. This measure was ineffectual;
-the <i>grimpeiros</i> were well provided with
-fire-arms, and determined to defend themselves as
-long as any gold could be found. In a year or
-two afterwards, the washings began to fail, and
-thus the great bond of interest which united them
-being loosened, some deserted the place, and the
-rest became less vigilant in taking measures for
-their defence. The government seized this favorable
-opportunity for reducing them; a considerable
-force was assembled in the vicinity, with
-orders to make an attack at a certain fixed day,
-which was known to be celebrated by the <i>grimpeiros</i>
-as a festival in honor of some saint. At
-the expected time, while they were engaged at a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-great banqueting, and too much occupied with
-their wine to think of their arms, which had been
-laid aside, (the flints having been secretly taken
-out), about a hundred soldiers rushed in among
-them; those who were sober enough flew to their
-arms, exclaiming, “We are sold! we are betrayed!
-treason! treason!” The contest was short;
-the soldiers seized the ringleaders, who were either
-sent to Africa, or imprisoned for life; of the rest,
-some were taken prisoners, others fled, but were
-pursued for years afterwards, and a few fell in the
-attack.</p>
-
-<p>The Government, having thus become masters
-of this territory, and imagining it to be as rich in
-gold as when the <i>grimpeiros</i> first settled there,
-issued many injudicious regulations, oppressed the
-natives beyond example, built registers in various
-parts, to prevent contraband, and filled the whole
-neighbourhood with guards. The numerous settlers,
-whom the supposed richness of the place afterwards
-attracted, soon found that the cream had been
-skimmed by the smugglers, and by degrees turned
-their attention to agriculture, a less precarious
-source of subsistence than mining. So little gold
-is at present found, that His Highness’s fifth
-scarcely pays the officers and soldiers appointed
-to receive it. There are some situations alike favorable
-to mining and farming; with a small capital,
-a man may here turn both pursuits to account,
-if he can bring himself to conform to the customs
-of the place. The land is strong and good; its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-various inequalities present spots adapted to the
-growth of almost every description of produce.
-In the valleys, and on the sides of the mountains,
-the soil, in some parts, consists of strong clay, but
-more generally of a fine, rich, vegetable mould.
-The rock, or solid stratum, which appears at various
-depths below it, is granite, composed of feldspar,
-hornblende, quartz, mica, and frequently
-garnets. When found in a decomposing state, it
-is denominated <i>pizarra</i>. No metallic substances,
-except gold and oxides of iron, appear; the former,
-which is found in the interjacent bed of <i>cascalho</i>,
-exists only in grains; I examined a considerable
-quantity, but could not discover a single particle
-in a crystallized state.</p>
-
-<p>The country appears to be very poorly stocked
-with cattle; no cows are kept for milking, nor is
-any attention here paid to the production of an
-article of diet, so essential to the subsistence of a
-poor family; a few goats are kept, and the only
-milk used is that which they yield. The common
-food of the inhabitants is as follows:&mdash;for breakfast,
-a kind of kidney beans, called <i>feijoens</i>, boiled,
-and afterwards mixed with the flour of Indian
-corn; for dinner, <i>feijoens</i> boiled with a little fat
-pork and some cabbage leaves, and a sort of pudding,
-made by pouring the water from the pork
-on a plate of the <i>farinha</i>, which is eaten with the
-hand, and much relished; for supper, some poor
-vegetables, also boiled up with fat pork. Fowls,
-which are bred here in great numbers, are generally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-cut to pieces and stewed for table. Wine is
-rarely used, even among the higher ranks; but
-here are fruits in great abundance, particularly
-bananas and oranges, which form a considerable
-part of the general diet.</p>
-
-<p>Very little sugar is grown here: the principal
-articles of produce sent to the capital, are Indian
-corn, and pulse of all kinds, bacon, fowls, <i>jaracandá</i>,
-or rose-wood, ipecacuanha, and a small quantity
-of gold. In many parts of the neighbourhood
-is found a tree, the bark of which has been successfully
-used as a substitute for the quinquina of Peru.</p>
-
-<p>In one of the frequent excursions I took in the
-neighbourhood of Canta Gallo, previous to my
-journey to the reputed silver mine, I obtained
-some information respecting the half-civilized
-aborigines of the district, from a man who employs
-himself in procuring ipecacuanha, and is a
-kind of chief among them. They reside in the
-woods, in a most miserable condition; their dwellings,
-some of which I saw, are formed of boughs
-of trees, bent so as to hold a thatch or tiling of
-palm-leaves; their beds are made of dry grass.
-Having little idea of planting or tillage, they depend
-for subsistence almost entirely on their bows
-and arrows, and on the roots and wild fruits
-which they casually find in the woods. The chief
-above-mentioned brought about fifty of these Indians
-to pay me a visit, which was not a little
-gratifying to me, as it afforded an opportunity of
-examining their features, and of conversing with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-the few among them who could speak a little of
-the Portuguese language. The dress of the men
-consisted of a waistcoat and a pair of drawers;
-that of the women, of a chemise and petticoat,
-with a handkerchief tied round the head, after
-the fashion of the Portuguese females. They
-bore the general characteristics of their race, the
-copper-colored skin, short and round visage,
-broad nose, lank black hair, and regular stature,
-inclining to be short and broad set. Being desirous
-to see a proof of their skill and precision in
-shooting, of which I had heard much, I placed an
-orange at thirty yards distance, which was pierced
-by an arrow from every one who drew his bow at
-it. I next pointed out a banana-tree, about eight
-inches in circumference, at a distance of forty
-yards; not a single arrow missed its aim, though
-they all shot at an elevated range. Interested
-by these proofs of their archery, I went with
-some of them into a wood to see them shoot at
-birds; though there were very few, they discovered
-them far more quickly than I could; and,
-cautiously creeping along until they were within
-bow-shot, never failed to bring down their game.
-The stillness and expedition with which they
-penetrated the thickets, and passed through the
-brushwood, were truly surprising; nor could any
-thing have afforded me a more satisfactory idea
-of their peculiar way of life. Their bows are
-made of the tough fibrous wood of the Iriri, six or
-seven feet long, and very stout; their arrows are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-full six feet long, and near an inch in diameter,
-pointed with a piece of cane cut to a feather
-edge, or with a bone, but of late more frequently
-with iron. They are loathsome in their persons,
-and in their habits but one remove from the Anthropophagi;
-a woman was gnawing at a half-roasted
-parrot, which was spiked on a stick, with
-the feathers scarcely burnt off, and the entrails
-hanging out<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>. They are not of a shy or morose character,
-but have a great aversion to labor, and
-cannot be brought to submit to any regular employment.
-Rarely is an Indian to be found
-serving as a domestic, or working for hire, and to
-this circumstance may be ascribed the low state
-of agriculture in the district; for as the farmers,
-when they begin the world, have seldom funds sufficient
-to purchase negroes at Rio, their operations
-are for a long time very confined, and frequently
-languish for want of hands. What benefits would
-result to the state, and how much would the
-general cause of humanity be served, if these Indians
-were civilized and domesticated! A tribe of
-idle and unsettled savages would be converted
-into useful and productive laborers; the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-face of the district would be improved; the roads,
-which at present connect it with the capital,
-would be cleared of the thousand inconveniences
-which now encumber them, and new ones<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> would
-be opened for the more expeditious conveyance of
-its produce.</p>
-
-<p>During my stay at Canta Gallo I undertook a
-journey to the gold-washing at Santa Rita, distant
-about five leagues, in a north-east direction.
-After passing the uneven country in the immediate
-neighbourhood of the village, we arrived at
-the Rio Negro, a considerable stream formed by
-many rivulets, which empties itself into the Paraiba;
-on crossing it<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a>, we entered upon a fine
-open country, the fertility of which was evident
-from the luxuriant growth of the tobacco and
-other plants: but it lay in a state of almost total
-neglect, and the families thinly scattered upon it
-appeared in the lowest condition of indolence and
-misery. We proceeded a league farther, through
-a tract entirely destitute of inhabitants, and arrived
-about two in the afternoon at Santa Rita.
-The proprietor of the works received us very
-kindly, and conducted us through them while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-dinner was preparing. The washing is in a deep
-ravine, bounded at one end by an abrupt hill, and
-open at the other to the plain. The vegetable
-earth appeared extremely rich, being clothed with
-luxuriant verdure, and the hills on each hand
-covered with trees of all sizes. The stratum of
-<i>cascalho</i>, which lies under a bed of soil four or
-five feet deep, is very thin and uneven, being no
-where more than two feet thick, and in many
-parts not more than seven or eight inches. The
-incumbent soil is removed at great labor and
-expense, being dug out and carried away in
-bowls; and the <i>cascalho</i> is conveyed with great
-care to a convenient place for water, where it is
-washed by the most expert among the miners, in
-a way similar to that practised at the mines of
-Jaraguá. The proportion of gold produced was
-moderate: I was informed that it paid the master
-the rate of from fourteen pence to two shillings
-per day for each negro, which is a large profit, as
-the daily subsistence of one costs somewhat less
-than a penny.</p>
-
-<p>The sides of the ravine towards the top were
-bare, and of different shades of color, being tinged
-by the water which flows from the vegetable
-matter above: in the bottom, on the surface that
-was yet unworked, lay some huge, half-rounded,
-amorphous masses. In the parts which had been
-worked, I observed two or three substances of
-the same kind, which being too large to be
-moved, the earth which imbedded them had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-cut away, and they appeared like detached nodules.
-On breaking a fragment from one of
-them, with my hammer, I was much surprised
-to find it a calcareous substance, a solid mass
-composed of hexagonal crystals, with a small portion
-of brilliant specular iron ore. I presented
-this fragment to the proprietor, informing him
-that it was limestone, at which he was truly
-astonished, having never before heard of stonelime<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>;
-nor would he believe me until I proved it
-by calcination. The mountains, as I afterwards
-found, are of the same substance.</p>
-
-<p>As I stood observing the heavy operation of
-cutting and carrying away the surface to get
-at the <i>cascalho</i>, it occurred to me that much time
-and labor might be saved by arching the work
-with brick; but, on suggesting the idea, I was informed
-that the sole or bottom was quite decomposed,
-and subject to much water.</p>
-
-<p>There is reason to suppose that the stratum
-of limestone, below the earth in the bottom of
-the valley, is of very modern formation, and
-that, if not too thick to cut through, there
-might be found, between it and the granite stratum
-underneath, a bed of <i>cascalho</i> of prior
-formation, much richer in gold than the upper
-stratum.</p>
-
-<p>After having investigated these works, we made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-an excursion of seven or eight miles, chiefly over
-a rich plain, abounding with the finest timber.
-On the margins of the rivulets which we crossed,
-I observed that the moss was incrusted, somewhat
-like the tuffa at Matlock; and, on more particular
-examination, I found a stratum of tuffa in all the
-valleys, a few inches below the surface, which, as
-I conjecture, must have proceeded from the deposition
-of calcareous matter by the overflowings
-of the streams after heavy rains. The hills, even
-at this distance, were composed of the same
-sparry limestone as at the gold-washing. It is
-much to be wished that the value of this material
-were duly appreciated at the capital, where the
-cost of the wood used in burning shells into lime,
-exceeds the price at which lime brought from
-Santa Rita might be delivered, if proper roads
-were made for its conveyance from this district
-to Porto das Caixas. Such an undertaking highly
-deserves the attention of His Highness’s ministers;
-the benefits likely to result from it are incalculable,
-and the expense attending it would be
-trifling; for in no part of the globe are roads made
-so cheap, or public works of any kind done on
-such moderate terms, as in Brazil.</p>
-
-<p>This fine but almost uninhabited district produces
-spontaneously many valuable articles of
-commerce, which run to waste for want of hands
-to cultivate and gather them. Here is found that
-celebrated variety of the palm-tree, the long, serrated,
-lancet-formed leaves of which are composed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-of innumerable fibres, that rival silk both
-in fineness and strength. I bought some fishing-lines
-made of them for a mere trifle; and I have
-no doubt that, if proper means were employed to
-propagate the growth of the trees, this valuable
-substance might be produced in as great plenty,
-and at as cheap a rate, as flax is in England.
-I laid before His Highness’s ministers, a project
-for using it as a substitute for that article
-in the manufacture of fine cordage, and I shewed
-by experiment that it was fully adequate to the
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p>We remained two days at Santa Rita and its
-vicinity, and on the third, set out on our return,
-taking the same route by which we came. In
-some parts we observed numerous flocks of birds,
-particularly parrots, and a few fine wild hens of
-the wood, and these were the only objects that
-engaged our attention. We reached Canta Gallo
-without having met with any monstrous serpents,
-or any other uncommon sights which travellers
-often see or fancy in a strange country.</p>
-
-<p>After a few days’ rest, I set out, accompanied
-by a guide, to the supposed silver-mine, notice
-having previously been sent to the men to prepare
-them for my coming. We travelled for
-about two miles through a deep valley, and arrived
-at a rapid stream called Macáco, which runs
-between two almost perpendicular mountains of
-very inconsiderable height, along one of which
-the road leads for about a mile and a half.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-Having passed this gloomy and dangerous ravine,
-we proceeded half a league farther, and halted at
-a neat farm-house called Machado, with a portion
-of good and well-cultivated land around it, which
-looked like a garden in the wilderness. The
-owner, a native of the Azores, received us very
-politely, and introduced us to his lady, who, with
-her blooming family of daughters, was engaged
-in needle-work on materials of their own spinning.
-The neatness of their dress, and the general
-air of propriety and comfort in the apartment
-where they sat, strongly reminded me of my
-country; and when they regaled us with liquor
-made from the fruits of their own farm, the image
-of our domestic scenes in rural life was complete:
-I could almost have fancied myself transported
-from the rugged wilds of Brazil to the smiling
-vales of England.</p>
-
-<p>We left this peaceful abode; and, advancing
-for six miles through thickets and forests, and
-over some plain land, we reached a farm called
-St. Antonio, belonging to a widow named Dona
-Anna, who is noted throughout the country for
-making excellent butter and cheese. The dwelling
-is of two stories, and neat, but very inconvenient.
-The good lady gave me a hearty repast
-of milk, and we entered into some conversation
-respecting her dairy, in which I learned that she
-knew no other mode of making butter than that
-of agitating the cream in a jar or bottle; and her
-notions of cheese-making were equally defective,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-In looking about the grounds for an hour, while
-our mules rested, I noticed an excellent fence,
-formed by planting a strong thorny shrub, that
-seemed of very rapid and luxuriant growth.
-The few cows that were grazing in the inclosures
-appeared to be of a superior breed, but were not
-managed with either method or foresight. The
-principal produce of the farm is Indian corn, and
-a little cheese; the latter is only made occasionally,
-when there happens to be a sufficient supply
-of milk for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p>We were here shewn various samples of earthy
-matter, wrapped very carefully in paper, and preserved
-with great secrecy, under the names of
-platina, silver, &amp;c. They proved to be merely
-small crystals of shining iron ore, and pyrites.</p>
-
-<p>Proceeding a league over a fine country, we
-reached the Rio Grande, a stream as large as the
-Derwent at Derby, which we crossed in a canoe,
-our mules swimming after us as usual. We passed
-several groupes of Aborigines, and occasionally
-saw many of their huts and places of abode. The
-road now led along the bases of some huge bold
-mountains of granite, from whose summits rushed
-fine cascades of water. The low ground was interspersed
-with fragments of the same rock, lying
-in heaps in every direction. In many places the
-grass was so tall that it reached above the skirts
-of my saddle, and, the weather being wet, rendered
-me very uncomfortable. After a laborious, and
-latterly a slow progress, we arrived by sun-set at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-the house of Father Thomas de Nossa Senhora
-da Conceição, who kindly accommodated us for
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>The house was new, and neatly built, containing
-only four rooms, with boarded floors; a convenience
-very rarely to be met with in these parts. It
-is absolutely encircled with fine streams, abounding
-with water-falls, which render the roads to it
-at all times indifferent, and in wet weather almost
-impassable. The father, an intelligent and industrious
-man, informed me that he took up that
-land about four years since, that he had only one
-negro, and had no funds wherewith to carry on
-his undertaking, except seven or eight pounds <i>per
-annum</i>, which he gained by his profession as a
-clergyman; this he expended in hiring those who
-chose to work. He shewed me his garden, which
-was full of fine coffee-trees, and was kept in the
-neatest order; his fields were covered with Indian
-corn; his live-stock consisted of a good milch
-cow, a number of pigs, and one mule. On asking
-him how he disposed of his produce, he told me
-that dealers came and purchased it on the spot.
-The whole of the <i>sesmaria</i>, or plantation, with the
-stock upon it, he valued at four hundred pounds
-sterling, and said that he had no doubt he could
-obtain that price for it. These were clear data
-for calculating the profits of farming, when managed
-with prudence and industry. Here is a
-man who, having begun with little or nothing,
-finds himself, at the end of four years, worth four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-hundred pounds; a snug independency in these
-parts, and not more than his exertions and perseverance
-deserved. Father Thomas lived more
-comfortably than any person I had hitherto met
-with in this district: he was economical, but not
-parsimonious; liberal in his sentiments, frank and
-communicative in his conversation, and polite in
-his manners.</p>
-
-<p>Here I was met by the discoverers of the reputed
-silver-mine, who came to conduct me to it.
-We set out on foot, and, after walking about six
-miles over mountains impassable for mules, fording
-rivulets, and passing thickets that left me
-scarcely a single article of dress untorn, we arrived
-at the miserable hut of these poor men; a
-perfect contrast to the neat dwelling of Father
-Thomas. Never in my life was I so exhausted by
-fatigue; I sat down, unable to go any farther,
-and rested about an hour, when, being somewhat
-recovered, I accompanied the men, along the
-edge of a beautiful stream, to the foot of the
-mountain, where they shewed me a hole which
-they had dug, about two feet deep, and informed
-me that the sand it contained at the bottom
-abounded with grains of silver. Having ordered
-a quantity to be taken out, I proceeded to examine
-the base of the mountain, which I found to
-be of granite-like gneiss, with garnets, and small
-crystals of pyrites. Near this place the margin of
-the rivulet contained rounded stones and sand,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-but no where was there to be found any metallic
-substance, except the one before mentioned. Indeed,
-the very idea of silver appearing here in
-dust or grains, as gold does, would be preposterous,
-and contradictory to every principle of nature,
-as, in such a state, it would probably have
-been attacked by the sulphur in the pyrites, so as
-to have assumed the form of a sulphuret.</p>
-
-<p>I returned extremely wearied and much exhausted
-to Father Thomas’s, where, after some needful
-repose, I proceeded to examine the sand and
-stones I had collected at the supposed silver-mine,
-but no particle of metal was to be found. I then
-ordered the men to produce their samples, which
-I examined both by the blow-pipe and by acids,
-but no silver appeared. After equivocating very
-much, they acknowledged that they had rubbed
-and beaten substances to powder, and when they
-found specular iron ore they thought it was silver.
-In one of the samples there certainly was silver,
-but it appeared to have been filed probably from
-an old buckle or spoon, or rubbed on a stone and
-mixed with a pulverized substance. The farce
-could no longer be carried on: I charged them,
-in a most determined manner, with imposture,
-which, after some hesitation, they confessed: an
-officer who was with me would have secured
-them, but I restrained him; for, having obtained
-a confession, I was unwilling to bring them to
-punishment, or to render them more miserable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-than they already were, by having them sent to
-the army. Perhaps that would have been doing
-them a greater service than setting them at liberty;
-for they were too lazy to work, and would,
-no doubt, return to their old habits of prowling
-about, and subsisting on the credulity of the public
-by spreading fallacious reports about mines,
-precious stones, &amp;c. Such impositions are not uncommon
-in South America: I have known instances
-in which copper-filings, mixed with earth,
-and afterwards washed, have been produced as
-samples, in order to enhance the value of land, or
-serve some other sinister purpose. A passion for
-mining is fatally prevalent among some of the lower
-orders of the people: by deluding them with
-prospects of becoming speedily rich, it creates in
-them a disgust for labor, and entails want and
-wretchedness upon them. Even among the few families
-of this district, I observed some examples
-of its effects; those who devoted themselves
-wholly to mining were in general badly clothed
-and worse fed, while those who attended to agriculture
-alone were well provided with every necessary
-of life.</p>
-
-<p>Having concluded the affair, I took leave of
-Father Thomas, and returned to Canta Gallo,
-where I prepared my papers for a report respecting
-it, as the Conde de Linhares, had desired me.
-During the remainder of my stay I collected specimens
-of the different species of wood, which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-neighbourhood produces. The following is a list
-of them:</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi p1"><i>Tapinhoam Canella</i>&mdash;Hard, and excellent for
-sheathing ships.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Venatico</i>&mdash;excellent timber.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Cedar</i>&mdash;good and durable.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Socupira</i>, also called <i>pao ferro</i>&mdash;hard and good.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Olio</i>&mdash;very solid, and of a peculiar fragrance.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Cubiuna.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Jaracandá</i>&mdash;cabinet-wood, variegated, black
-and yellow&mdash;This is called rose-wood in
-England: but the best sorts, as it appears to
-me, have not hitherto been imported.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Jaracatangá.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Ubatanga.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Palms</i>&mdash;many varieties, among which is the
-iriri, before described. Its wood, though
-small, is unrivalled for strength and elasticity.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Garfauna</i>&mdash;the bark of which, as I was informed,
-affords a yellow dye.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi"><i>Embé</i>&mdash;a creeping plant. The stems are
-used instead of cords, and often made into
-bridles.</p>
-
-<p class="pbqi">Many species of thorny trees.</p>
-
-<p class="p1">Most of the above-named species of woods are
-of large growth, and well calculated for ship-building.
-It is remarkable that this district produces
-none of the dye-wood called Brazil wood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Here are innumerable fruit-trees and shrubs
-which I have omitted to particularize. Tobacco
-is cultivated in some parts, and is always manufactured
-into roll by uniting the leaves with each
-other, and twisting them with a winch. By this
-operation the juice is expressed, and after a short
-exposure to the atmosphere, the color of the
-tobacco changes from green to black.</p>
-
-<p>Of wild animals, ounces are the most common;
-they are met with of various colors, some black
-and brown-red. Tapirs or antas are not unfrequent,
-but I saw only the footsteps of some of
-them. Wild hogs breed here in great numbers,
-and also long-bearded monkeys; the latter, when
-asleep, snore so loud as to astonish the traveller.
-The most formidable reptiles are the corral snake,
-the surocucu, the surocucu-tinga, and the jararaca,
-all said to be mortally venomous, none of which I
-ever saw on the journey, except a small one of
-the former species.</p>
-
-<p>The prevailing method of clearing and cultivating
-the land here, is precisely similar to that practised
-in the neighbourhood of S. Paulo. After
-the timber and underwood have been cut down
-and burnt (often very imperfectly), the negresses
-dibble the seed; in about six weeks a
-slight weeding is performed, and then the ground
-is let alone till harvest. The seed-time begins in October
-and lasts until November; the maize is ripe
-in four or five months. The next year they commonly
-sow beans on the corn land, which they
-then let lie, and proceed to clear new ground. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-is not common to molest the land from which they
-have had two crops in succession, before eight or
-ten years have elapsed.</p>
-
-<p>The sugar-cane and mandioca require from
-fourteen to eighteen months. Coffee, planted by
-shoots, bears fruit in two years, and is in perfection
-in five or six years. Cottons and palma Christi,
-raised from seed, bear the first year.</p>
-
-<p>Transplanting is only practised with tobacco;
-engrafting is little known and rarely attempted.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian corn is ground by a horizontal
-water-wheel, which acquires great velocity from
-the rush of water upon it. On the upper end is
-fixed the mill-stone, which makes from fifty to
-sixty revolutions in a minute. They have likewise
-a mode of pounding the corn into flour, by
-a machine called a Sloth. Near a current of water
-a large wooden mortar is placed, the pestle of
-which is mortised into the end of a lever twenty-five
-or thirty feet long, resting upon a fulcrum at
-five-eights of its length. The extremity of the
-shorter arm of this beam is scooped out, so as to
-receive a sufficient weight of water to raise the
-other end, to which appends the pestle, and to
-discharge itself when it has sunk to a given point.
-The alternate emptying and filling of this cavity
-cause the elevation and fall of the pestle, which
-take place about four times per minute. This
-contrivance surpasses all others in simplicity; and
-in a place where the waste of water is of no consequence,
-it completely answers its purpose.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc">HORIZONTAL CORN MILL.<span class="vh">&mdash;</span>POUNDING MACHINE.</p></div>
- <img src="images/ill-205a.jpg" width="400" height="265" id="i190"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-205b.jpg" width="400" height="282"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="capt1"><table id="cap1" summary="cap1">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc1">Mandioca first set
-cuttings.</td>
- <td class="tdc1">Commencing to grow
-&amp; form Root.</td>
- <td class="tdc1">Nearly full grown
-&amp; appearance of the Root.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Having finished my affairs at Canta Gallo, I
-set out on my return to the capital, accompanied
-for about a league of the road by the worthy governor,
-the captain, the treasurer, and almost all
-the inhabitants. During a residence of about fifteen
-days among these excellent men, my table
-had been sumptuously supplied without cost, and
-I had been treated with a degree of respect far
-exceeding my expectations or merits. I took
-leave of them with regret, wishing most sincerely
-that it might be in my power to be of service to
-them at court, by making representations in their
-favor.</p>
-
-<p>I arrived at Morro Queimado at night, after a
-journey of thirty-four miles<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>, and on the next
-day, in good time, reached the house of my
-worthy friend Captain Ferreira. Being now less
-pressed for time, I took a more leisurely survey
-of his establishment, particularly of his sugarwork
-and distillery, both which are very ill conducted.
-When I saw the furnaces for heating
-the coppers in the latter, I freely told the Captain,
-that they could not have been constructed
-on a worse plan, but I received for answer, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-no better was known. It would, indeed, be extremely
-difficult to introduce improvements into
-this or any other parts of the distillery, for every
-thing is left to the management of the negroes.
-When I asked any question concerning the process,
-the owner professed his ignorance of it, and
-sent for one of the African foremen to answer me.
-With this man I reasoned respecting the excessive
-quantity of fuel consumed to no purpose, and
-proposed a method for saving it, as well as for
-correcting the disagreeable taste of the rum,
-caused by the empyreuma; which was, to redistil
-it with an equal quantity of water, taking
-care previously to clean out the still; but he only
-laughed at me, and signified that his certainly
-must be the best method, for he had learned it of
-an old sugar-maker. Thus it is, that from the
-indifference of the owners to their own interest,
-things are suffered to go on in the same routine,
-being left to the direction of men who shrink
-from a temporary increase of labor, even when it
-promises them a lasting advantage. This aversion
-to improvement I have often observed
-among the inhabitants of Brazil: when, for instance,
-I have questioned a brick-maker, a sugar-maker,
-a soap-boiler, or even a miner, as to his reasons
-for conducting his concerns in such an imperfect
-manner, I have been almost invariably referred
-to a negro for answers to my interrogatories.</p>
-
-<p>Some parts of this estate are said to contain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-gold, and at the time of my visit, Captain Ferreira
-was negociating for permission from Government
-to work them. I presented to him
-a drawing of a plan for washing the <i>cascalho</i> in a
-manner superior to that commonly practised, and
-explained to him the use of grinding or stamping
-those concrete masses frequently found in it,
-which generally contain particles of gold, but
-being too hard to be crushed by the hand, are
-thrown aside among the debris.</p>
-
-<p>In this <i>fazenda</i>, as in most others, the conveniences
-for storing the produce, are so very
-poor and imperfect, that the weevil soon gets into
-the corn, and the cotton, coffee, and other produce
-are liable to be deteriorated in a thousand
-ways. The stabling, too, is bad, and the cattle
-are deplorably neglected; indeed, the only part of
-the live-stock that seems to be tolerably well attended
-to, is the swine. In the dwelling-house I
-observed a total inattention to domestic comfort;
-its general appearance confirmed a remark which
-I had often heard made, that the owners of estates
-here, dislike to live upon them, and considering
-their residence as only temporary, make shift
-with poor accommodations.</p>
-
-<p>The tract of land belonging to the farm is full
-two miles square, and though still susceptible of
-great improvement, has not been wholly neglected;
-the parts already cleared have produced
-many valuable crops, and the rest will no doubt,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-in a few years, be brought to an equally promising
-state of cultivation.</p>
-
-<p>Having staid two days with Captain Ferreira,
-I set out on the morning of the third for Porto
-das Caixas, where I arrived at two o’clock, after a
-journey of thirty miles, and was delayed some
-time, as the river was crowded with vessels, laden
-with ship-timber, for the capital. As soon as the
-navigation became sufficiently open, I embarked
-in a large boat, of about ten tons burthen, and
-rowing all night to the mouth of the river, sailed
-with a land wind, and arrived at Rio de Janeiro
-about noon. My first care was to inform His
-Excellency the minister of my return, after which
-I employed a few days in drawing up my journal
-for his inspection. He received it in the handsomest
-manner, and laid it before his Royal Highness,
-who was pleased to signify, that my description
-of the country, through which I had travelled,
-merited his approbation.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-212.jpg" width="400" height="727" id="i195"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc"><i>Published as the Act directs, 1822, by Longman &amp; C.<sup>o</sup> Paternoster Row.</i></p>
-</div></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c10" id="c10">CHAP. X.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Permission obtained to visit the Diamond Mines.&mdash;Account
-of a pretended Diamond presented
-to the Prince Regent.&mdash;Journey to Villa Rica.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">AFTER I had thoroughly recovered from the
-fatigues of my late journey, I solicited his Royal
-Highness for permission to go and explore the
-diamond mines of Cerro do Frio. This favor had
-never as yet been granted to a foreigner, nor had
-any Portuguese been permitted to visit the vicinity
-where the works are situated, except on business
-relative to them, and even then under restrictions,
-which rendered it impossible to acquire
-the means of giving an adequate description of
-them to the public. Through the kind friendship
-of the Conde de Linhares, the permission was
-granted, and my passports and letters of recommendation
-were speedily made out. Lord
-Strangford was much pleased at my being so highly
-favored, and willingly offered his service, and represented
-me favorably at court. I obtained admission
-to the archives, for the purpose of examining all
-the manuscript maps, and of copying from any of
-them whatever might be necessary to guide me in
-my route. It may here be proper to observe, that
-the most eligible mode of travelling in the interior<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-of Brazil, especially on such an excursion as I
-had undertaken, is to procure orders from the government,
-and an escort of soldiers, who have a
-right, under such orders, to require proper relays
-of mules from all persons who reside on or near
-the road. The Conde de Linhares intimated to
-me, that I might select any two soldiers I thought
-proper, and while I was deliberating on the
-choice, a singular occurrence took place, which
-was the means of furnishing me with two men of
-the corps of miners, who were appointed to attend
-me, under an injunction on the part of His
-Excellency, that their future promotion would
-depend entirely on the report which I should give
-of their conduct after my return. I am happy
-to say that their services merited every commendation.</p>
-
-<p>The occurrence to which I allude was this:&mdash;A
-free negro of Villa do Principe, about nine
-hundred miles distant, had the assurance to write
-a letter to the Prince Regent, announcing that
-he possessed an amazingly large diamond which
-he had received from a deceased friend some years
-ago, and which he begged he might have the honor
-to present to His Royal Highness in person. As
-the magnitude which this poor fellow ascribed
-to his diamond was such as to raise imagination
-to its highest pitch, an order was immediately
-dispatched to the commander of Villa do Principe,
-to send him forthwith to Rio de Janeiro; he
-was accommodated with a conveyance, and escorted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-by two soldiers. As he passed along the
-road, all who had heard the report hailed him as
-already honored with a cross of the order of S.
-Bento, and as sure of being rewarded with the
-pay of a general of brigade. The soldiers also
-anticipated great promotion; and all persons envied
-the fortunate negro. At length, after a
-journey which occupied about twenty-eight days,
-he arrived at the capital, and was straightway conveyed
-to the palace. His happiness was now
-about to be consummated, in a few moments the
-hopes which he had for so many years indulged,
-would be realized, and he should be exalted from
-a low and obscure condition, to a state of affluence
-and distinction:&mdash;such, no doubt, were the
-thoughts which agitated him during the moments
-of suspence. At length he was admitted into the
-presence; he threw himself at the Prince’s feet,
-and delivered his wonderful gem. His Highness
-was astonished at its magnitude; a pause ensued;
-the attendants waited to hear the Prince’s opinion,
-and what he said they seconded. A round
-diamond, nearly a pound in weight, filled them
-all with wonder; some ready calculators reckoned
-the millions it was worth; others found it difficult
-to numerate the sum at which it would be
-valued, but the general opinion of His Highness’s
-servants was, that the treasury was many millions
-of crowns the richer. The noise which this
-occurrence created among the higher circles, may
-be easily conceived; the general topic of remark<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-and wonder, was the negro’s offering. It was
-shewn to the ministers, among whom an apprehension,
-and even a doubt, was expressed, that a
-substance so large and round might not prove a
-real diamond; they, however, sent it to the treasury
-under a guard, and it was lodged in the deposit
-of the jewel-room.</p>
-
-<p>On the next day, the Conde de Linhares sent
-for me, and related all the circumstances which
-had come to his knowledge respecting this famous
-jewel, adding, in a low tone of voice, that he had
-his doubts about its proving a genuine diamond.
-His Excellency directed me to attend at his office
-in a few hours, when letters from himself and the
-other ministers to the Treasury should be given
-me<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>, for permission to see this invaluable gem, in
-order to determine what it really was. Readily
-accepting a charge of so interesting a nature, I
-prepared myself, and attended at the hour appointed,
-when I received the letters, which I presented
-at the treasury to an officer in waiting, I
-was led through several apartments, in which
-much business seemed to be transacting, to the
-grand chamber, where presided the treasurer, attended
-by his secretaries. Having my letters in
-his hand, he entered into some conversation with
-me relative to the subject; I was then shewn
-through other grand apartments hung with scarlet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-and gold, and ornamented with figures as large
-as life, representing justice holding the balance.
-In the inner room, to which we were conducted,
-there were several strong chests with
-three locks each, the keys of which were kept
-by three different officers, who were all required
-to be present at the opening. One of these
-chests being unlocked, an elegant little cabinet
-was taken out, from which the treasurer took the
-gem, and in great form presented it to me. Its
-value sunk at the first sight, for before I touched
-it, I was convinced that it was a rounded piece
-of crystal. It was above two inches in diameter.
-On examining it, I told the governor
-it was not a diamond; and to convince him I
-took a diamond of five or six carats, and with
-it cut a very deep nick in the stone. This was
-proof positive; a certificate was accordingly made
-out, stating, that it was an inferior substance of
-little or no value, which I signed.</p>
-
-<p>Other boxes were now unlocked, from one of
-which they showed me two large slabs of diamond,
-each a full inch on the superficies, and about the
-eighth of an inch in thickness, of a very bad
-brown color. When found, they formed one entire
-piece, which, being amorphous, was not
-known to be a diamond, until the administrator or
-chief of the working party, after keeping it by
-him many days, had recourse to the old experiment
-of placing it on a hard stone and striking it
-with a hammer. The result of this experiment is,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-that if the substance resist the blow, or, separate
-in laminæ, it must be a diamond; the latter was
-the case in the present instance, and the man having
-thus made two diamonds from one, transmitted
-them to the intendant.</p>
-
-<p>The river Abaité, from whence these pieces
-came, has produced one of an octahedral form,
-which weighs seven-eights of an ounce Troy, and
-is perhaps the largest diamond in the world. It
-was found about twelve years ago by three men
-who were under sentence of banishment for high
-crimes; but on presenting this valuable gem to
-the then Viceroy, they were pardoned and rewarded.
-It is now in the private possession of
-the Prince Regent.</p>
-
-<p>I was afterwards favored with a sight of the remaining
-diamonds in the Treasury; they appeared
-to be in quantity about four or five thousand carats.
-The largest did not generally exceed eight carats,
-except one of a fine octahedral form, full seventeen.
-Among the few colored diamonds, one of the
-smallest was of a beautiful pink, one of a fine blue,
-and several were of a green tinge; the yellow were
-the most common and least esteemed.</p>
-
-<p>Having now finished my business, I took my
-leave of the treasurer, with thanks for his polite
-attention, and on my return home wrote a letter
-to the Conde de Linhares, stating the result of
-my visit. It was no agreeable task to a stranger
-to have to announce that a substance which had
-been considered as an inestimable addition to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-treasures of the state, was in reality, though singular
-in its appearance, of very trifling value, and
-this too in a letter which was to be laid before the
-Prince. His Highness, however, was prepared
-for the intelligence, and was too noble-minded to
-manifest any chagrin at the disappointment. The
-poor negro who had presented it was of course
-deeply afflicted by this unwelcome news; instead
-of being accompanied home by an escort, he had
-to find his way thither as he could, and would, no
-doubt, have to encounter the ridicule and contempt
-of those who had of late congratulated him on his
-good fortune.</p>
-
-<p>When I had nearly completed my preparations
-for the journey, Mr. Goodall, a most respectable
-merchant, expressed a desire to accompany me to
-Villa Rica, which I readily acceded to, as he was
-a most agreeable companion. Lord Strangford
-having procured him passports from the ministers,
-he was enabled to join me without delay. On the
-17th of August, 1809, we set out on a journey
-which no Englishman had ever before undertaken,
-nor had any ever yet been permitted to pass the
-barrier of alpine mountains that stretch along the
-coast.</p>
-
-<p>Having embarked in a large market-boat with
-our retinue, which consisted of the two soldiers
-before mentioned, and my servant, a most trusty
-negro-boy, we made sail at mid-day with a sea-breeze,
-and ran down the bay about six leagues.
-We then passed the island of Governador and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-various others, one of which was the beautiful
-Cocoa-nut island. Proceeding along the strait,
-formed by it and another of similar extent, we
-crossed a fine open bay, and arrived at the mouth of
-the Moremim, a picturesque river which presents
-in its serpentine course a great variety of beautiful
-scenery. It was now sun-set; the weather was
-mild and serene, and we paused awhile to enjoy
-one of the finest rural prospects which we had
-ever seen in Brazil&mdash;a fine romantic fore-ground,
-enriched by the vivid foliage of the woods on the
-banks of the stream, and contrasted by the bold
-outline of the mountains in the distance, among
-which we noticed that singular chain of perpendicular
-rocks, called the Organpipe mountains,
-from their resemblance in form and position to the
-front of the instrument alluded to. Having advanced
-two leagues up the river, we arrived at a
-village on its margin, called Porto da Estrella, a
-place of great stir and bustle, on account of the
-hourly arrival of numerous droves of mules laden
-with produce from the interior. Here are some
-poor dwellings, and a number of large storehouses
-for the reception of the produce. The muleteers,
-being provided with bedding and cooking utensils,
-never leave their cattle, so that good inns are to
-them unnecessary. We were shewn into the best
-in the place, which was as dirty and inconvenient
-as can possibly be imagined. I shall forbear to
-detail the discomforts of the night, and merely
-observe that they were such as to make us early<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-stirrers in the morning. Our soldiers procured us
-mules, but owing to the great bustle of loading
-and unloading, we were not in travelling order
-until ten o’clock. We now proceeded about three
-leagues along the low land, having the range of
-mountains on our left, and passing the village of
-Piedade entered on a beautiful plain at their base.
-We stopped at a house at which the Prince Regent
-had remained three nights for the benefit of
-the air; but not being able to procure refreshment
-there, we passed on and began our ascent along
-an excellent paved road, extending five miles on
-a very steep elevation along the sides and over the
-ridges of the mountains. Having rested awhile
-at the half-way-house, which we had been near
-an hour in gaining, we toiled on, relieving ourselves
-at times by turning to take a view of
-Rio de Janeiro, and the bay, which from this lofty
-eminence appeared to great advantage. With
-some difficulty we reached the summit, which, as
-I suppose, is four thousand feet above the level
-of the sea; the atmosphere was at least ten degrees
-colder than on the plain.</p>
-
-<p>Our next halting place was a small village called
-Corgo Seco, situated in a most rugged and uneven
-district, with not half an acre of level ground in
-any part of its vicinity. Having taken some refreshment
-here, we proceeded to Belmonte, a
-beautiful spot, situated by the edge of a rapid
-stream, which washes the base of an immense
-mountain of granite on the left. We journeyed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-along this stream until we reached a station called
-Padre Correa, from the name of its owner. It
-consists of a house and chapel, with a handsome
-area in front. The Father maintains a large establishment
-of negroes, many of whom are employed
-in beating out mules’ shoes from the cool Swedish
-iron, after they have been forged into form. For
-these articles there is a considerable demand, as
-the unwrought material pays no duty on this side
-the river Paraiba, while on the other it is taxed
-full 100 <i>per cent</i>. which is also the case with salt.
-The great consumption of these necessary articles
-has probably induced Government to lay these
-heavy duties upon them, but certainly every principle
-of good policy furnishes an argument against
-the measure. Padre Correa received us very hospitably,
-afforded us an asylum for the night, and
-assisted us in regulating our baggage by supplying
-a pair of cane panniers for one of the mules,
-which proved very serviceable. Before sun-rise
-we were awakened by the clatter of hammers in
-the forges; the weather was dewy, and so cold
-that my thermometer was down at 46 degrees. We
-passed some time in viewing the garden, which
-was in tolerable order, and contained some fine
-peach trees in blossom. Our host informed us,
-that he had a good plantation a few miles distant,
-but his chief concern was the selling of corn and
-shoes for the use of the mules.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving this station we skirted the Piabunha, a
-river abounding in falls, which flows into the Paraiba.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-Among the hills and dales which we traversed,
-we at times observed farm-houses and
-plantations; but the road, farther on, was quite
-confined by continual wood-scenery. After proceeding
-about twenty miles we reached Cebolla, a
-tolerable establishment, consisting of a house of
-two stories, a small chapel, and a sugar-engine, in
-an unfinished state, situated in the bottom of a
-valley. The owner, Captain Jose Antonio Barbosa,
-was a Portuguese of the old school; he
-seemed much vexed that His Royal Highness had
-permitted strangers to travel the country, and
-treated us with a constrained civility, which shewed
-us that he thought we were come about no
-good. His conversation ran continually against
-the operations of Government in laying taxes upon
-rum and other commodities; and though he tasted
-the sweets of office, being part-renter of the lucrative
-ferry of Paraiba, which post he obtained
-through the interest of a very worthy gentleman
-in Rio de Janeiro, yet he had all the acerbity of
-a disappointed place-hunter. His self-interested
-and narrow-minded views were but too plainly directed
-to one object, monopoly; the mere mention
-of the Prince Regent’s liberality in permitting
-strangers to reside in Brazil appeared to torture
-him, and in short, so much of the snarler did he
-display while discussing this topic, that no character
-could have more forcibly reminded us of
-the dog in the manger. It is, however, but fair
-to add, that while indulging in severe reflections<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-on strangers, he did not forget the duties of hospitality;
-before we went to rest, he invited us to
-partake of a family supper, consisting of a boiled
-duck smothered in rice, and a stewed pullet, to
-which sat down eight people, including ourselves.
-Having thanked our host for his kindness, we retired
-to the apartments allotted to us. My bed
-was so uneasy that I was obliged to sit up during
-most of the night, having no alternative, for as
-the clay floor was neither boarded nor paved, I
-could not venture to throw the bed clothes upon
-it, and sleep there. Never did mortal hail day-break
-with greater satisfaction; but my agreeable
-feelings were soon damped by one of those little
-vexatious accidents which in some states of mind
-are more hard to bear than real misfortunes. I
-had placed my thermometer in a <i>wind-door</i> or air-hole
-(for the aperture was not glazed); a stupid
-fellow, in fastening the bridle of a mule to one of
-the bars, threw down the instrument and broke it.
-Luckily I had another, therefore the loss was not
-so grievous.</p>
-
-<p>Our soldiers having, with their wonted alacrity,
-provided mules, we set out at an early hour, and entered
-upon a much more level road than that of
-the preceding day. We passed along several valleys,
-the surface of which presented clay and decomposed
-granite, in some places more ferruginous
-than in others. There are numerous sheds
-all the way for the refreshment of travellers and
-their cattle. This day’s journey being only sixteen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-miles, we soon completed it, arriving about
-noon at the ferry of Paraibuna. This river, though
-as wide as the Thames at Westminster, is unnavigable,
-by reason of the large rocks which impede
-its course. The ferry-boat arriving, we went into
-it with all our mules, and were conveyed with
-oars and setting poles to the other side, where we
-found a Register for the examination of passengers,
-their passports, and property. The place is guarded
-by a few old soldiers, under the command of a
-lieutenant, who, though in ill health, shewed us
-every attention. Our soldiers got us a dinner
-cooked at a <i>venda</i><a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>, kept by a young man originally
-from Oporto; we took tea and supped with the
-commandant, who assigned to us an apartment in
-the Register. He was very civil, and seemed
-highly pleased to see us, frequently exclaiming,
-“Os Inglezes são grande gente,” (the English are
-a great nation). We were gratified by this and
-other national compliments which he paid us, and
-not less so by the respect which every one who
-came to visit us testified for our country, as being
-in alliance with a Prince to whom they were enthusiastically
-devoted.</p>
-
-<p>The Register is a substantial edifice of wood,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-built on posts to preserve it from the overflows
-of the river, which frequently inundate the sandy
-flat on which it stands. It contains a few rooms,
-which serve as barracks for the guards, and has a
-handsome gallery fronting the ferry. The station
-is low, and in summer is said to be very hot and
-unhealthy; a circumstance which, joined to the
-indolence and poverty of the inhabitants, may sufficiently
-account for the general appearance of debility
-observable among them. The little employment
-they have arises chiefly from the passengers
-who frequent this great thoroughfare, and from
-the numerous troops of mules which are continually
-arriving on their way to, as well as from, the
-interior. The barges of the ferry are as fine vessels
-as any I ever saw used for the purpose; and
-indeed they ought to be, for a considerable toll is
-paid, not only for every mule, or other beast of
-burden, but for every person crossing the river.
-The annual amount collected yields, no doubt, a
-handsome profit to the renters; but it might be
-considerably augmented if a regular road were
-opened to Canta Gallo, which is only eighteen
-leagues distant.</p>
-
-<p>Being informed that our next day’s journey
-would be an arduous one, on account of the hilly
-district through which we should have to pass, we
-retired to rest betimes, and were stirring at an
-early hour. We mounted fresh mules, and proceeded
-along a good road through a rugged and
-thinly peopled district; in the course of five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-leagues, we passed over seven very high granite
-mountains, and eight smaller ones, and at length
-reached the ferry of the Paraiba, a river considerably
-larger than the Paraibuna. At the Register
-belonging to it, which is more extensive
-and better guarded than the former, all goods are
-examined and weighed, paying duty according to
-their weight, whatever be their kind, quality, or
-value. This regulation bears very unequally upon
-different articles; salt, for instance, pays nearly
-<i>cent. per cent.</i> iron and lead about the same;
-while woollens, cottons, and other light goods do
-not, on an average, exceed eight or ten <i>per cent.</i></p>
-
-<p>The commandant of the Register offered us
-every assistance, and was kind enough to provide
-us a fresh mule for our baggage. The short time
-we staid here did not allow much leisure for observation;
-and, indeed, there was little of novelty
-to observe. The situation of the Register is pleasant;
-the country around is well wooded and
-fertile, though mountainous. The river is almost
-destitute of fish.</p>
-
-<p>We proceeded about a league and a half farther,
-through thick woods, and arrived at a place named
-Rosina de Negra, where we halted for the night.
-Our next day’s journey presented the same varieties
-of hill and ravine as those we had already
-passed. In one part of the road we observed a
-kind of barracks, consisting of an <i>estalagem</i> and
-some <i>ranchos</i> or huts, where an officer and about
-twenty horse-soldiers are stationed; they patrole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-the road, and are authorised to stop travellers,
-and make the strictest search of those whom they
-suspect of having gold-dust or diamonds concealed.
-Proceeding two leagues, we arrived at
-the Register of Mathias Barboza, situated in the
-midst of an almost impervious wood. It was
-built about sixty or seventy years ago, by the
-gentleman whose name it bears, and who was an
-ancestor of the noble family of Sousa.</p>
-
-<p>This Register is a large oblong building, with
-two great doors at each end, through which all
-travellers, with their mules, are required to pass.
-On entering, they stop, and deliver their passports
-to a soldier for examination by the commander,
-who, if he judges that a correct account
-is given of the property, suffers them to proceed:
-but if any grounds of suspicion occur, the mules
-are unloaded, and all the contents of their cargoes
-are examined with the strictest scrutiny. In these
-examinations it not unfrequently happens that a
-negro has been suspected of swallowing a diamond;
-in which case, he is shut up in a bare room
-until such time as the truth can be proved. The
-command of this station is entrusted to a major.
-The inner part of the building consists of apartments
-for the officers, <i>ranchos</i> for the soldiers, cells
-for the confinement of suspected persons, and
-stabling for the mules. In the yard there are
-numerous posts, to which the cattle are tied while
-loading or unloading. There is also a <i>venda</i> for
-the accommodation of travellers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Leaving this place, we proceeded through an
-extensive tract of wood, in which we occasionally
-observed a few deer, but no birds, except now
-and then a green parrot or a wood-pecker. The
-road, as far as the eye could reach, was bounded
-on each hand by close continuous thickets, and
-rarely enlivened by traces of habitation. Those
-persons who live by the way-side are commonly
-of the lowest order, who settle there with the
-view of selling refreshments to travellers, and
-corn for the mules; they are in general an idle,
-gossipping race: the more respectable classes reside
-at a distance from the public road.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived about four in the evening at a farm-house
-called Madeiras, belonging to Captain José
-Pinto de Sousa. The situation is cold and salubrious,
-the vicinity well-watered, and abounding
-in fine tracts of arable and pasture land, but deplorably
-neglected. The owner seemed to prefer
-ease, with inconvenience, to labor, with comfort;
-and, satisfied with the spontaneous bounty of nature,
-cared little about improving it by industry.
-The house itself was miserably out of repair: its
-walls, which consisted of lattice-work plastered
-with clay, were full of holes and crevices, and its
-roof was in a very crazy and shattered condition.
-We fared but poorly, and passed a very indifferent
-night; often reflecting on the apathy and listless
-indolence of the people: who, thought we, in
-a cold climate would live in a dwelling full of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-cracks and air-holes, when a few dashes of mud
-might render it comparatively comfortable!</p>
-
-<p>From this place, which is an hundred miles
-from Porto da Estrella, we continued our route
-next day over a chain of mountains, among which
-we encountered other falls of the Paraiba nearer
-its source, and, traversing a tract of close woodland,
-arrived at a station called the Fazenda do
-Juiz de Fora. Here we procured fresh mules,
-and proceeded for a considerable distance on the
-ascent, when we met with two planters from
-Minas Novas, who were going to Rio de Janeiro
-with forty-six mules loaded with cotton, packed
-in raw hides, each beast carrying two packages.
-They had been nearly three months on the road.
-We availed ourselves of their kind offers to carry
-intelligence to our friends in the capital, and gave
-them letters for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p>The remainder of our day’s journey afforded
-few incidents worth notice. We observed several
-pines of a singular species, which yielded abundance
-of resin. In one part of the road I shot a
-most beautiful bird, the name of which I could
-not learn, but was informed that it flew about
-much in the night. In another part, we noticed a
-beast of prey, which was crossing the road before
-us, and fled at our approach. I killed a small
-water-snake with two fins near its vent.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived towards evening at the <i>fazenda</i> of
-Antonio Ferreira, formerly a good house, but now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-almost in ruins. The owner was not at home; but
-his old negro-servants provided as handsomely for
-us as we could have expected them to do if he
-had been present. We made a tolerable supper
-of stewed fowls, with the addition of a fine wild
-turkey, which I had killed in the vicinity. I may
-here observe, that a traveller in this country should
-neglect no opportunity of providing for himself
-with his gun, as he is never certain of palatable
-fare at the places where he alights.</p>
-
-<p>The surface of the country is in general good
-strong clay; all the rocks are of gneiss and granite,
-in the composition of which hornblende predominates.
-We this day passed the site of the first
-gold-washing, which is very small, and has been
-many years abandoned. The rivulets have a great
-deal of oxide of iron in small grains mixed with
-the sand in their eddies. In some places the granite
-is in a decomposing state, and there are large
-nodules of what the Germans call grünstein, which
-appear not unlike basalt. The air in these elevated
-districts is fresh and cool, except from two to
-four o’clock in the afternoon, when I found it rather
-hot. In the evening, while amusing ourselves
-with shooting, we observed a man in a friar’s habit,
-with a box bearing a picture of the Virgin,
-fastened to his waist by a belt. His face was
-overgrown with hair, and his whole appearance exceedingly
-wild and uncouth. On inquiry, we
-were informed that this extraordinary figure was
-a hermit; and that he had embraced this austere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-life by way of doing penance for some great
-crime.</p>
-
-<p>Having pursued our diversion while day-light
-lasted, we returned to the house, where, for the
-first time since our departure from Rio, we partook
-of a comfortable meal, and regaled ourselves
-with a bottle of excellent Madeira, which my
-worthy companion by good fortune had brought
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>We set out next day by sun-rise, and proceeded
-some miles along a tolerable road. The vallies as
-we advanced were wider, and more easy of cultivation,
-but the mountains were excessively steep.
-On even ground our general pace was three or
-four miles an hour, but on the acclivities we proceeded
-slowly, and were obliged to observe every
-step of our mules, and to balance ourselves accordingly.
-This action of the body produces no
-perceptible consequences for the first few days,
-but afterwards it begins to torture the loins with
-a species of lumbago.</p>
-
-<p>After a journey of twenty-eight miles, which
-occupied nine hours, we found ourselves at six in
-the evening at a small farm-house called Fazenda
-de Dôna Clara e Dôna Maria. These two good
-ladies honored us with a more polite reception
-than we had hitherto experienced on the journey.
-It being the festival of St. Bartholomew, a great
-holiday among the Brazilians, they had prepared
-a more sumptuous dinner than usual, of which
-they kindly invited us to partake. We were the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-more sensible of this act of hospitality, because it
-evidently proceeded from sincere good-will; and,
-like the widow’s mite, derived additional merit from
-the smallness of the store which supplied the
-means of performing it. Their establishment
-seemed barely provided with necessaries; and the
-house in which they lived was ill built and scantily
-furnished. We could not but smile at the earnestness
-with which one of these worthy ladies complained
-of the hardness of the times; they paid,
-she observed, a moidore every three years in taxes.
-How happy, thought we, would our English spinsters
-of slender incomes deem themselves in being
-so lightly assessed!</p>
-
-<p>We passed the evening tolerably, having provided
-ourselves with candles, which we found very
-necessary both here and in other places on the
-road; for the rooms in general are lighted only by
-a glimmering lamp, which rather augments than
-diminishes their melancholy gloom.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning we were informed that the
-mules which had been provided for us over-night
-were taken away from the stable. This so enraged
-our soldier, that he immediately rode in
-quest of them, brought them back, and pressed
-others for our service. We here saw the convenience
-of travelling under official orders: had we
-not been so provided, we might have been exposed
-to a most vexatious delay. These military
-requisitions of cattle may be considered by the
-owner as a grievance; but he generally indemnifies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-himself by high charges to other travellers,
-and by impositions in the way of trade.</p>
-
-<p>Being now within the province of Minas Geraes,
-(a country famed at Rio de Janeiro for its excellent
-cheese), I expected to see some improvement
-in the condition of the country,&mdash;some establishment
-worthy of being called a farm,&mdash;some dwelling,
-constructed not merely for shelter but for
-comfort. I hoped to remark among the inhabitants
-that air of health and animation which springs
-from the invigorating occupations and cheering
-pursuits of husbandry; but no such pleasing
-change was perceptible: the same want of exertion
-prevailed here as in other parts of the country;
-the people seemed to act as if the tenure by
-which they held their lands was about to be abolished;
-all around them had the appearance of
-make-shift; their old houses, fast hastening to decay,
-bore no marks of repair about them; wherever
-a bit of garden-ground was inclosed, it appeared
-overrun with weeds; where coffee-trees, planted
-in former years, still existed, the present occupiers
-were too indolent to gather the fruit; no inclosures
-were made for pasturage; a few goats
-supplied the little milk that was consumed; and
-cows’-milk was rarely to be procured. On observing
-these deplorable consequences of the
-apathy of the inhabitants, I could not but reflect
-on the advantages which might accrue from the
-introduction of the English system of agriculture
-among them. The example of a single farm, conducted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-on that system, might go far towards rousing
-the people from their slothful state; and,
-when they once felt their faculties awakened, they
-would be ashamed to lounge about as they now
-do, under an old great coat, for days together,
-burthens to themselves, and objects of contempt
-to all strangers who see them.</p>
-
-<p>The next place we visited, after quitting the residence
-of these old ladies, offered every requisite
-for making the experiment above alluded to. It
-was a <i>fazenda</i> called Mantiqueira, situated in the
-largest plain we had hitherto traversed, consisting
-of rich land watered by numerous streams.
-The establishment was in a fit state to begin with:
-the house was falling to ruin, and the grounds
-about it were overrun with weeds and brushwood.
-What more desirable situation, exclaimed
-I to my companion, could an English farmer select!
-Here cattle of every description are cheap;
-cows and oxen at two years old may be purchased
-at 30s. or 40s. per head; excellent horses from 60s.
-to £8. each; and pigs, poultry, and other live-stock,
-at a price too trifling to mention. Here is land
-which, under the influence of this genial climate,
-is capable of yielding two hundred-fold; here is
-wood in abundance for every purpose; excellent
-clay for making bricks; and water at command.
-Yet all these advantages are lost to the present
-occupiers, who consider them too cheap to be valuable;
-and, perpetually hankering after the precious
-minerals, seem to think that the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-standard for estimating the gifts of nature, is the
-difficulty of obtaining them.</p>
-
-<p>Having passed the hamlet of St. Sebastian, we
-arrived late in the evening at Borda do Campo,
-a village consisting of about twenty houses, the
-best of which is that of Captain Rodrigo de
-Lima, who, on learning our situation, kindly took
-us in for the night. While supper was preparing,
-we had some conversation with him respecting
-the agriculture and produce of the neighbourhood,
-in the course of which he paid much attention
-to our observations, and promised next day
-to shew us the system he pursued. At the repast,
-which was speedily announced, he introduced
-us to his wife and daughter, and a lady
-who was then on a visit to them. This was an
-unexpected act of politeness, and one which had
-never yet been exercised towards us by any master
-of a family in the whole course of our journey.
-The few females we occasionally saw at
-any former place generally secluded themselves on
-our arrival and during our stay; and, when they
-came near us by chance, they commonly ran away
-in as much apparent alarm as if they had been
-accustomed to be frightened at the name of an
-Englishman. The ladies appeared in very neat
-dresses of English manufacture, with a profusion
-of gold chains about their necks, which are always
-worn on receiving or paying visits. Their
-conversation was gay and enlivening; they were
-very inquisitive respecting the costume of English<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-women, and seemed quite astonished at hearing
-that they wore caps, it being never the custom
-among the Brazilian females to cover their
-heads until advanced in years. They ornament
-their hair with combs, frequently of gold, and
-very richly wrought. Wine was introduced, of
-which the ladies could not be prevailed on to partake:
-they gave our healths by putting the glass
-to their lips. After supper, the table was covered
-with delicious sweetmeats; when, being desirous
-of paying the lady of the house a compliment, I
-spoke highly of their excellence, and presumed
-that the fruits were preserved under her immediate
-direction; but she assured me to the contrary,
-and observed that her negress did all that sort
-of domestic work. I perceived, or imagined, that
-she was rather offended at my remark, and therefore
-apologized by saying, that it was not uncommon
-for the ladies in England to interest themselves
-personally in the concerns of housewifery.
-The remainder of the evening passed off very
-agreeably.</p>
-
-<p>On looking out of my chamber-window the following
-morning, I was surprised to see two small
-and very neat inclosures, in one of which flax was
-growing, and in the other wheat. The latter,
-which apparently had been sown about seven
-weeks, was very poor and unpromising: the
-ground had too much water, and seemed of late
-to have been flooded. Our host regaled us with
-a breakfast of stewed fowl, excellent coffee and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-milk, and a dish of <i>feijones</i>, with mandioca and
-buttered toast; after which he conducted us to
-his inclosures.</p>
-
-<p>The flax was very healthful and strong: he told
-us he cut<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> it three or four times a year, and that
-it was dressed, spun, and woven in his own house.
-He grew but little, having occasion for no more
-than what answered his domestic purposes. The
-wheat, he told us, was blighted. He shewed us a
-sample of last year’s growth, which was very
-poor, coarse, and foul. The mills are of similar
-construction to those used at Canta Gallo, but I
-did not observe a pair of stones fit for the grinding
-of wheat.</p>
-
-<p>I now expressed a wish to see his dairy, which
-the good gentleman immediately complied with.
-Instead of an apartment, such as I expected to
-find, fitted up and kept in order for that sole purpose,
-I was shewn into a kind of dirty store-room,
-the smell of which was intolerable. The present,
-I was told, was not the time for making cheese,
-as the cows gave milk only in the rainy season. I
-begged to see the implements used in the process;
-and, on examining them, found, to my utter
-astonishment, that neither the vats nor cloths had
-been washed since they were last used; and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-milk-pails, &amp;c. were in the same condition. This
-sufficiently accounted for the offensive smell
-which I had perceived on entering the place.
-When I asked to see the utensil used for making
-butter, an apology was made, by stating that it
-was not in the way: they had observed my disgust
-at the other vessels, and probably thought
-that this was equally unfit to be inspected. I did
-all in my power to inform our worthy host of the
-manner in which English dairies were conducted,
-and gave him several directions, which he wrote
-down, but seemed quite indifferent about adopting
-them. On enquiry, I found that no provision was
-made for the cows; there were no houses erected
-for milking, and that operation was frequently
-neglected, and at all times badly performed.</p>
-
-<p>The premises bore traces of the industry and
-taste of the former occupants: there was a mud-wall
-round them, encompassing about an acre of
-ground, which, when perfect, must have given the
-whole a retired and comfortable appearance; but
-it was now partly broken down in ruins. The
-steps leading to the front door of the dwelling
-were of the lapis ollaris, or pot-stone, of which
-substance there is a stratum in the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p>Our cattle being ready, we mounted about
-eleven in the forenoon, returning thanks to our
-host, and offering to pay for the accommodation
-we had met with; but the only compensation he
-required, was a promise, on our part, to pass a
-day or two with him on our return. The ladies,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-who had not appeared at breakfast, came out
-upon the gallery, and very pleasingly and politely
-wished us a good journey.</p>
-
-<p>Resuming our route, we passed several small
-farms, and observed that the blight had destroyed
-all their bananas, and withered their coffee-trees.
-My thermometer at the time was not lower than
-52°, but the damage had been done some days before
-by a sharp southerly wind. In some parts of
-the road there were very small inclosures of flax
-and rye. The country now appeared more open,
-and the wood-scenery lay at a greater distance.
-We rode by the side of a barren mountain,
-which was covered to an extent of three miles
-with quartz, and produced little or no herbage,
-except a species of wiry or windle grass, which
-was much parched by the sun. We descended
-a declivity tremendously steep, and full a mile in
-length, at the bottom of which we crossed the Rio
-das Mortes, here a small rivulet. On its further
-bank is an <i>estalagem</i>, or inn, called Registro Velho,
-(Old Register) having been originally built as a
-searching-office, to prevent the smuggling of gold.
-Proceeding hence, the eye is again relieved from
-confined wood-scenery by the prospect of a grand
-amphitheatre of mountains, which are bounded
-by others of amazing magnitude, covered with
-forests. On the side of one hill, which we skirted
-obliquely, I observed several crystallized masses,
-which, on examination, proved to be clusters of
-cubes of ferruginous quartz of a dark-brown color.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-We shortly afterwards arrived at a village
-called Barbacena, situated on a commanding eminence,
-in a most fertile country, and apparently
-containing about two hundred dwelling-houses.
-While we stopped to take some refreshment,
-numbers of the inhabitants came to look at us,
-having never before seen Englishmen, and being
-on the rack of curiosity to know the objects of
-our journey. At this place two great roads from
-the mining country unite, and form the main road
-to Rio de Janeiro. That to the westward leads
-from S. João d’El Rey, Sabará, and Cuiabá; the
-other from Villa Rica, Mariana, Villa do Principe,
-Tejuco, Minas Novas, &amp;c. Being a sort of half-way
-station to the capital, and the last open place
-on the road, it is much frequented by people from
-different parts of the interior, and has a considerable
-traffic in various articles, particularly baizes,
-cotton goods, salt, and iron. Many of the shops
-were well stocked with English manufactures.
-The place is governed by an <i>Ouvidor</i>, or justice
-of the peace, and a military officer. In its neighbourhood
-there is a quarry of soft, whitish granite,
-from which mill-stones are made; but, from
-the specimens I saw of it, the material must be
-very unfit for such a purpose.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived, about four in the evening, at a poor
-place called Resequinha, the owner of which made
-every provision for us which his scanty means afforded.
-He dispatched a negro to gather grass
-for the mules, which is here incredibly scarce; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-killed us a fowl or two for dinner. The time previous
-to that meal hung heavy on our hands; there
-were no birds to afford us an hour’s shooting, and
-we had no source of diversion, except that which
-the lively fancy and inexhaustible humor of my
-companion afforded. We dined heartily about
-seven o’clock on stewed fowls and mandioca, which
-fully supplied the want of bread. That article is
-so extremely scarce in these parts, that even the
-populous village of Barbacena, though situated
-in the richest corn-district of the province, could
-furnish us only one rusk. Being overcome with
-weariness, we prepared for rest. One of our beds
-was placed on the table, the other on a dried hide
-stretched upon the clay floor. These were miserable
-accommodations; but sleep knows little distinction
-between the hovel and the palace, and a
-man thoroughly disposed may enjoy it as soundly
-in one as in the other. So it was with my companion;
-he was in a profound slumber within five
-minutes after he had lain down, in despite of the
-rough materials of which his pallet was composed.
-Mine prevented me from sleeping, and compelled
-me to sit up during most of the night; it consisted,
-as well as his, of the leaves of Indian
-corn crammed into a bag, with the mouth tied up;
-but the careless negro who performed that operation
-had neglected to pick out the core or pith from
-which the grain is rubbed, so that there was no
-finding an easy posture upon it. I sat musing on
-the absolute wretchedness of every thing around;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-a miserable lamp hung over our heads and threw
-a dismal glimmer about the apartment; the floor
-was uneven and broken into holes; the table,
-on which we had dined, consisted of one large
-plank of a quality not discoverable without the
-assistance of a scraper, as it had never been
-cleaned since it was made; there was not a chair
-or any thing resembling a seat, except an antique
-bench with a back to it, fixed at a distance on one
-side of the table, so that some of the guests had
-to take their repast standing. The very beasts in
-the out-houses were better provided for than the
-master, if we might judge from the healthy condition
-of those we saw, whose slothful apathy
-could be matched only with that of the swine
-they fed.</p>
-
-<p>We left Resequinha an hour after day-break,
-and entered on some clayey ground which caused
-our mules to come down frequently, as they were
-unshod. The day being Sunday we found some
-difficulty in procuring fresh mules, as they were
-all engaged in taking their masters to mass. After
-proceeding about a league and a half we arrived
-at the <i>fazenda</i> do Gama, consisting of a good
-mansion and some out-buildings. The house,
-which is the residence of a major, stands on an
-eminence in a fine open country, beautifully interspersed
-with clumps of trees and small patches
-of wood, but wholly uncultivated and destitute
-of inclosures. The land appeared much burnt
-up, and ill supplied with water, but the vallies,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-we were told, abounded in numerous streams and
-rivulets. Having stopped at the door, we were
-saluted by the voice of a fine motherly-looking
-lady, apparently about forty, who invited us to
-alight, and we readily obeyed, having occasion
-to change our baggage-mule. Two young ladies,
-the daughters of the one whom we had first seen,
-came on the gallery to welcome us. As the morning
-was cool, they were covered with purple
-mantles of baize, which left only a part of the face
-exposed, but shewed us sufficient to prove that
-the females of this province, here called <i>mineras</i>,
-are above mediocrity in personal charms. This
-opinion was confirmed on entering the house,
-where these ladies appeared to much greater advantage;
-they were in the bloom of health, rather
-tall in stature, and in their air and gestures extremely
-graceful. We had just entered into conversation
-when in came our soldier to announce
-that the baggage-mule was loaded, and that the
-day was so far spent as barely to allow time enough
-to reach the next station before night. This
-honest fellow for the first time on our journey was
-the bearer of unwelcome news. I asked him why
-he did not bring us to this mansion last night, instead
-of halting at the miserable dog-hole of Resequinha.
-“Ah, Sir,” replied he, “the mules
-could travel no further.” “Then you might have
-told us of this delightful place, and we would have
-walked hither had it been double the distance.”
-How much more merrily we should have passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-the evening, thought I, on observing two fine
-guitars hung up in a closet that was accidentally
-opened. The mother, who now came in, gave
-us an invitation to stop, regretting that her husband,
-being confined by illness to his bed, was unable
-to pay his respects to us in person. We expressed
-our disappointment at not being able to
-avail ourselves of this invitation, and again related
-how ill we had passed the night at Resequinha.
-“Yes,” observed one of the daughters
-very facetiously, “men alone make very insipid
-society; you would have been much better here,
-would not you?” Our soldier again came to say
-that the baggage-mule was out of sight, and that
-we should be in danger of losing our way. The
-mule, said I, may surely for once fall lame to accommodate
-us, or some lucky misfortune may occur
-to give us a pretext for prolonging our stay.
-We were at length obliged to yield to the pressing
-remonstrances of our soldier, and took leave of the
-good lady and her amiable daughters, promising to
-visit them on our return. We pursued our journey
-with reluctance, over a dreary tract of country,
-passing at intervals through small woods, where
-we shot a few wood-peckers, here called <i>carpinteros</i>,
-a name sufficiently characteristic of their
-peculiar habits. The incessant hacking which
-they make with their beaks may be heard at a considerable
-distance. No incident worth mentioning
-occurred in this day’s journey, which terminated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-at Bandeira de Coelho, where we arrived at
-sun-set. A more dirty and slovenly place, in a
-finer situation, we never visited. It was with
-great difficulty that my negro-boy procured us a
-pot of any sort to dress us a fowl and some beans
-for supper. The kitchen was a mere dirt-hole,
-blackened with soot and smoke above and all
-around, and covered with mud and filth below:
-the cooking utensil was a pot placed on three
-stones and heated by a fire of green wood. The
-owner was very assiduous in helping us, and
-heartily desired us to make free. He was reputed
-to be a man of considerable property, which he
-had accumulated by selling corn for the troops of
-mules which frequently stop here, and are generally
-better accommodated than his biped guests.
-We procured something in the form of a supper,
-and passed the night under the same sort of shed
-as that which sheltered our cattle, and on bedding
-very little superior in quality to theirs.</p>
-
-<p>The experience of this night completed the catalogue
-of inconveniences to which we had been
-exposed since the commencement of our journey.
-I would advise every traveller who pursues the
-same route, to provide himself with a hammock
-and blankets, a stock of tea, sugar, candles, liquors,
-soap, and salt, two kettles, and a drinking-horn,
-(for in few places will he meet with any of these
-articles), as well as an umbrella, which can by no
-means be dispensed with. This equipage, (together<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-with proper instruments), is necessary for
-a person who travels to make observations on the
-country, and will require two baggage-mules to
-carry it.</p>
-
-<p>We set out next morning at six, without breakfast,
-not being able to procure either coffee or
-milk; and proceeding six miles, through a fine
-open country, arrived at a large village called
-Louza, containing full two thousand inhabitants.
-It is well built, but as I was informed, has much
-declined from its former consequence, which it
-owed principally to the rich mines in its vicinity,
-now almost exhausted. We procured a tolerable
-breakfast of coffee and eggs at a <i>vend</i>; and, while
-we partook of it, were much amused by the
-numbers of inhabitants, who crowded the door
-in eager curiosity to see us, asking a variety
-of questions of a political nature, and forming
-endless conjectures respecting the object of our
-journey.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving this village about eleven o’clock, we
-proceeded along a range of mountains composed
-of argillaceous schistus, and passed a hill covered
-with micaceous iron ore: in one part of it there
-was a break that showed marks of stratification,
-which appeared vertical, or it was probably a
-strong vein of ferruginous matter, which traversed
-the mountain. I was not a little surprised
-to find that the road, for above half a mile, was
-covered with rich oxide of iron.</p>
-
-<p>We passed a place called Alto de Virginia,
-where, as well as in the vicinity, to a considerable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-extent, there are gold-washings, which bear the
-general name of Lavras de Virginia. I examined
-the heaps of debris, but found in them nothing
-but rounded quartz and ferruginous matter.
-Journeying half a league further, we came to
-the gold-washings of S. Antonio do Ouro Branco,
-where hillocks of the same materials abounded;
-and we soon afterwards entered the poor and
-almost deserted village of the same name, containing
-about five hundred souls. We had an interview
-with the commandant, but could obtain
-nothing in the way of refreshment; indeed the
-few people we saw were so needy, that far from
-being able to supply our wants, they seemed to
-crave all we had to satisfy their own, and eyed us
-as if they expected we had brought them something.
-Glad to get away from this wretched
-place, we continued our journey through a succession
-of fine vallies, and arrived about four
-o’clock at the foot of a tremendous mountain,
-overhung with clouds. The ascent was so steep
-that, judging it in vain to attempt to ride, I
-dismounted; our soldier, who was a lighter man
-than myself, exchanged mules with me, and up we
-went in a zig-zag direction for half an hour, when
-we found ourselves immersed in a thick cloud,
-which for some time hindered us from seeing our
-way. We were at length able to proceed, and in
-many parts had to mount up ledges nearly two
-feet perpendicular, which we performed without
-alighting, as our saddles were secured from slipping
-off behind by a strong strap passing round<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-the mule’s neck. It is considered very unsafe to
-dismount in these ascents, for the animals go much
-less steady when led than when ridden. At seven
-o’clock we reached the summit, where, though
-night was setting in, we found it necessary to rest
-half an hour, and then proceeded a league in the
-dark without our baggage-mule, which, being unable
-to keep pace with us, had been left in charge
-of two men and the negro-boy. We were under
-little apprehension for the safety of our property,
-though, as we afterwards learnt, the poor animal
-was down above twenty times in the course of
-the ascent. About eight o’clock we reached Alto
-do Morro, our baggage arriving about an hour
-after. Here we halted for the night in one of the
-best inns we had hitherto seen, the hostess of
-which soon provided us with a comfortable supper,
-of which we partook very heartily, and
-passed an agreeable evening. The good order
-and propriety which reigned in this inn confirmed
-an observation we had often made, that of all
-houses on the road those under the direction of
-females were managed with most ability, and certainly
-afforded the best accommodations. I may
-add, that there prevailed in them that evident disposition
-and wish to oblige which generally makes
-up for any deficiency, and by appealing to a
-stranger’s liberality makes him satisfied with whatever
-is set before him.</p>
-
-<p>The land, through which we this day passed,
-appeared much burnt up, being in general very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-bare of vegetable soil, and having few trees to
-defend it against the heat of the sun. In the
-mountains we observed several slips or breaks,
-which presented abrupt and singular masses lying in
-all directions like confused heaps of architectural
-ruins, disclosing veins of soft talc, and some <i>cascalho</i>,
-poor in gold. The stratum was argillaceous
-schistus, very ferruginous, and friable. At
-the bottom of these slips, which appeared to be
-caused by the disrupture of one part of the
-mountain from the other (probably through the
-infiltration of water), there were small streams,
-which in rainy weather swell into torrents, and
-burst through their channels with great velocity.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, it being our intention to reach
-Villa Rica before night, we set out at an early
-hour, notwithstanding the cold cloudy weather
-and the heavy dew which prevailed. We passed
-through a bare and uneven tract of country, presenting
-similar characteristics to those above described.
-Near a place called Capão, I rode down
-a hill covered with rich iron ore in such profusion,
-that tons might have been gathered from the surface.
-Proceeding a short distance farther, we
-arrived at a house, the owner of which, we afterwards
-understood, possessed a topaz-mine in
-the neighbourhood. The mention of a <i>mine</i> of
-topazes excited my curiosity, as it gave me the
-idea of a vein worked under-ground, and containing
-those substances in the matrix as originally
-formed. On expressing to the owner my desire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-to see the works, he kindly undertook to accompany
-me to the spot. After walking about half a
-mile up the mountain just mentioned, I was
-shown two breaks or slips, in which my guide informed
-me were the topaz-mines. We entered
-one of them, which was in extent little short of
-two acres; the argillaceous schistus, which formed
-the upper stratum, appeared in a variety of
-stages, the greater part migrating into micaceous
-schistus. In one part I observed two negroes
-poking in the little soft veins, which the slips
-disclosed, with a piece of rusty iron, probably
-part of an old hoop; and on enquiring what they
-were about, I was informed they were the <i>miners</i>,
-searching for topazes. I took one of their instruments,
-and on using it as they did, found these
-veins to contain a very minute micaceous substance
-approaching to earthy talc, also some
-quartz, and large crystals of specular iron ore. I
-had the good fortune to find two or three topazes,
-which, as they had only one pyramid each,
-and appeared fractured, I judged to be out of
-their original place. It had hitherto been my
-opinion, that all the topazes which I had seen at
-Rio de Janeiro, or elsewhere, and which were of
-similar form to these, had been broken from the
-matrix by the miners; I now, therefore, fully expected
-to meet with some having double pyramids,
-but, to my great disappointment, all that I
-found were entirely detached. From a great
-quantity (at least a cart-load) of inferior topazes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-which were afterwards shown to me in the
-owner’s house, (and any number of which I might
-have taken away), I could not select one with a
-double pyramid. They informed me that sometimes,
-but very rarely, topazes had been found attached
-to quartz, but even in these instances
-the quartz was fractured and out of its original
-place<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>. The topazes which were shewn me, were
-very imperfect, and full of flaws. The negroes
-employed in these works were superintended by
-two Creolians, who received what they found.</p>
-
-<p>After I had collected a variety of specimens,
-we returned to our mules, continued our journey
-over bleak and sterile mountains, through roads
-covered with dust, and arrived about three o’clock
-in sight of Villa Rica. Though the town stands
-on an eminence rather steep and lofty, the approach
-to it is not noble or striking, neither is
-there any thing in a near view of it, which, to the
-eye of a traveller, corresponds with the grandeur
-of its name. The environs, unlike those of opulent
-towns in general, exhibited few signs of cultivation;
-not an acre of good pasture was any
-where to be seen, nor an inclosure of any kind.
-We arrived a little after four, and alighted at one
-of the first houses to the left, on entering the
-town; it had been recommended to us as one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-the best inns, but we found, that, in point of
-cleanliness and accommodation, report greatly
-overrated it. The owner, being a priest, entrusted
-the entire management to a mulatto, who
-acted as if he was seldom under the eye of his
-master. Having ordered dinner, we walked into
-the town for about a mile; the streets were very
-irregular, and so badly paved as to give us no
-favorable idea of the opulence of the inhabitants.
-As night was coming on, and we felt fatigued, we
-postponed delivering our letters until next day,
-and returned to our inn. Our dinner, which was
-served up in as slovenly a manner as we had ever
-witnessed, even in the poorest <i>rancho</i> on the road,
-consisted of some stewed beef and a fowl. The
-bread was tolerable, but dear. Being little inclined
-to sit up after our repast, we retired early
-to rest; our rooms, though destitute of almost
-every appropriate convenience, were better than
-those to which we had of late been accustomed.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the fatigue of the journey,
-which heartily disposed me to sleep, my mind was
-for some time occupied in reflecting on the place
-at which we had now arrived, and which had
-long been the theme of our wonder and conjecture.
-Villa Rica&mdash;the rich village! The capital
-of the province of Minas Geraes, and the seat of
-its government; a place which had for many years
-been reputed the richest in Brazil, as to it was
-brought all the gold found in the vast district<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-around. Impatient to see some vestiges of that
-splendor which its name implies, I slept but little,
-and rose at an early hour. We, with difficulty,
-obtained our breakfast, consisting of coffee and
-eggs, with bread and English butter, after which
-we dressed and went to deliver our letters.</p>
-
-<p>Our arrival being announced, we were directed
-to present ourselves at the audience-chambers,
-which form part of a large edifice, containing also
-the post-office and other public rooms for the
-transaction of Government business. We were
-introduced to the General of the Forces, and to
-Dr. Lucas Antonio Monteiro de Barras, Judge of
-the Supreme Court; the latter held the principal
-authority in the absence of the Viceroy, who was
-gone to Rio de Janeiro, another from Goyazes
-being expected shortly to succeed him. We were
-honored with a most handsome reception, and
-various houses were put in our choice, with a
-kind invitation to make use of any of them during
-our stay, but we preferred taking lodgings in
-the centre of the town, within three minutes’ walk
-of the Palace, in Rua Dereita, the very Bond
-Street of Villa Rica.</p>
-
-<p>After our interview with the Judge, we devoted
-some hours to a perambulation of the
-town, and returned much fatigued to dine at our
-inn. In the evening I paid a visit to the vicar,
-who gave me a hearty welcome, and in the usual
-style of Portuguese compliment, told me his
-house was mine. The saying, had it been verified,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-would have put me in possession of one of
-the best mansions in Villa Rica. At tea the
-worthy pastor introduced me to several officers,
-among whom was the late governor of the Diamond
-district, who gave me much information
-concerning it, and shewed me an aqua-marina,
-which had been found in one of the washings.
-It was a perfect hexagonal prism, full seven
-inches in length, and three quarters of an inch
-in diameter, clear and free from flaws. After
-some hours of very agreeable conversation, the
-party broke up, and it being dark, I was conducted
-to my inn by a servant of the vicar’s, with
-his lantern. At the corners of the streets, along
-which we passed, there were groups of the lower
-order of people offering their prayers; in a niche
-above them was a figure of the Virgin, with tapers
-burning before it. A voice in a low solemn
-tone uttered the vespers, the responses were made
-by the multitude. I took off my hat as I passed,
-knowing that such a token of reverence is always
-expected.</p>
-
-<p>The next day was occupied chiefly in removing
-our equipage to our new lodgings in Rua Dereita;
-to this service our soldiers were particularly
-attentive, and left us nothing to do which
-they could do for us. On the day following we
-were honored with visits from the judge, the
-general, the vicar, and many of the principal inhabitants,
-all of whom testified their respect for
-us in the most polite manner. Many of them afterwards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-sent me presents of fine sugar, coffee,
-sweetmeats, cheese, and some good bread. One
-gentleman, to give me a proof of the richness of
-the soil and salubrity of the climate, sent me a
-cabbage, full fourteen inches in diameter, when
-stripped of its outside leaves; a finer vegetable
-never was produced.</p>
-
-<p>When our leisure permitted, we took excursions
-to view the town and its vicinity, sometimes
-on horseback and sometimes on foot, generally
-going and returning in a different direction. It
-is situated on the side of a large mountain, connected
-with others forming an immense chain, of
-which it is one of the highest. Most of the
-streets range, in steps, as it were, from the base
-to the summit, and are crossed by others which
-lead up the acclivity. It is most admirably supplied
-with water, which is conducted into almost
-every house in a most convenient and pleasant
-manner. In the streets are many fountains,
-which, though not to be compared with those of
-Italy in architectural taste, are well constructed.
-One cistern in particular contained water which
-tasted strongly of sulphate of iron; the natives
-consider it serviceable in the cure of cutaneous
-diseases, and frequently bathe in it. The town is
-divided into two parishes, and contains a population
-of about twenty thousand inhabitants, of
-whom there are more whites than blacks. The
-climate is delightful, and perhaps equal to that of
-Naples. Though the latitude of the place is only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-20° south, yet owing to its elevated site, the temperature
-of the air is generally moderate. The
-thermometer never exceeds 82° in the shade and
-rarely below 48°, but its usual range is from 64° to
-80° in summer, and from 48° to 70° in winter.
-The greatest heats prevail in January. Owing
-to its great elevation various changes from heat to
-cold prevail in the same day, and there are frequent
-showers of rain. Thunder-storms are common,
-but by no means violent. The sun is sometimes
-clouded by dews and mist so dense as not
-to subside until the forenoon is far advanced.</p>
-
-<p>The gardens here are laid out with great taste,
-and from the peculiarity of their construction
-present a curious spectacle. As there is scarcely
-a piece of level ground, even ten yards square, on
-the whole side of the mountain, the defect has
-been remedied by cutting spaces one above another
-at regular distances, and supporting them
-by low walls, the top of one being on a level with
-the base of that next above it. An easy flight of
-steps leads from one level to the other. These
-terraces seemed to me to be the very kingdom
-of Flora, for never did I before see such a profusion
-of delicate flowers. Here were also excellent
-vegetables of every kind, such as artichokes, asparagus,
-spinach, cabbage, kidney-beans, and potatoes.
-There are many indigenous fruits which
-might be much improved by a better system of
-horticulture. The peach appears to be the only
-exotic fruit which has been hitherto introduced;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-it florishes amazingly. I have frequently seen
-the branches of the trees so loaded as to require
-perpendicular support.</p>
-
-<p>The town is of considerable extent, but by no
-means so well peopled as when the mines were
-rich. Few of the inhabitants have any employment
-except the shopkeepers, who are indeed a
-numerous class. English woollens were by no
-means dear, superfine cloth being at 30s. to 35s.
-per yard; coatings, &amp;c. nearly as cheap as in England;
-common cotton prints at 1s. 6d. to 2s. per
-yard; hats, handkerchiefs, kerseymeres, and Manchester
-piece goods in great plenty. There
-seemed, indeed, to be a glut of English merchandise
-and produce of all sorts, except earthenware,
-hams, porter, and butter, which were dear
-on account of the risk of carriage. Common Figueira
-wine was 3s. 6d. the bottle. The shops
-that sold the produce of the country were few in
-number and very indifferent. There were a great
-many tailors, shoe-makers, tin-workers, and venders
-of hardware, some smiths, and no inconsiderable
-number of saddlers. In a country where
-every one is a horseman, this trade must, one
-would imagine, take the lead of most others.
-The saddles that were shewn me here, were of
-a much superior make to those which I saw in
-Rio de Janeiro. I was surprised to find no
-workers in gold in a place so renowned for the
-production of that precious metal, but I was informed
-that the trade was prohibited by law, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-prevent the gold from being worked before it was
-permuted.</p>
-
-<p>The market of Villa Rica was but ill supplied,
-notwithstanding the fertility of the district around
-it. Pulse and vegetables for the table were
-scarce, even grass was an article in great demand<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>,
-and milk was as dear as it is in London. Poultry
-sold at from 3s. 6d. to 4s. 6d. per couple. Beef
-of a tolerable kind, but by no means good, might
-be had at 1-1/2d. per pound. Pork was very fine:
-mutton was utterly unknown. Tallow was exceedingly
-dear, and candles were more than double
-the price at which they sell in this country.</p>
-
-<p>Though our arrival in the town excited some
-surprise, as we were the first of our nation who
-had visited it, yet the people did not regard us
-entirely as strangers, many of them having seen
-Englishmen in their frequent intercourse with
-Rio de Janeiro. My worthy companion had letters
-to some of the principal shopkeepers, which
-we took an early opportunity of delivering. When
-we spoke to them of the richness of the country,
-and of the quantity of gold with which it was
-reputed to abound, they seemed glad of the opportunity
-of telling us, that they believed the
-gold was all sent to England, adding that their
-capital ought now to be termed Villa Pobre, instead
-of Villa Rica. Indeed we were surprised
-to observe the comparative poverty which prevailed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-among them. Of above two thousand habitations,
-which the town contained, a considerable
-proportion was untenanted; and the rents
-of the rest were continually lowering. Houses
-were to be purchased at one half their real value;
-for instance, a house built a few years ago at
-one thousand pounds cost, would not now sell for
-more than five hundred pounds.</p>
-
-<p>The mountain on which the town stands, appeared
-to me in length from eight to nine miles,
-in every part narrow and almost insulated, being
-surrounded by deep ravines. In riding over it in
-various directions, I observed it to be composed
-of argillaceous schistus in almost every gradation,
-migrating from the compact blue slate into micaceous
-schistus. In some parts it lies in regular
-strata, in others it appears in confused masses.
-The slate is sometimes, but not very generally,
-used for paving, roofing, and other similar purposes.
-In some parts I noticed a few slender,
-confused, and irregular quartzose veins of little
-consequence, a large proportion of ferruginous
-accumulations and stalactitic aggregates, together
-with pyrites, and a considerable quantity of
-quartz pebbles of all sizes. That side on which
-the town is built presents many small hills, which
-form a number of gulleys in narrow ravines.
-Numerous streamlets flow down from the springs
-in the mountain in various channels, and in rainy
-weather swell into cascades; they form a rivulet
-at its base called Rio do Carmo, which in its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-course from hence is joined by many others, and
-changes its name first into that of Rio S. Jose,
-and then into Rio Doce. Of the latter I shall
-have occasion in the sequel to speak more at
-large.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c11" id="c11">CHAP. XI.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Origin and present State of Villa Rica.&mdash;Account
-of the Mint.&mdash;Visit to the City of Mariana.&mdash;Excursion
-to the Fazendas of Barro and Castro,
-belonging to His Excellency the Conde de Linhares.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">THE history of an establishment, which, twenty
-years after its foundation, was reputed the richest
-place on the globe, was an object of considerable
-interest with me, and I made many enquiries respecting
-it from some of the best informed men
-on the spot. It appears that the first discovery
-of this once rich mountain was effected by the enterprising
-spirit of the Paulistas, who, of all the
-colonists in Brazil, retained the largest share of
-that ardent and indefatigable zeal for discovery,
-which characterized the Lusitanians of former
-days. They penetrated from their capital into
-these regions, braving every hardship, and encountering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-every difficulty which a savage country,
-infested by still more savage inhabitants, opposed
-to them. They cut their way through
-impervious woods, carrying their provisions with
-them, and occasionally cultivating small patches
-of land to afford them food to retreat to, in case
-of necessity, as well as to keep up a communication
-with their city S. Paulo. Every inch of
-ground was disputed by the barbarous Indians,
-here called Buticudas, who were constantly
-either attacking them openly or lying in ambush,
-and but too frequently succeeded in surprising
-some of them, or their negroes, whom they immediately
-sacrificed to their horrible appetite for
-human flesh. They believed the negroes to be the
-great monkeys of the wood. The bones of the unfortunate
-sufferers were frequently found exposed,
-shocking testimonies of the barbarity of their
-murderers, whom the Paulistas, roused to revenge,
-invariably shot, wherever they met them. These
-examples of vengeance answered their desired
-end; the Indians, terrified as well by the noise as
-by the fatal effect of fire-arms, fled with precipitation,
-believing that the white men commanded
-lightning and thunder.</p>
-
-<p>It does not appear that in exploring this territory
-they received any assistance whatever from
-the Aborigines: they followed the course of rivers,
-occasionally finding gold, of which they skimmed
-the surface, and continued to proceed until they
-arrived at the mountain which is our present subject.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-Its riches arrested their course; they immediately
-erected temporary houses and began their
-operations. The principal men of the party that
-first settled here, were Antonio Dias, Bartholomo
-Rocinho, Antonio Ferreira (<i>filho</i>) and Garcia
-Ruis. It appears that they took the most direct
-way to the place, for the roads they then opened
-are the same which are still used. The fame of
-their success soon reached the city of S. Paulo;
-fresh adventurers arrived in great numbers, bringing
-with them all the negroes they had means to
-purchase. Other adventurers went from S. Paulo
-to Rio de Janeiro to procure more negroes, their
-own city being drained; and thus the news of the
-lately discovered gold mountain being made known
-in the Brazilian capital, men of all descriptions
-went in crowds to this land of promise by the way
-of S. Paulo, which was the only route then known.
-The first settlers might have prevented the exposure
-of their good fortune, had they been able
-to moderate their joy, and consented to act in
-concert; but as gold was in such great abundance,
-every individual appropriated a lot of ground, and
-thus became a capitalist. Each strove which
-should make the most of his treasure in the
-shortest time, and thus there was a continual demand
-for more negroes, more iron, &amp;c. and, in
-the general eagerness to obtain them, the secret,
-which all were interested in keeping, was disclosed.
-The Paulistas independent in spirit, and
-proud of their wealth, were desirous of giving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-laws to the new-comers; but the latter determining
-to oppose this measure, formed themselves
-into a party under the guidance of Manuel Nunes
-Vianna, an adventurer of some consequence, who
-strenuously asserted their claim to equal rights
-and advantages. Disputes arose on both sides,
-and were at length aggravated into hostilities,
-which proved unfavorable to the Paulistas, the
-greater part of whom fled to a considerable station
-of their own, and there awaited reinforcements.
-Vianna and his followers, without loss of
-time, went in pursuit of their foes, whom they
-found on a plain near the site of St. João d’El Rey.
-The two parties met on the border of a river, and
-a sanguinary battle took place, which ended in the
-defeat of the Paulistas, who afterwards made the
-best terms they could. The slain were buried on
-the margin of the river, which, from that circumstance,
-took the name of Rio das Mortes.</p>
-
-<p>The Paulistas, bent on revenge, but weakened
-by defeat, appealed to the sovereign, King Pedro,
-denouncing Vianna and his followers as rebels,
-who were attempting to take the district to themselves,
-and set up an independent government.
-The King’s ministers apprised of the state of
-affairs, and learning by report the immense riches
-of the country, immediately sent a chief, with a
-competent body of troops, to take the advantage
-of the strife between the two parties; which in a
-country tenable by a few men, on account of its
-numerous strong-holds, was a most fortunate circumstance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-The name of this chief was Albuquerque;
-a man of enterprise and perseverance,
-in all respects qualified for the service on which
-he was sent. His appearance at first occasioned
-much confusion and discontent among both parties;
-and though he was not openly opposed, yet he
-was in continual alarm. The Paulistas now saw
-that the riches which they in conjunction with
-their rivals might have retained, were about to
-be seized by a third party, which would reduce
-them both to subordination. Disturbances prevailed
-for some time, but reinforcements continually
-arriving from Government, tranquillity was
-at length perfectly established; and in the year
-1711, a regular town began to be formed; a government-house,
-a mint, and a depôt for arms
-were built. A code of laws was enacted for the
-regulation of the mines; all gold-dust found was
-ordered to be delivered to officers appointed for
-that purpose; a fifth in weight was taken for the
-King, and the remaining four parts were purified,
-melted into ingots at the expense of Government,
-then assayed, marked according to their value,
-and delivered to the owners, with a certificate to
-render them current. For the greater convenience
-of trade, gold-dust was likewise permitted to
-circulate for small payments. Notwithstanding
-these strict regulations, a considerable quantity
-of the precious metal in its original state found
-its way to Rio de Janeiro, Bahia, and other ports,
-clandestinely, without paying the royal fifth, until<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-Government, apprised of this illicit traffic, established
-Registers in various parts for the examination
-of all passengers, and stationed soldiers to
-patrole the roads. By these means, gold in immense
-quantities was seized and confiscated; the
-persons on whom any was found, forfeited all their
-property, and, unless they had friends of great
-influence, were sent as convicts to Africa for life.
-The greatest disgrace was attached to the name
-of smuggler; and such was the rigor of the law
-against offenders of this description, that every
-person quitting the district was obliged to take a
-certificate stating whither he was going, and
-what he carried with him. This regulation is still
-in force, and is rigorously observed.</p>
-
-<p>Villa Rica soon enjoyed a considerable trade
-with Rio de Janeiro; the returns were negroes,
-iron, woollens, salt, provisions of various kinds,
-and wine, all which at that time bore amazingly
-high profits.</p>
-
-<p>About the year 1713, when Dr. Bras da Silva was
-appointed governor, the quantity of gold produced
-was so considerable that the royal fifth amounted
-to above half a million sterling annually. The
-mountain became pierced like a honey-comb, as
-the miners worked every soft part they could find,
-and penetrated as far as they could, conveying
-the <i>cascalho</i> which they dug out to a convenient
-place for washing. In rainy weather the
-torrents of water running down the sides of the
-mountain, carried away much earthy matter containing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-delicate particles of gold, which settled
-in the ground near its base. When the waters
-abated, this rich deposit gave employment to
-numbers of the poorer sort of people, who took
-it away and washed it at their convenience.</p>
-
-<p>Antonio Dias, the person already mentioned as
-one of the leaders of the Paulistas, who discovered
-the place, having become extremely rich,
-built a fine church, and dying soon after, bequeathed
-to it considerable funds. It bears his
-name. Five or six others were begun and soon
-finished, as neither wood nor stone was wanting;
-and the inhabitants were all ready to contribute a
-share of their property, and to employ their negroes
-in furtherance of these pious works. A
-law highly creditable to the wisdom of the Portuguese
-government was now enacted, to prohibit
-friars from entering the territories of the
-mines. What treasures were thus saved to the
-state, and what a number of persons were thus
-continued in useful labor, who would else have become
-burthensome to the community!</p>
-
-<p>The town now underwent many improvements;
-its streets were more regularly built, and some
-parts of the side of the mountain were levelled, to
-afford more convenient room for the construction
-of houses, and the laying out of gardens. Reservoirs
-were formed, from which water was distributed
-by means of conduits to all parts, and
-public fountains were erected in the most convenient
-and central situations. The mint and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-smelting-houses were enlarged, and rendered more
-commodious for the transaction of business.
-About this period the inhabitants amounted to
-twelve thousand or upwards; those who possessed
-mines, were either the first settlers or their descendants,
-and as the best part of the district was
-occupied, the new adventurers who continued to
-arrive from time to time, were obliged to enter
-into the service of the existing owners until they
-had learned their methods of working, after
-which they generally went in search of fresh
-mines, proceeding along the water-courses and
-ravines, where they sometimes discovered new
-sources of wealth. Between the years 1730 and
-1750, the mines were in the height of their prosperity;
-the King’s fifth, during some years of that
-period, is said to have amounted to at least a million
-sterling annually.</p>
-
-<p>The mines which produced this immense
-wealth, at length became gradually less abundant;
-and, as the precious metal disappeared,
-numbers of the miners retired, some to the mother-country,
-loaded with riches, which tempted
-fresh adventurers, and many to Rio de Janeiro
-and other sea-ports, where they employed their
-large capitals in commerce.</p>
-
-<p>Villa Rica, at the present day, scarcely retains
-a shadow of its former splendor. Its inhabitants,
-with the exception of the shopkeepers, are void of
-employment; they totally neglect the fine country
-around them, which, by proper cultivation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-would amply compensate for the loss of the
-wealth which their ancestors drew from its bosom.
-Their education, their habits, their hereditary
-prejudices, alike unfit them for active life;
-perpetually indulging in visionary prospects of
-sudden wealth, they fancy themselves exempted
-from that universal law of nature which ordains
-that man shall live by the sweat of his brow. In
-contemplating the fortunes accumulated by their
-predecessors, they overlook the industry and perseverance
-which obtained them, and entirely lose
-sight of the change of circumstances which renders
-those qualities now doubly necessary. The
-successors of men who rise to opulence from
-small beginnings, seldom follow the example set
-before them, even when trained to it; how then
-should a Creolian, reared in idleness and ignorance,
-feel any thing of the benefits of industry!
-His negroes constitute his principal property, and
-them he manages so ill, that the profits of their
-labor hardly defray the expenses of their maintenance:
-in the regular course of nature they become
-old and unable to work, yet he continues in
-the same listless and slothful way, or sinks into a
-state of absolute inactivity, not knowing what to
-do from morning to night. This deplorable degeneracy
-is almost the universal characteristic of
-the descendants of the original settlers; every
-trade is occupied either by mulattoes or negroes,
-both of which classes seem superior in intellect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-to their masters, because they make a better use
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>During my stay here, I paid frequent visits to
-the mint, and was liberally permitted by the officers
-to see every process performed there. In
-the smelting-house were eight or ten small blast-furnaces,
-in form much resembling blacksmiths’
-hearths. The fuel used is charcoal. When a
-quantity of gold-dust is brought, (no matter whether
-large or small), say, for instance, six ounces, it
-is first permuted, and a fifth taken for the Prince;
-the rest is put in a Hessian crucible, about three
-inches in diameter, which is immediately placed
-in the furnace. A quantity of corrosive sublimate
-is then put to it, which, on being heated, exhales
-very strong fumes; the scoriæ, if any be formed,
-are taken off with a pair of tongs, and more
-sublimate is added if required. Ebullition sometimes
-occurs, in which case the crucible is covered
-with a bit of common tile. As soon as the
-mercury is evaporated, the gold is poured into an
-ingot-mould, previously rubbed with animal fat;
-it is afterwards turned out into a tub of water.
-The ingot generally, in some part or other, has
-mercury attached to it, (which it seizes immediately),
-and the part of the gold thus affected
-assumes the appearance of lead<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>. To remove this,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-they hold it in a strong fire with a pair of tongs
-until the mercury is evaporated. It is afterwards
-sent to the assay-master, who first compares it on
-the touchstone with gold bars of different alloys,
-ascertained and marked, and then assays it. The
-two methods being found to agree, the assay-master
-stamps upon the ingot its degree of fineness,
-(called <i>toque</i>), also its weight, its number,
-the name of the place, and the year. It is then
-registered in a book kept for that purpose, and a
-copy of the entry is made out on a slip of printed
-paper, in which the ingot is wrapped, and delivered
-to the owner for circulation. The operation
-of melting a given quantity seldom occupies
-more than ten minutes or a quarter of an hour;
-that of cupelling about double the time: but I
-have seen men deliver their gold-dust, and receive
-it in a circulating form in less than an hour; so
-that little delay takes place, and, as there are six
-furnaces, the bringers of gold have seldom to wait
-for their turn. The pale color and low quality
-of various bars of gold are always imputed to the
-silver, platina, or other metal contained in them.
-I have seen some as low as sixteen carats, and
-others as fine as 23-1/2 carats, which is within half a
-carat of what is denominated pure gold. Twenty-two
-is the standard, and gold exceeding that receives
-a premium according to its fineness.</p>
-
-<p>Considerable quantities of arsenical pyrites, said
-to be cobalt, were brought to me: I examined
-some specimens with the blow-pipe, but found no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-vestige of that metal, as the substance in no stage
-imparted a blue color to borax or glass. Iron
-pyrites is found about three miles from the town,
-where there is a very strong vein of it in quartz.
-Antimony was brought to me from some distance,
-and also a few bits of copper much oxidated,
-which were said to have been found in the washings
-at a place called Caldeiroens, but this I had great
-reason to doubt. Not a few impositions respecting
-the discovery of copper were attempted upon
-me. One man brought a rounded piece of jasper,
-about an ounce in weight, and with it half an
-ounce of copper, of the form and about the size
-of a duck-shot, which he told me had been produced
-by a smelting stone similar to the jasper then
-before me. I with much difficulty persuaded him
-that the person who had performed the operation
-for him had dropped a copper coin into the crucible.
-I was astonished to find that many persons,
-even gentlemen of some consequence, had a notion
-that almost every red-colored stone in the
-pavement of the streets was copper. One fellow
-had circulated a report that he possessed several
-pieces rich in that metal; but, on being sent for,
-and questioned closely, he stated that he had lost
-them in removing to another house. It is not
-surprising that tales of this kind should gain easy
-credit among persons stimulated by avarice and
-blinded by ignorance, and that the artful men
-who invent and propagate them, should be tempted
-by success to repeat their impositions, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-corrupt others by their example. The rich iron
-ores with which the district abounds, and of
-which I saw many specimens, might furnish employment
-much more profitable than washing for
-gold, or following other idle and chimerical speculations.</p>
-
-<p>During the first few days of my residence here,
-my soldiers procured me a quantity of the finest
-porcelain clay I have ever seen; that used in the
-manufactory at Sèvres, near Paris, is inferior to
-it. This clay is found at the foot of a mountain
-of argillaceous schistus, called S. Antonio, near
-Congonhas do Campo, in a vein accompanied with
-quartz and specular iron ore.</p>
-
-<p>A week after my arrival here, I was invited to
-go to a pottery about three miles distant. Crossing
-a bridge over the Rio do Carmo, at the foot
-of the town of Villa Rica, we ascended another
-steep mountain, on the summit of which I found
-iron ore in great quantities. Though not very
-rich, I have no doubt it would produce 25 <i>per
-cent.</i> of metal. The want of wood, which is here
-complained of as an objection to working it, might
-be remedied by planting; for this summit is a fine
-plain, which proper cultivation would render highly
-productive. At present, though so near the town,
-it lies totally neglected, without a single inclosure
-upon it. The pottery, at which we soon arrived,
-has been but recently established. The clay is
-used in its native state, without any admixture,
-and is cleared of its coarse particles by washing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-After the water has been let off and evaporated so
-as to leave it of a sufficient consistency, it is put
-on the wheel and formed into plates, mugs, jars,
-&amp;c. which are bulky and heavy, but by no means
-strong. They are rendered less fragile by being
-covered with an excellent thick glazing. The furnaces
-have no chimneys, but consist merely of a
-low arch in which are several vent holes. The
-glazing furnace is reverberatory, but it is so ill
-constructed as to destroy much fuel and produce
-little heat. Throughout the whole district there
-is good coarse clay, for bricks, tiles, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>I was here invited to taste some wine, made
-from grapes grown on the spot, which was excellent.
-A more happy situation than this vicinity
-affords for the growth of fruits of every kind can
-scarcely be imagined. The pear, the olive, and
-the mulberry would thrive here equally well with
-the grape, if proper pains were taken with them.
-A skilful agriculturist would with great ease, I
-am certain, bring it into such a state of improvement,
-as to serve the double purpose of a corn
-and dairy farm; excellent wheat might be grown,
-and a certain quantity of the land kept under artificial
-grasses for cutting. A fine stream of water
-runs through the whole, with a sufficient fall to
-turn mills.</p>
-
-<p>The principles of husbandry seem as little understood
-here as in any part of the territory through
-which we had hitherto travelled. Perhaps there
-is no country on the globe where the vicissitudes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-of plenty and scarcity do not prevail, and where
-human experience has not shewn the necessity of
-laying by a store in time of abundance, as a provision
-for a season of famine; but here this salutary
-practice is almost wholly disregarded. The
-cattle are turned out on the uninclosed tracts<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>,
-and left to subsist on whatever they can find. In
-the summer months, when the grass throughout
-the wide extent is burnt up, they flock to the margins
-of the rivulets as their last resource, which
-soon fails. Numbers of them die of famine, and
-those that survive the season are so exhausted
-and weakened, that they seldom thoroughly recover.</p>
-
-<p>A small mount in the vicinity of this pottery presented
-much ferruginous matter, and a heavy substance
-that appeared to me barytes in a botryoidal
-form, a specimen of which I took with me. Since
-my return to England it has been proved, by
-analysis, to be Wavellite, without fluoric acid.</p>
-
-<p>During my stay at Villa Rica, I rode to the
-city of Mariana, distant eight miles, by a tremendous
-and almost impassable road, along a ridge of
-mountains; and afterwards went thither by the general
-road which passes between two high hills, and
-for some distance along the river-side, all the way
-on the descent. The margins of the Rio do Carmo,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-which runs through the town, have been
-washed the whole way from Villa Rica: parties
-from which place held possession of this settlement
-as early as the year 1710, claiming it on account
-of the gold brought down from thence by
-the current of the river. It was made a bishop’s
-see about the year 1715, and was called Cidade
-de Mariana, in honor of the then reigning Queen
-of Portugal, the present Prince Regent’s grandmother.
-It is a small, neat, and well-built town,
-containing from six to seven thousand inhabitants.
-Here is a college for the education of young men
-destined for the church. The bishop is a prelate
-of exemplary character, and is beloved by all who
-know him. The place has very little trade, and
-depends chiefly on the mines and farms in its vicinity.
-Many miners reside here whose works are
-several leagues distant, some of them have also
-washings extending to the village of Camargo, situated
-beyond a large plain which stretches westward
-from the confines of the city.</p>
-
-<p>Having resided in Villa Rica nearly a fortnight,
-I expressed a desire to visit two estates, forty
-miles distant, known by the names of Barro and
-Castro, both belonging to the Conde de Linhares.
-Between the years 1730 and 1740 these estates
-produced much gold, and were then in the possession
-of Senhor Mathias Barboza, a settler of great
-respectability, who took up these lands and
-drove the Aborigines from them. He becoming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-very rich, sent his only daughter to Portugal to
-be educated, where she remained, and after his
-death inherited his whole property. She was married
-in Lisbon to a gentleman of the family of
-Sousa, and from them are descended the two noblemen
-of that name, who now hold high official
-situations under the Prince Regent. His Excellency
-the Conde’s steward furnished me and my
-worthy friend with mules, and Dr. Lucas, the
-Judge, obligingly ordered every necessary to be
-provided for our journey. We rode through Mariana,
-and arrived at Alto do Chapada, a village,
-three miles distant from it, situated on an elevation
-in the midst of a fine plain. We soon afterwards
-reached a very high and confined situation,
-between two perpendicular mountains, from whence
-we had a bird’s eye view of the village of S. Sebastian.
-From this steep we descended, with
-great difficulty, on foot, to the Rio do Carmo
-at its base, over which is a very high-arched and
-picturesque bridge. Passing this ravine we proceeded
-a full league by the river side, through a
-rich country abounding in fine sloping hills and
-fertile plains, watered by numerous streams,
-which flow into the river in various directions, and
-all of which bear vestiges of having been formerly
-washed for gold. The road-side exhibited similar
-remains, and seemed to have been at some period
-connected with the river, which, in this part, is
-as large as the Thames at Windsor. We passed
-through San Giatanha, a straggling, thinly peopled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-village, and proceeding about three miles
-farther, arrived at an indifferent house, called
-Lavras Velhas, where we halted for the night,
-having performed half our journey. The owner
-of this place found it difficult, with thirty or forty
-negroes, to maintain himself decently, though the
-land was susceptible of every species of culture,
-and needed only the hand of industry to render it
-productive. Every thing about the establishment
-exhibited a pitiful spectacle of neglect, indifference,
-and sloth. It is but justice to add, that he
-treated us with the greatest civility, and amply
-supplied our necessities.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Lavras Velhas at eight next morning,
-we passed Morro dos Arreaes, the country presenting
-still finer valleys and excellent timber, but totally
-destitute of cattle. Ascending a high hill, we
-were immerged for about an hour in a cloud, and
-exposed to some small rain, but not sufficient to
-penetrate our coats. This was the only rain we
-experienced on the road by day. In the night the
-rain sometimes fell plentifully. We observed some
-exceedingly large worms, stretched motionless on
-the road, which our guide told us were sure signs
-of wet weather. From this height we saw the
-Rio Gualacha, which, with another river, joins
-the Rio do Carmo about ten leagues below, and
-forms the Rio San Jose. Proceeding in that direction
-through a fine country, we reached Altos
-de St. Miguel, where the river last mentioned is
-of considerable width, but not deep. Its waters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-are extremely turbid, on account of the mud
-brought from the gold-washings along the banks,
-from its source to this place. These heights command
-a fine view of three windings of the river;
-at their base there are vestiges of one of the oldest
-and most extensive gold-washings, which yielded
-much treasure to its discoverer and proprietor,
-Senhor Mathias Barboza. The country is well
-wooded, but rather thinly peopled; I expressed
-some surprise at observing no good dwelling-houses
-in a district which formerly produced so
-much wealth, and was informed that the first miners,
-eager to take the cream of the gold to as large an
-extent as they could, seldom remained long on
-the same spot, and contented themselves with
-building sheds, or <i>ranchos</i>, to serve for their temporary
-residence.</p>
-
-<p>Descending this mountain, we entered upon
-the estate of His Excellency, called Fazenda do
-Barro, and were shewn the house at a distance of
-nearly a league, on a pleasing eminence, near the
-river-side. On arriving, an excellent dinner was
-provided for us, of which, having been eight
-hours on our mules, we partook very heartily.</p>
-
-<p>The house, and indeed the whole establishment,
-were strikingly superior in point of convenience,
-to the miserable places we had lately passed. Having
-dined, we refreshed ourselves with a walk in
-the garden, where the coffee-trees in full blossom
-showed, at a distance, as if their branches were loaded
-with snow. This spot afforded a view of a most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-enchanting country, diversified with gentle eminences
-and large valleys well clothed with timber.
-From the farther margin of the river, which flows at
-one hundred yards’ distance in front of the house,
-rises a fine hill, well calculated for the culture of
-every species of produce, and connected with
-others of equal fertility.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day I was chiefly occupied in
-visiting every part of the establishment. The
-distil-house, sugar-engine, and corn-mill, were
-very much out of repair; the two latter were
-worked by horizontal water-wheels of great power.
-The buildings of the <i>fazenda</i> form a square, the
-southern side being occupied by the house, and
-the three others consisting of dwellings for the
-negroes, storehouses, carpenters’ and blacksmiths’
-shops, and other offices equally useful.</p>
-
-<p>Having requested to see the cattle, I was shown
-seven fine well proportioned cows; their calves
-were old, and they being unaccustomed to be milked
-regularly, gave very little. I signified to the people
-my wish to instruct them in the way of making
-butter after the English mode; and the carpenter
-hearing my description of a churn, readily
-assured me that he could make one, and set about
-it forthwith in the following manner. He procured
-a trunk of a tree of the length and girth
-required; sawed it length-wise in two equal parts,
-which, (after hollowing them sufficiently, and preparing
-a bottom), he joined with two iron hoops
-so tightly as to hold water. The churn-staff and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-top were soon finished: but now an unexpected difficulty
-occurred; here was no place free from dust
-and dirt to serve for a dairy, nor any pan fit to
-hold the milk. All the cooking-pots that could
-be spared were cleaned for this purpose, but they
-were quite of the wrong make, being wide at the
-bottom and narrow at the brim. They were, however,
-laid by along with the churn, to be used the
-first time the cows were milked. The good lady
-of the house assisted in our preparations, and
-seemed much interested in them.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon I rode out to see the gold-washings.
-On the way thither I observed a man
-training a horse, with a cord attached to the bridle
-in one hand, and a whip in the other. Two
-pieces of leather, in the form of breechings, were
-sewed to two iron rings; one part was put over
-the back of the animal, the other part slipped
-down as a breeching; the part on the back was
-to prevent its slipping lower. To these rings
-were tied cords from the horse’s fore-feet, capable
-of being shortened or lengthened at pleasure.
-The horse being put in motion, took very short
-fore-steps, somewhat like those of the chargers in
-equestrian performances. Horses thus trained
-are here called <i>pacers</i>, and are in great request
-among persons of distinction of both sexes, their
-gait being very easy and graceful.</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at the washings, I saw a great extent
-of ground already worked, and immense<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-heaps of quartzose stones. On the margin of the
-river where they were then working, I found
-them cutting away the bank, to the depth of at
-least ten feet, to get at the <i>cascalho</i> incumbent on
-the rock. The substance they had to cut through
-was clay, so strong that, though falls of water
-were let upon it, and negroes were constantly
-working it with hoes of various kinds, it was with
-difficulty to be removed. This was not the only
-impediment, for, by the constant precipitation of
-mud, the <i>cascalho</i> was five feet below the bed of
-the river; hence, when they had sunk their pits,
-they had to use means for drawing the water
-from them. The hydraulic machines employed
-for this purpose are constructed as follows: A
-trough or spout, made of four stout planks, forming
-a trunk, about six inches square, is placed in
-an inclined position, with its lower end in the pit,
-where a roller is properly secured to a pile driven
-in the ground: an iron chain, with peculiar links,
-on every one of which is fixed a piece of wood,
-nearly answering the interior dimensions of the
-spout, is passed through it, then under the roller,
-and over the outside, up to the axis of a water-wheel,
-which, being put in motion, causes the
-discharge of a column water equal to the cavity.
-These machines are calculated to raise a great
-deal of water, but they are liable to be thrown out
-of repair. In many cases hand-pumps would
-serve the purpose better, being made at little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-trouble or expense, easily repaired, and always
-ready at an hour’s notice. They are here utterly
-unknown.</p>
-
-<p>In the operation of getting gold, the heavy
-work is assigned to the male negroes, and the
-lighter labor to the females. The <i>cascalho</i>, dug
-from these pits by the former, is carried away
-by the latter in <i>gamellas</i>, or bowls, to be washed.
-When a sufficient quantity has been procured,
-the men proceed to that process, which they perform
-much in the way already described in treating
-of S. Paulo. I perceived, however, that here
-they did not, in the first instance, attempt to
-separate the gold from the black oxide of iron,
-but emptied their <i>gamellas</i> into a larger vessel,
-by rinsing them in the water which it contained.
-The substance deposited in this vessel was delivered
-out, in small portions of about a pound
-each, to the most skilful washers, as the operation
-of washing, or, as it was termed, purifying it,
-required great niceness and dexterity. Some of the
-grains of gold were so fine as to float on the surface,
-and of course were liable to be washed away
-in these repeated changes of water; to prevent
-which the negroes bruised a few handfuls of herbs
-on a stone, and mixed the juice in small proportions
-with the water in their <i>gamellas</i>. Whether
-this liquid did in reality tend to precipitate the
-gold, I could not positively ascertain, but the negroes
-certainly used it with the greatest confidence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There is another mode of separating the gold
-from the <i>cascalho</i> called canoe-washing, which is
-extremely interesting. The canoes are made in
-the following manner:&mdash;Two ten or twelve-inch
-planks, about twelve or fifteen feet in length, are
-laid on the ground, forming an inclined plane,
-sloping about one inch in twelve: two other
-planks of similar dimensions are fixed in the same
-direction at the lower end, forming a second inclined
-plane, with a fall of six inches from the
-former. On their sides are boards placed edge-wise,
-and staked down to the ground so as to
-form long shallow troughs, the bottoms of which
-are covered with hides tanned with the hair on,
-having the hairy side outwards, or, in defect of
-these, with rough baize. Down these troughs is
-conveyed the water containing the oxide of iron
-and the lighter particles of gold; the latter substance
-precipitating in its course is entangled by
-the hair. Every half hour the hides are taken
-up, and carried to a tank near at hand, formed of
-four walls, say five feet long, four broad, and four
-deep, and containing about two feet depth of
-water. The hides are stretched over this tank
-and well beaten, then dipped and beaten repeatedly,
-until all the gold is disentangled, after which
-they are carried back and replaced in the troughs.
-The tanks are locked up at nights, and well secured.
-The sediment taken from them being
-light, is easily washed away by the hand in the
-manner before described, leaving only the black<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-oxide of iron, called <i>esmeril</i>, and the gold, which
-is so fine that mercury is used to separate it. The
-process, as I saw it performed, was as follows:
-About two pounds weight of oxide of iron, very
-rich in fine grains of gold, was put into a clean
-bowl; a quantity of mercury, about two ounces,
-was added to it; the mass of oxide, which was
-very damp, was worked by the hand for about
-twenty minutes, when the mercury appeared to
-have separated the <i>esmeril</i>, and to have taken up
-all the gold, assuming a soft doughy mass, that retained
-any form into which it was squeezed. The
-grains of gold, however, remained, not amalgamated
-with, but merely enveloped in the mercury.
-The mass was put into a folded handkerchief,
-and an ounce or more of mercury was
-wrung or squeezed from it. The rest was put
-into a small brass dish, covered with a few green
-leaves, and then placed over a charcoal fire, where
-it was stirred with an iron rod to prevent the
-gold from adhering to the sides of the dish. The
-leaves were occasionally changed as they became
-parched by the heat. When taken off, they exhibited,
-in some parts, small globules of mercury,
-and in others white oxide; on washing them with
-water, nearly half an ounce of the former substance
-was obtained from them<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>. I ever observed
-that the gold, after this operation, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-changed in color from an agreeable soft yellow to
-a dirty brown, and presented a very different appearance
-from that which was not subjected to
-mercury.</p>
-
-<p>By way of suggesting an improvement, I made
-some drawings and models of earthen vessels for
-evaporating, and afterwards condensing the mercury;
-but the quantity of gold in the hands of individuals
-requiring this mode of separation is so
-inconsiderable, that it would scarcely be worth
-their while to alter the process now practised.</p>
-
-<p>I rode over various parts of the estate, and
-more particularly along both banks of the river,
-which, as well as the bed, appeared to have been
-much washed. The bends, or parts where eddies
-were formed, were the places noted as being rich
-in gold. Wherever the margin formed a flat, or
-level, the <i>cascalho</i> continued under the surface to
-some distance, appearing like a continuation of
-the bed of the river, which, in all probability, it
-was, as the river is known to have been much
-wider formerly. The parts that were then working,
-and others that had yet to be worked, bore a
-very unpromising appearance.</p>
-
-<p>An opportunity was soon afforded me of carrying
-into execution the proposed dairy experiment.
-Having obtained about six quarts of milk,
-(which, on account of the scarcity of grass, was
-very poor), I put it into the culinary vessels that
-had been set apart for it; but such was the state
-of the place in which they were deposited, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-that though I placed banana leaves over them,
-the surface next morning was covered with dust.
-I took off the cream in the best manner I could,
-but not being able to find a cellar or cold place
-for it to stand in, I was obliged to leave it in the
-same room with the milk, where it was hardly
-secure against the pigs. On each of the two following
-mornings, I obtained about two gallons of
-milk, which, being added to the other, was in due
-time churned; and, notwithstanding the disadvantages
-of poor milk, improper utensils, and bad
-keeping, a tolerably fair proportion of good butter
-was obtained. The people seemed highly satisfied
-with the success of the process; but I had
-strong doubts that they would not pursue it after
-my departure, as they must naturally dislike the
-trouble and care which it required. Such was
-the force of their habitual and long-cherished prejudices,
-that I have no hesitation in saying they
-would take ten times more pains to procure
-forty shillings-worth of gold, at an expense of
-thirty shillings, than they would to obtain forty-shillings
-worth of butter, though it were only to
-cost them five.</p>
-
-<p>It may be expected that I should assign some
-reasons for entering so frequently into detail upon
-one of the simplest branches of rural economy.
-I have to observe, then, that ere I left Rio de
-Janeiro to undertake this journey, I was informed
-that the cheese generally consumed in that capital,
-and regarded there as a luxury, was the produce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-of the district to which I was going. Its
-taste was sometimes so extremely rancid and disagreeable,
-as to be utterly unwholesome, and
-from this circumstance I judged that there must
-be great mismanagement in the preparation of it.
-All the farms which I had occasion to visit on my
-journey to Villa Rica, and from thence to this
-place, fully confirmed my opinion; for, miserable
-as was the condition of every department belonging
-to them, that of the dairy was still worse.
-In the few places where they pretended to prepare
-milk for cheese, not only were the various
-utensils in an extremely filthy condition, but the
-rennet was so putrid as to be in the last degree
-sickening. I endeavoured to make the people
-sensible of the advantages of an improved mode
-of management, and wherever I had an opportunity,
-gave them information how to proceed;
-but as oral or written instructions were little calculated
-to make a durable impression, I determined,
-when leisure and convenience should concur,
-to enforce them by example. The first and
-only opportunity of this kind presented itself at
-the Fazenda do Barro; and I was the more induced
-to avail myself of it, from considering that
-the precedent which I wished to give to the
-farmers of the district, would have greater influence
-by being sanctioned by the approval of His
-Excellency the Conde de Linhares. The result,
-as I have just observed, was not very flattering to
-my hopes; a solitary experiment can do little towards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-reforming a general evil of long continuance;
-and there is no probability that this or any
-other branch of the farming system of the country
-will be improved, until the great and the opulent
-zealously unite for the accomplishment of an object
-so highly important.</p>
-
-<p>In our excursions through various parts of the
-estate, we observed on the exterior of many of
-the trees a great variety of crimson lichens, which,
-on being steeped in water, imparted a very strong
-tinge of that color. Here were excellent barks
-for tanning, particularly that of a tree called
-Canafistula, which does not redden or color the
-hide. We found many beautiful varieties of the
-jacarandá, or rose-wood.</p>
-
-<p>Having resided at Barro some days, we set out
-for the Fazenda de Castro, distant about seven
-miles, where we arrived, after a pleasant ride over
-a mountainous and finely-wooded district, containing
-large tracts of rich virgin land, watered
-by many excellent streams. This noble mansion
-was erected by the first possessor of the district,
-Senhor Mathias Barboza. It is very spacious and
-airy, having a gallery in front forty-eight yards
-long, to which open fourteen folding-doors, or
-windows, extending nearly from the top to the
-bottom of the rooms. It is situated near the confluence
-of the Ribeiro do Carmo and the Rio
-Gualacha, which form the San Jose, a river as
-large as the Thames at Battersea.</p>
-
-<p>We did not rest above an hour at this <i>fazenda</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-it being our intention to visit the <i>aldea</i> or village
-of S. José da Barra Longa, situated on the confines
-of the territory inhabited by the Buticudos
-Indians. Crossing the river by a fine wooden
-bridge, built about fifty years ago, but still in
-tolerable repair, we proceeded along the bank,
-which was embellished with several gardens, and
-presented more frequent appearances of cultivation
-than we had of late been accustomed to view.
-The climate is much hotter than at Villa Rica, on
-account of the lowness of the situation; and we
-were informed that fruits of every kind, particularly
-the pine, grew in this soil to great perfection
-in size and fineness of flavor. The truth
-of these accounts we could not ascertain, as this
-was not the fruit season.</p>
-
-<p>After travelling about four miles, we arrived at
-the village. It being Sunday, numbers of people
-had come from various parts in the neighbourhood
-to attend divine service, and, after it was over,
-flocked in crowds to the place where we alighted.
-It appeared as if the whole population of the
-village, men, women, and children, were possessed
-with the same spirit of curiosity, so great was
-their eagerness to get a sight of us. We dined
-in a mixed company of ladies and gentlemen, at
-the house of the worthy vicar, who kept a very
-hospitable table, and paid us the most flattering
-attention. A military officer and a judge, who
-were of the party, entered into conversation with
-us; and it was difficult to decide who were the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-most inquisitive, they, respecting the motives
-and objects of our journey, or we, respecting the
-state of the country, the Aborigines, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>We learnt that the village was founded about
-twenty-three years ago by a number of Portuguese,
-who were tempted to settle, in a spot thus
-exposed to the depredations of the Buticudos,
-by the gold with which it abounded. At the present
-day, I was informed that it contains about
-four hundred inhabitants, and that the vicinity is
-well peopled, so that a sufficient force is always
-at hand to repel the savages; who, no longer daring
-to attack openly, now have often recourse to
-stratagem. When they have marked out a house,
-and ascertained its strength, they set fire to it by
-shooting arrows with fire-brands into the roof, and
-fall on the unfortunate inhabitants as they are attempting
-to escape. These savages, accustomed
-to live in the woods, and well practised in all the
-arts requisite for catching the wild animals on
-which they subsist, have a thousand stratagems
-for way-laying the settlers. Sometimes they render
-themselves invisible by tying branches and
-young trees about them, and fix their bows imperceptibly,
-so that, when a poor negro or white
-happens to pass near them, they seldom miss their
-aim. At other times they rub themselves with
-ashes and lie on the ground, or make pit-falls, in
-which they place pointed stakes, and cover them
-with twigs and leaves. They have a great dread
-of fire-arms, and betake themselves to flight whenever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-they hear them: but these weapons are by no
-means so general among the settlers as they ought
-to be, and the few they have are of very indifferent
-make, and frequently altogether useless.
-It sometimes, though rarely, happens, that the
-soldiers surprise the aborigines, in which case no
-combat takes place; the latter run away as speedily
-as possible; and their pursuers, taking vengeance
-for injuries sustained, seldom give quarter.
-Those whom they make prisoners they are obliged
-to tie hand and foot, and carry on a pole to a place
-of security: if any one of them be loosed but for
-a moment, he bursts away, and flees into the woods
-like a tiger, leaving his pursuers behind. They
-are untameable, either by stripes or kindness;
-and, if they find no means of escaping from confinement,
-they commonly refuse sustenance, and
-die of hunger.</p>
-
-<p>The injuries occasionally done to settlers by
-these savages have excited the attention of Government,
-who have passed a decisive law against
-them. A proclamation has been issued by the
-Prince Regent, in which they are invited to live
-in villages, and become Christians, under a promise
-that, if they come to terms of peace and
-amity with the Portuguese, their rights shall be
-acknowledged, and they shall enjoy, in common
-with other subjects, the protection of the state;
-but, if they persist in their barbarous and inhuman
-practices, the soldiers of His Royal Highness are
-ordered to carry on a war of extermination against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-them. Those who are taken prisoners are at the
-disposal of their captors as slaves, for the space
-of ten years. It is doubtful whether the offers of
-conciliation contained in this proclamation will
-produce in any degree the desired effect; for the
-Buticudos have an unconquerable aversion to a
-settled way of life, and a rooted antipathy to every
-other nation; nor have they intelligence enough
-to appreciate the benefits of civilized society; so
-that there appears no hope of reducing them but
-by the dreadful alternative proposed in the latter
-part of the decree. One reason for having recourse
-to this summary mode of dealing with
-them, which will probably outweigh any arguments
-in favor of gentler proceedings, is, that the
-country they inhabit contains gold, and the settlers
-and adventurers are desirous to obtain speedy possession
-of it. Some officers, well acquainted with
-the locality of the territory, and skilled in the art
-of conducting an Indian war, are already employed
-in this difficult enterprise. About two
-leagues from this village is another, called Piranga,
-situated near the margin of a river of that name,
-which at a distance of four leagues joins the San
-Jose, and with it forms the Rio Dôce. This river
-runs through a fine country, in a northerly and
-afterwards an easterly direction, discharging itself
-into the sea in lat. 19° 30′ south. There are three
-islands at its mouth, called Os Tres Irmâos, (the
-Three Brothers).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Were this river rendered navigable, what benefits
-might accrue to the fine country through
-which it flows! Large quantities of sugar, cotton,
-and other produce, which the soil is capable of
-growing, besides excellent timber for exportation,
-would then form the basis of an extensive commerce,
-by stimulating the industry of the planters,
-who are at present averse from cultivating beyond
-the extent of their own consumption, on account
-of the heavy expense attendant on a land-carriage
-of above five hundred miles to the nearest sea-port.</p>
-
-<p>Piranga is perhaps more exposed to the attacks
-of the Indians than the village of San Jose, but
-there are some gold-washings in its neighbourhood
-which tempt the inhabitants to brave that
-danger. A small band of horse-soldiers is stationed
-here to parade the confines, enter the woods, and
-go in quest of the natives whenever information
-is given. Yet, notwithstanding these precautions,
-the village is never in perfect security; a house in
-its immediate vicinity was surprised a few months
-previous to our visit to this district.</p>
-
-<p>We now took leave of the vicar and his guests,
-and, I may add, of all the villagers, who came
-out to salute us as we passed. Returning to
-Castro, I remained the whole of the next day to
-examine the establishment. It is built, like that
-at Barro, in the form of a square, the dwellings
-of the negroes forming three sides, and the mansion
-the fourth, the entrance being in front through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-a pair of gates, which, when shut, secure the whole.
-The rooms in the mansion were like ancient halls,
-adorned with carvings, and fitted up and furnished
-after the old fashion. Here were blunderbusses,
-swords, and other weapons for defence, used in
-former days, when the house was liable to the
-continual attacks of the Buticudos. The stairs,
-gallery, and floors, were of fine wood, of a
-quality which time had not in any degree
-perceptibly injured. Attached to the house
-were the remains of a sugar-mill, distil-house,
-corn-mill, and a machine, worked by a strap and
-spindles, for spinning cotton, all in a state of neglect.
-The whole establishment bore marks of
-former opulence and grandeur, from which it appeared
-to have gradually declined as the gold-washings
-at the confluence of the rivers and in
-other parts had become exhausted. The negroes
-were now all removed to Castro, except a few infirm
-and sick, who were stationed here to keep
-the mansion in order, (this being considered as a
-light employment for them), until such time as
-their convalescence should fit them for resuming
-their labors along with their brethren at the other
-estate.</p>
-
-<p>Having made a sketch of the house, and visited
-every part which interested me, I returned by the
-same road to Barro, where I employed myself in
-making a topographical map of the river, distinguishing
-by different colors the places already
-washed for gold, those which were then washing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-and the yet unworked grounds. This sort of map
-might be made on a large scale, so as to include a
-whole district or parish, where the several mines,
-or gold-beds, in their different stages, might be
-exhibited at one view.</p>
-
-<p>On this estate are employed one hundred and
-fifty-six negroes, of all descriptions, who, on such
-excellent land, producing every necessary for
-food and clothing, might be expected to earn considerably
-more than their own maintenance; yet
-a former steward managed so ill for twenty successive
-years, that, although he had nothing to
-purchase but a little iron, and though the gold-mines
-were then more productive than at present,
-he ran the establishment annually into debt
-to the shopkeepers of Villa Rica. A single circumstance
-may account for this mismanagement;
-the noble proprietor resided in Portugal. At
-present the estate is in a much more prosperous
-way, being entrusted to the care of another steward,
-and three overseers, all Creolians. The
-latter receive a salary of thirty <i>milrees</i> (about
-nine pounds sterling) <i>per annum</i>, besides their
-maintenance; their business is to execute the
-orders of the steward, and to superintend the labor
-of the negroes committed to their charge.
-They lead a life of extreme indolence, never
-putting their hands to any species of work.</p>
-
-<p>The general diet of the country-people in this
-land of Canaan is somewhat similar to that of the
-miners in the vicinity of S. Paulo, already described.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-The master, his steward, and the overseers,
-sit down to a breakfast of kidney-beans of
-a black color, boiled, which they mix with the flour
-of Indian corn, and eat with a little dry pork fried or
-boiled. The dinner generally consists, also, of a bit
-of pork or bacon boiled, the water from which is
-poured upon a dish of the flour above mentioned,
-thus forming a stiff pudding. A large quantity (about
-half a peck) of this food is poured in a heap in the
-middle of the table, and a great dish of boiled beans is
-set upon it: each person helps himself in the readiest
-way, there being only one knife, which is very
-often dispensed with. A plate or two of colewort
-or cabbage-leaves complete the repast. The
-food is commonly served up in the earthen vessels
-used for cooking it; sometimes on pewter dishes.
-The general beverage is water. At supper nothing
-is seen but large quantities of boiled greens,
-with a little bit of poor bacon to flavor them. On
-any festival occasion, or when strangers appear,
-the dinner or supper is improved by the addition
-of a stewed fowl.</p>
-
-<p>The food prepared for the negroes is Indian
-corn-flour, mixed with hot water, in which a bit
-of pork has been boiled. This dish serves both
-for breakfast and supper. Their dinner consists
-of beans boiled in the same way. This unfortunate
-race of men are here treated with great
-kindness and humanity, which, indeed, their good
-behaviour seems to deserve. They are allowed as
-much land as they can, at their leisure, cultivate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-(Sundays and holidays being by law allotted to
-them for that purpose), and are permitted to sell
-or dispose of their produce as they please. Their
-owners clothe them with shirts and trowsers made
-of coarse cotton, which is grown and woven on
-the estate. Their days of labor are rather long;
-before sun-rise a bell rings to summon them to
-prayers, which are recited by one of the overseers,
-and repeated by the congregation; after
-worship is over they proceed to work, at which
-they continue till after sun-set, when prayers are
-said as in the morning. An hour after supper
-they are employed in preparing wood to burn,
-taking Indian corn from the husk, and in other
-in-door operations. Swelled necks are not uncommon
-among the men-negroes, but in other respects
-they appear healthy: I saw few or none
-afflicted with elephantiasis, or with any cutaneous
-disease. There were many very aged of both
-sexes; a few even remembered their old master,
-the first possessor, though he has been dead upwards
-of sixty years.</p>
-
-<p>Their principal article of diet, the <i>farinha de
-milho</i>, or flour of Indian corn, appeared so palatable
-and nutritive, that, after living upon it for
-some time, I had the curiosity to enquire into
-the mode of preparing it from the grain. It is
-first soaked in water, and afterwards pounded in
-its swelled and moist state, to separate the outer
-husk. It then appears almost granulated, and is
-put upon copper pans, which have a fire underneath,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-and in these it is kept constantly stirred
-until it is dry and fit for eating. This substitute
-for bread is as common among the inhabitants
-here as is the <i>farinha de Pao</i>, or mandioca, among
-the people of Rio de Janeiro, S. Paulo, and other
-districts.</p>
-
-<p>The grain is grown always on virgin lands,
-cleared by burning, after the manner already described.
-In good seasons, or, in other words,
-when the dry weather allows the felled wood to
-be completely reduced to ashes, the return is from
-one hundred and fifty to two hundred bushels for
-one. Weeding is only performed after the seed
-has been a short time in the ground; indeed, the
-growing crops suffer less from the neglect of that
-operation than from the depredations of rats, which
-are frequently very considerable.</p>
-
-<p>On the state of society here I had little leisure
-to make observations. A general debility seemed
-to prevail among the females, which I imputed to
-the want of better food and more exercise: they
-confine themselves principally to the sedentary
-employments of sewing, or making lace. While
-at San Jose I saw many females from the country,
-dressed in gowns made of English prints; some of
-them had woollen mantles, edged with gold lace
-or Manchester velvet, thrown loosely over their
-shoulders. Their hair was invariably fastened with
-combs, and they in general wore, out of doors, men’s
-hats. The men, most of whom belonged to the
-militia, appeared in uniforms. No two things can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-be more different than the deshabille and full-dress
-of a nominal militia officer. When at home he
-seldom puts on more than half his clothes, over
-which he throws an old great coat; and saunters
-about the house in this attire from morning till
-night, a true picture of idleness. On Sundays,
-or on gala-days, after some hours spent in decorating
-his person, he sallies forth, completely metamorphosed
-from a slip-shod sloven into a spruce-officer,
-glittering in a weight of gold lace, on a
-horse caparisoned with equal splendor, forming
-as fine a sight for the gazing multitude as a general
-at a review. He observes no medium between
-these extremes, being always very shabby or
-very fine.</p>
-
-<p>During my stay at Barro I was presented with
-some singularly fine fruit, equal in flavor to fresh
-almonds, and capable of being preserved by drying
-only, so as to become a valuable article of
-commerce. Having never before heard of this
-fruit, I am induced to give a brief account of it.
-The exterior substance is about the size of a full-grown
-cocoa-nut with the rind on, say nine or ten
-inches long and five or six in the thickest part.
-It grows suspended from the branch by a very
-slender but strong stem. This shell is full of kernels,
-to the number of from thirty to fifty, of the
-shape of almonds, but twice or thrice the size,
-disposed in ranges or layers, and separated from
-each other by a white pithy substance. As these
-kernels ripen, the top of the shell, which appears<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-like a lid, is gradually forced open, and when they
-are at full maturity, the larger part, which contains
-them, separates and falls to the ground. The
-trees, at the season of shedding their fruits, are
-frequented by wild hogs, herds of monkies, flocks
-of parrots, and other birds, which never quit
-them, while any of these delicious nuts remain. I
-was credibly informed that some trees have been
-known to produce above a ton weight in a season.
-One of the nuts I preserved and brought with
-me, which I sent to Sir Joseph Banks.</p>
-
-<p>We now took leave of the good people at the
-<i>fazenda</i>, and returned to Villa Rica by the way
-we came. I had, with great difficulty, procured a
-few pounds of butter, made after the new process,
-as a present for Dr. Lucas, the Judge, which arrived
-perfectly fresh and sweet. On passing Lavras
-Velhas, as we returned, we were shown some
-excellent cinchona, very like that of Peru, and
-said to possess similar properties in a high degree.
-From the specimen we saw, there was every reason
-to believe, that, if fairly introduced into practice,
-it might be administered in many cases with as
-much success as Peruvian bark; and, as great
-quantities might be procured here, the experiment
-is certainly worth attending to by medical men. I
-sent a parcel of it home, but by some accident or
-other it was lost at the Custom-house.</p>
-
-<p>In many parts of our route we might have collected
-insects, but they require so much attention
-and care in preserving them for conveyance so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-great a distance, that I gave up the pursuit. It
-appeared to me extraordinary, that I had not,
-since my arrival in Brazil, seen (except in the cabinets
-of the curious,) more than one <i>curculio
-imperialis</i> (diamond-beetle), though I had frequently
-searched for them in almost every variety
-of plantation.</p>
-
-<p>During my absence from Villa Rica one of my
-soldiers had procured me a full pound of native
-bismuth in lumps, none of which exceeded an
-ounce in weight. It is frequently found in this
-state, which proves that it is out of its place,
-as it originally occurs in veins. Many pieces of
-pyrites, and various iron ores, were also brought
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>I had commissioned some persons to collect land
-shells for me during my absence, and was now to
-my great gratification presented with six, of a
-fine chesnut brown color, with beautiful pink
-mouths, belonging to a new variety of the helix.
-Having kept them a few days, without taking out
-the animals, I was surprised to find that one of
-the latter had laid two eggs. I had before imagined
-that they were oviparous. I took one of
-the shells in my hand, while the animal was crawling,
-when it immediately folded itself, and entered
-very quickly, in which exertion another egg was
-deposited in the mouth of the shell. All the
-eggs were about the size of a sparrow’s. These
-were the only land shells I had seen on this
-journey.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On resuming my visit to the mint I took an
-early opportunity of stating to the acting governors
-my ideas respecting a new regulation for supplying
-mercury to the miners. One great impediment
-to the use of that metal, so essential in certain
-branches of the process, was the exorbitant
-price at which it was exclusively sold by the apothecaries,
-generally upwards of two shillings the
-ounce. I suggested that the mint should be the
-general depository for it, and that it should be issued
-from thence to the gold-washers without
-profit. By this regulation the article would be
-brought into general use, much to the benefit of
-the state as well as of private individuals. I also
-gave them models of earthen vessels, which might
-be made at a small expense, for evaporating and
-condensing the mercury, which, if universally
-adopted, would effect a great saving in the consumption
-of that article.</p>
-
-<p>The remainder of my stay, previous to my
-journey to Tejuco, passed very agreeably. In the
-evening-parties to which I was invited, and which
-generally consisted of ladies and gentlemen, I observed
-that the English style of dress prevailed,
-particularly among the former. The houses of
-the higher classes in Villa Rica are much more
-convenient and better furnished than any I saw
-in Rio de Janeiro and S. Paulo, and are for the
-most part kept in the exactest order. Their beds
-seemed to me so elegant as to deserve a particular
-description. The posts were of fine wood, fluted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-or carved in various ways; the sides plain, the
-bottoms of boards or leather. The bed itself was
-of cotton, the sheets of fine linen edged with lace
-of home manufacture, full nine inches broad. The
-bolster was covered with fine muslin, the ends of
-which were edged also with lace. The pillows
-were made round at the ends and covered with pink
-sarsnet, over which was another of fine muslin,
-terminated with broad lace, which being starched
-and delicately managed had a very rich appearance.
-The coverlet was yellow satin of a Damask
-pattern, edged like the sheets and pillows with
-broad lace. The hangings were of the same materials,
-in the form of a canopy, without curtains.
-Not excepting the refinements of recent date in
-this article of furniture, I never saw beds so
-magnificent as those of the opulent in this captaincy.</p>
-
-<p>Every thing being now in readiness for my departure,
-I waited upon the several inhabitants to
-whom I had been introduced, to express my
-thanks for the polite attentions they had shewn
-me, and received from them the most obliging assurances
-of friendship, and the kindest wishes for
-my welfare. I also, much to my regret, took
-leave of my valued friend and fellow-traveller,
-Mr. Goodall, whose affairs required him to go to
-St. João D’El Rey, and thence return to Rio de
-Janeiro. Never was a traveller more fortunate
-in a companion; always cheerful and in spirits,
-he had the happy faculty of regarding every thing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-on its bright side, and in all the various inconveniences
-of bad roads, wretched inns, miserable
-fare, and worse accommodations, he exemplified
-the truth of the adage that, “a merry heart hath
-a continual feast.” Being perfectly master of the
-language, and well acquainted with the character
-and manners of the people, he made himself at
-home every where, and generally contrived to
-draw from the conversation of those around him,
-some topic either for lively remark or instructive
-comment. These amiable qualities, the offspring
-of a cultivated understanding and an excellent
-heart, gave him a double claim to that respect and
-confidence which we ever entertain for those whom
-we distinguish by the name of friend.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c12" id="c12">CHAP. XII</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct"><i>Journey from Villa Rica to Tejuco, the Capital
-of the Diamond District.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn2">HAVING previously sent letters to his Excellency
-the Conde de Linhares, giving him an account
-of my proceedings, I set out from Villa
-Rica, attended by the two soldiers and my negro
-servant. I passed through the city of Mariana,
-and entered upon the plain in its vicinity already<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-mentioned, which, in the rainy season, is often entirely
-overflowed. To the left I observed a beautiful
-and romantic mountain, called Morro de
-Santa Anna, on which stood many small neat
-houses, surrounded by coffee-plantations and
-orangeries; its base was watered by a <i>corvinha</i>,
-or rivulet, the banks of which contain much gold,
-and are worked by the inhabitants of the mount.
-Passing onward, the road became very confined;
-and the land, though now covered with wood,
-appeared to have been formerly under cultivation.
-We here met a number of mules laden
-with sugar, destined for Villa Rica, or, if not sold
-there, for Rio de Janeiro.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived and refreshed at a little village
-called Camargo, and passed an excellent house,
-situated near a rivulet of that name, where there
-is a gold-washing, which employs about two hundred
-negroes, and is said to be very productive.
-About a league farther we passed a poor little
-place called Bento Rodriguez, and about six in
-the evening arrived at a very considerable village,
-called Inficionado, which contains full fifteen hundred
-inhabitants. It had been more populous, but
-its mines having decreased, it was then on the decline.
-Finding no inn that offered any thing
-tolerable, I alighted at the house of a shopkeeper,
-who very civilly provided me an apartment to
-sleep in, and introduced me at supper to his wife,
-and three other ladies, whose society was very
-pleasant and cheerful. On the next day, after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-some trouble, my soldiers at a late hour procured
-mules, when I set out about ten o’clock upon a
-bad road, and, after travelling half a league, arrived
-at the Corgo do Inficionado, a fine rivulet
-flowing through a country rich in gold, particularly
-near the village of Santa Barbara, where
-washings appear in all directions. From hence
-to the village of Catas Altas, two leagues distant,
-is a tract of the finest open country I ever travelled
-in Brazil; it has many features resembling
-that between Matlock and Derby, and its mountains
-bear a strong similarity to those of Westmoreland.
-There are slips in some of them in
-which topazes are found, but rarely any of good
-quality. This district appeared equally suited
-for mining and agriculture, the ground being rich
-above as well as below. The village of Catas
-Altas, through which we rode, contains at least
-two thousand inhabitants, and is situated in a populous
-neighbourhood. The public buildings are
-well constructed, and the private houses in general
-appear very respectable, but bear evident
-marks of decay. We crossed the river which is
-broad but shallow, and has works on its banks of
-greater extent and under better management than
-any I had hitherto seen. The whole vicinity is
-irrigated by numerous rivulets, many of which are
-diverted from their courses to a great distance for
-the purpose of gold-washing. In all parts, even
-on the tops and sides of the hills, we observed
-operations of this kind going on; in the valleys<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-there were many spots still rich in gold, which
-had not yet been washed.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing about six miles over this naked
-country, we entered on a more confined road, and
-passing a village called Cocaes, proceeded half a
-league further in the dark, to the mansion of
-Senhor Felicio, the <i>Capitao Mor</i> of the district,
-where we alighted, having travelled this day
-above thirty miles. On being announced, I was
-immediately shown up stairs into a suite of handsome
-apartments, furnished with great magnificence,
-where I was introduced by the <i>Capitao</i> to
-his amiable lady and daughter. We were joined by
-Dr. Gomides, a man of talents and science, with
-whom I entered into conversation, and who afterwards
-showed me a fine collection of gold in various
-forms, some like duck-shot, others laminated
-with micaceous iron, others arborescent.
-He had also some specimens of stalactitic matter,
-on which nitre was forming, others of specular
-iron ore, and three or four fine pieces of chrome,
-which I at first took for realgar. From this gentleman
-I received considerable information respecting
-the mineralogy of the country, which is
-so difficult to be obtained accurate, that I found
-reason to reject all which did not correspond with
-what I saw. In the course of the evening the
-party was joined by the Count de Oeyenhausen,
-who commands a corps of cavalry in the district.
-He made many enquiries of me respecting England,
-that being the country in which he had received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-his education, and to which he seemed as
-much attached as to his native soil.</p>
-
-<p>This large establishment, though still rich in
-gold, is worked by only two hundred negroes.
-One part of the estate is an auriferous mountain
-of schistus, containing beds of micaceous iron
-ore; the latter substance forms a thin stratum,
-which contains gold in grains laminated with it.
-It is singular to remark, that the <i>cascalho</i>, which
-generally, nay, almost invariably occurs in ravines
-and low situations, is here found at a very
-small depth below the surface on the summit.</p>
-
-<p>The discovery of the original gold mine in this
-rich <i>sesmaria</i>, is said to have been owing to the
-following accident. Some negroes employed in
-clearing the land, broke up an ant-hill of considerable
-size, when, on laying it open to the air,
-for the purpose of destroying or dispersing the insects,
-large grains of gold were found. It is,
-however, highly probable that the general characteristics
-of the soil had led to the discovery
-long before this period, and that the accident here
-related, served only to indicate the presence of
-gold in a part which had not been supposed to
-contain any. The estate is situated almost in the
-centre of the mining country, and is reputed one
-of the richest portions of it. The owner and his
-brother, who are partners, have conducted their
-concerns in a liberal way, and are said to be very
-wealthy. It was my wish to have staid a day or
-two for the purpose of inspecting the extensive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-works which they have opened; but I forebore to
-make any request of this nature, as I perceived,
-or supposed, some little jealousy or suspicion respecting
-my views. It seemed to be the opinion
-here, as well as in other places, that I had a mission
-from Government, authorizing me to enquire
-into the state of the mines, and give a report concerning
-them.</p>
-
-<p>In riding past the works, after having taken leave
-of the <i>Capitao</i> I did not perceive any machinery
-used for facilitating manual labor. The tedious
-process of washing by hand was most generally
-practised; in some instances inclined canoes were
-used, which, if carried to the degree of improvement
-of which they are susceptible, might much
-more effectually answer the purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Between the mountain on <i>Capitao</i> Felicio’s
-estate and the village of Sabará is a rich mining
-district, which extends also to Bromare, over a
-continuation of hilly country. It is occupied
-by several opulent miners, who possess many fine
-grounds still unworked. A tract of land a few
-miles in extent is appropriated to agricultural
-purposes, being reputed to be destitute of gold.</p>
-
-<p>I proceeded four leagues, over a well-watered
-and finely-wooded country, to a hamlet called
-Vaz, a name which had become familiar to my ear
-through the frequent mention which my soldiers
-made of “the good old man of Vaz.” This
-person, whose reception of me fully justified the
-appellation with which he had been distinguished,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-was a farmer from Oporto, who had been resident
-here about forty years. He bought the estate
-with twenty negroes upon it, and paid for it by
-yearly instalments in twenty years afterwards.
-This mode of disposing of estates is much practised,
-being at once easy to the purchaser, and
-advantageous to the seller, as it ensures to the
-latter a better price than he could obtain on the
-condition of immediate payment. The house, which
-is well-built and convenient, has a sugar-mill and distillery
-attached to it. The sugar is generally sent
-to Rio, under an agreement with the carrier,
-giving him half or sometimes two-thirds of the
-proceeds, with a promise of back-carriage of salt,
-iron, and other commodities.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the kind assiduities of my worthy
-host, the evening passed very agreeably. Many
-of the neighbours came to see and converse with
-me, as I was the first Englishman, or perhaps
-foreigner, who had ever travelled so far into the
-interior. Their curiosity led them to examine
-almost every implement I carried with me; my
-saddle, bridle, and stirrups, were viewed with
-great attention; nor could they imagine how it
-was possible to sit in the former with any degree
-of safety. There was no convincing them that it
-was much preferable to the Portuguese saddle,
-which has a ridge about eight inches high, both
-before and behind, so that the rider is, as it were,
-in the stocks, and, though not so liable to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-thrown out, has a most galling and uncomfortable
-seat.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning I visited the negroes’ houses,
-and was much pleased to find one set apart for
-the reception of poor distressed travelling negroes,
-who here find a fatherly protection, and are
-allowed to stay as long a time as may suit their
-necessities. On taking leave of the good old
-gentleman, I could not prevail on him to accept
-any remuneration for his kindness, and he replied
-to my thanks with the warmest assurances of
-welcome. I crossed a fine stream, and rode
-through several plantations of sugar-cane, which
-were at this season nearly ready for cutting.
-The country, as we proceeded, gradually became
-more mountainous, and abounded with argillaceous
-schistus very full of quartz. After riding
-about sixteen miles, we saw a very singular mountain,
-or bare rock of granite, called Itambé, forming
-part of a high ridge which lay on our left.
-About four o’clock we arrived at a poor village,
-also called Itambé, situated near a fine river of
-the same name. This place was formerly of some
-consequence, but as the gold in its vicinity failed,
-it sunk into poverty and wretchedness. It contains
-about a thousand inhabitants, who, degraded
-to the lowest stage of inactive apathy, looked as
-if they were the ghosts of their progenitors haunting
-the ruins of their departed wealth.</p>
-
-<p>Every thing about them bore a cheerless aspect;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-the houses were ready to fall to the ground
-through want of repair; the door-places were
-overgrown with grass, and the patches of garden-ground
-that here and there appeared, were covered
-with weeds. The face of the country, too, was
-entirely different from that which I had passed on
-my way hither, being universally sterile, dry, and
-stony. It may well be supposed, from this description,
-that our accommodations here were of
-the worst kind: we halted at a miserable abode,
-where they offered us some mouldy Indian corn
-and <i>feijones</i>, and, after a great deal of difficulty,
-procured us a fowl. My servant was obliged to
-clean all the utensils before they could be used;
-and the soldiers while cooking, were obliged to
-guard the pot lest some half-famished prowler
-should steal it. The commandant of the place, with
-whom we had afterwards some conversation, answered
-our remarks on the visible signs of starvation
-in the looks of the villagers, by coolly saying,
-“While they get Indian corn to eat, and water to
-drink, they will not die of hunger.” I was glad
-to depart from this home of famine as fast as possible,
-heartily joining in the exclamation which
-the Portuguese have bestowed upon it; “Das
-mizerias de Itambé <i>libera nos Domine</i>!”&mdash;(From
-the miseries of Itambé the Lord deliver us!)</p>
-
-<p>After riding about five miles, we came to the
-River Das Onzas, so named from the numbers of
-those animals which formerly infested its banks.
-Changing our mules at a village called Lagos, cosisting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-of a few miserable <i>fazendas</i>, we proceeded
-a league over a most rugged and mountainous
-road, and passing a ridge, entered on a fine country,
-presenting to view a grand picturesque mountain
-nearly a league distant from us; about mid-way
-up was a large house, to which we directed
-our course. We forded a rather deep river called
-Rio Negro, on account of the blackness of its
-waters, caused by the decomposition of bituminous
-or vegetable matter. Its margin, along which
-we rode for some distance, presented some fine
-grazing land. Passing through a broken and irregular
-tract of country, we arrived at another
-deserted village called Gaspar Soares, and rode
-up to the house above-mentioned, the owner of
-which was from home, but his lady received me
-very politely. Having arrived rather early in the
-evening, I employed myself some time in walking
-about the grounds: the mountain on which the
-house stands consists almost entirely of micaceous
-iron ore<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a>; the wall before the door of the house
-was built of that substance. In some parts, to
-my great surprise, I observed it lying in regular
-strata, not more than an inch in thickness, between
-beds of white sand. The quantity of ore
-found in this neighbourhood is so considerable as
-to have induced Government to commence an
-iron-work, under the direction of Dr. Manoel
-Ferreira da Camara, Intendant of the Diamond<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-District. In aid of this undertaking, the gentleman,
-at whose house I was a guest, has presented
-a square league of woodland, the only
-tract of that description in the neighbourhood.
-The ground for the intended works is marked out,
-and a few blocks of stone are prepared; but the
-undertaking seems to go on very slowly, and probably
-will not arrive at any great degree of perfection.</p>
-
-<p>This hill and the streams near it were formerly
-rich in gold, but they have been completely washed,
-and are at present as much exhausted as the
-works at Itambé. A rivulet which runs over the
-top of the hill afforded conveniences for washing,
-which are very rarely to be met with; it is now
-intended to be converted to the use of the iron
-manufactory.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day I continued my route
-northerly, over a fine country, and, after riding, or
-rather walking, about six miles of bad road with
-wretched mules, ascended a hill abounding with
-rich compact iron ore. Two leagues of the way
-were covered with excellent oxide of iron, and it
-appeared as if the hills were entirely covered with
-that substance. Without any material occurrence,
-we arrived at a beautiful rivulet, near
-which stood a miserable hut, where two women
-were weaving cotton. This place, apparently so
-insignificant, proved one of the most interesting,
-in a mineralogical point of view, which I had hitherto
-visited. It is called Lagos, and also bears<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-the name of Ouro Branco (White Gold), in allusion
-to a granular substance, not unlike gold in
-size and weight, found in a gold-washing in the bed
-of the stream. This substance, which has since
-been proved to be platina, was discovered many
-years ago in the <i>cascalho</i> below the vegetable
-earth, and incumbent on the solid rock, accompanied
-with gold and black oxide of iron. From
-these circumstances the people judged it to be
-gold united with some other metal, from which it
-could not be separated; and, as the quantity of
-real gold found was small, and the white gold, as
-they called it, was not known to be of value, the
-work was gradually neglected, and at length abandoned.
-I procured a specimen of the substance:
-it appeared accompanied with <i>osmium</i> and <i>iridium</i>,
-and was in rougher grains than the platina brought
-from the province of Choco; which latter circumstance
-may be owing to its not having been
-triturated with mercury. Now that the substance
-is known to be platina, it is doubtful whether the
-work might be resumed with advantage, as the
-demand for that article is at present so small, that
-the quantity sold would hardly pay expenses.
-Near this place is a work called Mata Cavallos.</p>
-
-<p>The rivulet of Lagos empties itself into the
-Rio de St. Antonio, along which we rode a small
-distance, and proceeding about four miles farther,
-arrived at Conceição, a large and tolerably handsome
-village. I was conducted to the house of
-the curate, who kindly assigned to me an apartment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-for the night, and, perceiving that I was unwell,
-gave me an invitation to rest a day, which I
-very gladly accepted.</p>
-
-<p>I here received many visits from the villagers,
-whose curiosity had been excited by the news of
-an Englishman having arrived: some of them
-were upwards of eighty years of age, and, as they
-had resided here more than fifty, they were able
-to give many curious accounts of the country,
-and of the progress and decline of its mines. I
-was much pleased with the information they communicated,
-but more so with the attention of the
-good curate, who corrected every misrepresentation,
-and seemed anxious that I should not be led
-into error, either through accident or design. By
-some means or other, an opinion circulated among
-them that I was a medical man, and numbers of
-infirm persons, principally old men, women, and
-children, were brought to me for advice. In the
-evening we were entertained with music by some
-of the younger females, who brought their guitars,
-and sung several pleasing airs.</p>
-
-<p>I was here shown a Buticudo Indian boy, apparently
-about nine years of age, who had been
-taken about six months before. He could not
-utter a word of Portuguese; but, from the expression
-of his countenance, his mind seemed capable
-of receiving any tuition. His eyes had so much
-vivacity in them that they almost spoke, especially
-when his attention was attracted by any thing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-agreeable, as I found by offering him a few sweetmeats,
-with which he seemed much delighted. I
-examined his features and the construction of his
-frame with some curiosity, as exhibiting the characteristics
-of the singular race of men from whom
-he sprung. The face was short, the mouth rather
-wide, the nose broad, the eyes large and black,
-skin of a dusky copper color, hair jet-black, strong,
-straight, and of regular length, limbs stout and well-proportioned,
-feet large, probably from going without
-shoes. He lived with a poor woman, who clothed
-and brought him up exactly as one of her family.
-On enquiring how he came there, I was informed
-that he belonged to a party of Indians who were
-surprised at a place about six leagues distant, and
-all either fell or escaped, except this little fellow,
-who was taken care of, and brought hither by an
-officer resident in the village.</p>
-
-<p>Being still too unwell to travel, I remained another
-day, and met with every attention and care
-from the good clergyman and his housekeeper. In
-the course of conversation, he informed me that
-he studied and had been ordained at S. Paulo; and
-when he learnt that I had been there so recently,
-seemed much pleased, and asked me many questions
-respecting the present state of that city,
-which showed his attachment to it as the scene of
-his youthful days.</p>
-
-<p>About a week previous to my arrival, this village
-was the scene of a somewhat remarkable adventure.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-A <i>tropeiro</i><a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> going to Rio de Janeiro
-with some loaded mules, was overtaken by two
-cavalry soldiers, who ordered him to surrender his
-fowling-piece; which being done, they bored the
-butt-end with a gimblet, and finding it hollow,
-took off the iron from the end, where they found
-a cavity containing about three hundred carats of
-diamonds, which they immediately seized. The
-man in vain protested his innocence, stating that
-he had bought the gun of a friend: he was hurried
-away, and thrown into prison at Tejuco,
-where I afterwards saw him. The diamonds were
-confiscated, and the soldiers received half their
-value. The fate of this man is a dreadful instance
-of the rigor of the existing laws: he will forfeit
-all his property, and be confined, probably, for
-the remainder of his days in a loathsome prison,
-among felons and murderers. What must be the
-feelings (if, indeed, he can be said to possess any)
-of the fellow who betrayed him; for, doubtless,
-the poor man owed his misfortune to some secret
-villain, in the shape of a confidential friend, who,
-having learned his mode of carrying diamonds
-concealed, had, for the sake of a paltry premium,
-or from some mean spirited motive, given notice
-of it to Government! How must the miscreant
-recoil at having brought to irreparable ruin, and
-plunged into that lowest state of human misery,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-perpetual imprisonment, a man who not only
-claimed his sympathy as a fellow-creature, but was
-united to him by the ties of friendship!</p>
-
-<p>The village of Conceição, seemed to me large
-enough to contain two thousand inhabitants, but,
-like most others in this exhausted district, it was
-fast hastening to decay. The rent of a tolerable
-house is about two shillings a month. The only
-manufacture carried on here is that of a little cotton,
-which is spun by the hand and woven into
-coarse shirting. It appears to be a maxim among
-the inhabitants rather to go naked, than labor to
-clothe themselves. The vestiges of old gold-washings
-in every direction, and the slight quantities
-still found in all parts, from the summits of the
-mountains to their bases, might almost lead a traveller
-to conclude that the whole country was at
-one period auriferous. The surface is in general
-fine red earth, and in many parts presents fine situations
-for iron works, as there is ore and wood
-in abundance. It is much to be wished that such
-works were established; for iron is so dear at Conceição,
-and the people in general so poor, that the
-mules have seldom a shoe to their feet, which is
-irksome to the riders, and dangerous to the animals
-themselves, as they are continually coming down,
-particularly when ascending a clay-hill, after a
-shower of rain.</p>
-
-<p>Neither here, nor in any other part of my journey
-from Villa Rica, did I observe any limestone,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-though I was informed that considerable quantities
-were found near Sabará.</p>
-
-<p>Taking leave of the worthy curate, I set out
-for Tapinhoá-canga<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>, distant about thirty miles.
-After an unpleasant ride through a rough stony
-country, abounding in quartz laminated with
-schistus, I reached a village called Corvos, where
-there are some gold-washings, one of which produced,
-about half a year ago, a net profit of £800,
-though only four negroes were employed a month
-upon it. The road to the village above mentioned
-led through a most uneven tract, presenting formidable
-precipices, which required us to travel
-with so much caution, that we did not complete
-our journey until an hour after sun-set. I was received
-into a very respectable house, which had
-the appearance of former opulence. The owner,
-Captain Bom-jardim, a venerable old gentleman,
-came to welcome me: on entering into conversation,
-he informed me that he had emigrated hither
-from Oporto at the age of seventeen, and had
-lived here sixty-two years. He was tempted to
-settle here by the hope of participating in the rich
-treasures for which the country was then famed;
-but he arrived two or three years too late: the
-mines were already on the decline, and he was
-obliged to turn his attention to agricultural pursuits,
-in which he persevered with such success<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-that he was enabled to realize a comfortable independency,
-and to bring up a numerous family in
-credit and respectability. It had been well if his
-neighbours had profited by so eminent an example,
-instead of deserting the country when the
-gold on its surface disappeared. That many did
-so was evident from the declining state of the village;
-a great number of its houses were falling to
-decay, others were untenanted, and its population,
-which formerly amounted to near three thousand,
-was dwindled to a third of that amount.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing my journey next day, I crossed the
-ridge of a lofty chain of mountains, abounding
-with streams, that were much swoln in consequence
-of the late rains; one of the largest, called
-Rio dos Peixes, I forded thrice, and entered on
-a wide champaign country. In many parts I saw
-large tracts of bare places, where the grit-stone
-alternated with argillaceous schistus. The next
-ten miles led through an elevated and fertile plain,
-intersected with rivulets in every direction, and
-well calculated for farming, but very thinly inhabited.
-Early in the afternoon I reached an eminence,
-from which I had a fine view of Villa do Principe,
-situated on the rise of a lofty hill opposite,
-the base of which was washed by a rivulet called
-<i>Corvinho dos Quatro Vintens</i><a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>. On arriving in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-the town, I was conducted to the house of the
-governor, or chief magistrate, who received me
-very politely, and introduced me to his lady and a
-party of friends, with whom I took tea.</p>
-
-<p>Villa do Principe was established as a <i>comarco</i>,
-or district, in the year 1730, when the gold-washings
-were most productive: but it dates its origin
-fifteen years earlier, at which period the place was
-discovered by the Paulistas, who had then commenced
-to migrate from Villa Rica and the adjacent
-settlements. The town at present contains
-about five thousand inhabitants, the most considerable
-proportion of whom are shopkeepers, and
-the rest artisans, farmers, miners, and laborers.
-Here is a house of permutation, to which every
-miner in the district brings the gold he obtains,
-and pays the royal fifth, as is done in Villa Rica.
-The <i>ouvidor</i> holds the office of mint-master, which
-renders his situation one of the best in the gift of
-the crown. Here are several inferior officers belonging
-to various departments of the public service.
-As this town is situated very near the confines
-of the Diamond District, and on the high
-road leading to it, the strictest regulations prevail
-respecting the passage of all persons thither.
-No one, except travellers on business, with certificates<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-to that effect, is suffered to proceed, until
-a formal notification has been made to the governor
-of that district; the laws of which are so
-strict, that any person found within it, out of the
-regular road, is liable to be apprehended on suspicion,
-and subjected to an examination, which
-frequently occasions much trouble and delay.</p>
-
-<p>The country around Villa do Principe is very
-fine and open, being free from those impenetrable
-woods, which occur so frequently in other parts of
-the province. Its soil is in general very productive,
-and the climate mild and salubrious.</p>
-
-<p>At a washing about six leagues distant, a lump
-of gold was found of several pounds weight. From
-the same place I procured some above two ounces,
-and obtained the large crystals now in my possession,
-one of which is considered unique.</p>
-
-<p>I quitted Villa do Principe about noon on the
-day following, after making my acknowledgments
-for the polite attentions of the governor, who kindly
-sent a servant to attend me the first league of the
-road. This man I commissioned, under a promise of
-pecuniary recompence, to collect for me land-shells
-and insects, against my return, which I expected
-would take place in two or three months; and,
-from the aptness with which he received my directions,
-(joined to the prospect of emolument),
-I had little doubt but that he would attend to
-them.</p>
-
-<p>As we journeyed on, I perceived that the country
-bore an aspect entirely different from that in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-the neighbourhood of Villa do Principe: its surface,
-consisting of coarse sand and rounded quartz
-pebbles, was almost destitute of wood or herbage.
-One hillock near the road exhibited perpendicular
-laminæ of micaceous grit, which, on alighting
-from my horse and examining, I found to be flexible.
-My soldier, hearing me remark that the
-country bore characteristics which I had never
-observed elsewhere, exclaimed, “Senhor, we are
-in the Diamond District.” This circumstance,
-which I had not before thought of, fully accounted
-for the change. We travelled over a very sterile
-country for the first four leagues, and passed several
-high mountains. Towards the close of the
-day we reached an eminence, from which we beheld
-a most romantic cluster of dwellings, resembling
-a labyrinth, or a negroes-town in Africa.
-We descended the hill, and approached the place;
-when, it being nearly dark, I was conducted to a
-house much larger than any of the others, where
-I learnt that the establishment was a diamond-work
-called San Gonzales, the first which occurs
-in the Serro do Frio. It has been some time on
-the decline, and employs about 200 negroes. The
-intendant, a very intelligent man, had been apprised
-of our coming by a letter from the governor
-at Tejuco, and gave me a very friendly reception.
-While engaged in conversation with him, I observed
-(it being now moon-light) some fine cows
-in front of the premises, and concluded that they
-were come to be milked, but this I understood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-was not the case. They were licking the doorposts
-and sides of the houses, with much apparent
-eagerness, and, on enquiring what this signified,
-I was told that they wanted salt. They were so
-tame and gentle that, on holding out my hand,
-they licked it; when, being desirous to see the
-effect which salt produced on them, I procured
-some, and gave them a handful: but they became
-so very unruly for more, that had I not immediately
-desisted and retired, their fury might have produced
-serious consequences. This article is so
-necessary for the support of the cattle, that their
-very existence depends on it, yet it is encumbered
-with a heavier duty than any other article of import,
-iron alone excepted. Surely, when it is
-considered that vast herds are daily sent from this
-province to Rio de Janeiro, each paying a toll of
-nearly twelve shillings on crossing the river Paraibuna,
-the impolicy of this duty must be self-evident,
-because, in raising the price of the commodity
-to an excessive degree, it checks the breed
-of cattle, and thus ultimately defeats the purpose
-for which it was imposed.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, before we left this romantic
-place, I devoted some time to an examination of
-the refuse-hillocks contiguous to the diamond-works,
-but found nothing among the heaps of
-quartzose stones, which had been washed when
-this place was more in repute. I here noticed a
-thin stratum below the roots of the grass, which
-I had elsewhere seen, but never so distinctly characteristic.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-It is called <i>bergalhão</i>, and consists
-of quartz pebbles, generally angular, and not unfrequently
-large beds of solid quartz not more
-than four or five inches thick. This stratum does
-not appear to have been formed at the same time,
-or by the same means as the <i>cascalho</i>, from which
-it is invariably separated by a stratum of vegetable
-earth unequal in thickness; it has more the appearance
-of a thin bed of quartz subsequently
-shattered into innumerable fragments.</p>
-
-<p>Having taken leave of the administrator, I proceeded
-through a continuation of mountains and
-sterile country, very thinly inhabited. I stopt at
-one of the best of the few miserable houses on the
-road to procure some refreshment. There was a
-half-starved cat in the door-way, the sight of which
-plainly evinced to me what I had to expect. Poor
-animal, thought I, the habitation in which thou
-existest, will not afford maintenance for a mouse,
-much less for thee! While musing on this picture
-of distress and famine, a poor meagre woman
-came to the door, of whom I requested a little
-water, which she brought me, and while I was
-drinking it she began to implore charity. Her
-countenance had already expressed what her tongue
-now uttered: I gave her the few provisions my
-soldiers had with them, together with a small
-piece of money, and took leave;&mdash;the last words
-I heard from her were those of gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>Ere we arrived at this place, we had seen Tejuco
-at full twelve miles’ distance, and were now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-much nearer. We crossed two rapid rivulets, one
-of them called Rio Negro, the waters of which
-were of a very black color, and afterwards passed
-a guard-house, or register, called Milho Verde,
-situated near a stream of the same name, formerly
-much noted for diamonds. Here a band of soldiers
-are stationed, who are always on the alert,
-riding after and examining passengers. The country
-is extremely rough, and destitute of vegetation,
-covered in all directions with grit-stone rocks
-full of rounded quartzose pebbles. We rode two
-miles along the Corvinho de St. Francisco, which
-runs through the ravine at the foot of the mountain
-on the side of which Tejuco is built, presenting
-much the same appearance as Villa Rica.
-I entered the town, and took up my abode at
-the best inn, which contained some neat rooms,
-and afforded tolerable accommodations.</p>
-
-<p>This was Sunday the 17th of September, being
-one month since my departure from Rio de Janeiro,
-during which period I had been almost continually
-on horseback; for the time I remained at
-Villa Rica was principally occupied in journies to
-various places in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c13" id="c13">CHAP. XIII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Visit to the Diamond Works on the River Jiquitinhonha.&mdash;General
-Description of the
-Works.&mdash;Mode of Washing.&mdash;Return to Tejuco.&mdash;Visit
-to the Treasury.&mdash;Excursion to
-Rio Pardo.&mdash;Miscellaneous Remarks.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">THE continual fatigues, and want of accommodation
-on the journey, had rendered me very unwell,
-and I was therefore desirous of resting a
-week at Tejuco before I proceeded to the diamond
-mines; but, learning that I had been expected for
-the last two or three days, I sent one of my soldiers
-up to the house of Dr. Camara, the governor,
-to announce my arrival, and to state that I
-was prevented by indisposition from personally
-paying my respects to him. He immediately came
-with a few friends to visit me, gave me a most
-hearty welcome to Tejuco, and staid with me at
-least three hours. I delivered to him my public
-and private letters, passports, and other credentials,
-which he perused with great satisfaction, observing
-to the <i>ouvidor</i> and his friends, that I possessed
-the same privileges which they did, having
-permission from the court to see every place I
-wished, which they were directed to show me.
-He then told me that, in expectation of my arrival,
-he had delayed a journey to the greatest of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-the diamond works, called Mandanga, situated on
-the river Jiquitinhonha, which employs about a
-thousand Negroes, and on particular occasions
-double that number. He was desirous that I
-should see this great work with all the machinery
-in operation, which would be very speedily removed,
-the late rains having swoln the rivers so
-much as to render working more, impracticable.
-He therefore kindly invited me to breakfast at his
-house on the following morning, when he would
-have all in readiness for a journey of about thirty
-miles to the place above mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>At an early hour I arose; and, though so unwell
-as to be scarcely more than half alive, I could
-not resist the favorable opportunity now offered
-me of gratifying the curiosity which had so long
-occupied my mind, by visiting the diamond mines,
-in company with the principal officer in the administration
-of them, who was therefore qualified to
-furnish me with the amplest information. A fine
-horse was waiting for me at the door, and I rode
-up to the house of the governor, who introduced
-me to his amiable lady, daughters, and family,
-with whom I had the honor to take breakfast. Several
-officers of the diamond establishment arrived
-on horseback to accompany us, their presence being
-required on this occasion.</p>
-
-<p>At nine o’clock we set out, and crossed the ravine,
-watered by the small rivulet of St. Franciso,
-which separates Tejuco from the opposite mountains.
-The road was very rough and uneven, continually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-ascending or descending mountains of
-considerable extent, the strata of which were grit
-alternating with micaceous schistus, and presenting
-an immense quantity of rude masses, composed
-of grit and rounded quartz, forming a loose
-and friable kind of pudding-stone. The country
-appeared almost destitute of wood, presenting occasionally
-a few poor shrubs; there were no cattle
-to be seen, yet some of the tracts would certainly
-maintain sheep in great numbers. Having halted
-at a place about half way, we descended a very
-steep mountain, full a mile in the declivity, and
-entered a ravine, where we crossed a very good
-wooden bridge over the river Jiquitinhonha, which
-is larger than the Derwent at Derby. We rode
-along its margin, where the land appears much
-richer, presenting a good vegetable soil covered
-with underwood; and, proceeding about a league,
-arrived at the famed place called Mandanga. The
-habitations, which are about one hundred in number,
-are built detached, and are generally of a
-circular form, with very high thatched roofs, like
-African huts, but much larger. The walls are
-formed of upright stakes, interwoven with small
-branches, and coated with clay inside and out.
-The houses of the officers are of the same materials
-but of much more convenient form, and whitewashed
-within. Near some of the houses we observed
-inclosures for gardens, which, in some degree,
-enlivened the prospect, and gave an air of
-comfort to these rude and simple dwellings.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I remained here five days, during which I was
-occupied in viewing and examining various parts
-of the works, of which I shall here attempt to give
-a general description.</p>
-
-<p>This rich river, formed by the junction of a
-number of streams which will be hereafter noted,
-is as wide as the Thames at Windsor, and in general
-from three to nine feet deep. The part now
-in working is a curve or elbow, from which the
-current is diverted into a canal cut across the
-tongue of land, round which it winds, the river
-being stopped just below the head of the canal by
-an embankment, formed of several thousand bags
-of sand. This is a work of considerable magnitude,
-and requires the co-operation of all the negroes
-to complete it; for, the river being wide
-and not very shallow, and also occasionally subject
-to overflows, they have to make the embankment
-so strong as to resist the pressure of the
-water, admitting it to rise four or five feet.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc">BREAK IN THE HILL SHEWING THE TOPAZ MINE AT CAPON.</p></div>
- <img src="images/ill-335a.jpg" width="400" height="274" id="i314"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-335b.jpg" width="400" height="276"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc">BED OF THE RIVER LAID DRY BY AN AQUEDUCT TO CONNECT THE
-ALLUVIAL SOIL IN ORDER TO WASH IT FOR DIAMONDS, GOLD, &amp;c.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The deeper parts of the channel of the river
-are laid dry by means of large <i>caissons</i> or chain-pumps,
-worked by a water-wheel. The mud is
-then carried off, and the <i>cascalho</i> is dug up and
-removed to a convenient place for washing. This
-labor was, until lately, performed by the negroes,
-who carried the <i>cascalho</i> in <i>gamellas</i> on their
-heads, but Dr. Camara has formed two inclined
-planes about one hundred yards in length, along
-which carts are drawn by a large water-wheel, divided
-into two parts, the ladles or buckets of
-which are so constructed that the rotatory motion
-may be altered by changing the current of water
-from one side to the other; this wheel, by means
-of a rope made of untanned hides, works two carts,
-one of which descends empty on one inclined plane,
-while the other, loaded with <i>cascalho</i>, is drawn to
-the top of the other inclined plane, where it falls into
-a cradle, empties itself, and descends in its turn. At
-a work, called Cangica, formerly of great importance,
-about a mile up the river on the opposite side,
-there are three cylindrical engines (<i>wims</i>) for drawing
-the <i>cascalho</i>, like those used in the mining
-country of Derbyshire, and also rail-ways over
-some uneven ground. This was the first and
-only machinery of consequence which I saw in
-the Diamond District, and there appear many obstacles
-to the general introduction of it. Timber,
-when wanted of large size, has to be fetched a
-distance of one hundred miles at a very heavy expense;
-there are few persons competent to the
-construction of machines, and the workmen dislike
-to make them, fearing that this is only part of
-a general plan for superseding manual labor.</p>
-
-<p>The stratum of <i>cascalho</i> consists of the same
-materials with that in the gold district. On many
-parts, by the edge of the river, are large conglomerated
-masses of rounded pebbles cemented by
-oxide of iron, which sometimes envelop gold and
-diamonds. They calculate on getting as much
-<i>cascalho</i> in the dry season as will occupy all their
-hands during the months which are more subject<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-to rain. When carried from the bed of the river
-whence it is dug, it is laid in heaps containing
-apparently from five to fifteen tons each.</p>
-
-<p>Water is conveyed from a distance, and is distributed
-to the various parts of the works by
-means of aqueducts, constructed with great ingenuity
-and skill. The method of washing for
-diamonds at this place is as follows:&mdash;A shed is
-erected in the form of a parallelogram, twenty-five
-or thirty yards long, and about fifteen wide, consisting
-of upright posts which support a roof
-thatched with long grass. Down the middle of
-the area of this shed a current of water is conveyed
-through a canal covered with strong planks,
-on which the <i>cascalho</i> is laid two or three feet
-thick. On the other side of the area is a flooring
-of planks, from four to five yards long, embedded
-in clay, extending the whole length of the shed,
-and having a slope from the canal, of three or four
-inches to a yard. This flooring is divided into
-about twenty compartments or troughs, each
-about three feet wide, by means of planks placed
-on their edge. The upper ends of all these
-troughs (here called canoes) communicate with
-the canal, and are so formed that water is admitted
-into them between two planks that are
-about an inch separate. Through this opening
-the current falls about six inches into the trough,
-and may be directed to any part of it, or stopped
-at pleasure by means of a small quantity of clay.
-For instance, sometimes water is required only
-from one corner of the aperture, then the remaining
-part is stopped; sometimes it is wanted
-from the centre, then the extremes are stopped;
-and sometimes only a gentle rill is wanted, then
-the clay is applied accordingly. Along the lower
-ends of the troughs a small channel is dug to carry
-off the water.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-340.jpg" width="400" height="590" id="i317"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc">NEGROES WASHING FOR DIAMONDS, &amp;c.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the heap of <i>cascalho</i>, at equal distances, are
-placed three high chairs<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> for the officers or overseers.
-After they are seated, the negroes<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> enter
-the troughs, each provided with a rake of a peculiar
-form and short handle, with which he rakes
-into the trough about fifty or eighty pounds weight
-of <i>cascalho</i>. The water being then let in upon it,
-the <i>cascalho</i> is spread abroad and continually
-raked up to the head of the trough, so as to be kept
-in constant motion. This operation is performed
-for the space of a quarter of an hour; the water
-then begins to run clearer, having washed the
-earthy particles away, the gravel-like matter is
-raked up to the end of the trough; after the current
-flows away quite clear, the largest stones are
-thrown out, and afterwards those of inferior size,
-then the whole is examined with great care for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-diamonds<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a>. When a negro finds one, he immediately
-stands upright and claps his hands, then
-extends them, holding the gem between his forefinger
-and thumb; an overseer receives it from
-him, and deposits it in a <i>gamella</i> or bowl, suspended
-from the centre of the structure, half full
-of water. In this vessel all the diamonds found
-in the course of the day are placed, and at the
-close of the work are taken out and delivered to
-the principal officer, who, after they have been
-weighed, registers the particulars in a book kept
-for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p>When a negro is so fortunate as to find a diamond
-of the weight of an <i>octavo</i> (17-1/2 carats),
-much ceremony takes place; he is crowned with a
-wreath of flowers and carried in procession to the
-administrator, who gives him his freedom, by paying
-his owner for it. He also receives a present of
-new clothes, and is permitted to work on his own
-account. When a stone of eight or ten carats is
-found, the negro receives two new shirts, a complete
-new suit, with a hat and a handsome knife.
-For smaller stones of trivial amount proportionate
-premiums are given. During my stay at Tejuco
-a stone of 16-1/2 carats was found: it was pleasing
-to see the anxious desire manifested by the officers,
-that it might prove heavy enough to entitle the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-poor negro to his freedom; and when, on being
-delivered and weighed, it proved only a carat short
-of the requisite weight, all seemed to sympathize
-in his disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>Many precautions are taken to prevent the negroes
-from embezzling diamonds. Although they
-work in a bent position, and consequently never
-know whether the overseers are watching them or
-not, yet it is easy for them to omit gathering any
-which they see, and to place them in a corner of
-the trough for the purpose of secreting them at
-leisure hours, to prevent which they are frequently
-changed while the operation is going on. A
-word of command being given by the overseers,
-they instantly move into each other’s troughs, so
-that no opportunity of collusion can take place.
-If a negro be suspected of having swallowed a
-diamond, he is confined in a strong room until the
-fact can be ascertained. Formerly the punishment
-inflicted on a negro for smuggling diamonds
-was confiscation of his person to the state; but it
-being thought too hard for the owner to suffer for
-the offence of his servant, the penalty has been
-commuted for personal imprisonment and chastisement.
-This is a much lighter punishment than that
-which their owners or any white man would suffer
-for a similar offence.</p>
-
-<p>There is no particular regulation respecting the
-dress of the negroes: they work in the clothes
-most suitable to the nature of their employment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-generally in a waistcoat and a pair of drawers,
-and not naked, as some travellers have stated.
-Their hours of labor are from a little before sunrise
-until sun-set, half an hour being allowed for
-breakfast, and two hours at noon. While washing
-they change their posture as often as they
-please, which is very necessary, as the work requires
-them to place their feet on the edges of the
-trough, and to stoop considerably. This posture
-is particularly prejudicial to young growing negroes,
-as it renders them in-kneed. Four or five
-times during the day they all rest, when snuff, of
-which they are very fond, is given to them.</p>
-
-<p>The negroes are formed into working parties,
-called troops, containing two hundred each, under
-the direction of an administrator and inferior
-officers. Each troop has a clergyman and a surgeon
-to attend it. With respect to the subsistence
-of the negroes, although the present governor has
-in some degree improved it by allowing a daily
-portion of fresh beef, which was not allowed by
-his predecessors, yet I am sorry to observe that it
-is still poor and scanty: and in other respects they
-are more hardly dealt with than those of any other
-establishment which I visited: notwithstanding
-this, the owners are all anxious to get their negroes
-into the service, doubtless from sinister motives,
-of which more will be said hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>The officers are liberally paid, and live in a style
-of considerable elegance, which a stranger would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-not be led to expect in so remote a place. Our
-tables were daily covered with a profusion of excellent
-viands, served up on fine Wedgewood ware,
-and the state of their household generally corresponded
-with this essential part of it. They were
-ever ready to assist me in my examination of the
-works, and freely gave me all the necessary information
-respecting them.</p>
-
-<p>Having detailed the process of washing for diamonds,
-I proceed to a general description of the
-situations in which they are found. The flat pieces
-of ground on each side the river are equally rich
-throughout their extent, and hence the officers are
-enabled to calculate the value of an unworked
-place by comparison with the amount found on
-working in the part adjoining. These known
-places are left in reserve, and trial is made of more
-uncertain grounds. The following observation I
-often heard from the Intendant: “That piece of
-ground” (speaking of an unworked flat by the
-side of the river) “will yield me ten thousand carats
-of diamonds whenever we shall be required
-to get them in the regular course of working, or
-when, on any particular occasion, an order from
-Government arrives, demanding an extraordinary
-and immediate supply.”</p>
-
-<p>The substances accompanying diamonds, and
-considered good indications of them, are bright
-bean-like iron ore, a slaty flint-like substance, approaching
-Lydian-stone, of fine texture, black
-oxide of iron in great quantities, rounded bits of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-blue quartz, yellow crystal, and other materials
-entirely different from any thing known to be produced
-in the adjacent mountains. Diamonds are
-by no means peculiar to the beds of rivers or deep
-ravines; they have been found in cavities and
-water-courses on the summits of the most lofty
-mountains.</p>
-
-<p>I had some conversation with the officers respecting
-the matrix of the diamond, not a vestige of
-which could I trace. They informed me that they
-often found diamonds cemented in pudding-stone,
-accompanied with grains of gold, but that they
-always broke them out, as they could not enter
-them in the treasury, or weigh them with matter
-adhering to them. I obtained a mass of pudding-stone,
-apparently of very recent formation, cemented
-by ferruginous matter enveloping grains
-of gold and diamonds; likewise a few pounds of
-the <i>cascalho</i> in its unwashed state.</p>
-
-<p>This river, and other streams in its vicinity,
-have been in washing many years, and have produced
-great quantities of diamonds, which have
-ever been reputed of the finest quality. They
-vary in size; some are so small that four or five
-are required to weigh one grain, consequently sixteen
-or twenty to the carat: there are seldom found
-more than two or three stones of from seventeen
-to twenty carats in the course of a year, and not
-once in two years is there found throughout the
-whole washings a stone of thirty carats. During
-the few days I was here they were not very successful;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-the whole quantity found amounted only
-to forty, the largest of which was only four carats,
-and of a light green color.</p>
-
-<p>From the great quantity of <i>debris</i>, or worked
-<i>cascalho</i>, in every part near the river, it is reasonable
-to calculate that the works have been in operation
-above forty years; of course there must arrive
-a period at which they will be exhausted, but
-there are grounds in the neighbourhood, particularly
-in the Cerro de St. Antonio, and in the country
-now inhabited by the Indians, which will probably
-afford these gems in equal abundance.</p>
-
-<p>After residing here five days, we visited a diamond
-work called Monteiro, about two miles up
-the river, and went a league further to a gold-work
-called Carrapato. The <i>cascalho</i> at this work was
-taken from a part of the river eight feet deep,
-which formed an eddy under a projecting point;
-I was shewn a heap of it, that was estimated to
-be worth £10,000. In removing this heap from
-its bed, four hundred negroes had been employed
-three months; and to wash it, would occupy one
-hundred men for three months more, the expense
-of both operations amounting to perhaps £1,500.
-We arrived at this place at eight o’clock in the
-morning; six negroes were employed four hours
-in washing two troughs, containing together about
-a ton of <i>cascalho</i>, when, to my great surprise,
-after the water ran clear, and the large stones
-were thrown out, the black oxide of iron, of which
-there was great abundance, was fringed with grains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-of gold, a novel and very agreeable sight to a
-stranger. The gold was taken out at three or four
-different times, and, when the washing was completed,
-was dried over a fire and weighed: it
-amounted to nearly twenty ounces Troy. This is
-esteemed a very rich place, and such circumstances
-are of rare occurrence. The whole neighbourhood
-is sterile, presenting the same characteristics
-as those before described. By proper cultivation
-the vallies might be rendered very productive; but,
-as the troops of negroes and their officers are
-continually changing, no agricultural establishments
-are formed.</p>
-
-<p>This place probably derived its name from a
-most disagreeable insect, which infests the low
-brushwood in the neighbourhood. It is like a
-sheep-tick; and, on getting access to any part
-of the body, it fastens imperceptibly, buries its
-head under the skin, and draws blood until its
-body is swelled to the size of a bean. If forcibly
-removed, it leaves a very deep disagreeable hole,
-which is frequently difficult to heal. The best
-mode of getting rid of the animal is to anoint it
-with either laudanum or oil, and suffer it to remain
-until it dies, when it will drop off.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon we returned to Tejuco by another
-route more mountainous than that by which
-we had come. Crossing a deep ravine, formerly
-very rich in diamonds, we rode up a mountain full
-a mile on the ascent, and passed several rivulets,
-which I was informed had produced many fine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-stones. These, and in fact all the best situations
-in the district, had been in the possession of the
-smugglers, and were explored by those enterprising
-men. In the course of our journey, I observed
-that whenever a traveller or a negro was seen
-by any of our party at a distance from the road, a
-soldier was instantly dispatched to bring him to
-the officers, before whom he underwent an examination.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening we arrived at Tejuco, where I
-was desirous of remaining a week to recruit my
-strength. Dr. Camara ordered my baggage to his
-house, whither I removed in compliance with his
-pressing invitation: he was kind enough to give
-me his library as my private room; it was extensive
-and very select, consisting chiefly of English
-authors on science. Adjoining to it is a fine garden
-of nearly three acres in extent, planted chiefly
-with grass. It was formerly a gold-washing, and consequently
-presented a surface of only refuse stones;
-but the present proprietor levelled it, brought a
-little soil from various parts, and planted a peculiar
-variety of grass, which he keeps in cutting for
-his mules. This was the commencement of the
-fruit season; the peaches, with which the trees
-were loaded, were nearly ripe. The asparagus,
-and vegetables of every description, were very
-fine. The climate appeared to be mild and genial;
-the thermometer was generally at 62 degrees at sunrise,
-and at mid-day, in a room rather exposed to
-the sun, rose to 74 degrees.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Tejuco being situated in a sterile district, which
-produces nothing for the maintenance of its inhabitants,
-in number about six thousand, depends,
-for a supply of provisions, on farms situated several
-leagues distant. The bread of the country
-was at this time extremely dear; Indian corn,
-from which it is made, being from 5s. 6d. to 6s.
-the bushel; beans and other pulse in proportion.
-Beef was very indifferent, this being the dry season;
-pork and poultry were rather plentiful. At
-no place do I recollect to have seen a greater proportion
-of indigent people, particularly of females.
-Full a hundred and fifty of these unhappy persons
-come weekly to receive portions of flour which the
-governor was pleased to allow them. They are totally
-without occupation, here being neither agriculture
-nor manufactures to afford them any; yet
-both these main supports of the population might
-be introduced, if a proper spirit of industry prevailed
-among the inhabitants. The land would,
-with little trouble, yield excellent crops, were any
-kind of inclosures made, which, it must be allowed,
-is an undertaking attended with some difficulties,
-yet not of such magnitude as to render it
-hopeless. With respect to manufactures, a most
-valuable material is at hand, as cotton from Minas
-Novas, distant only from sixty to one hundred
-miles, passes through this place to the capital.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, notwithstanding the idleness of the inhabitants,
-Tejuco may be called florishing, on account
-of the circulation of property created by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-the diamond works. The annual sum paid by Government
-for the hire of negroes, salaries of officers,
-and various necessaries, such as nitre and
-iron, does not amount to less than £35,000, and
-this, added to the demands of the inhabitants of
-the town and its vicinity, occasions a considerable
-trade. The shops are stocked with English cottons,
-baizes, and cloths, and other manufactured
-goods; also hams, cheese, butter, porter, and
-other articles of consumption. Mules from Bahia
-and Rio de Janeiro came loaded with them. Great
-complaints were made among the shopkeepers of
-the bad quality of the cotton goods, and of their
-losing their colors in washing. Some of the principal
-inhabitants exclaimed against the introduction
-of foreign luxuries, and rather wished that
-their trade with England should furnish them the
-means of working their iron mines, and enable
-them to defend themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Tejuco, owing to its situation by the side of a
-hill, is very irregularly built; its streets are uneven,
-but the houses in general are well constructed
-and in good condition, compared with those of
-other towns in the interior. Its name, which, in
-the Portuguese language, signifies a muddy place,
-is derived from places of that description in its
-neighbourhood, which are rendered passable by
-being covered with large pieces of wood.</p>
-
-<p>Through the kind care and attention of Dr. Camara
-and his excellent family, my health was in
-part re-established, and I was enabled to ride out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-daily, occupying myself in seeing all I could, and
-gaining the best information, in which I was assisted
-by my worthy host and all his friends. Our
-evenings were passed in a most agreeable manner,
-among the parties which regularly assembled at
-the Intendant’s house, consisting of some of the
-principal inhabitants of the town. In these parties
-the gentlemen engage at whist, and the ladies
-take tea and play round games, or enter into conversation
-on the passing occurrences of the day.
-In no part of Brazil did I meet with society so
-select and agreeable; this may certainly be called
-the court of the mining district. In their manners
-there was no ceremonious reserve or courtly refinement,
-but their whole demeanour was genteel
-and well-bred, enlivened by an ease and good humor
-which the affability of the chief and his amiable
-lady and daughters ever tended to promote.
-The company all dressed after the English mode,
-and in dresses of English manufacture: the gentlemen
-were almost all men of title, distinguished
-with stars, yet the <i>constellation</i> which they formed,
-was far inferior in brilliancy and elegance to that of
-the ladies.</p>
-
-<p>I was invited to pay a visit to the treasury,
-which can only be viewed when a meeting of officers
-is called, as the treasure is kept in chests, under
-three distinct locks, the keys of which are entrusted
-to three several officers, who are all required
-to be present at the opening. They here
-showed me the diamonds taken from the <i>tropeiro</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-at Conceição, which were in general much better
-than those from the mines worked by Government.
-One about eleven carats was a very fine stone,
-perfectly crystallized, in the form of an octahedron.
-The unfortunate man from whom they were taken,
-I was informed, was very ill in prison. I was
-then shown about eight hundred carats found in
-the regular course of washing; they were in general
-very small, not one exceeding five carats. I
-observed several round and many inferior ones colored.
-Those with a dark green hue and rough
-exterior, were, they informed me, when cut, of
-the purest water, and from Rio Pardo.</p>
-
-<p>Here the diamonds found in the district are deposited
-monthly, as they are received from the
-different works. They are carefully weighed, and
-some selected and kept separate. The average
-quantity obtained may be estimated at from 20,000
-to 25,000 carats annually, which are sent under a
-military escort to Rio, and there lodged in the
-treasury.</p>
-
-<p>The diamonds are tied up in black silk bags,
-and deposited in elegant inner cabinets, the whole
-of which are locked up in strong chests bound
-with iron.</p>
-
-<p>They then showed me the gold, which was in
-large bars, weighing from five to ten pounds each,
-the whole of which I estimated at full 150lbs.
-weight. It was found in the district of Cerro do
-Frio, and was reserved to pay part of the expenses
-attending the establishment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>An excursion was some days afterwards proposed
-to another diamond work, called Rio
-Pardo, distant about twenty miles in a north-west
-direction. After proceeding a third of the
-way, over a country covered with a poor wiry
-sort of grass, we passed several fine falls of water,
-and crossed a ridge of mountains. The land as
-we advanced appeared much better, though still
-very naked, having only a few poor crooked small
-trees, that rather increased than took from its desolate
-appearance.</p>
-
-<p>We passed through Chapada, a little dirty village,
-once famous for its washings, as were all
-the streams and ravines in the vicinity, and proceeded
-over some good clay-land, and a considerable
-tract of peat-moss, well watered by streams
-which burst in all directions from the hills. The
-country was open, and had a most romantic appearance,
-caused by a quantity of low rocks of
-soft pudding-stone, laminated, which lay on the surface
-in the most irregular forms. These lands were
-well calculated for pasturage, particularly in the
-season of abundance, but I was told that the
-cattle put to graze upon them were frequently
-stolen by the negroes<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>, and that there were many
-noxious plants in the herbage which proved fatal
-to the beasts that ate them.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived at the houses of the establishment
-about eleven in the forenoon, and walked four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-miles farther to the diamond works, on which a
-full troop of negroes was then employed. Rio
-Pardo is a dirty paltry-looking rivulet, which runs
-into the Rio Velho: in some parts it is confined
-by shelving rocks of quartz, through which it runs
-rapidly; in others it takes a serpentine course,
-and forms eddies, which are called <i>caldrones</i>, on
-account of their resemblance to the cavity of a boiler.
-The bed of the river, though confined, has a stratum
-of <i>cascalho</i> of variable thickness, which, after the
-current has been diverted, is dug up, and washed
-in the same way as at Jiquitinhonha. The <i>caldrones</i>,
-or holes, formerly eddies, but now partly
-filled with <i>cascalho</i>, so as to be no more than three
-or four feet deep, are frequently found to contain
-many diamonds; one of them, which was cleared
-by four men in as many days, produced one hundred
-and eighty carats.</p>
-
-<p>Rio Pardo, though paltry and insignificant in
-its appearance, has produced as large a quantity
-of the most precious gems as any river in the
-district. The rough blueish-green-colored diamonds,
-formerly so much esteemed by the Hollanders,
-continue to be found here, and the stones
-of this rivulet are to this day reputed the most valuable
-in Brazil. The accompanying substances are
-somewhat different from those of the washings at
-Mandanga; here is no bean-like iron ore, but a considerable
-quantity of flinty-slate, like Lydian-stone,
-in various shapes and sizes, and very small black
-oxide of iron; the earthy matter is also much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-finer than at the above place. I was informed
-that there remained as much unworked ground
-as would occupy a hundred negroes full twenty
-years.</p>
-
-<p>Rio Pardo runs about a league to the westward
-of Capella Velha, which is a chapel on a mountain,
-washed at its base by a stream, called Corgo
-de Capella Velha, which some years ago was
-worked, and produced diamonds of great size and
-superior brilliancy. The rivulets to the eastward
-of this ridge of mountains run into the Jiquitinhonha;
-those to the westward have their course
-into the Rio Velho, which flows into the Rio
-de San Francisco. The height of the mountains
-I had no means of ascertaining, but they
-are considered as undoubtedly the highest in
-Brazil. The air in this elevated region is pure
-and rather keen; the thermometer in the mornings
-and evenings stood at 62, and at mid-day about
-74. In all the parts which I visited, the land appeared
-favorable for the growth of almost every
-species of produce, and, if properly inclosed and
-cultivated, might in no long time become the
-granary of the district.</p>
-
-<p>On our return to Tejuco I was shown several
-dwarfish trees, of the height and size of a common
-crab-tree, with extremely crooked branches; and
-was informed that they were a species of the
-<i>quercus suber</i>. I cut from them some pieces of
-bark about an inch in thickness, which were elastic,
-and actually proved to be cork. It seemed
-to me a question of considerable interest, whether<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-these trees, if regularly planted and attended to,
-might not produce cork of as good a quality as
-that which we obtain from the Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p>After resting a few days, I accompanied the Intendant
-to a small diamond work, called Corolina,
-and returned the same day. This work some
-years ago produced many good stones, but at present
-it employs very few people. The mode of
-washing is exactly the same with that practised at
-Mandanga.</p>
-
-<p>At Tejuco some tolerably good barley was
-shown to me; it was not so heavy as that of our
-best from Norfolk, and was but little known.
-The Intendant uses it as provender for his mules
-whenever he can obtain it. On examining the
-sample, I could not but reflect that, if land so ill-managed
-produced such barley, how much superior
-would be the quality of the grain under good
-management.</p>
-
-<p>At a subsequent period of my visit, the Intendant,
-with whom malt-liquor is a favorite beverage,
-expressed a desire to see some of the barley
-converted into malt, in order to brew beer, and,
-after repeated solicitations, I undertook to make
-the experiment. A quantity was procured
-which I endeavoured to prepare in the best manner
-that circumstances would allow. Having
-steeped it the requisite time, I put it on a cold
-floor, and managed it as is customary in our malt-houses;
-when it had germinated sufficiently, I
-dried it over a slow fire; afterwards, having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-cleansed it from the combs by rubbing, I crushed
-it, and finally mashed it. The infusion produced
-a tolerable wort, which, however, I did not deem
-sufficiently good, as it wanted saccharine matter:
-this deficiency I supplied by the admixture of a
-small quantity of sugar. It was then boiled until
-it was judged of a proper consistency, and a very
-pleasant bitter was added instead of hops. The
-fermentation I endeavoured to promote with leaven,
-which had been prepared a few days before,
-and, when that process had terminated, the liquor
-was put into small casks, which we stopped close.
-Though it might not prove good from the hasty
-manner in which the process was conducted, yet
-the mode of preparing it was exemplified, which
-was the main purpose of the experiment. It appeared
-to me by no means impossible either to
-make malt or to brew beer, if proper places were
-made under-ground, so as to ensure a moderate
-degree of cold for the operation of malting, and
-for the subsequent process. Sugar is here so
-abundant, that any quantity of saccharine matter
-might be added to improve the poorness of the
-malt; and it is highly probable that a very pleasant
-beverage might be made, which would relieve
-the inhabitants of this remote district from
-the necessity of having recourse to the metropolis
-for bad wines, and from the ill effects which
-proceed from drinking bad spirits distilled in the
-vicinity.</p>
-
-<p>Many parts of this fine country abound in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-oranges, pines, peaches, guavas, and a great
-variety of indigenous fruits, both sweet and acid,
-particularly the <i>jaboticaba</i>, which is very rich in
-mucilaginous matter; yet no attempt has hitherto
-been made to obtain wine from any of them.
-Ginger and pepper grow here spontaneously,
-and many spices might probably be cultivated
-with success.</p>
-
-<p>Grass for cattle was as dear at Tejuco as at
-Rio de Janeiro, and the small quantity which cost
-eight-pence would scarcely suffice a mule a day.
-The Intendant and the Captain of the cavalry
-had each of them about two acres under cultivation,
-of a species called <i>Engorda Cavallos</i> (fattener
-of horses), which grew from five to seven
-feet high, with a thick esculent stem, and long
-lancet-shaped leaves. It has a large fibrous root,
-and is well-calculated for stony ground where
-there is little earth; it even grew among rounded
-stones that had been washed three years before<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The Intendant, who had a taste for rural economy,
-and more particularly his lady, were very
-anxious to make their own butter and cheese, and
-expressed a great desire to be instructed in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-process as practised in England, though milk was
-very scarce; and it was not without much difficulty
-that, after sending a few miles, about three
-gallons were collected. In the mean time such
-household utensils as were most fit for the purpose,
-having been made ready, and others procured,
-very excellent butter was produced, and
-afterwards a few cheeses were made, which there
-was every reason to suppose would prove good.
-The lady interested herself greatly in the experiment,
-not only performing part of the operations,
-with the assistance of her daughter, but inviting
-several of her friends in the town to see with what
-little trouble the processes were performed, and
-distributing the products among them<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>:&mdash;a rare
-example of industry! I am decidedly of opinion,
-that, were the females of Brazil better educated,
-especially in whatever relates to domestic economy,
-and were they accustomed to see the concerns
-of a household conducted with regularity
-and order, they would be better members of
-society; for I have ever observed in them that
-inquisitive disposition and desire of information,
-which may be called the first step to improvement.
-But what can be expected from ill-educated
-females, reared from their infancy among
-negras, in miserable houses, scarcely affording a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-shelter from the rain, or a shade from the sun, and
-destitute of every ray of comfort!</p>
-
-<p>In 1815, some iron works were established at
-the Morro de Pilar, a mountain rich in ore, about
-twenty-five leagues south of Tejuco, on the road
-to Villa Rica. The <i>Observador Portuguese</i>,
-vol. xvii. p. 143, contains an interesting account
-of the festivities which took place when the first
-sample of iron was brought from thence to the
-capital of the Diamond District.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c14" id="c14">CHAP. XIV.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Some Account of the Districts of Minas Novas
-and Paracatu.&mdash;Of the large Diamond found
-in the River Abaiti.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">IT was my intention to have continued my journey
-to Minas Novas, and from thence westward
-to Paracatu, and to have returned by Abaiti, a
-place that has produced many large diamonds,
-though generally of inferior quality. This design
-I was prevented from accomplishing by illness,
-being attacked with a violent sciatic complaint,
-accompanied with great debility in the right side,
-which obliged me to return as soon as possible.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-While I remained at Tejuco, for the purpose of
-regaining strength sufficient to encounter the fatigues
-of a journey back to the capital, I employed
-myself in collecting information respecting
-these districts from intelligent persons who resided
-there, as well as from officers on the establishment.
-The following brief description is the
-result of the communications with which they
-favored me.</p>
-
-<p>The principal village in Minas Novas, called
-Tocaya, is thirty-five leagues distant from Tejuco,
-in a north-easterly direction. The road thither is
-parallel with the river Jiquitinhonha, which runs
-from two to five leagues westward of it<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>. Numerous
-rivulets flow into it in this direction, in
-some of which are found white topazes, more
-commonly known here by the name of <i>minas novas</i>.
-They are pretty pellucid pebbles, generally rounded,
-though sometimes they occur perfectly crystallized,
-in the same form as the yellow topaz.
-Blue topazes and <i>aqua-marinas</i> are also found
-here; some of the former are of a singular variety,
-being in one part blue, and in the other clear and
-pellucid. This neighbourhood is also noted for
-producing the beautiful Chrysoberyl, which is
-much esteemed by the higher orders of society in
-Brazil, and in great request among the jewellers
-of Rio de Janeiro. These gems rarely occur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-crystallized; they sell at considerable prices in
-their rough state, and are much more valued in
-America than in England, where, indeed, they
-are little known, or they would be more highly
-appreciated, being, when polished, of great brilliancy
-and exquisite beauty.</p>
-
-<p>To the westward of the river Jiquitinhonha,
-and opposite the village of Bom Successo, is the
-Cerro of Santo Antonio, a place much famed for
-diamonds, which are said to be of an indifferent
-quality. There are, also, other parts, well known
-to many of the inhabitants of the district as being
-rich in these treasures.</p>
-
-<p>The country is very fertile, and produces a
-great variety of the finest woods for cabinet-works;
-also numerous fruits, and most exquisite
-Vanilla, which grows spontaneously. The land,
-being less elevated<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> than Cerro do Frio, is said
-to be much warmer, and is highly favorable to the
-growth of sugar and coffee. The plantations are
-chiefly of cotton, which is reputed to be equal in
-color and quality to that of Maranham. It is transported
-to Rio de Janeiro on mules, and many
-hundreds of those useful animals are continually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-employed in this commerce. A troop of loaded
-mules are full three months, and sometimes four,
-in going, and the same time in returning. These
-animals in this district are double the price that
-they are in S. Paulo. The journeys are attended
-with considerable expense and difficulty; Indian
-corn must be daily bought for their use; and, notwithstanding
-the great attention paid to them on
-the road, many die, and others are frequently
-lamed and disabled. Their burdens are divided
-into two equal parts, and suspended on a pack-saddle
-of peculiar make by straps of raw hide.
-The average burden is nine <i>arrobas</i>, nearly equal
-to three hundred pounds weight, the carriage-expense
-of which, from Rio de Janeiro to Minas
-Novas, is six or seven pounds sterling; to Tejuco
-five pounds; to Villa Rica about three.</p>
-
-<p>The trade to Minas Novas from Rio de Janeiro
-consists principally in negroes, iron, salt, woollens,
-hats, printed cottons, hardware, arms, and
-some fancy articles, a little wine and oil, salt-fish,
-and butter. Few luxuries enter these remote
-parts, the inhabitants seeking for little beyond
-mere necessaries.</p>
-
-<p>Minas Novas is under the jurisdiction of the
-<i>Ouvidor</i> of Villa do Principe, who goes thither
-once a year to settle disputes, administer justice,
-and discharge other duties belonging to his
-office.</p>
-
-<p>At Tocaya the Jiquitinhonha flows into a larger
-river, called Rio Grande, which, taking an easterly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-direction, enters the sea in lat. 16° 20´ south, near
-Porto Seguro. A gentleman with whom I was
-acquainted undertook to navigate this fine river
-from Tocaya to the sea, and, as the current was
-rapid, he performed the task in six days. On his
-return, which occupied fifteen days, he observed
-several tributary rivers, the sources of which
-are unknown, as they rise in the country inhabited
-by the Indians. The river being free from
-falls, may in a short time be frequented by vessels
-from sea, for I did not learn that its entrance
-was shallow or unfit for navigation; probably the
-land about it is low and marshy, which may be
-the reason that it is so little known.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot be too much recommended to the
-Government of Brazil, immediately to order a
-survey of this river, which might be performed
-in one of their launches in two months at little
-or no expense, and, were it found necessary, a
-chain of connection might be established from its
-mouth to Tocaya. The benefits resulting to the
-inhabitants from opening the navigation may be
-easily conceived. The produce of the country, its
-cotton, coffee, and sugar, its rich cabinet-woods,
-and many other valuable articles, would be brought
-into active commerce; extensive plantations would
-be established, and the whole territory would be
-improved. It is true that the commerce of the
-district would flow through another channel, and
-the tolls paid on passing the Paraibuna, to and
-from the capital, would be a little diminished:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-but surely the policy of Government is not so confined
-as to allow that consideration to have any
-weight against a measure of such national importance,
-when it is obvious that one of the greatest
-disadvantages under which the empire of Brazil
-labors, is the want of traffic on all its rivers, except
-to Rio Grande de St. Pedro.</p>
-
-<p>The population of Minas Novas is thin, compared
-with its extent, but is daily increasing. It
-does not appear that mining is the object which
-attracts settlers, though there is a considerable
-quantity of precious stones exported, which are
-found only here, as has been before observed.</p>
-
-<p>Where the rivers are deep it is very difficult to
-raise the <i>cascalho</i> from their beds, in order to
-wash it for gold, &amp;c. for this purpose various
-trivial and ineffectual methods are practised: it
-would be highly conducive to the interest of the
-proprietor, as well as of the state, to have rafts
-or boats constructed, and to adopt the machinery
-used by the ballast-heavers on the river
-Thames<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>, by means of which the <i>cascalho</i> might
-be raised, even from a depth of twenty feet.
-The requisite iron-work might be prepared in
-Rio de Janeiro, (if necessary,) and admitted into
-the mining country, free of duty: there would probably
-be such an increase of gold obtained by it,
-that the proportionate augmentation of the royal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-fifths would amply repay the expense of introducing
-the improvement.</p>
-
-<p>Paracatu is the principal village or town of a
-district of the same name, which lies about ninety
-leagues north-west of Tejuco, bordering on the
-<i>Capitania</i> of Goyazes, from which it is separated
-by a chain of high mountains that take a northerly
-direction. The numerous rivers which rise on the
-eastern side of the mountains, and flow into the
-great river S. Francisco, are rich in gold. The
-population of the village is estimated at above a
-thousand souls, and will shortly be more numerous,
-as the reputed richness of some late discoveries
-has tempted many families to migrate thither.
-It has all the advantages of a high and healthy
-situation, in the midst of a most fertile country,
-and has considerable intercourse with Sabará and
-Villa Rica, where the gold procured in its vicinity
-is permuted. It is governed by a <i>Capitao
-Mor</i>, who is subordinate to the governor of the
-latter place, to whom all disputes of consequence
-are referred. To the southward is the rich <i>destacamento</i>
-of Rio da Prata, a river that yields fine
-diamonds, and has been much frequented by many
-adventurers, who, when discovered and seized, are
-called <i>grimpeiros</i> (smugglers). A strong guard
-of soldiers is stationed here to prevent the precious
-stones from being sought for clandestinely.</p>
-
-<p>A few leagues to the north of the Rio Prata is
-the rivulet named Abaité, celebrated for having
-produced the largest diamond in the Prince’s possession,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-which was found about twelve years ago.
-Though this circumstance has been already briefly
-stated, it may be allowed me in this place to relate
-the particulars as they were detailed to me during
-my stay at Tejuco. Three intelligent men, having
-been found guilty of high crimes, were banished into
-the interior, and ordered not to approach any of
-the capital towns, or to remain in civilized society,
-on pain of perpetual imprisonment. Driven by this
-hard sentence into the most unfrequented part of
-the country, they endeavoured to explore new mines
-or new productions, in the hope that, sooner or
-later, they might have the good fortune to make
-some important discovery, which would obtain a
-reversal of their sentence, and enable them to regain
-their station in society. They wandered about
-in this neighbourhood, making frequent searches
-in its various rivers for more than six years, during
-which time they were exposed to a double
-risk, being continually liable to become the prey
-of the Anthropophagi, and in no less danger of
-being seized by the soldiers of Government. At
-length they by hazard made some trials in the river
-Abaité, at a time when its waters were so low,
-in consequence of a long season of drought, that
-a part of its bed was left exposed. Here, while
-searching and washing for gold, they had the good
-fortune to find a diamond nearly an ounce in
-weight. Elated by this providential discovery,
-which at first they could scarcely believe to be
-real, yet, hesitating between a dread of the rigorous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-laws relating to diamonds, and a hope of regaining
-their liberty, they consulted a clergyman,
-who advised them to trust to the mercy of the
-state, and accompanied them to Villa Rica, where
-he procured them access to the governor. They
-threw themselves at his feet, and delivered to him
-the invaluable gem on which their hopes rested,
-relating all the circumstances connected with it.
-The governor, astonished at its magnitude, could
-not trust the evidence of his senses, but called the
-officers of the establishment to decide whether it
-was a diamond, who set the matter beyond all
-doubt. Being thus, by the most strange and unforeseen
-accident, put in possession of the largest
-diamond ever found in America, he thought proper
-to suspend the sentence of the men as a reward
-for their having delivered it to him. The
-gem was sent to Rio de Janeiro, from whence a
-frigate was dispatched with it to Lisbon, whither
-the holy father was also sent to make the proper
-representations respecting it. The sovereign confirmed
-the pardon of the delinquents, and bestowed
-some preferment on the worthy sacerdote.</p>
-
-<p>The governor immediately ordered a guard on the
-river, which was soon afterwards worked under the
-direction of the Intendant of Cerro do Frio, who
-sent thither an administrator and two hundred negroes.
-It has since been worked at different periods
-with various success; sometimes large diamonds
-have been found, but of an indifferent quality.
-The work, being considered unprofitable, is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-now abandoned by Government, but it yet gives
-occupation to numbers of adventurers. Its neighbourhood
-has many interesting places, hitherto but
-little explored.</p>
-
-<p>A few leagues from this river is a very rich
-vein of lead ore in calcareous spar. I have seen
-pieces of it of the weight of twenty pounds, and
-it is said to be so abundant, that any quantity may
-be obtained. Some of the specimens presented to
-me were covered with carbonate of lead. It has
-not the appearance of being rich in silver. No one
-has undertaken to work it, as the difficulty and
-expense of conveying the metal to Rio de Janeiro,
-would exceed the price at which it would sell for
-at present in that market<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>. When the neighbourhood
-becomes more populous, and the value of this
-useful metal is better known, the mine will probably
-be a source of riches; for lead ore is certainly
-scarce in Brazil, nor did I hear of any other place
-which produces it.</p>
-
-<p>The river St. Francisco is very considerable,
-and is said to contain great quantities of fish<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>,
-which is a sufficient proof that there are but few
-(if any) gold-washings in it. On the banks, and in
-the country to the eastward, great numbers of cattle
-are bred, which are sold in all the populous towns
-of the captaincy, and large herds are sent to Rio<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
-de Janeiro, a distance of above six hundred miles.
-A considerable commerce is carried on with them,
-and some families, who raise large numbers, are
-reported to have acquired great fortunes by it.
-The want of salt is a very general complaint; it is
-requisite for the cattle, nor will they breed well
-without it.</p>
-
-<p>This district is too far distant from a sea-port
-to enjoy any extent of commerce in the general
-articles of its produce. Gold and precious stones
-are easily transported, but lead, and other commodities
-of greater bulk and inferior value, would
-scarcely pay the expense of carriage. Hence no
-cotton, coffee, or sugar is grown for exportation,
-and the quantity consumed in the district is very
-limited, owing to the small number of the inhabitants,
-and the miserable indigence in which they
-generally live, their common diet being Indian
-corn-flour, boiled beans, and a little pork. The
-trade to Rio de Janeiro is much similar to that of
-Minas Novas, and consists chiefly in iron, salt,
-cotton-prints, woollens, arms, hardware, and a few
-trivial luxuries: also hats and India goods. Persons
-of all ranks are eager to purchase negroes.
-The only articles sent to Villa Rica are gold-dust
-and hides.</p>
-
-<p>In this district, and in other parts of these immense
-territories, particularly to the eastward, are
-large tracts of land <i>devoluto</i>, or not occupied by
-any person under a grant from government.
-These lands to a considerable extent (half a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-league to a league square) may be taken by
-making proper application, and afterwards held
-as freehold. Other excellent situations are in the
-possession of indigent people, who are equally incapable
-and unwilling to reap advantage from them.
-These may be bought very cheap, and are certainly
-preferable to the unoccupied tracts, as they
-have generally some few conveniences attached to
-them, and may, therefore, more easily be brought
-into a proper state of cultivation. Here is every
-inducement for a spirited and experienced agriculturist
-to settle: a rich and fertile district, in which
-there remains much to be discovered in every department,
-where all the necessaries, and many of
-the luxuries of life are produced almost spontaneously;
-and where the exertions of industry
-would be rewarded in a tenfold degree by the
-bounteous hand of nature, and stimulated by the
-certain hope of arousing a slender population
-to follow the example. Nor could there be any
-objection on the score of differences in opinion;
-for I am persuaded that no one would here be molested
-for his religious tenets, while he prudently
-avoided giving offence, and paid the same regard
-to the conscience of his neighbour which he expected
-for his own.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c15" id="c15">CHAP. XV.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct"><i>Observations on Tejuco and Cerro do Frio</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="pn2">IN the foregoing pages I have endeavoured to present
-to the reader a narrative of whatever I observed
-worthy of note in the Diamond District,
-and have related the several particulars in the order
-in which they occurred to me, reserving the
-task of general description for that period of my
-residence there when I might be supposed best
-qualified to perform it. This mode of proceeding
-will expose me to the risk of a few repetitions, for
-which my apology must rest on the peculiar circumstances
-under which I visited Tejuco,&mdash;on
-the continual journeys in which I was occupied
-from the moment of my arrival to the time when
-I was attacked by illness, and which left me no
-leisure for combining my actual observations with
-general views of the country.</p>
-
-<p>The district of Cerro do Frio consists of rugged
-mountains, that have a northerly and southerly
-direction, and are generally allowed to be the
-highest in Brazil. What is termed the Diamond
-ground, extends about sixteen leagues from north
-to south, and about eight from east to west. It
-was first explored by some enterprising miners
-from Villa do Principe, a few years after the establishment
-of that town. These men proceeding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-northerly found an open country, watered by many
-small rivulets, which they tried for gold by washing:
-some of them engaged their attention for
-a short time, but not proving sufficiently rich,
-they continued their route, passing the places now
-called San Gonçalo and Milho Verde, until they
-arrived at a few streams that flow from the base of
-the mountain on which Tejuco is built. These
-rivulets were then washed for gold, and were considered
-as belonging to the district of Villa do
-Principe. No idea was at first entertained that
-the rivulets contained diamonds, although it is said
-that some were collected and presented to the then
-governor of Villa do Principe as curious bright
-stones, and were used by him as counters at cards.
-Soon afterwards a few of them found their way to
-Lisbon, and were given as pretty pebbles to the
-Dutch minister to send to Holland, which was
-then the principal mart in Europe for precious
-stones. The lapidaries, to whom they were presented
-for examination, pronounced these pebbles
-to be very fine diamonds. Information was accordingly
-sent to the Dutch consul at Lisbon, who did
-not fail to profit by the occasion; for he managed
-the affair with Government so well, that he contracted
-for the precious stones, at the same time
-that he communicated the intelligence. Government
-afterwards endeavoured to monopolize the
-diamonds, and made a distinct district of Cerro
-do Frio, placing it under peculiar laws and regulations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The number of diamonds sent over during the
-first twenty years after the discovery is said to be
-almost incredible, and to exceed one thousand
-ounces in weight. This supply could not fail to
-diminish the general value of diamonds, as none
-had ever before been known to come from any
-other part of the globe, except India, whither the
-Brazilian diamonds were afterwards sent, and
-found a better market there than in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>By stratagems and intrigues Government was
-prevailed on to let these invaluable territories to a
-company, who were under stipulations to work
-with a limited number of negroes, or to pay a certain
-sum per day for every negro employed. This
-opened a door to every species of fraud; double
-the stipulated number of negroes was admitted;
-and this imposition was connived at by the agents
-of Government, who received pay in one hand
-and bribes in the other. Presents were made to
-men possessing influence at court, by the contractors,
-who soon became rich; and they continued
-(subject to a few regulations) in possession of the
-diamond mines until about the year 1772, when,
-Government determining to take them into their
-own hands, these contracts were ended.</p>
-
-<p>This was the time for reforming abuses, and for
-placing this rich district under the best regulations,
-but it was neglected; prejudice prevailed over
-prudence; and the management was entrusted to
-men who did not understand the real interests of
-the concern, or, what is more probable, who were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-so shackled in their authority, that they could not
-pursue them. From this time, affairs became
-worse, and the establishment was in debt to foreigners,
-who had advanced a considerable sum
-of money on the security of having all the diamonds
-which the mines produced. There were
-other incumbrances, which can be removed only
-by a total change of system. In its present
-state the establishment appears to produce much
-greater wealth than it actually does. During
-a period of five years, from 1801 to 1806 inclusive,
-the expenses were £204,000; and the
-diamonds sent to the treasury at Rio de Janeiro
-weighed 115,675 carats. The value of gold found
-in the same period amounted to £17,300 sterling,
-from which it appears that the diamonds actually
-cost Government thirty-three shillings and nine-pence
-per carat. These years were esteemed singularly
-productive; the mines do not in general
-yield to Government more than 20,000 carats annually<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The town is under the absolute government of
-the Intendant. The principal officers of the civil
-and military establishments are, an <i>ouvidor</i> or <i>fiscal</i>,
-a captain of cavalry, and a <i>capitao mor</i>. In
-the Diamond establishment there is a great number
-of officers, of whom the following are the
-principal: 1st, the Intendant, who is a judge, and
-intendant-general of the Diamond district (this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-office is one of the best in the gift of the crown):
-2d. the Treasurer, whose situation is almost a sinecure;
-he receives 8,000 crusades <i>per annum</i>:
-and 3d. the Administrator-general, who has a salary
-of 6000. The book-keeper has 4,000; and
-three clerks, or key-keepers, have from 800 to
-1,000 each. These officers are employed in whatever
-relates to the treasury, or to the general concerns
-of the establishment; they all reside in Tejuco,
-and are the most respectable of the inhabitants.
-The management of the different works is
-entrusted to eight or ten under-administrators, each
-having in his care two hundred negroes, called a
-troop; to which, besides a clergyman and a surgeon,
-are attached several overseers and subordinate
-officers, who have salaries of from 400 to
-200 crusades. The privilege of employing a certain
-number of negroes in the works is common
-to all the officers, to an extent corresponding with
-their rank; the superior officers let to hire as many
-as they please, say forty, and sometimes upwards
-of fifty; the inferior officers are permitted to let
-out two or three, in preference to other individuals;
-a decidedly bad practice, as will be shown
-hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>The Intendant holds a place of great trust: he
-is the superior magistrate, and his duty is to administer
-justice, and to see that the laws peculiar
-to the district are duly executed. He is of course
-president of the assembly, or juncta, and calls
-meetings whenever he thinks proper; he disposes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-of the military force of the district, orders roads
-to be made or stopped, and stations guards on them
-to examine travellers, and to detain suspicious persons.
-He has also the privilege of giving or refusing
-permission for persons to enter the district, or
-settle in it; and every one, however high in rank
-and property, who passes thither is supposed to
-have the Intendant’s express concurrence, which,
-as a matter of form, is sometimes dispensed with.
-He appoints officers, signs all papers, receives all
-reports that are made, and acts accordingly. To
-him solely the treasury is entrusted for the payment
-of the salaries of the officers, the negroes’
-wages, tradesmen’s bills, and every incidental expense
-attending the establishment. He issues
-paper-money, and withdraws it from circulation
-whenever he thinks proper; for all which he is responsible
-to Government alone, and may be said to
-be almost absolute in his office.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to these important functions, the
-present Intendant has assumed the whole direction
-and regulation of the mining concern, which none
-of his predecessors ever practically interfered
-with, it being the peculiar province of the Administrator-general.
-For this undertaking he is
-equally qualified by the superiority of his talents,
-and by the extent of his acquirements: he studied
-mineralogy many years under the celebrated Werner,
-by whom he was considered as one of his
-most enlightened disciples; afterwards he travelled
-through Hungary, and all the most interesting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-German states; and, lastly, made the tour of
-England and Scotland, where he resided two
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The Administrator-general, to whom belong
-the management and direction of the works, ought
-to be equally experienced in mining and mechanics,
-particularly in hydraulics: he should be a man of
-general information, combined with great practical
-knowledge, relative to the locality of the
-district, so as to be able to ascertain the real value
-of every situation, and to direct the operations
-accordingly. He should have a mind fertile in resources,
-and prepared to meet every disappointment
-or casualty that can possibly occur, that the
-time of the negroes may not be employed in vain;
-he should also facilitate their labors by the introduction
-of machinery, and should be particularly
-attentive to their good treatment, since on them
-his success, and consequently his reputation, must
-in a great measure depend.</p>
-
-<p>On this latter point humanity and policy ought
-alike to direct the attention of the superiors of the
-establishment. It is natural to suppose that negroes,
-when treated with harshness, ill fed and ill
-clothed, will be indifferent to the interests of their
-employers, and, perhaps, determined not to find
-diamonds, whereas, when subjected to milder and
-kinder usage, which might be done without relaxing
-in vigilance, they would become anxious to
-please, and would search more diligently in order
-to obtain notice and reward. It must be obvious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
-that negroes rarely conceal diamonds for <i>themselves</i>;
-and yet custom has rendered the feelings
-of their real owners in Tejuco so irritable, on being
-suspected to encourage the practice, that if
-the word <i>grimpeiro</i> (smuggler) is mentioned in
-conversation, they shudder with horror and distort
-their features, calling on the Virgin to witness
-their abhorrence of a crime to which Government
-has attached the greatest disgraces and punishments.</p>
-
-<p>Pure, honest souls! Being a stranger in the
-country, I conceived that these gentlemen really
-felt the sentiments which their words and gestures
-expressed; and, as persons of all ranks seemed to
-fear conversing on the subject, I thought at first
-that I should not see a single diamond in all Tejuco,
-except those in the treasury; but a little acquaintance
-with the town soon convinced me that
-I was a novice; for, on visiting a few friends to
-whom I had introductions, I found that diamonds
-were bartered for every thing, and were actually
-much more current than specie. Even pious indulgencies
-were bought with them; and surely no
-one could have suspected that the seller of His
-Holiness’s bulls would condescend to taste the forbidden
-fruits of Tejuco.</p>
-
-<p>As I had the honor to reside at the house of
-the Intendant, I was considered by the people of
-the town as a person connected with Government,
-and therefore as one who ought not to be informed
-of the secret traffic among them; hence, when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-in company with the officers of the establishment,
-whenever the word <i>grimpeiro</i> was mentioned, I
-found it necessary to manifest the same feelings
-of disgust which they did; and, on expressing my
-surprise that any one could so far degrade himself
-as to be guilty of the crime of smuggling diamonds,
-it was tacitly agreed that no white man
-could stoop to such dishonor. The point was soon
-settled; for I found it best not to oppose general
-opinions, nor to enter too minutely on delicate
-subjects; and it was sometimes expedient for me
-to seem regardless of what I was most steadfastly
-looking at.</p>
-
-<p>In Tejuco there are about nine or ten principal
-shopkeepers, to whom the establishment itself,
-and the officers belonging to it, are frequently indebted;
-indeed, these men receive the greater
-part of the money due to the various persons employed
-in the works, in exchange chiefly for English
-commodities of one description or other. The
-establishment is paid once a year, and for this purpose
-a sum not less than 300,000 crusades is sent
-from Villa Rica, to which may be added 60,000
-or 100,000 more, found in the gold mines of the
-district. The greater part of this money flowing
-into the hands of the shopkeepers, as above stated,
-is immediately employed in a way injurious to the
-interests of Government; nor can worse policy
-be imagined than that of allowing so large an expenditure
-in a place which offers such temptations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Some years ago many gold-mines were washed
-in this district, but as information was given that
-diamonds were found in them, they were ordered
-to be abandoned. At present more equitable measures
-are adopted, and the proprietors are commencing
-to work some of them again, under an
-agreement to give up whatever diamonds they
-find.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
-
-<p>There is a general order to work all the gold-mines
-which were formerly confiscated, and this
-measure will, it is hoped, increase the quantity of
-gold, and have a good effect in every respect.</p>
-
-<p>If Government are obliged to hire negroes
-wherever they can obtain them, (which appears to
-be the case), it would be at least expedient to
-have a store to supply them, in order that the
-money paid in wages to them might return into
-the funds of the establishment.</p>
-
-<p>The hiring of negroes to the diamond works is
-the favorite occupation of all ranks in Tejuco;
-rich and poor endeavour to engage in it to as great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-an extent as their property will allow. The pay
-of the slaves is trifling compared with the risk,
-their labor being heavy, their maintenance poor,
-and their treatment harsh; there must, therefore,
-be some temptation not openly seen, yet as well
-known as light from darkness. Numbers of persons
-are thus induced to reside in Tejuco under
-various pretexts, but with no other real view than
-to get their negroes into the service, and to live
-idly on their wages, and on what they conceal or
-pick up. Thus all fatten upon the pasture, except
-those in the extreme of indigence, and others
-who, from the neglect of economy, are always
-poor. There are a numerous class, from the age
-of seven years to upwards of twenty, who are
-without any visible means of earning their subsistence,
-and would remain idle even if manufactories
-were established; for though they are
-brought up from their infancy with negro-children,
-yet in the working department they
-would abandon their former play-fellows. The
-people in general are rendered more averse from
-habits of regular industry by the continual hopes
-which they indulge of becoming opulent by some
-fortunate discovery of mines; these fallacious
-ideas, which they instil into the minds of their
-children, strongly prejudice them against labor,
-though they all exist miserably, and not unfrequently
-depend upon donations. Their education
-is extremely limited: they are in general total<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-strangers to the sciences, and are very scantily
-informed on any useful subject.</p>
-
-<p>As the object of my journey into this district
-was to examine into the real state of affairs, and
-to give a true report of them on my return, for
-which purpose I was furnished with many privileges
-never allowed to any person before, and was
-thus enabled to see all that I desired, humanity
-requires that I should make some observations on
-the fate of those unfortunate persons who have
-been tempted to smuggle diamonds, and have
-been caught in the act. I even mentioned the
-subject to His Excellency, the minister, on my
-return to Rio de Janeiro; but as his occupations
-were great, and the state of my health required
-me to leave the country immediately, nothing more
-was said of it.</p>
-
-<p>The great demand for these precious articles,
-and the facility of secreting them, have caused
-them to be searched for and carried away in violation
-of the existing laws of the country. Of the
-numbers who have engaged in this illicit traffic,
-from an eager desire to become rich at once, many
-have eluded the vigilance of the guards, and have
-finished their career with credit and opulence;
-others less fortunate have been detected, and have
-incurred the punishment annexed to the offence,
-namely, the surrender of their illegally acquired
-treasure, the confiscation of their whole property,
-and exile to Africa, or confinement, perhaps for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-life, in a loathsome prison. Mild as are the criminal
-laws of Brazil, the latter part of this sentence
-is an exception at which human nature
-shudders. Surely, when a poor wretch, who has
-been tempted to this offence, has atoned for it by
-the loss of all he possessed, he has suffered sufficiently
-without being subjected to the forfeiture
-of personal liberty, and to all the woes incident
-to hopeless captivity. Far be it from me to countenance
-any infringement on the laws which have
-been established for the protection of property,
-either public or private; to respect the institutions
-of whatever nation I may live in, I hope I
-shall always be among the first, and to encourage
-others to disregard them, the very last; for illicit
-trade of every description is a deceitful and dangerous
-pursuit, the sweets of which are ever attended
-with a counteracting portion of evils. The
-object of my reasoning is to shew that these degraded
-persons have been of service to the state,
-and may still be rendered useful to it. May it be
-permitted me to enquire who were the discoverers
-of perhaps all the diamond mines which have enriched
-the caskets of the royal family of Portugal
-beyond comparison with those of any other state, and
-which have not only augmented the revenues of the
-government, but have proved the source from which
-many respectable and enterprising individuals
-have derived their opulence? Adventurers, who,
-at great risk and with indefatigable toil, have penetrated
-unknown forests, and explored deep ravines<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>
-among the haunts of the savage Anthropophagi,
-in search of gold-mines, and in them have
-by chance found diamonds. When a place of this
-description has been once discovered by these
-men, it seldom remains long secret; the agents of
-Government take possession of it, and either
-work it immediately, or guard it until a future
-occasion. The discoverer of course flies from the
-place; and if he have picked up a few stones, or
-robbed the earth of some of its most brilliant
-rarities, he will seek the best and safest means of
-procuring value for them. If he be a man of sufficient
-property, he will hire a few mules, load
-them with cotton, bacon, and other commodities,
-and proceed to Rio de Janeiro in regular form.
-On his arrival there, he enters some good house
-in which he has confidence, and disposes of his
-concealed treasure. His mind is then relieved
-from apprehension, and he begins to make preparations
-for his return. His first care is to lay
-out his money to the best advantage; negroes are
-his chief object, and these pay a duty to the state
-on their leaving Angola, and another of ten <i>milreis</i>
-each on entering the mining country. If
-they be employed in mining, Government obtains
-a fifth of the gold found, and if in agriculture, a
-tenth of the produce is exacted. The next object
-of the adventurer is to lay in a stock of
-woollens, and other English manufactures, which
-pay a duty of fifteen <i>per cent.</i> on being landed,
-and are subject to another, according to their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
-weight, on entering the territory of the mines.
-Thus it really appears that most of the contraband
-property is divided between the state and the
-smuggler: but this is not all; the diamonds are
-sent out of the country, and real effects of value
-are received in return, leaving a balance entirely
-in favor of Brazil.</p>
-
-<p>This illicit trade has been carried on to a very
-considerable extent: there is a strong presumptive
-authority for stating that, since the first discovery
-of the mines, diamonds to the amount of
-two millions sterling have thus found their way to
-Europe, exclusive of what the contractors accounted
-for. This has been owing to the ill management
-of the whole establishment, and to the
-total want of necessary regulations, which have
-prevailed so long, that it will not be easy to
-apply a remedy. Let us suppose for a moment
-the system to be changed; the two thousand negroes
-employed in the establishment to be the
-property of the crown (whom two years’ profit of
-the diamond mines would be adequate to purchase);
-these negroes to be supplied with every
-article for their support from a general store, and
-to be treated as mildly as possible; they would
-then form a society, and, knowing no other masters
-than their officers, would have only one common
-interest to serve. The contraband trade by
-this means, though perhaps not totally destroyed,
-would receive an irrecoverable blow, and would
-be reduced almost to nothing. Should such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-change take place, the shopkeepers, and those persons
-who subsist by hiring negroes to the works,
-would find the source of their emoluments dried
-up, and, rather than remain at Tejuco, would migrate
-to situations more congenial to their interests:
-thus the district would be freed from that
-bane which has so long overrun it, and Government
-would reap the advantage of having the
-mines worked by their own negroes, whom it
-would be difficult for others to seduce.</p>
-
-<p>Another evil which such a change of system
-would be calculated to remove, is the following:&mdash;Every
-article of sustenance required for the establishment
-is purchased of farmers who reside a
-few leagues from Tejuco, or who have farms at a
-greater distance; and this absurd practice is the
-cause of much unnecessary intercourse. There
-are thousands of acres of excellent land in the vicinity
-of the diamond works, having choice of
-situation, and fit for the growth of every species
-of produce. How well might a part of the force
-above-mentioned be occasionally spared for a few
-days only, to be employed in the first operations
-of husbandry, which would be, to inclose a sufficient
-quantity of ground in various parts for the
-maintenance of the establishment. A certain
-number of negroes would be allotted, in proportion
-to the land under cultivation, and on particular
-occasions, as in harvest, an auxiliary force
-would be always at hand. This would be farming
-with double advantage; the plough would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
-work instead of the hoe; after-crops would be
-sown to be eaten off the ground, which would
-thus be enriched and kept in good condition.
-Numbers of acres would be planted with artificial
-grass, subject to irrigation where that was practicable,
-and thus, contrary to the general practice,
-the cattle would be provided with subsistence
-in the dry season. Indian corn, wheat, mandioca,
-feijones, potatoes, &amp;c. would be cultivated, and,
-under proper management, would yield crops
-equal to the most sanguine expectation. Storehouses,
-with requisite conveniences, would soon
-be erected, in which the grain might be kept
-without spoiling. Thus would the first principles
-of husbandry be introduced into the district, and
-prove a source of more lasting benefit to the state
-than mines either of gold or diamonds, for when
-the latter were exhausted there would remain an
-active and industrious population. It seems, indeed,
-to have been the purpose of nature, in distributing
-these precious substances in these remote
-and almost unknown parts, to allure civilized
-men to settle upon them.</p>
-
-<p>From the circumstances which have been already
-explained, it will appear that, under the
-present system, the Government pay for all the
-diamonds that are found here, and probably
-receive little more than one-half; therefore it is
-evident that those conveyed through other channels
-can be sold to the public at a lower price than
-that at which the former are obtained. But the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
-embarrassed state of the establishment is such,
-that the managers cannot lessen their expenses, being
-obliged to take credit for every article, and
-to hire almost any negroes that are offered. These
-evils have taken too deep root to be eradicated, even
-by the abilities of the present Intendant: had such a
-man been placed here forty years ago, empowered
-to act without control, and to govern the district
-as private property, on the principles above
-stated, he might have rendered it a province both
-rich and independent.</p>
-
-<p>As all the diamonds found in these works belong
-to the crown, the royal family have been accustomed
-to select from the quantity annually remitted
-whatever stones they considered worthy
-their notice, which were generally those exceeding
-seventeen carats. They were formerly sent
-to Holland to be cut, the Dutch being the contractors
-of the diamonds, from the first discovery
-of the mines; but since the emigration of the
-court to Rio de Janeiro, that trade has been
-transferred to England, where these precious
-stones annually arrive, and are sold by private
-contract.</p>
-
-<p>The collection of diamonds now in the possession
-of the Prince Regent is unequalled in number,
-size, and quality, by that of any potentate
-in the world; and I am credibly informed that it
-exceeds in estimated value three millions sterling.</p>
-
-<p>This district has a direct communication with
-Bahia, and a few troops of mules are continually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
-employed in going from one place to the other.
-The journey is much longer than to Rio de Janeiro,
-but the country is less mountainous; there
-are fewer <i>ranchos</i> or hovels on the road, and in one
-part it is requisite to carry fresh water for two days’
-consumption. The commodities sent from Tejuco
-to Minas Novas are very trivial, consisting of smuggled
-gold, chrysoberyls, topazes, amethysts, and
-other stones; in return for which are brought English
-fine manufactured goods, particularly hats, printed
-cottons, stockings, and saddles, which have been
-much cheaper in Bahia than in England. Coarser
-articles are generally sent from Rio de Janeiro,
-the distance being, as before observed, much
-shorter.</p>
-
-<p>Of navigable rivers we can say but little. The
-many small streams, that rise in various parts, join
-and form the Jiquitinhonha, which, as before observed,
-may be navigated to sea, without any impediment,
-in at most ten days’ time. How much
-would the country be benefited if a port were established
-at the entrance of this river, and vessels
-were allowed to load and unload; canoes would
-find their way from thence into the interior in the
-short space of twenty days, loaded with every article
-necessary for the consumption of the district.
-How superior would this mode of conveyance be
-to that of making roads through impervious woods,
-and over almost impassable mountains. How
-many thousands of crusades annually expended on
-mules would be thus saved to the public, and what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
-numbers of men would thus be trained for the
-service of the marine, instead of those now employed
-as muleteers. With the advantage of such
-a communication, Minas Novas and Cerro do Frio
-would soon more than double their population,
-and it might be anticipated that the banks of these
-fine rivers, now lying deserted and useless, would
-bloom with every variety of vegetation, which this
-genial climate is capable of producing.</p>
-
-<p>Under the present system Tejuco ought to maintain
-itself, and have the least possible intercourse
-with other places. Its commerce ought to be confined
-wholly to gold and precious stones; but
-should Government determine to make diamonds
-a free trade, then a contrary policy would be requisite.
-On this subject I shall, in the sequel,
-have some observations to make.</p>
-
-<p>The quadrupeds of Cerro do Frio are common
-to other parts of Brazil. Mules are the principal
-beasts of burthen, and are much dearer than in
-the districts more to the southward. Horses are
-not so numerous, but cheaper, being in very little
-request, and used only on journeys of pleasure.
-Horned cattle are bred at a considerable distance,
-and brought for the consumption of the place.
-Sheep are almost unknown; hogs and goats are
-more plentiful; of dogs there are but few, and
-the race is very indifferent. Ounces are very seldom
-seen; there are not many deer; the danta, or
-tapir, is not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p>Of birds there are a few varieties, but in no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-great numbers; partridges are rather common; we
-shot several in our way to the different mines,
-which proved good eating. Domestic fowls are
-in tolerable plenty, but by no means cheap, being
-eighteen-pence to two shillings each.</p>
-
-<p>Of serpents, I saw only one, and it was harmless:
-but I was informed that the rattle-snake and
-the <i>jararaca</i>, both equally venomous, are common
-in this district. Lizards are very numerous, and
-the <i>cayman</i>, or alligator, is found in most of the
-lagoons and rivers.</p>
-
-<p>Fish are extremely scarce in all the streams,
-owing to the quantity of matter with which their
-waters are impregnated from the numerous washings.</p>
-
-<p>This district is in general free from that troublesome
-plague, the mosquito, as that insect is peculiar
-to low and swampy places, and does not
-bite with such disagreeable effect in elevated and
-airy situations. Bees are but little attended to,
-and are scarcely known; were the management of
-them better understood and practised by the inhabitants,
-they might be much increased, and wax
-might even be exported.</p>
-
-<p>In closing my observations on this district, I
-may be permitted to add some particulars relative
-to the capital. The families whom I had the honor
-to visit appeared to live in great sociability.
-They frequently form tea-parties. The dress of
-the ladies consists almost entirely of articles of
-English manufacture, cotton-prints, straw hats, artificial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>
-flowers, jewelry, &amp;c. Owing to the distance
-of Tejuco from a sea-port, piano-fortes have not
-been introduced here, or they would probably be in
-considerable demand; for the ladies in general have
-a taste for music, and touch the guitar with great
-spirit and elegance. Dancing is a favorite amusement,
-and all appear much pleased and animated
-with the English country-dance. The ladies seldom
-go abroad, except to mass, and then they are
-usually carried in a chair hung with curtains and
-a canopy, and suspended from a pole borne by
-two men. The sedentary habits of the females I
-have often thought injurious to their health; but,
-since English saddles have been introduced, they
-begin to take airings on horseback.</p>
-
-<p>Warm baths are very generally used, being considered
-of great efficacy in removing recent colds,
-to which all persons here are liable, on account of
-the peculiar nature of the climate. They are invariably
-offered at night to travellers, as a means
-of relieving the pains occasioned by the fatigues
-of the day.</p>
-
-<p>A continuance of ill health obliged me to take
-leave of my friends in Tejuco, and to return to
-Rio de Janeiro with all possible expedition. It
-will not be expected that I should relate all the
-particulars of my journey thither, as I retraced
-my former route with a few occasional deviations;
-I shall therefore confine myself to whatever I saw
-worthy of interest which I did not observe on my
-way to Tejuco.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Dr. Camara did me the honor to accompany me
-as far as San Gonçal, and showed me a work a
-short distance from the establishment, near the
-margin of a river of the same name. As I staid
-here one entire day with this gentleman, I had
-leisure to examine this singular situation, where
-I, for the first time, found mountains of sienite,
-incredibly hard, composed of hornblende and feldspar.
-About forty years ago this excavation, which
-was of considerable depth, was suddenly filled up
-by the bursting-in of the side, for want of proper
-support to resist the pressure of the incumbent
-stratum, which falling in immense masses, totally
-destroyed the works; and they remained in this
-state until about two years ago. As the wings of
-vague report are in general much longer than those
-of truth, this place had the reputation of being
-extremely rich in diamonds, and the apparent impossibility
-of clearing it, added greatly to the credit
-which was given to it. Old inhabitants came forward
-to say that they had been employed in the
-works when the accident happened, and that the
-diamonds found in them excelled in number, size,
-and fineness those produced at any other place.
-These reports soon reached the ears of the Intendant,
-who, within a year after entering his office at
-Tejuco, formed a plan of clearing and excavating
-the works. Such a stupendous undertaking was
-calculated only for a man of his superior talents
-and enterprise. He stationed there four hundred
-negroes under the direction of the best officers on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-the establishment; inclined planes were formed,
-and pulleys calculated to lift immense weights
-were erected. As some of the masses of sienite
-were too large to be raised whole, and the substance
-was so hard that steel would not stand to
-bore it, they were obliged to contrive means for
-breaking them. Recourse was had to large fires,
-with which the rocks were heated, and cold water
-was thrown upon them from tubs suspended by
-long pieces of timber formed somewhat like cranes.
-After six months of very heavy and incessant labor,
-the place was cleared. Let us for a moment
-reflect on the sanguine expectations which had
-been formed respecting the size of the diamonds,
-their number and brilliancy, the honors that would
-be conferred on the officers, &amp;c. and we may
-judge what must have been the general disappointment,
-when, after the very bottom had been scraped,
-not a diamond was found! Thus ended this serious
-trial, made at great expense, labor, and risk;
-like many other speculations, built on the delusive
-stories propagated by old miners respecting places
-formerly worked, by which new adventurers are
-generally tempted, and frequently ruined.</p>
-
-<p>I continued my former route, visiting the same
-friends who had received me on my journey to Tejuco,
-until I arrived at Cocaes. In the vicinity
-of this place are found fine amethysts and crystals,
-through which titanium is interspersed. Proceeding
-from hence, I took a more easterly route to
-Bromada, distant about five leagues. A great part<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-of the road was covered with rich iron ore. I
-passed through the village of St. John, and entered
-a fine valley, through which ran a little rivulet,
-called St. Antonio;&mdash;a more delightful place cannot
-be imagined: the grounds, which lay in gentle
-elevations, were capable of every kind of cultivation,
-and appeared calculated amply to repay the
-farmer for any labor he might bestow on them. In
-addition to these advantages, and that of a fine
-climate, this vicinity yet contains some places extremely
-rich in gold. At the end of this valley
-we crossed the rivulet over a good stone bridge,
-and passed through a pretty hamlet called Barra;
-proceeding a league further, we arrived at the
-house of Captain José Alvarez, who received me
-with great kindness. This being Sunday, many
-of the neighbours were on a visit to his house; a
-sumptuous dinner had been provided, and the
-evening passed in very interesting conversation
-relative to the mode of mining in that neighbourhood.
-Next day I went to visit the gold-works
-belonging to this gentleman, the principal of which
-was situated near the summit of a mountain of
-decomposed granite, one part of which seemed to
-have slipped from the other, leaving a cleft of
-twenty feet perpendicular. The face of this cleft
-appeared of different colors, some more red or
-brown than others; the parts esteemed most
-rich in gold had the appearance of irregular cavities,
-filled by a stalactitic substance in decomposition.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-This mountain has produced a great quantity
-of gold, and continues yet rich: it may be truly
-called auriferous; for I directed negroes to bring me
-specimens of earth from every part of the cleft, from
-the roots of the grass to the bottom, all of which I
-found to contain gold. At this place stamps are
-used to reduce the more indurated substances, but
-they are so ill constructed as to produce but little
-effect. After a most pressing invitation to stay, and
-advantageous offers of land to a considerable extent,
-which I found it expedient to decline, I took leave
-of the owner of this establishment, and passed a very
-large house belonging to <i>Capitao Mor</i> Penha, a
-very opulent miner, who has a large establishment
-of negroes, and extensive lands. I continued my
-route five leagues through an auriferous country,
-passed the village of St. Barbara, and arrived at
-Cantas Altas. From hence I proceeded to Villa
-Rica, without observing any thing worth notice.</p>
-
-<p>I was here received with the same attention
-and respect which I had experienced on my
-first visit. Finding it necessary to remain a few
-days to recruit my health, I examined a variety
-of substances that had been collected for me during
-my absence, but was not fortunate enough to
-meet with any thing very interesting. The theatre
-being open, I passed two evenings there, and was
-much gratified to find that the rational amusement
-of the drama had superseded savage bullfights.
-The theatre and decorations were neat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-and the performances tolerable; were they better
-encouraged, the public would receive greater gratification.
-They have ever been under the control
-of the governor, and are generally so fettered as
-to be obliged to perform such pieces only as his
-caprice may dictate.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Villa Rica, I continued my journey to
-the capital, where I arrived about the middle of
-February 1810, in a most exhausted state, from
-the combined effects of fatigue and an indisposition
-which continual exertion and want of rest
-had increased in a considerable degree. I informed
-His Excellency the Conde de Linhares of
-my arrival, and, in a few days afterwards, had the
-honor of presenting to him a report, stating the
-particulars of my journey. I was afterwards introduced
-to the Prince, who did me the honor to
-express his approbation of my account of the
-country through which I had travelled, and requested
-me to publish it. He was graciously
-pleased to make both my attendants inferior officers,
-in reward for their good conduct; and when
-I expressed my thanks for this mark of his attention,
-he replied, that it was too trivial to notice,
-and desired me to name in what manner he
-could testify the sense he entertained of my services.
-At this moment my health was so extremely
-precarious, that I could not think of remaining
-in Rio de Janeiro, where I found myself
-daily getting worse; otherwise I have not the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-smallest doubt that the generosity of the Prince
-would have amply repaid me for the fatigues I
-had encountered.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c16" id="c16">CHAP. XVI.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct"><i>General View of Minas Geraes.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn2">THE <i>capitania</i> of Minas Geraes extends from
-600 to 700 miles from north to south, and about
-the same distance from east to west. It is bounded
-on the north by the <i>capitania</i> of Bahia; on the
-west by that of Goyaz; on the south by the river
-Paraibuna, which divides it from the <i>capitania</i>
-of Rio de Janeiro. It is separated from the
-<i>capitania</i> of Espirito Santo and the coast by an
-immense chain of mountains, which country, being
-inhabited by the Aborigenes, is of course very
-little known.</p>
-
-<p>This <i>capitania</i> is estimated to contain three
-hundred and sixty thousand inhabitants, of whom
-two hundred thousand are negroes, or their immediate
-offspring. The population of Indians is
-not included in this estimate, nor can it be ascertained;
-they are considered as by no means numerous,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
-as they never make any opposition against
-an armed force, however small. In the course of
-my journey I did not see one, except the child
-at the village of Conceição, nor did I ever hear
-of one of the race of the Buticudos becoming civilized,
-or living in any of the villages with the settled
-inhabitants<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The regular military establishment of the <i>capitania</i>
-is very respectable, and consists of 1400
-cavalry, which number is prescribed by law. Their
-principal station is at Villa Rica, where the general
-resides, who, jointly with the governor, issues all orders
-respecting them. They form a disposeable
-force for the general service of the <i>capitania</i>; they
-are appointed to guard certain places known to contain
-valuable products; also to receive tolls, collect
-tythes, patrol the roads, and search suspicious
-persons, for which purposes parties of them
-are stationed at the various guard-houses and registers.
-They go in quest of felons, guard the
-prisons, and likewise execute orders to impress men
-levied for service in Rio de Janeiro. They are
-employed exclusively in the mining country, which
-they never quit, except when they escort diamonds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-and treasure to the capital, or are dispatched
-on any particular service. The regiment
-is a very fine one, and enjoys so high a reputation,
-that numbers are continually offering to enlist
-in it. While I was at Villa Rica, nearly two
-hundred volunteers were serving, without any remuneration
-whatever, waiting to be placed on the
-establishment according to their seniority, as vacancies
-should occur. This affords the general an
-opportunity of choosing the most soldier-like
-men, and those of best character; in which respects
-it is asserted, and I believe with great
-truth, that the corps is unrivalled. The officers
-enter very young, and serve as cadets for a certain
-period, during which they perform the duty and
-receive the pay of privates, from whom they are
-distinguished by a star on the right shoulder, and
-generally exercise together. They are promoted
-according to seniority.</p>
-
-<p>Besides this force, there is a militia, in which
-all the male inhabitants of the <i>capitania</i> are enrolled,
-and are liable to be called out when occasions
-require. It is a part of the present policy
-of the Prince’s ministers to stimulate the Creolians
-to active occupations, by obliging them either
-to till their grounds, or to enter the ranks and
-become soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>The known produce of this vast extent of territory
-comes next under consideration. On this
-subject I shall not follow a variety of vague accounts,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-which have been compiled with little regard
-to truth, but shall present to the reader the
-result of my own observations.</p>
-
-<p>The great quantities of gold, precious stones,
-iron, &amp;c. produced in this country have been
-largely treated upon. Lead ore appears to be
-rare, as it is found only near Abaité. Antimony
-abounds in the vicinity of Sabará; native bismuth
-is found near Villa Rica; arsenical and iron
-pyrites are very common; titanium is found in
-octahedral crystals, also in beautiful prisms and
-tender spicula, finely grouped in rock crystal.
-Platina may be obtained in tolerable quantities at
-Lagos, but the place which produces it has been
-abandoned from want of a market. Chromate of
-lead, <i>I was informed</i>, is found in the vicinity of
-Cocaes; but I have reason to suspect I was
-imposed upon. At Tejuco, also, I was shown
-some, and was presented with two pieces, which
-are uncommonly fine, more brilliant in color than
-that from Siberia, and distinctly crystallized on
-a matrix of granular sand-stone, accompanied
-with the green oxide of chrome. Copper can
-scarcely be said to exist in this country; the
-only place at present known to produce it, is
-a mountain twenty leagues from Tejuco, where
-small particles appear in a rock of quartz and
-hornblende: the matrix is so hard, and the
-quantity of copper so trivial, as to afford no encouragement
-to work it. The place has been examined
-by the Intendant, and is known to most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-persons in Tejuco<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a>. No mines of silver have
-been discovered in the <i>capitania</i>, but the gold is
-generally found to contain that precious metal,
-sometimes in great proportion. No tin, cobalt, or
-any other metal, except those above mentioned,
-have been hitherto met with.</p>
-
-<p>Of salts, impure nitrate of potass is formed in
-great abundance, generally, if not always, in calcareous
-situations, in a tract of country which
-commences from ten to fourteen degrees west of
-Tejuco, particularly at Monte Rodrigo, which is
-situated between the two celebrated rivers called
-Rio dos Velhos and Parauna. This mountain is
-very large and well wooded; the stratum is calcareous,
-and contains many eaves furred, as it were,
-with nitrate of potass. Since Government has
-made nitre an object of commerce, and encouraged
-its production, many families have settled at this
-place, and have collected large quantities of this
-saliferous substance, which, after several operations,
-is sent to Rio de Janeiro, where it is refined
-for the great powder-manufactory recently established
-near that city.</p>
-
-<p>In various places are found the finest clays in
-great plenty, fit for porcelain and earthenware of
-every description, which are entirely neglected.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
-In other parts I saw cyanite, actinolite, tremolite,
-pot-stone, and chlorite. Conglomerate masses of
-recent formation, enveloping diamonds and grains
-of gold, are sometimes, though rarely, met with;
-also a siliceous substance of a fine dark-blue color,
-probably totally unknown.</p>
-
-<p>On the vegetable products of this <i>capitania</i> I
-have but few observations to make, in addition to
-those already given in the course of my narrative.
-Many parts are well calculated for the growth of
-hemp and flax, and water for steeping them is
-easily obtained in most situations; so that the only
-impediment to the introduction of these useful
-plants appears to be the labor required to clear
-them.</p>
-
-<p>In the immense woods the finest trees are frequently
-destroyed by the creeping plants, which
-cannot grow without adhering to some support.
-When they attach themselves to a tree, they shoot
-up very rapidly, encircling it with numerous fibres,
-and in a few years become so strong as entirely to
-stop the growth of the tree, and at length destroy
-it. When in a young state, they are so flexible
-as to be used for ordinary purposes instead of cords.
-I have seen negroes make their bridles of them,
-and ride with them for a day together.</p>
-
-<p>As these forests remain unexplored, many of
-the trees are unknown, and consequently the qualities
-of their barks. However, there are some
-used by the inhabitants in dying yellow; and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-was informed some yielded a black color that could
-not be washed out. There is a variety which
-serves for curing skins, or tanning, some of which
-give the hide a red color, others leave it almost
-white: but this art is so little known, and the
-people are so averse to employments of this sort,
-that it has hitherto made little progress.</p>
-
-<p>Gum tragacanth is in great plenty, and of a very
-good quality. There are immense quantities of
-aromatic shrubs; and I found in many places, upon
-the bark of trees, and more particularly upon old
-wood, a lichen, which yielded to water a most
-beautiful crimson color<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a>. Jointed canes grow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-spontaneously, frequently above thirty feet long,
-and in many places form arcades over the road:
-these plants always indicate the soil to be very
-fertile.</p>
-
-<p>Ferns grow so large, as almost to lose their characteristic:
-I have frequently seen them twelve
-feet high. These and other succulent plants, when
-reduced to ashes, serve to make soap, of which
-almost every negra knows the process, and most
-families make for their own use. It is very sharp,
-and washes white articles uncommonly well<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a>. In
-this fine country, where almost every gradation of
-climate may be found, European fruits, such as
-olives, almonds, chesnuts, mulberries, &amp;c. would
-thrive, if properly attended to.</p>
-
-<p>The mulberry is cultivated at one place, where
-I saw a few silk worms. The climate is favorable
-to them, but the population is not sufficient to
-carry the breeding of them to any extent, as they
-require great attendance and care.</p>
-
-<p>Cochineal may be said to be almost unknown in
-the <i>capitania</i>; the <i>palma Christi</i> grows spontaneously,
-and from its seeds great quantities of
-castor oil may be extracted. For bananas and
-other tropical fruits the climate is not sufficiently
-hot, and is too changeable. Beans, peas, and pulse
-in general are very fine; pumpkins also, and cabbages<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
-grow to a great size. It is a fine country
-for flowers; the rose is extremely fragrant, and is
-in bloom all the year. Varieties of the passion-flower
-are found in all parts; pinks and carnations,
-with numberless other flowers, grow in great profusion.</p>
-
-<p>This <i>capitania</i> contains four <i>comarcas</i>, or districts,
-St. João d’El Rey, Sabará, Villa Rica, and
-Cerro do Frio, all of which produced much more
-gold a few years after their discovery than at present,
-though in the year 1809 Villa Rica alone received
-for gold permuted a hundred and six <i>arrobas</i>
-of thirty-two pounds each. The mines in the
-other three <i>comarcas</i> cannot be rated to permute
-less than from fifteen to twenty <i>arrobas</i>, therefore
-the <i>capitania</i> may be estimated to yield to Government,
-as the annual fifth, a quantity not less than
-one hundred and fifty <i>arrobas</i>.</p>
-
-<p>St. João d’El Rey, the capital of the district so
-called, is a considerable town, and contains at
-least five thousand inhabitants. It is situated near
-the Rio das Mortes, which runs northerly, and
-empties itself into the Rio das Velhas. The country
-around it is very fertile, and produces excellent
-fruits, both exotic and indigenous; also Indian
-corn, and beans in great quantities; as well
-as a little wheat. This <i>comarca</i> being more cultivated
-than any other part, is called the granary of
-the district; cheese is made here in tolerable quantity,
-and bacon very indifferently cured, both
-which are sent to Rio de Janeiro, and form a considerable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
-trade. Great numbers of fowls are also
-sent thither, and a little rum, sugar, and coffee.
-Provisions of all kinds are much cheaper than at
-Villa Rica; pork and beef are about a penny per
-pound, poultry in proportion, and vegetables
-equally cheap.</p>
-
-<p>About two leagues distant from the town is the
-rivulet of San José,<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> formerly abounding in gold-washings,
-some of which continue good, particularly
-those in the vicinity of a pretty village, called
-Campanha. In the neighbourhood is a mountain
-that produces a great quantity of iron pyrites,
-which many people believe to be gold, and say
-that no method is yet known for extracting it. In
-this district are a great number of pines of a very
-singular variety, from the bark of which exudes
-much resinous gum. The wood is of a fine
-brown-red color, full of knots, and inconceivably
-hard.</p>
-
-<p>Some cotton, although not very considerable in
-quantity, is grown in this district; it is spun by
-hand, and woven into coarse clothing, generally
-for the use of the negroes. Finer cloth is sometimes
-woven for table linen. The making of lace
-is a favorite occupation with the ladies of St. João
-d’El Rey, who are reputed to be more attentive
-to domestic concerns than those of other towns,
-many of them being descendants of the Paulistas,
-so celebrated for industry and economy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The district of Sabará was discovered and settled
-by the Paulistas, who took possession of it
-as early as the year 1690, or, according to some
-accounts, twenty years earlier. They founded the
-town which is now the capital of the district, and
-worked several gold-mines in its neighbourhood,
-the produce of which they sent to their native
-place, as it was their custom to do with all the
-gold found in the various parts which they explored;
-on this account the city of S. Paulo acquired
-a much higher reputation for riches than it
-merited, it being generally believed that all the
-gold sent from thence was procured in that vicinity.
-Some years after the establishment of Sabará,
-the Court of Lisbon sent out a nobleman as
-governor to reduce the settlers, and to oblige them
-to pay a tribute in conformity to the laws of the
-colony. The settlers took up arms, and several
-encounters took place, in one of which the nobleman
-was killed: but, after some time, the viceroy
-sent great reinforcements into the interior, and
-quelled the insurgents, who submitted to pay a
-fifth of the gold produced. An adventurer of the
-name of Artis, who was a man of great intrepidity
-and perseverance, and had made considerable
-discoveries in the neighbourhood, was afterwards
-appointed governor, and this proved the means of
-reconciling all parties.</p>
-
-<p>Respecting the working of the mines throughout
-this <i>capitania</i>, it has been already observed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-that much loss of time and labor is occasioned by
-the want of machinery, and proper implements
-for the workmen. Not a cart or wheel-barrow is
-in use: every thing necessary to be removed is
-carried on the heads of the poor negroes, in <i>gamellas</i>,
-who have in many instances to climb up
-steep ascents, where inclined planes might be employed
-to great advantage, and would be formed
-with very little trouble. The cassoon is the only
-hydraulic machine known, and is very generally
-adopted: but it is constructed with great difficulty
-and expense, and can be used only where a strong
-current of water can be commanded. Pumps might,
-at very trivial cost, be constructed on the simple
-plan of the machines used to pound their Indian
-corn.</p>
-
-<p>The tedious process of washing the <i>cascalho</i> for
-gold in <i>gamellas</i>, would be much shortened by
-using a machine of very easy construction. Suppose
-a cylinder to be formed of bars of iron longitudinally
-placed, and nailed to circles of wood,
-open at each end, and suspended on two centres,
-one about sixteen inches higher than the other.
-At the highest end the <i>cascalho</i> is to enter by being
-put into a hopper which communicates with
-it. The bars must be nailed almost close to each
-other at the upper end, gradually widening to the
-lower end, where they should be about half an
-inch asunder. The cylinder ought to be from ten
-to twelve feet long, and a stream of water conducted
-to fall upon it length-wise: it should be inclosed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-like a dressing-machine in a flour-mill, and be subjected
-to a very quick motion. The portion of
-<i>cascalho</i> containing the most gold will fall through,
-near the upper end; the other parts, according to
-their comparative fineness, gradually descending
-until nothing but the pebbles fall out at the lower
-end. The earth, &amp;c. falling into partitions or
-troughs below the cylinder, would be ready for
-being separated from the gold by hand, which
-might be done with very little trouble. Machines
-of this kind might be made on any scale, and, if
-generally known and adopted, would save the labor
-of the negroes in a tenfold degree. The one
-constructing in Cerro do Frio will, when complete,
-do more work than a hundred negroes in the same
-space of time. A considerable improvement might
-yet be made in this useful apparatus; for, if the
-gold, &amp;c. washed from the machine were to fall
-upon troughs placed in an inclined position, having
-a channel across about a yard from the upper
-end,<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> all the gold would precipitate into it, and;
-if a negro were to be continually employed in agitating
-the water, the earthy matter would run off,
-leaving only the gold and the ferruginous particles,
-which might be easily separated by mercury<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>. The
-utility of machinery of this kind is too obvious to
-need pointing out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mills composed of three heavy irregular stones,
-resembling our flint-mills, would reduce many of
-the ferruginous aggregates and softer substances
-which contain gold. The matter thus reduced
-might be immediately washed by falling or being
-put into the inclined planes before described, and
-would, no doubt, prove the means of obtaining
-considerable quantities of the precious metal,
-which would be otherwise lost. Stamps might be
-useful where gold is found in hard and brittle substances:
-but these would be more effectually pulverized
-by a heavy stone rolling upon its edge, not
-unlike a tanner’s bark-mill.</p>
-
-<p>In many instances, hand-sieves might be useful,
-and would save much time and labor in washing,
-but perhaps they would be too expensive. Even
-miners’ tools are much wanted, the only ones in
-use being the iron bar and the hoe. The common
-miner’s pick would in many cases be serviceable,
-and <i>bucking-irons</i><a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> would reduce the matrix much
-more effectually than beating it with stones, which
-is the only mode now practised. It is a most unfortunate
-circumstance, and very detrimental to
-the interests of the miners, that whatever is made
-of iron is so dear as to be beyond the means of
-the inhabitants to procure, nor have they any substitute
-for it.</p>
-
-<p>When the present state of the mining country<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
-is considered, and its rich resources are compared
-with the want of science, which prevents the inhabitants
-from improving them, how much is it
-to be wished that Government would establish
-and encourage economical societies on the plan
-of our Society of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce,
-in which inquiries might be made into
-all subjects relative to the useful arts. Repositories
-also might be established in all the principal
-towns of the <i>capitania</i>, where models of useful
-machinery and various implements might be
-kept for the inspection of the public. Scientific
-publications should be purchased, and every means
-employed to promote the cultivation of science
-among the inhabitants. At the meetings of the
-societies, every measure tending to increase the
-commerce of the district should be discussed with
-particular attention; honorary gifts should be
-made to those who most promoted its welfare, and
-premiums should be offered for the encouragement
-of all attempts to ameliorate the condition of the
-working class of the negroes.</p>
-
-<p>Thus emulation would be enkindled among
-them, and useful knowledge, descending from parent
-to child, would soon be universally diffused.
-This would be the true foundation of the prosperity
-of the country; for no territory perhaps in
-the world is so rich in natural products, and at the
-same time so neglected for want of an enlightened
-and industrious population.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c17" id="c17">CHAP. XVII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pcs"><i>Brief Notices on the Capitanias of Bahia, Pernambuco,
-Seara, Maranham, Para, and Goyaz.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn">THE <i>capitania</i> of Bahia, to the northward of
-Minas Geraes, comes next under consideration,
-respecting which, as I did not visit it, I have only
-to present some observations from the best information
-I could procure. It extends a considerable
-distance along the coast, being bounded
-on the north by the great river St. Francisco,
-which runs into the sea in lat. 11° south, and separated
-from the district of Ilheos (formerly a
-<i>capitania</i>) by the river Das Contas in lat. 14°
-south. It receives its name from the capacious
-bay on which its capital is built, and which affords
-excellent anchorage for ships of any burthen.
-St. Salvador, the capital, also called Cidade de
-Bahia, was originally the seat of the supreme
-government of Brazil: it consists of two parts,
-one built on low ground near the shore, where the
-commerce is carried on, and the other on a high
-hill, which being considered the most healthy, is
-the residence of all the people of consequence.
-Its population is said to be nearly equal to that of
-Rio de Janeiro, and is stated at not less than
-seventy thousand souls. The houses are built<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>
-with latticed windows and balconies, similar to
-those in Rio de Janeiro. The churches are the
-public buildings most worthy of notice: they are
-said to be richly ornamented within. The government
-of the city is vested in a governor, who
-is nominated by the court for three years. Here
-all law proceedings, civil and criminal, come before
-the tribunal, called <i>Rellaças</i>, the sentence of
-which is in general final, though appeals in certain
-cases may be made to a higher tribunal, called
-the <i>Dezembargo do Paço</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This town is tolerably defended, also the bay,
-as well as circumstances will permit. On the
-shore is a royal arsenal, and numerous houses for
-stores, &amp;c. The custom-house and wharfs are
-conveniently situated. Ships of war have been
-built here, also many very large and fine vessels
-for the merchant service. For these purposes a
-large supply of fine timber was (and, I presume,
-continues to be) readily obtained from the interior
-from the number of fine rivers which flow into
-the bay. The wood holds iron better, and is superior
-to our oak.</p>
-
-<p>The manners and customs of the people differ
-little from those of the inhabitants of the capital;
-but it is said that in the best societies here, more
-gaiety and refinement prevail, and the higher
-classes are more sociable, than in Rio de Janeiro.
-A taste for music is general; there are few houses
-without the guitar, and all the more respectable
-families have piano-fortes. The ladies dress in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>
-the English style, and ornament themselves with
-gold chains: they wear very few diamonds; their
-favorite gem is the chrysolite. For deshabille at
-home they wear a kind of loose dress, over which
-they throw a veil on the entrance of strangers.
-They are considered as far less industrious than
-the females of the southern districts. The domestic
-dress of the men consists of a jacket and
-loose trowsers, made of light printed cotton.</p>
-
-<p>Religious processions take place here, as in Rio
-de Janeiro, on great festivals and rejoicing days;
-and these festive occasions are distinguished by
-various amusements, which continue from morning
-to night. At these times the Brazilians have
-a custom of covering the walls and balconies of
-their houses with velvet or beautiful silks, embroidered
-with gold lace, in architectural orders,
-made and ornamented for the purpose; thus
-adorned the houses exhibit a most splendid appearance.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most memorable seasons of rejoicing
-of late years was when the Prince touched at
-this city on his voyage to Rio de Janeiro, and remained
-several days. The inhabitants testified
-their loyalty and attachment to him by every public
-demonstration of joy, and by a display of all
-the grandeur and magnificence which they had
-means to furnish. As a more solid proof of their
-attachment and regard, they unanimously voted
-to subscribe a sum equal to a million sterling to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>
-build a palace for the royal family, if the Prince
-would condescend to reside among them.</p>
-
-<p>The climate is always warm, but is refreshed
-by the sea-breeze, and is in some degree tempered
-by the long absence of the sun, the nights being
-of almost uniform length throughout the year.
-Though hotter than Rio de Janeiro, Bahia is considered
-much more healthful, having a more airy
-situation, and being better supplied with water.
-The practice of bathing is very general, and most
-of the houses have conveniences for this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Bahia is plentifully supplied with provisions.
-Beef and pork are in abundance; the former is
-decidedly bad, the latter tolerable. Fish are in
-great plenty and variety, and form a principal article
-in the diet of the inhabitants. Fish, with
-sallad, is the general supper of almost all ranks;
-even the rich desire nothing more for this repast
-in family. Numbers of retail shopkeepers, who
-sell wine, cheese, groceries, &amp;c. buy fish and fry
-it, and afterwards retail it in small quantities.
-Poultry is in plenty, but not cheap; vegetables,
-and pulse of every description, are in very great
-profusion. The markets are well supplied with
-all the tropical fruits, many of which are said to
-be in great perfection, particularly the pine, the
-mango, and the banana; the latter is esteemed
-the best in America. Preserved fruits are in
-great abundance, owing to the cheapness of sugar;
-great varieties of them are sold in the streets, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
-two or three preserved limes in a cup of syrup
-may be bought for less than a penny. Even the
-lower orders conclude the meanest dinner with this
-delicious delicacy.</p>
-
-<p>The soil of this <i>capitania</i> is peculiar, and is
-esteemed the best in Brazil for the growth of the
-sugar-cane. This advantage, and the conveniences
-arising from the numerous rivers that flow
-from the interior into the bay, have occasioned
-the establishment of many sugar plantations, undoubtedly
-the finest in the country, which have
-produced immense quantities of that article. The
-soil most adapted to the plant, and held in the
-highest estimation, is a black greasy loam, a deposit,
-containing a large quantity of decomposed
-vegetable matter.</p>
-
-<p>The opulent and best informed planters have
-imported steam-engines for the crushing of cane,
-which will probably prove very advantageous,
-and cheaper in many situations, as they can at all
-times be worked, and are as easily regulated as a
-water-mill.</p>
-
-<p>The mode of cultivating the cane has already
-been detailed. If planted in new soil, it is fit for
-cutting in fourteen months, but in old and poorer
-land it requires eighteen or twenty months. When
-ripe, the canes are cut and dressed by taking off
-the top leaves, &amp;c. which afford excellent provender
-for cattle; they are then brought to the
-mill, which is composed of three wooden or iron<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
-cylinders, moving on their axes in a perpendicular
-position, and between them the canes are repeatedly
-passed until all the juice is expressed,
-and they are reduced to a mass of dry fibres.</p>
-
-<p>The cane-juice is conducted through spouts to a
-large boiler or clarifier, where a certain quantity
-of alkaline matter, called <i>temper</i>, is added to it<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a>.
-Afterwards it is conducted to the largest of a
-range of boilers, consisting of three, or sometimes
-four, one less than another. The largest seldom
-contains more than one hundred gallons. Here
-the syrup boils for a certain time, and is continually
-skimmed; it is then laded to the next, where
-it continues to boil until more of the aqueous
-fluid is evaporated; after which, it is laded into the
-third boiler, and is there sometimes sufficiently
-boiled without removing it into the fourth. They
-judge of its consistency by the touch; a little of the
-syrup is taken between the thumb and finger, and
-if it forms threads, and breaks on being drawn about
-an inch, it is supposed to be boiled sufficiently<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a>.
-It then begins to granulate, and is gently laded into
-earthen pots of the form of a sugar-loaf, about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
-two feet deep and ten inches in diameter at the
-open end, where, on cooling, it becomes concrete.
-In the lower end of each pot is a small hole, which
-at first is nearly closed; but after the sugar begins
-to cool, it is unstopped, and a piece of cane
-is put in to admit the molasses to drain. Soon
-after the moulds are filled, they are removed into
-an airy room, where they are placed so that the
-molasses drain into a large cistern, from whence
-they are conveyed into the fermenting vats, which
-are recepticles for all the refuse of every description
-in the sugar-house. In the process of fermentation
-much depends on the quality of the
-wood of which the vats are made; some of them
-bring the liquor into a proper state for distillation
-two or three days sooner than others.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest part of the sugars made here are
-clayed, by a very simple operation, which consists
-merely in covering the sugar with very moist clay,
-the water from which percolates the mass, and
-carries with it the remaining molasses. When
-the earthy matter becomes dry, more is applied
-until the sugar is perfectly freed, and nearly
-white. This operation renders the article unfit
-for making loaf sugar. After remaining in the
-drying-house about six weeks, the moulds are
-placed with the large end downwards, and the
-sugar leaves them; they are then beaten down to
-powder in large strong cases, constructed of four
-entire planks, and the two ends, generally about
-eight feet long, and about twenty-six inches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span>
-square<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a>, holding from fifteen to sixteen hundred-weight.
-The cases, when filled, are nailed down,
-and are ready for shipping.</p>
-
-<p>The principal points to be attended to in making
-sugar are, first, that the canes be all ripe, and
-well cleaned from <i>trash</i> and leaves; next, that
-they be immediately crushed, and not suffered to
-lie in heaps to heat; and thirdly, that the rollers,
-and all the passages for the liquor, be well cleansed
-by washing as often as necessary.</p>
-
-<p>A greater quantity of sugar is shipped from
-Bahia than from all the other parts of Brazil
-united, and in general it is of a very good quality;
-that from certain plantations is particularly
-so. It is not however, esteemed of so strong a
-body as our best from the West Indies<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The tobacco of this <i>capitania</i> is peculiar to it;
-and, by an exclusive privilege, no other part of
-Brazil was allowed to cultivate the same sort. It
-has given rise to much commerce, and has enriched
-many families. It was the most esteemed
-sort, not only in Portugal, but in Spain, and all
-her colonies, where it has been sold at great
-prices. Great quantities of it were consumed in
-Barbary; and on many parts of the coast of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span>
-Guinea the demand for it was such that it was
-almost impossible to carry on trade for gold, ivory,
-gums, and oil without it. The mode of growing
-and manufacturing it is as follows:&mdash;First, a good
-piece of ground is prepared, the finer dressed the
-better; the seed is sown broad-cast, and when
-the plants are about six weeks or two months
-grown, they are transplanted into ground prepared
-as before. In eight or ten months they arrive
-at their full growth, and when ripe the leaves
-are taken from the stem, which frequently grows
-from four to seven feet high. They are laid upon
-the ground, or, in preference, upon any support
-which will preserve them from absorbing moisture,
-and admit a free circulation of air underneath.
-When they become in a slight degree
-withered, they are twisted with a strong winch,
-the end of one leaf uniting with the other,
-and the twist is coiled into a roll weighing from
-thirty to forty pounds. By this operation the
-juice of the leaf is expressed, which is viscid, and
-when oxidated becomes of a black color, not unlike
-molasses. The tobacco, after this last operation,
-is fit for commerce.</p>
-
-<p>It is an object highly worthy the attention of the
-Portuguese government, to introduce other modes
-of curing tobacco. There can be no doubt that
-the soil and climate are congenial to it, and, were
-it properly prepared, it would probably equal any
-in Virginia, and become as great an article of
-commerce among the northern nations. Should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>
-such a commerce be pursued, how many cargoes
-of this commodity alone would arrive in our ports,
-and from thence be distributed to the different
-markets of Europe!</p>
-
-<p>Cotton has of late been grown here in considerable
-quantities, and has been sent to England at
-nearly the same price with that grown in Pernambuco,
-and its plantations are daily increasing and
-improving<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Here are many plantations of coffee, but it is not
-esteemed so fine as that from Rio de Janeiro.
-Rice is produced in tolerable quantity, and its
-quality is superior: but the husk is so difficult to
-separate from the grain, that a great part is bruised
-in the operation, and is thus rendered of less
-value. The method of cleaning it is bad. Why
-not apply such mills as those used in Carolina, of
-which there is now one working at Maranham by
-steam, that has improved the quality of rice so
-materially, that it now sells in Europe for nearly
-the same price as the North American.</p>
-
-<p>The beautiful dye-wood, called Brazil-wood, is
-shipped from this port and Pernambuco, of a
-quality much superior to that of Rio de Janeiro.
-This is one of the articles prohibited from general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
-commerce, being the property of the royal household.
-Fustic in small quantities is brought from
-the interior.</p>
-
-<p>The indigo made here is so far inferior to that
-imported from India as scarcely to be worth mentioning.
-It is owing to the great quantity of lime
-in it. There is a general opinion among all who
-make indigo, that some part of the process is very
-prejudicial to the health of the negroes, who frequently
-become sick, and often die while employed
-in it, which is most probably owing to deleterious
-gas which escapes during fermentation.</p>
-
-<p>Bahia has a considerable trade with all the ports
-on the coast, from whence are exported various
-articles, the prices of which are continually fluctuating.
-A great number of fine brigs and smaller
-vessels are employed in this trade.</p>
-
-<p>Produce to a considerable amount was exported
-to the River Plata, from whence a great quantity
-of hides and tallow were returned.</p>
-
-<p>The imports to Bahia from Europe consist in
-general of the same articles with those specified
-in the description of Rio de Janeiro. In this <i>capitania</i>
-was found the largest piece of native copper
-that has ever appeared, being in weight upwards
-of 2,000lbs. It was discovered several
-years ago by some persons who were preparing to
-wash for gold.</p>
-
-<p>To the north of Bahia are the <i>capitanias</i> of Pernambuco,
-Seará, and Maranham, the interior of
-which is very little known, though some parts of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
-coast are tolerably populous. Pernambuco, though
-situated nearly in the latitude of eight degrees,
-is considered healthy. The town is built on a rising
-ground, much exposed, and constantly refreshed
-by the sea-breeze. It has many excellent edifices,
-and is supposed to contain more opulent merchants,
-in proportion to population, than any other
-place in Brazil. It produces <i>vanilla</i>, cocoa, and
-a considerable quantity of sugar; but the chief
-article of its trade is cotton, which for many
-years had the reputation of being superior to any
-other, but of late it has much deteriorated, from
-neglect, either in the growth, or in the gathering
-the pods and cleaning it from the seeds, or probably
-from general inattention to the whole management
-of it. The cotton, when ready for packing,
-is pressed into raw hides, so hard as to form
-very heavy packages. The operation is superintended
-by an officer authorised by Government,
-who puts a stamp upon it describing its quality,
-which enables the shipper to pass it through the
-custom-house, where it pays a heavy duty on exportation.</p>
-
-<p>The district of Seará is but little known, it enjoys
-an extensive trade in cotton and sugar. Maranham,
-though a very small district, has of late
-raised itself considerably into eminence by the cultivation
-of cotton, the other productions are the
-same as those of Pernambuco. Cotton and rice
-are the staple articles, with some cocoa and sugar,
-numerous cargoes of which are annually exported.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The dye-wood of these districts is considered
-excellent, and is sometimes shipped from this
-coast. The tree which produces the <i>annatto</i> is
-very common, and the seeds from which it is washed
-are of the best quality, and might be obtained
-in great abundance. Cocoa may be grown in any
-quantity; capsicum, pimento, ginger, &amp;c. are very
-plentiful.</p>
-
-<p>The markets are well stored with fish and meat,
-the latter very indifferent in its kind. Poultry,
-vegetables, and fruits, are in great abundance.</p>
-
-<p>St. Louis, the capital, is built upon an island,
-and is esteemed healthy, though so near the
-equator. Several rivers run into the bay, which
-afford an eligible conveyance for the produce of
-the vicinity. The island is said to contain 20,000
-inhabitants, and the population in the rivers is by
-no means inconsiderable.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>capitania</i> of Pará, is considered the largest
-in Brazil: its extent is imperfectly known. The
-principal town is called Belem, where the governor
-resides, and, its government being superior, it
-may be said to preside over several of the neighbouring
-districts. The land is low and unhealthy,
-the great river, or port, is much interrupted by
-shoals and currents. It is a dangerous coast, and
-exposed to a continual swell, so as to render it hazardous
-for ships to anchor upon it, as they roll
-so much that they not only endanger their masts,
-but are subject to strain.</p>
-
-<p>The town of Pará is situated on the river Tocantines,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
-the navigation of which is difficult, and
-is seldom attempted, except by small craft: the
-Confiance sloop of war with great care sailed up
-it, and anchored near the town, several days previous
-to the expedition against Cayenne. The
-town may contain ten thousand inhabitants, who
-are in general very poor, probably from want of
-commerce: for although the great rivers Tocantins
-and Amazons have their source, the latter in
-Peru, and the former in the <i>capitania</i> of Goyaz,
-though they receive almost millions of inferior
-streams in their course through immense tracts of
-territory, yet they are not productive of any commerce
-of consequence. The exports from Pará
-consist of a considerable quantity of rice, cocoa,
-cotton, drugs, hides of various sorts, woods, and
-a few other articles. The trade is much on the
-increase, and it is to be hoped, that from its vast
-internal communications, it may be greatly extended,
-and more ships loaded for Europe, as a
-cargo is generally rather precarious, and sometimes
-difficult to be obtained.</p>
-
-<p>The climate is hot, as may well be supposed,
-from its lying so near the equinoctial. Thunder,
-with lightning and rain, occurs generally every afternoon,
-when the air becomes more cool, and
-the heat less disagreeable.</p>
-
-<p>On conversing with creditable men who had
-lived many years at Pará, Maranham, and upon
-the coast, I never heard them relate the strange
-accounts of the Indians which Estalla has related.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span>
-As a Spaniard, he seems to be amusing the public
-with the actions of his own countrymen in Chili,
-and to aim, in common with all the writers of his
-nation, to prejudice the world against the Portuguese.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>capitania</i> of Goyaz is bounded chiefly by
-Minas Geraes on the east, Matto Grosso on the
-west, and Pará on the north. Its greatest extent
-in length is from lat. 6° south to 21°. Villa Boa,
-its principal town, is situated in lat. 16° south,
-about eighty leagues to the west of Paracatu, from
-whence there is a good road. Here is a permutation-house,
-where all the gold found in the <i>capitania</i>
-is permuted. The governor is elected for
-three years, after which he is generally appointed
-to Bahia or Minas Geraes. In the <i>capitania</i> are
-many gold mines, some of which produce gold of
-a very fine quality. Diamonds have been found
-in some parts, which are different in their appearance
-from those found in Cerro do Frio, having more
-brilliancy on their exterior; but when cut, they
-are not in general of so pure a water, though of
-a very desirable size. As this fine district is so
-distant from the coast, it has very little commerce
-in any of its productions, except the valuable substances
-above mentioned, and cattle, which are
-bred on the frontiers; also some cotton, and occasionally
-a few particular articles, which are sent to
-Rio de Janeiro. The mules on the return-journey,
-are all loaded with salt, iron, cheap cotton-prints,
-woollens (particularly baizes), hats, fire-arms,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
-powder, and shot, and a variety of artificers’ tools.
-When any of the inhabitants have any thing peculiarly
-precious to dispose of, they generally take
-it to Rio de Janeiro, and lay out the proceeds
-chiefly in the purchase of negroes, (they being at
-all times the first object), iron, salt, and other commodities.</p>
-
-<p>The population is very small in comparison to
-the extent of the district, but is likely to be increased
-by new settlers; although the indigent in
-Villa Rica, Tejuco, and other places in the mining
-country, are little inclined to remove out of
-society, even for the chance of riches: in fact,
-having no negroes fit to work, and being totally
-destitute of exertion themselves, all situations are
-to them indifferent. These are by no means the
-class of people who can be styled adventurers.
-The poorer class of inhabitants who have obtained
-a small portion of gold, sometimes make a journey
-to Paracatu or Villa Rica, to purchase what
-negroes they want. This <i>capitania</i> has been very
-little explored, and scarcely any thing is known of
-its productions beyond what is above stated; indeed,
-it is not unreasonable to presume that the
-soil contains the same variety of metals as the district
-of Minas Geraes. Many persons from thence,
-with whom I have conversed, speak of it with delight
-as being a fine country, having numerous rivers
-well stored with fish, woods abounding with fine
-birds, which afford excellent diversion to the sportsman;
-also a great variety of animals.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This <i>capitania</i> communicates with Matto Grosso,
-S. Paulo, and Pará, by rivers which are navigable,
-though frequently interrupted by falls.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c18" id="c18">CHAP. XVIII.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct"><i>Geographical Description of the Capitania of
-Matto Grosso<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a>.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn2">RESPECTING this extensive portion of Brazil,
-I had an opportunity of gaining considerable information,
-being intimately acquainted with the
-commanding officer of the military force stationed
-there, Colonel Martines, an engineer of extraordinary
-merit, who had made four journeys to Matto
-Grosso, and had resided there some years. He
-was kind enough to give me a description of his
-route from S. Paulo to the capital of that province,
-and promised me a chart of the navigable
-rivers and roads from thence to Pará, which had
-been formed by officers of his party, together with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span>
-documents in illustration of it. But he being
-hastily called away on a particular service, was
-prevented from executing his promise, and I could
-only profit by the verbal description which he repeatedly
-gave me. This description, as proceeding
-from an officer of such undoubted veracity, it
-was my intention to give to the public; but, after
-my return to England, I was agreeably surprised
-to find a MS. nearly corresponding with it, in the
-hands of that eminent geographer, Mr. Arrowsmith,
-who has liberally permitted me to make use of it.
-To his excellent map, compiled according to the
-latest MS. charts communicated from Brazil, I beg
-leave to refer the reader for an accurate delineation
-of the particular localities here detailed.</p>
-
-<p>This extensive <i>capitania</i> is separated from the
-neighbouring territory belonging to Spain by the
-intervening channels of the rivers Paraguay, Madeira,
-Mamoré, and Guaporé, which form a broad
-and natural trench around it of five hundred leagues
-in circuit, by means of which, and by upwards of
-thirty rivers that empty themselves into it, a communication
-is opened through many and distant
-points with the interior of Brazil. This <i>capitania</i>,
-from its geographical position, has ever been considered
-as the grand outwork of Brazil, not only
-because it covers the interior divisions of this vast
-portion of the new continent, which is the cradle
-of its greatest rivers, branching in innumerable
-channels, and enriched with great and untouched<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
-treasures; but also because, by this extensive channel,
-the Portuguese are enabled to penetrate to the
-establishments of Spain in Peru.</p>
-
-<p class="pc2"><i>The River Araguaya, or Grande.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1">The eastern boundary of the <i>capitania</i> of Matto
-Grosso, separating it from that of Goyaz, is the
-river Grande, two hundred leagues from Villa
-Bella. This river, known in the state of Pará,
-by the name of Araguaya only, which is conferred
-on it by the numerous nations inhabiting its banks,
-has its remotest source in lat. 19°, and running
-north and south, intersected at various points by
-the meridian of 52° 30′, flows in lat. 6° into the
-Tocantines, wherein it loses its name; and both,
-thus united in one ample stream, continue their
-course for three hundred and seventy leagues, and fall
-into the southern estuary of the mighty river Amazons
-in lat 1° 40′ between the two celebrated bays
-of Marapata and Limseiro, opposite to the great
-island of Joannes, or Murajo, and twenty leagues
-west of the city of Pará. The river das Mortes,
-which rises far to the west of the Rio Grande, and
-forms its highest western branch, running for a
-considerable space to the east, and afterwards
-to the north, with an entire course of 150
-leagues, till it enters the Araguaya in lat. 12°, is
-entirely within the <i>capitania</i> of Matto Grosso.</p>
-
-<p>The river Araguaya is peopled by many tribes
-of warlike savages; it abounds in all the productions
-peculiar to the state of Pará, and affords<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span>
-an uninterrupted navigation from the city of that
-name, and by the river, with the centre of Brazil
-and the <i>capitania</i> of Matto Grosso. The same is
-practicable by the river das Mortes, and other western
-branches which enter the Rio Grande below.
-These branches, no doubt, contain unexplored
-mines; for there is no physical reason why gold
-should be found in the rivers that enter the Araguaya
-on the eastern side, (where, besides Villa
-Boa, are situated several villages belonging to the
-<i>capitania</i> of Goyaz), and not likewise in the branches
-on the opposite side. It is positively known that
-the river das Mortes is auriferous, and hence it is
-fair to conclude that the smaller streams which
-flow into it are much more so, for the nearer the
-source the greater is the quantity of gold found.
-The mines of one of its western branches were
-abandoned, not from the absence or scarcity of
-the precious metal, but because, being remote
-from the road, and in the midst of a swamp peopled
-by savages, the few settlers could not get
-conveniently supplied with arms, implements, and
-other articles.</p>
-
-<p>In some of these mines gold above twenty-three
-carats has been found, but the greater part is only
-of seventeen, and of a green color, being combined
-with a large portion of silver.</p>
-
-<p class="pc2"><i>The River Chingu</i>,</p>
-
-<p class="pn1">the clearest, and one of the largest and most copious
-branches of the Amazons, which it enters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span>
-on the south side, after a course of three hundred
-leagues, in lat. 1° 42′, and long. 53°, seventy leagues
-west of the city of Pará, in a direct line, but one
-hundred of navigation, is confined in a great part
-of its course to the <i>capitania</i> of Matto Grosso.</p>
-
-<p>Its remote sources supply, not only the lands in
-which rise also the branches and rivers forming
-to the east and north the upper part of the
-river Cuiaba, but also that large space north of
-the river das Mortes, intersected by the great
-road from Goyaz, extending as far as the river
-Porrudos. There is a tradition among the guides
-of the Sutãos<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> of Pirá and the Indians established
-on the banks of the Chingu, that, after mounting
-the first large falls of this river, much gold was
-found in it, of which the Jesuits, those great explorers,
-obtained a large quantity. It is probable
-that the now unknown Minas dos Martirios, famous
-as the first discovery made by Bart<sup>o</sup>. Bueno,
-and of which I have heard repeated mention in
-S. Paulo, exist only on some of the many branches
-that form the river Chingu. For this enterprising
-man, after having discovered those mines, returned
-to S. Paulo in order to engage negroes,
-and provide implements for extracting those
-treasures, which to this day continue to elude the
-searches of others, retraced his course; but passing
-by the mines of Cuiaba, which had been just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span>
-discovered and were found wonderfully productive,
-he was there deserted by the greatest part
-of his followers. Fearing that he should lose the
-rest also, he turned eastward, and, in his anxiety
-to avoid the mines of Cuiaba, got still farther
-from those of dos Martirios, until he lost himself
-in the immense wastes, wherein he wandered
-many months, and at length accidentally found
-the mines of Goyaz, which his father had before
-seen. These, like all the rest, proved very productive
-at the beginning.</p>
-
-<p>This rich and new discovery soon diverted the
-attention of adventurers from the preceding; and
-the route to the Minas dos Martirios, together with
-their positive situation, have long been lost in a vague
-tradition of their existence. As the place was explored
-without the assistance of a compass, or any of
-the means necessary for defining its geographical
-position, there could not but prevail much doubt
-and uncertainty respecting it. Now there is no
-such discovery on the river Tocantines, which comprehends
-the whole <i>capitania</i> of Goyaz: the first
-account places it near a river, which indeed runs
-into the Amazons, like the Tocantines, but which
-was sought for passing near the upper branches,
-and west of the river Cuiaba, a situation in which
-the river Chingu alone is found; other explorers
-place it on the Araguaya, which renders it useless
-to look there, for it is more than two hundred
-leagues north-west of the place sought. This is
-substantiated by a fact of later date, which is as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span>
-follows:&mdash;A grandson of Bart<sup>o</sup>. Bueno, under the
-direction of an ancient journal of this discovery,
-describing the route to it, descended by the river
-das Mortes, and entered some extensive plains on
-its western bank, on which he travelled westward
-for some days, when he arrived at a plain covered
-with white <i>Mangaba</i> trees, which were designated
-in the journal. From this place they had a sight
-of some detached high mountains between the
-north and west, three of which were of the figure
-specified, and indicated the situation of the Minas
-dos Martirios. An unexpected attack of the Indians,
-in which the chief and many others of the
-adventurers were killed, dispersed the party, and
-frustrated the object at the moment when it appeared
-to be already attained.</p>
-
-<p>The river abounds in various products: cocoa
-is in plenty; there are some spices, and various
-indigenous fruits.</p>
-
-<p class="pc2"><i>The River Tapajos</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn1">is the third which derives its copious sources,
-flowing through numerous large branches, from
-the <i>capitania</i> of Matto Grosso. It runs north
-between the Madeira and the Chingu for three
-hundred leagues, flowing into the Amazons in
-lat. 2° 24′ 50″, and long. 55°, which is the geographical
-position of the town of Santarem, situated
-at its mouth one hundred and eighteen leagues
-from the city of Pará, and one hundred and sixty-two
-by the shortest navigation. The river Tapajos<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span>
-rises in the plains of the Parexis, so called
-from an Indian nation which inhabits them. These
-plains occupy a vast space, not level, but formed
-by undulating heaps of sand and light earth, resembling
-large waves. The spectator who is in the
-midst of them ever sees before him a distant and
-extended mount; he advances towards it by a
-gentle and long declivity, traverses the plain, and
-advances by an ascent equally gentle until he
-gains imperceptibly the heights he saw; another
-eminence then presents itself, and he proceeds
-with the same recurring circumstances. The soil
-of these wide plains is sandy, and so light that
-loaded beasts in passing sink into it so much as
-to impede their progress. The pasturage is poor,
-consisting of a grass composed of wiry stalks a
-foot high, and small rough lancet-shaped leaves;
-the animals in grazing pluck them up with the
-roots covered with sand; on this account the
-passage by land is difficult and tedious; though,
-on finding any of the streams, which abound in
-these plains, there is grass and other mild herbage,
-which afford tolerable pasturage. The plains of
-Parexis form, to a large extent and breadth, the
-summit of those high mountains of the same
-name, and are situated on some of the most elevated
-land in all Brazil; for from them descend
-the two greatest rivers of South America,&mdash;the
-Paraguay, as well in its own numerous heads, as
-in its great and higher branches, the Jauru, the
-Sypotuba, and the Cuiaba,&mdash;and the Madeira,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>
-which is the largest river that flows into the Amazons
-on the south.</p>
-
-<p>The Tapajos, flowing in a direction contrary to
-that of the above-named river, rises in these
-mountains. Its westermost branch is the river
-Arinos, which intwines its sources with those of
-the Cuiaba at a short distance from those of the
-Paraguay. The river Arinos has a western branch,
-called Rio Negro, from which, to the point where
-it is navigable, there is a passage of eight leagues
-over land to the river Cuiaba, below its upper and
-greatest falls; and, in like manner, from the Arinos
-itself the passage to the same part of the river
-Cuiaba is twelve leagues.</p>
-
-<p>The Arinos is auriferous at its springs, and in
-1747 the mines of Santa Isabel were discovered in
-it, but immediately abandoned, as not answering
-the expectations created in those fortunate times
-by the great quantities of gold drawn from the
-mines of Cuiaba and Matto Grosso. The lands
-were infested by dangerous tribes of warlike Indians.</p>
-
-<p>The river Sumidouro empties itself on the south
-side into the Arinos, and its source being a short
-distance from that of the Sypotuba, a large western
-branch of the Paraguay, there is an easy communication
-from one river to the other. The famous
-discoverer, João de Souza Echevedo, in
-1746, made this passage: he descended the river
-Cuiaba, and sailing up the Sypotuba to its very
-sources, he there passed his canoes over land into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>
-the Sumidouro, which he navigated, following the
-current, notwithstanding that the river runs for
-some distance under ground, and thence derives
-its appellation. After this, he passed into the
-Arinos, and thence into the Tapajos, where he
-surmounted the falls, though more difficult than
-those of the Madeira, and discovered many symptoms
-of gold in the river of Tres Barras, a western
-arm of the Tapajos, a hundred leagues below
-the springs of the Arinos. West of the Sumidouro,
-and in the plains of Parexis, the river Xacurutina
-has its origin to the north of the river Jauru: it is
-famous for a lake, situated in one of its branches,
-where every year is produced a great quantity of
-salt, which is a constant cause of war among the
-Indians. Some navigators make the Xacurutina
-an arm of the Arinos, and others of the Sumidouro.
-In these plains of Parexis, terminating
-to the west in the high mountains so denominated,
-which, extending two hundred leagues in a north-north-west
-direction, front the Guapore at a distance
-of fifteen or twenty leagues, springs the river
-Juruena, between the heads of the Sarare and the
-Guapore, a league east of the former and two west
-of the latter. This river, the largest and westermost
-branch of the Tapajos, rises in lat. 14° 42′,
-twenty leagues north-north-east of Villa Bella, and,
-running north one hundred and twenty leagues,
-flows into the Arinos, and with it forms the bed
-of the Tapajos.</p>
-
-<p>The Juruena receives on both sides many small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span>
-rivers, those from the west affording many practicable
-communications by short passages over-land
-with the Guapore and its confluent streams. The
-uppermost of these, which is nearest to Villa
-Bella, is the Securiu, navigable even there, and
-almost to its source. This is a league north of
-the principal source of the river Sarare, which, a
-quarter of a league from its head, is three yards
-deep and five broad. Thus sailing up the Juruena,
-into the Securiu, and making from its source the
-short land-passage of a league to the Sarare, the
-navigator may reach Villa Bella in less than eight
-days, without any other obstacle than that of the
-fall formed by the Sarare, three leagues below its
-source, where it precipitates itself from the Parexis
-mountains on the western slope: this difficulty
-may be surmounted in detail, or by at once
-passing the four leagues, for the Sarare from its
-fall becomes immediately navigable to the capital
-of Matto Grosso. A league north of the source
-of the Sarare is the first head of the river Galera,
-the second confluent of the Guapore below Villa
-Bella; and a league east of the same head rises
-the Ema, a western branch of the Securiu, affording
-equal facility of communication. The Galera
-has three other sources north of the first in the
-plains of the Parexis, all ample streams; the last
-and most northerly, called Sabará, is distant little
-more than a league from the source of the river
-Juina, a large western branch of the Juruena.
-Thus by the Juina and the Securiu, with a crossing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span>
-of five or six leagues, so as to pass the falls of
-the Galera on the western scarp of the mountain,
-the Juruena may be connected with the Guapore.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, the Juruena may be navigated to its upper
-fall, which is within two leagues of its own
-source. The fall is formed by two small leaps, the
-river being, even in this part, thirty yards broad
-and of great depth; from hence downwards it flows
-with great rapidity, yet its falls are not greater,
-and are more passable, than those of the Arinos.
-With the same circumstances, and by similar short
-land-passages, a communication is practicable from
-the Juruena with the rivers Guapore and Jauru,
-which are to the eastward of it, although these
-two rivers precipitate themselves from the south
-side of the Parexis mountains, where they rise,
-and immediately form numerous and extensive
-falls.</p>
-
-<p>From the geographical position of the Tapajos,
-it is evident that this river facilitates navigation
-and commerce from the maritime city of Pará to
-the mines of Matto Grosso and Cuiaba, by means
-of its large branches, the Juruena and Arinos; if
-the short passages over-land should be found troublesome
-to drag canoes, the goods may be forwarded
-immediately on mules. This navigation to
-Matto Grosso is at least two hundred leagues
-shorter than that performed through the Madeira
-and Guapore; it is consequently less tedious and
-expensive, and equally advantageous to the mines<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span>
-of Cuiaba. The navigation of the river Tapajos
-might lead also to new discoveries in the vast unexplored
-parts of this river, up to its entrance
-into the plains of the Parexis, and their products
-might add to those of the extensive regions on the
-Amazons. Besides this, the river is known to be
-auriferous for a great part of its course: it is known
-also, that, passing from the Juruena into its western
-arm, the river Camararé, and the heads of the
-river Jamary or das Candeas, which, running in
-broad streams down the eastern side of the Parexis
-mountains, enters the Madeira, there are mines
-which have inspired great hopes, though but lately
-seen, after a fruitless search of twenty years.</p>
-
-<p class="pc2"><i>The River Paraguay</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn1">has its remote springs to the west of the heads of
-the Arinos in latitude 13°, and, after a southern
-course of six hundred leagues, enters the ocean
-under the appellation of the Rio de la Plata. The
-heads of the Paraguay are seventy leagues north-east
-from Villa Bella, and forty leagues north from
-Cuiaba, and divided into many branches, and already
-forming complete rivers, which, as they run
-south, successively unite, and form the channel of
-this immense river, which is immediately navigable.
-To the west, a short distance from the main
-source of the Paraguay, is that of the Sypotuba,
-which disembogues on its west bank in lat. 15° 50′,
-after a course of sixty leagues. In the upper part
-of this river, and near its western branch called<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span>
-the Jurubauba, was formerly a gold-mine, which
-was worked with considerable profit; but the superior
-advantages derived from others subsequently
-explored in Matto Grosso and Cuiaba, caused it
-to be abandoned, and its site is not now known
-with certainty. The little river Cabaral, also auriferous,
-enters the Paraguay on the west side,
-three leagues below the mouth of the Sypotuba.
-On the banks of the latter lives a nation of Indians,
-called <i>Barbados</i>, from the distinction peculiar
-to themselves, among all the Indian nations,
-of having large beards.</p>
-
-<p>The Boriars Araviras inhabit the banks of the
-Cabaral: they are a mixture of two different nations,
-who in the year 1797 sent four chiefs of
-their tribe, accompanied by their mother, to Villa
-Bella, in order to solicit the friendship of the Portuguese.
-The nation called Parrarioné lives in
-their neighbourhood, close by the Sypotuba. A
-league below the mouth of the Cabaral, on the east
-bank of the Paraguay, is Villa Maria, a small and
-useful establishment, founded in 1778. Seven
-leagues south of Villa Maria, and on the west bank
-of the Paraguay, the river Jauru disembogues into
-it in lat. 16° 24′. This river is remarkable for the
-boundary-mark erected at its mouth in 1754, as
-well as for being entirely Portuguese, together
-with the lands on its south bank, and bordering
-on the Spanish possessions. It rises in the plains
-of the Parexis in lat. 14° 42′, and long. 58° 30′, and
-running south to lat. 15° 45′, the situation of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span>
-Register of the same name, it there turns to
-the south-east for thirty-four leagues, till, by an
-entire course of sixty leagues, it reaches its
-junction with the Paraguay. There are salt-water-pits,
-which in part have supplied Matto Grosso,
-ever since its foundation, with salt: they are in the
-interior of the country, seven leagues from the
-Register, and extend to a place called Salina de Almeida,
-from the name of the person who first employed
-himself in these works.</p>
-
-<p>These salt-pits are situated along the margins
-of broad marshy bottoms, in which are found fish
-of the same kind with those in the Paraguay. The
-Salina de Almeida is not far distant from the bank
-of Jauru, and the great quantity of saline liquid
-found in it continues three leagues farther to the
-south, where a junction is formed with another
-from the west, called Pitas; westward of which
-are high and dry plains, where are found numerous
-large circles, formed by a species of palm called
-Carandas. These plains terminate nine leagues
-west of the Salina de Almeida, in a large pool
-or marsh, called Paopique, which runs to the
-south.</p>
-
-<p>The confluence of the Jauru with the Paraguay
-is a point of much importance: it guards and
-covers the great road between Villa Bella, Cuiaba,
-and their intermediate establishments, and in the
-same manner commands the navigation of both
-the rivers, and defends the entrance into the interior<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span>
-of the latter <i>capitania</i>. The Paraguay from
-this place has a free navigation upwards, almost
-to its sources, which are scarcely seventy leagues
-distant, with no other impediment than a large
-fall. These sources are said to contain diamonds.</p>
-
-<p>The mark placed at the mouth of the Jauru is a
-pyramid of beautiful marble, brought to this distant
-point from Lisbon. It bears inscriptions
-commemorative of the treaty between the courts
-of Spain and Portugal, by which the respective
-territories, of which it stands as the boundary,
-were defined.</p>
-
-<p>The lofty chain of mountains, which extends
-from the sources of the Paraguay near its eastern
-bank, border the river opposite the mouth of the
-Jauru, and are terminated seven leagues below it
-by the Morro Escalvado in lat. 16° 43′. Eastward
-of this mount or point, all is marsh, and nine
-leagues below it there flows into the east side of
-the Paraguay a deep stream or river, called Rio
-Novo, discovered in 1786, which may hereafter
-afford a navigation to near St. Pedro d’El Rey,
-when the aquatic plants that obstruct its channel
-are removed. The most distant sources of this
-river are the rivulets of Sta. Anna, Bento Gomes,
-and others which cross the great road of Cuiaba
-to the west of Cocaes. In lat. 17° 33′ the west
-banks of the Paraguay become mountainous at
-the north point of the Serra da Insua, which,
-three leagues to the south, makes a deep break to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span>
-form the mouth of the lake Gaiba. This lake extends
-westward, and there is a broad canal of four
-leagues in extent, which comes from the north,
-communicating from the above lake to that of
-Uberava, somewhat larger than the Gaiba, situated
-exactly contiguous to the Serra da Insua, on its
-north side. Six leagues and a half below the
-mouth of the Gaiba, and opposite this mountainous
-bank of the Paraguay, is the mouth of the
-St. Lourenço, formerly called Porrudos. Twenty-six
-leagues above this the river Cuiaba enters its
-western bank in lat. 17° 20′, and long. 57° 5′: these
-two rivers are of great extent; that of Lourenço
-has its sources in lat. 15°, forty leagues east of the
-town of Cuiaba, receiving (besides the branches
-crossed by the road from Goyaz) other great
-streams on its east side, such as the Paraiba or
-Piquiri, which receives the Jaquari and the Itiquira,
-all of moderate size, and navigable. The
-Itiquira has been navigated to its heads, from
-whence the canoes were dragged over-land to the
-Sucuriu, which falls into the Parana four leagues
-below the mouth of the river Tiete on the opposite
-side. The rivers Itiquira and Sucuriu were
-found to have fewer and smaller falls than the
-Taquari, and the land-passage is much shorter
-and more convenient than that of the Camapuão,
-so that this navigation is preferable to that by the
-two last-mentioned rivers: it is attended by only
-two obstacles,&mdash;many Indians, and a want of provisions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The navigation to the town of Cuiaba by the
-river of that name, from its above-mentioned confluence,
-is short and easy: in the first ten leagues,
-after passing the two small islands of Ariacuni
-and Tarumus, occurs a large plantation of bananas,
-formed on an embankment on the east side
-of the river. Three leagues above this place the
-Guacho-uassu enters the Cuiaba by its east bank,
-and on the same side, seven leagues farther, the
-Guacho-mirim. From this point the river winds
-in a north-east direction, eleven leagues to the
-island of Pirahim, and from thence makes a large
-bend to the east, receiving numerous streams, and
-passes the town of Cuiaba, which is situated a
-mile to the eastward of it. This town is ninety-six
-leagues to the east of Villa Bella, and the
-same distance from the confluence of its river with
-the Paraguay. It is large, and, together with
-its dependencies, may at present contain 30,000
-souls. It is well provided with meat, fish, fruits,
-and all sorts of vegetables, at a much cheaper rate
-than at the sea-ports. Their country is well
-adapted for cultivation, and has rich mines, but
-in some places little water to work them in dry
-weather. They were discovered in 1718, and
-have been estimated to produce annually above
-twenty <i>arrobas</i> of gold of extremely fine quality.
-These mines have produced an enormous quantity
-of gold compared with the thinness of the population,
-and the want of means, machinery, &amp;c.
-for working them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Twenty leagues south-west of the town of
-Cuiaba is the settlement of St. Pedro d’El Rey,
-the largest of all the adjacent settlements, and
-contains full 2,000 inhabitants. It is situated
-near the western side of the rivulet Bento Gomes,
-which, at the distance of a league and a half
-south of the settlement, forms a large bay,
-called Rio de Janeiro. The river Cuiaba has its
-sources forty leagues above the town, and its
-banks are cultivated through the greater part of
-its extent, including fourteen leagues below the
-town, down the stream. Four leagues below
-the principal mouth of the river Porrudos, the
-Paraguay is bordered by the mountains that separate
-it from Gaiba on its western bank, and in
-this place they obtain the appellation of <i>Serra das
-Pedras de Amolar</i>, from being composed of a
-stone of which whet-stones are made. This is the
-only spot which is not inundated by the floods of
-the river, and is therefore much visited by the
-canoes that navigate it. These <i>Serras</i> terminate
-two leagues to the south in those of the Dourados,
-immediately below which there is a channel on the
-west side of the Paraguay, which, piercing between
-two high detached mounts, called Cheines,
-leads to the lake Mendiuri, six leagues long, and
-the largest on the Paraguay.</p>
-
-<p>From the Dourados the Paraguay runs southward
-to the Serras of Albuquerque, where it
-touches directly on the northern point, on which
-is situated a town of that name. These Serras<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span>
-form a compact square of ten leagues, and contain
-much calcareous stone; the land is considered the
-best on either side the Paraguay, from the river
-downwards, and only equalled by that on the
-western margins of the lakes Mandiuri and Gaiba.
-From Albuquerque the Paraguay turns to the
-east, skirting its Serras, which terminate at the
-end of six leagues in the Serra do Rabicho, opposite
-which, on the north bank of the river, is
-situated the lower southern mouth of the Paraguay-mirim.
-This is an arm of the Paraguay,
-which, terminating here, forms an island fourteen
-leagues in length from north to south: it is the
-usual channel for canoes in times of inundation.
-From the mouth of the Paraguay-mirim the river
-takes a southerly direction to the mouth of the
-Taquari, navigated annually by flotillas of canoes
-and other craft, which come from S. Paulo to
-Cuiaba, and even as far as the Register of Jauru,
-when their destination happens to be Villa Bella.</p>
-
-<p>As this navigation is an object of great importance,
-from its connecting two distinct districts,
-the following compendious description of the
-route pursued in it may not prove uninteresting;
-it is abstracted from the diary of a man of science,
-who performed the journey a few years ago, in the
-month of October, when the Paraguay begins to
-retire to its own channel. The description may
-commence at the Taquari, as the voyage from
-thence to Cuiaba and the Jauru has already been
-detailed. The largest of the many mouths of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[427]</a></span>
-Taquari in the Paraguay is in lat. 19° 15′, and
-long. 54°. In the first ten leagues of navigation,
-the channel of the river is lost, as it crosses some
-large plains, covered with water to the depth of
-several feet. This is contiguous to Taquari, a
-place where the river is much confined.</p>
-
-<p>From this place it is twenty leagues to the resting-place
-of Allegre, in lat. 18° 12′, and this space
-contains, on both banks of the Taquari, many
-entrances into the paths, which lead in time of the
-floods to various distant places on the Paraguay,
-Porrudos, and Cuiaba. From this resting-place
-there are thirty leagues of navigation, on the course
-of the river east to the fall of Barra, where it is
-impeded and unnavigable above a mile, though a
-part of it may be passed in half-loaded and part
-of it in empty canoes. At the head of this fall
-the river Cochim enters the Taquari, and the navigation
-here quits the latter for the Cochim. At
-its mouth it is twenty fathoms broad, and a league
-upwards receives on its south bank the Taquari-mirim,
-a river nearly as broad as itself. A little
-above this confluence is situated its first fall, which
-is called <i>da Ilha</i>, and may be passed in empty
-canoes. A league above is the fall of Giquitaya,
-passed with half cargoes, and a league and a quarter
-farther, that of the Choradeira, the current of
-which is very rapid. Beyond this is the fall of
-Avanhandava-uassu, where the cargoes are carried
-over-land for half a mile, and the canoes are
-conducted through a difficult channel of three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[428]</a></span>
-fathoms, at the end of which they are pushed
-over the rocks in order to pass the head or cataract.
-Half a league above is the fall do Jauru, so
-called from a river of that name, which enters the
-Cochim above it, on the north side. From this
-confluence upwards there occur seven falls in the
-course of five leagues and a half, in the midst of
-which distance the river cuts and is enchannelled
-in a mountain, through which it runs smoothly,
-although scarcely five fathoms broad, and receives
-on its south side the stream of the Paredão, which
-is said to be auriferous. Half a league above the
-last of the seven falls before-mentioned are three
-successive ones, called <i>Tres Irmãos</i>, and at an equal
-distance above them, that of Das Furnas, which is
-passed laboriously with canoes unloaded. From
-this place the navigation continues on the Cochim
-through a succession of falls, until that river is
-joined by the Camapuão, eight yards in breadth
-at its mouth. From this point to its junction
-with the Taquari, the course of the Cochim is
-thirty leagues.</p>
-
-<p>The river Camapuã, along which the navigation
-is continued, becomes narrower on passing some
-rivulets that flow into it, and so shallow, as to
-be in general scarcely two feet deep, and the canoes
-are rather dragged than navigated along its
-sandy bed. After two leagues of this labor, they
-quit the Camapuão-uassu, leaving it on the right
-hand, choked with fallen trees, &amp;c., and enter into
-the Camapuão-mirim, up which they proceed one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[429]</a></span>
-league, when they reach the <i>fazenda</i>, or estate, of
-the same name. This is an important establishment,
-belonging to the Portuguese, in the centre
-of those vast and desert regions that intervene between
-the great rivers Paraguay and Parana, ninety
-leagues south-south-west, in a direct line from the
-town of Cuiaba. The place seems very proper
-for a Register, to prevent the smuggling of gold
-in this route, and to fix the duties on goods passing
-to Cuiaba and Matto Grosso. The canoes and
-cargoes are transported from the Fazenda de Campauão
-by land about a mile to the river Sanguixuga,
-the principal source of the Rio Pardo. From the
-end of the land-passages the navigation continues
-down the Sanguixuga, and, in the interval of three
-leagues, they pass four falls to the Rio Vermelho
-(so called from the color of its waters), which enters
-the Pardo. Half a league from the mouth of
-the Vermelho, the Pardo has the fall of the Pedras
-de Amolar, and a league below receives on its south
-side the river Claro, from which, after proceeding
-two leagues of level stream, there occur nine falls
-in the space of two leagues more. The passage of
-them occupies twelve or fourteen days in going up
-the river, though only one in returning. Below
-the last of these, called the Bangue, the river Sucuriu
-enters the Pardo on its south side. Three
-leagues below the mouth of the Sucuriu is the cataract
-of Curare, about eight yards high, to avoid
-which the canoes are hauled over land, through a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[430]</a></span>
-passage of a hundred yards. From this cataract,
-in the space of ten leagues, there occur ten falls,
-which occupy fifteen or twenty days in ascending
-the river, though only one in descending. The
-breadth of the Rio Pardo in this part is twenty-two
-fathoms. Two leagues below the last of these
-falls is a deep inlet of three hundred and ninety
-fathoms; half a league lower the canoes are hauled
-over a space of land of a hundred and fifty yards.
-Half a league further is the fall of Sirga Negra;
-one league further, that of Sirga Matto; and a
-little more than a league from thence, the great
-cataract, or Salto da Cajuru, ten yards in height,
-to avoid which, the canoes are hauled through a
-narrow channel here formed by the river. At a
-distance equal to the preceding is the Cajuru-mirim,
-and immediately after is found the fall of <i>da
-Ilha</i>, the thirty-third and last on this river. Six
-leagues below this fall, the Rio Pardo receives on
-its north side the river Orelha da Anta;[A] and four
-leagues lower down, on the same side, the Orelha
-da Onça<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a>, from the mouth of which, after eleven
-leagues of navigation, is found the junction which
-the river Anhandery-uassu makes from the south
-with the Pardo, which, from the passage of Camapuão
-to this point, completes a south-east course
-of forty-five leagues in extent. The Anhandery
-and the Pardo, from their confluence, run sixteen
-leagues of navigation westward, in one channel,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[431]</a></span>
-and disembogue in the west bank of the Parana
-in lat. about 21°. The velocity of the current of
-the Rio Pardo is very irregular: it may be navigated
-downward in five or six days, but cannot be
-ascended in less than twenty or thirty, and that
-by hauling, for the force of the stream in some
-places is too great for oars.</p>
-
-<p>The river Parana is of great breadth and
-weight of water, and is navigated against its current
-up to the mouth of the fine river Tieté.
-In the first three leagues occurs the island of
-Manoel Homem. Five leagues above this island
-the Rio Verde falls into the Parana, by a
-mouth of forty-two fathoms, on its western bank,
-and at an equal distance above, on the opposite
-eastern side, the river Aguapehy enters, by a
-mouth apparently above twenty yards wide. Eight
-leagues above this river, and on the west side of
-the Parana, the large river Sucuriu has its mouth,
-at least fifty fathoms wide, and, after four leagues
-of navigation further, on the same side of the Parana,
-is found the mouth of the large and interesting
-river, the Tieté<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a>. The distance between the
-rivers Tieté and Pardo, according to the windings
-of the Parana, may be estimated at thirty-five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[432]</a></span>
-leagues; the direction north, inclining to the east.
-Passing up the Tieté, in the first three leagues is
-found the great Salto de Itapura (a great cascade)
-to avoid which, the canoes are dragged sixty fathoms
-over-land. A league above is the difficult
-fall of Itapura-mirim; another league upwards
-are the three falls, called Tres Irmaos, and little
-more than that distance onward, that of Itupiru,
-half a league long; two leagues further is
-the fall of Uaicurituba-mirim, and in the upper
-part of it the small river Sucury enters the Tieté
-upon its north bank. One league above it is the
-fall of Utupiba, a quarter of a league in length.
-The same distance above is the fall of Araracangua-uassu,
-which is passed with unloaded canoes.
-Five leagues above this is found the Araracangua-mirim;
-one league further, the Arassatuba, and
-at the same distance, Uaicurituba, from which, in
-the space of nine leagues, occur seven falls. Three
-and a half leagues above the last of them is that of
-the Escaramunca, so called from the abrupt windings
-of the river among a thousand rocks and
-stoppages. Two leagues above this is the large
-fall of Avanhandava, where the canoes are unloaded,
-and their cargoes carried half a mile over-land<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a>,
-and the canoes hauled the greatest part of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[433]</a></span>
-the way, to avoid a cataract sixteen yards perpendicular.
-A league and a half above this is the
-fall of Avanhandava-mirim, and very near it, that
-of the Campo, from which there are fourteen
-leagues of clear navigation to those of the Camboyu-voca,
-and next to the Tambau-mirim and
-Uassu, both within the compass of two leagues.
-One league further is the fall of Tambitiririca;
-three leagues from thence, the Uamicanga, and a
-little more than two leagues upwards, the Jacuripipira
-enters the Tieté on the north side, and
-has a mouth fifteen fathoms broad. A league and
-a half above this is the Jacuripipira-mirim, six
-leagues from whence is the fall of Congouha, a
-league in length. For the space of eight leagues
-from this there are six falls, of which the last is
-Banharem. From this it is three leagues and a
-half to the mouth of the Paraniaba, thirty-eight
-fathoms broad: it enters the Tieté on the north;
-and the latter river from this point immediately
-narrows itself to forty fathoms wide. From the
-mouth of the Paraniaba there is a navigation of
-four leagues to the small fall of Ilha, and fourteen
-leagues more, with frequent windings to that of
-Itahy, near a populous village, called Jundahy.
-Six leagues from this is the fall of Pedrenegoa,
-which is a quarter of a league long; and half a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[434]</a></span>
-league above it, the river Sorecaba, which comes
-from the town of the same name, in lat. 23° 31′,
-empties itself on the south into the Tieté. Near
-this town are several mountains, called Guaraceaba,
-some of which abound with rich oxide
-of iron, which on smelting, has proved very good.
-Upon them grows fine timber for machinery, and
-wood of every size, fit for reducing into charcoal.
-Numerous streams flow from them, which may be
-employed to great advantage, and their base is
-washed by the river Campanhes, near the Capivara,
-both of which empty themselves into the
-Tieté at a short distance. From the river Sorecaba
-it is only six leagues to Porto Felix, where
-all the embarkation is now made to Matto Grosso
-from S. Paulo, the distance being about twenty-three
-leagues from that city. Through this conveyance,
-salt, iron, ammunition, clothing for the
-troops, &amp;c. are sent annually by Government.&mdash;Trading
-parties frequently arrive at S. Paulo from
-Cuiaba in the month of February, and return in
-April or May.</p>
-
-<p>Resuming our account of the Paraguay, it is
-to be observed that the Embotetieu enters that
-river five leagues below the mouth of the Taquari,
-and on the same side. It is now called Mondego,
-and was formerly navigated by the traders from
-S. Paulo, who entered by the Anhandery-uassu,
-the south branch of the Pardo. On the north
-bank of the Mondego, twenty leagues above its
-mouth, the Spaniards founded the city of Xerez,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[435]</a></span>
-which the Paulistas destroyed. Ten leagues
-above this place, in the mountains that form the
-upper part of the Embotetieu, there is a tradition
-that there are rich mines which were discovered
-fifty years ago. One league below the mouth of
-the Mondego there are two high insulated mounts
-fronting each other on the Paraguay: at the extremity
-of the southern declivity of the mount
-on the west side, near the bank of the river, is the
-garrison of New Coimbra, founded in 1775; it is
-the last and southermost Portuguese establishment
-on the great Paraguay. Eleven leagues to
-the south of Coimbra, on the west side of the
-Paraguay, is the mouth of Bahia Negra, a large
-sheet of water of six leagues in extent, being five
-leagues long from north to south: it receives the
-waters of the wide-flooded plains and lands to the
-south and west of the mountains of Albuquerque.
-At this bay the Portuguese possessions on both
-banks of the Paraguay terminate. From thence
-the river continues to lat. 21°, where, on its west
-bank, is situated a hill known to the Portuguese
-by the name of Miguel José, crowned with a
-Spanish fort with four pieces of artillery, called
-Bourbon. Three leagues above this the little
-river Guirino falls into the Paraguay on the east
-side. Nine leagues to the south of the above fort,
-and in lat. 21° 22´, are other mountains, on both
-sides the Paraguay, which command this river;
-for the eastern side is surmounted with a lofty
-chain extending to the interior of the country,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[436]</a></span>
-near which is the sugar-loaf mount; the opposite
-side is equally mountainous, but not so high or
-extensive; and in the middle of the river there is
-a high rocky island, which, with the mountainous
-banks on each side, forms two channels of about
-a musket-shot across. This, in case of war between
-the neighbouring nations, would be a post
-of the highest importance, as it forms a natural
-barrier, which would require little fortification to
-render it an effectual obstacle to invasion. Here
-terminate those extensive inundations, to which
-both banks of the Paraguay are subject: they
-commence at the mouth of the Jauru, and to this
-point cover an extent of one hundred leagues from
-north to south, and forty in breadth, at their
-highest floods, forming an apparent lake, which
-geographers of former days, as well as some moderns
-have termed the Xarayes. This inundation
-confounds the channel of the great Paraguay with
-those of its various confluents, in such a manner
-that, from twenty to thirty leagues above their
-regular mouths, it is possible, in time of the
-floods, to navigate across from one to the other,
-always in deep water, without ever seeing or approaching
-the banks of the Paraguay. During
-this wonderful inundation, the high mountains
-and elevated land which it incloses appear like so
-many superb islands, and the lower grounds form
-a labyrinth of lakes, bays, and pools, many of which
-remain after the floods have subsided. From the
-intricacy of these inundated plains, the navigation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[437]</a></span>
-is rendered impracticable to all who do not
-unite experience with skill. From this position,
-(the only barrier on the Paraguay), the banks
-downward are in general high and firm, particularly
-the eastern or Portuguese side. In lat. 22° 5′,
-a considerable river empties itself into it, which
-the Spaniards, at the demarcation in 1753, would
-have to be the Corrientes, whereas the heads of
-this river are twenty leagues north of the real
-Corrientes mentioned in the treaty.</p>
-
-<p>Between the Paraguay and Parana there runs
-from north to south an extensive chain of mountains,
-which have the appellation of Amanbay;
-they terminate to the south of the river Iguatimy,
-forming a ridge running east and west, called Maracayer.
-From these mountains spring all the
-rivers which, from the Taquari southward, enter
-the Paraguay, and from the same chain, also, proceed
-many other rivers, which, taking a contrary
-direction, flow into the Parana, one of them, and
-the most southerly, being the Igoatimy, which
-has its mouth in lat. 23° 47′, a little above the
-seven falls, or the wonderful cataract of the Parana.
-This cataract is a most sublime spectacle,
-being distinguished to the eye of the spectator
-from below by the appearance of six rainbows,
-and emitting from its fall a constant cloud of vapors,
-which impregnates the air to a great distance.
-On the north side of the Igoatimy, twenty
-leagues from its mouth, the Portuguese had
-formerly the fortress of Bauris, which was abandoned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[438]</a></span>
-in 1777. The Igoatimy has its sources ten
-leagues above this place, among high and rugged
-mountains. The river Xexuy enters the Paraguay
-on the east side in lat. 24° 11′, twenty leagues below
-the Ipane, another small river, called Ipanemirim,
-intervening.</p>
-
-<p>This is a summary and highly interesting description
-of Portuguese Paraguay, to the point
-where the territory ought (as our Tourist observes)
-to extend! and such is the situation of this great
-river, that the above-mentioned rivers which concentrate
-toward the interior of Brazil, enter it on
-the eastern side; not one enters it on the western,
-from the Jauru to the parallel of the Ipane.
-Many parts of the banks of all those rivers are
-laid under water at the time of the floods, and
-the plains are covered to a considerable depth.</p>
-
-<p>A river of such vast size as the Paraguay, in a
-temperate and salubrious climate, abounding with
-fish, bordered by extensive plains and high mountains,
-intersected by so many rivers, bays, lakes,
-and forests, must naturally have drawn many of
-the Indian nations to inhabit its banks: but, immediately
-after the discovery of the new continent, the
-incursions of the Paulistas and Spaniards seem to
-have dispersed and destroyed the numerous tribes:
-the Jesuits transplanted many thousands to their
-settlements on the Uruguay and Parana. Other
-nations fled from the avarice of the new settlers
-to countries less favored, but more secure by reason
-of their distance, and the difficulty of approach.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[439]</a></span>
-This emigration of one nation to districts
-occupied by another, became the fruitful source
-of inveterate and sanguinary wars among them,
-which tended to reduce their numbers. There
-are, however, still some Indians left on the borders
-of the Paraguay, among whom the Guaycurus, or
-Cavalier Indians, are principally distinguished for
-valour. They occupy the lands from the river Taquari,
-extending southwards, along all the rivers
-that enter the Paraguay on the eastern side, as
-far as the river Ipane, and in like manner, on the
-opposite bank, from the mountains of Albuquerque
-downwards. They have made war repeatedly
-on the Spaniards and Portuguese, without ever
-being subdued. They are armed with lances of
-extraordinary length, bows, arrows, &amp;c. They
-make long incursions on horseback into the neighbouring
-territories; they procure horses in exchange
-for stout cotton cloaks, called <i>Ponches</i>,
-which they manufacture. There are other Indian
-nations inhabiting these large tracts, some of
-whom have intermixed both with the Portuguese
-and Spaniards, there being few of the latter on
-any part of the confines without some traces of
-Indian physiognomy.</p>
-
-<p>From the river Xexuy, downwards, the Paraguay
-takes its general course southwards for
-thirty-two leagues to the city of Assumpcion, the
-capital of Paraguay, and the residence of its governor.
-This city is situated on an obtuse angle
-made by the eastern bank of the river; the population<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[440]</a></span>
-is by no means trifling, and there are some
-Portuguese among the inhabitants. The government
-is of vast extent, and its total population is
-said to amount to near 120,000 souls. The land
-is fertile, and contains many rich farms: its principal
-produce is the <i>matte</i>, which is exported to
-Tucuman and Buenos Ayres, from whence it is
-sent to various parts of the Spanish dominions,
-along the coast of Chili and Peru, being a general
-article of consumption among all ranks of people.
-Its other products are hides, tobacco, and
-sugar. From Buenos Ayres large boats arrive at
-the city of Assumpcion, after two or three months’
-passage; the only difficulty in navigating is the
-great weight of the waters of the Paraguay, which
-flow with great rapidity: but this disadvantage is
-lessened by favorable winds, which blow the greater
-part of the year from the south.</p>
-
-<p>Six leagues below Assumpcion, on the western
-side of the Paraguay, the river Pilcomayo enters
-that river by its first mouth; its second is fourteen
-or sixteen leagues lower. In this space some
-other smaller rivers enter on the eastern side, and
-amongst them the Tibiquari, on an arm of which,
-twenty leagues south-east from Assumpcion, is
-Villa Rica, a large Spanish town, with much property
-in cattle on its extensive plains. The river
-Vermelho enters the west side of the Paraguay in
-lat. 26° 50′: on a remote upper branch of this
-river is the town of Salto, near an accessible fall;
-it is an important point to the Spaniards, who are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[441]</a></span>
-transporting their goods from Buenos Ayres, Tucuman,
-&amp;c. to Upper Peru.</p>
-
-<p class="pc2"><i>The River Parana</i>,</p>
-
-<p class="pn1">or Great River, which the first discoverers considered
-as the chief, on account of its abundant
-waters, unites with the eastern side of the Paraguay
-in lat. 27° 25´, and their united streams take
-the name of the Rio de la Plata, which originated
-in the following circumstance:&mdash;Martim de Sousa,
-the first donatary of the <i>capitania</i> of St. Vicente,
-furnished Aleixo Garcio, with an adequate escort
-to explore the hitherto untrodden wilds to the west
-of the extensive coast of Brazil. This intrepid
-Portuguese, by the route of the Tieté, reached
-the Paraguay, which he crossed, and penetrated
-considerably into the interior, from whence he returned,
-it is said, loaded with silver, and some
-gold: but he halted on the Paraguay, and waited
-for the coming of his son, a youth of tender years,
-with some of his people, whilst he sent forward
-an account of the discovery. He was surprised
-by a body of Indians, who killed him, took his son
-prisoner, and carried off all his riches: the year
-following, sixty Portuguese, who were sent in
-search of Garcia, shared the same fate. The Spaniards
-who first settled on this river, seeing so
-much silver amongst these Indians, and supposing
-it to be the produce of the country, called the river
-La Plata.<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[442]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Parana derives its principal sources from
-the west side of the mountains of Mantiqueira,
-twenty-five leagues west of the town of Paraty.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c19" id="c19">CHAP. XIX.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct"><i>Account of the Capitania of Rio Grande.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pn2">THE <i>capitania</i> of Rio Grande is one of the most
-important in Brazil. It is of considerable extent,
-and is bounded by the <i>capitania</i> of S. Paulo on the
-north, Matto Grosso on the west, and by the Spanish
-territories, between it and the Rio de la Plata,
-on the south.</p>
-
-<p>Its port is situated about 32° south; it is dangerous
-to enter, first from its being shoal water,
-and next, from a violent sea always running, and
-from the shifting of the sands. Notwithstanding
-these inconveniences, there is a great trade carried
-on from this place to all the ports of Brazil, in
-brigs and small vessels that do not draw above ten
-feet water. After passing the bar, which is long,
-they enter into an inland sea, or lagoon, of deep
-water, and navigate to the north and west to its
-head, where the principal river runs into it. To
-the southward is the lagoon Meni, and the neutral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[443]</a></span>
-ground; a little to the southward of which is the
-Spanish fortress of Santa Theresa, lately put in
-repair.</p>
-
-<p>The principal town is defended by many forts,
-some of which are upon islets. Since it was taken
-from the Spaniards by General Coimbra, the Portuguese
-have much strengthened it, and now there
-is a very considerable force of cavalry, horse-artillery,
-and foot-soldiers; so that at a short notice,
-with the addition of the militia, a body of
-five or seven thousand men might be calculated
-upon.</p>
-
-<p>The climate is considered very fine, and the soil
-so productive, that this district may be called the
-granary of Brazil; the wheat grown here is shipped
-to all the ports on the coast where bread is
-used. Farming, however, is carried on in so
-slovenly a manner, that the grain is always rough,
-bad skinned, and extremely foul. It is packed in
-raw hides, which are sewed up like sacks; it swells,
-and heats frequently on the passage from Rio
-Grande to the more northerly ports; and often,
-after landing in Rio de Janeiro, it is left on the
-quay exposed for days to the rain.</p>
-
-<p>The vicinity of Rio Grande is extremely populous;
-in a circuit of twenty leagues, the inhabitants,
-including the troops, are estimated at 100,000.
-Their principal occupations are, the breeding of
-cattle, for which the immense tract of pastureland
-is so well calculated; the drying and preparing
-of hides, and the making of <i>charque</i>, or what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[444]</a></span>
-is called, in the river Plata, jug-beef. It is prepared
-in the following manner:&mdash;After the ox is
-skinned, the flesh is stripped from the bones in as
-large flakes as possible, in some degree resembling
-sides of bacon: it is put into hot brine, where it
-remains from twelve to forty hours, according to
-the thickness. It is then taken out, drained, and
-dried in the sun, afterwards shipped to all parts
-of Brazil. It is a general article of consumption
-among the lower classes and negroes, and is
-not unfrequently seen at respectable tables, being
-in taste somewhat similar to hung-beef. It constitutes
-the general food for the sailors, and forms
-part of almost every cargo sent out from this port.
-It has found its way to the West Indies, where it
-is in great request, and has been frequently sold,
-during the war, at nine-pence or a shilling per
-pound. The <i>charque</i> prepared at Rio Grande is
-much superior to that brought from the river
-Plata. During the time that the English troops
-were in possession of Monte Video, in consequence
-of an apprehension that the cattle might be driven
-away, and they be in want of supplies, large quantities
-were contracted for at S. Pedro, which arrived
-at Monte Video, though not wanted. They
-were afterwards shipped for the West India
-market.</p>
-
-<p>The quantity of hides exported from hence is
-almost incredible; they furnish many vessels with
-entire cargoes, which are carried to the northern
-ports, and from thence embarked for Europe. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[445]</a></span>
-annual average may be estimated at not less than
-three hundred thousand.</p>
-
-<p>Tallow forms another considerable article of
-commerce, which in general is shipped in the crude
-state, and not refined, as in the river Plata. The
-greater part is consumed in Brazil, and the dealers
-find it preferable to refine the article on the spot,
-where they manufacture it into candles. It is packed
-in waste raw-hide packages.<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a></p>
-
-<p>Horns and horse-hair form an inferior branch of
-the commerce, and are shipped from this port in
-great quantities.</p>
-
-<p>The above are the staple productions of Rio
-Grande, which give employment perhaps to a hundred
-sail of coasters, some of which make two or
-three voyages in a year, carrying thither rum, sugar,
-tobacco, cotton, rice, coarse manufactured cotton,
-sweet meats, &amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a></p>
-
-<p>Of European merchandise, they bring wine, olive-oil,
-glass, and a great variety of English commodities,
-particularly iron, (though they much
-prefer the Swedish), baizes, coatings, stout woollen
-cloths, Manchester velverets of various qualities
-and colors, printed cottons, calicoes, muslins,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[446]</a></span>
-handkerchiefs, silk, cotton, and worsted hosiery,
-hats, flannels, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Sail-cloth, cordage, anchors, tar, paints, fowling
-pieces, ammunition of all sorts, hardware of
-every description, particularly slaughter-knives,
-some plated ware, and fancy articles. A great
-part of the goods are conveyed upon horses into
-the interior, where they are carried from house to
-house for sale or exchange.</p>
-
-<p>During the old system, so lately as within these
-four years, a most lucrative trade was here carried
-on with the Spaniards, who came in numbers,
-and most eagerly bought up the tobacco, and
-such of the English manufactures as could be
-transported on horseback, at great prices. Thus
-Rio Grande and its vicinity became very enviable
-situations, where considerable fortunes were made
-in a little time, as the goods bought were much
-in request, though contraband, and were paid for
-in specie. This trade, so advantageous to each
-party, is now entirely ruined through the eagerness
-of our speculators in over-stocking the markets,
-and selling for two what would have been
-eagerly bought for six.</p>
-
-<p>The neighbourhood of the capital is an unpleasant
-place, being surrounded with sand and sandhills
-of no inconsiderable size, formed by the wind
-blowing the sand in heaps in various directions,
-which become half indurated, and appear stratified.
-The excessively high winds, which frequently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[447]</a></span>
-prevail, blow the sand so as to be very disagreeable,
-as it enters every part of the house.</p>
-
-<p>The cattle bred in this <i>capitania</i> are very numerous,
-and large herds are brought hither from the
-Spanish frontiers.</p>
-
-<p>The large river Uruguay rises in this <i>capitania</i>,
-and empties itself into the river Plata, a little above
-Buenos Ayres; there are numerous others of less
-consequence, the banks of which are well stored
-with wood. Some attempts were lately made, by
-miners sent from Villa Rica, to work gold-washings.
-In the neighbourhood of the capital they
-have coal, a specimen of which I have seen. From
-the same district, a gentleman shewed me a substance
-which he could not define; on seeing it, I
-asked him if he was certain that it came from
-thence; he assured me that he was: I then told
-him that it was wolfram; and stated that this metal
-strongly indicated tin, of which it is frequently an
-attendant in Europe, though probably it may
-not be so in America. It was a rude lump, not
-rounded by friction, and weighed at least a pound.
-Of the geology and general features of the rocks
-of this <i>capitania</i> very little is known.</p>
-
-<p>In various parts <i>jaguars</i>, and other beasts of
-prey, are very common. Among the graniverous
-animals are <i>capivaras</i> of great size, deer in vast
-herds, and <i>armadillos</i>, which afford excellent eating
-when roasted. Of birds, there are ostriches
-of the dark-colored species, which go about in
-flocks of great numbers. There are eagles, hawks,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[448]</a></span>
-and other birds of prey, particularly a species of
-crow of the vulture kind. Cranes, storks, wild
-turkeys, ducks, partridges, horned plovers, goat-suckers,
-horned owls, small parrots, cardinals,
-humming birds, &amp;c. are found in great numbers.</p>
-
-<p>The inhabitants are, generally speaking, athletic
-and robust, and so extremely fond of riding, as
-not to go the smallest distance on foot. They are
-esteemed excellent horsemen, and greatly surpass
-their neighbours in dexterity and agility, particularly
-in catching cattle with the balls and the <i>lazo</i>.
-But it ought to be understood that the Spaniards
-have Peons on their farms, who are more nearly
-allied to the Indians than to them, whereas the
-Portuguese have Creolians, bred up to the business,
-or expert negroes, who are inferior to none
-in this labor.</p>
-
-<p>It is singular to Europeans, that in this fine climate,
-where the thermometer is frequently below
-40° Fahrenheit, and where are bred as fine cows as
-any in the world, and every convenience is at hand
-for dairies, neither butter nor cheese is made, except
-on particular occasions; nor is milk even for
-coffee to be procured at all times. It may probably
-be urged that the production of these articles
-would not answer the purpose of the farmers:
-but certainly it might be made to do so; and I
-hesitate not to say, that a hundred cows, kept for
-dairy purposes, would yield to any man capable
-of rearing, training, and managing them, a greater
-profit than any other part of husbandry. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[449]</a></span>
-colony might easily be made to supply the neighbouring
-districts, and even the whole of Brazil,
-with these articles.</p>
-
-<p>A number of years ago some hemp was grown
-here by order of Government: it proved excellent,
-but was abandoned because it was troublesome
-to dress, and probably did not yield sufficient
-profit, owing to the high price of labor.</p>
-
-<p>In some places grapes are very good, and probably
-wine will soon be made from them, as the
-restraint laid by the mother-country upon her colonies
-is now removed.</p>
-
-<p>Troops have been for a considerable time pouring
-into Rio Grande, the result was, Monte
-Video taken possession of by the Portuguese.
-This so enraged Artigas, a Spanish officer and
-great land owner, that he rallied the inhabitants of
-the country, and, being joined by the Peons and
-negroes, made war against the new possessors,
-(from whom he had probably received indignities
-and injury), issuing orders for reprisals at sea,
-and carrying on a desolating warfare. But this
-was not all&mdash;his people, under no discipline, plundered
-the good <i>Fazendistas</i>, and robbed and murdered
-private individuals; thus changing the
-scene from peace, happiness, and contentment,
-to anarchy, confusion, rapine, plunder, and murder.</p>
-
-<p>A great many rivers run into Rio Grande, which
-has more the appearance of a vast lake or inland
-sea than a river. On the banks of these rivers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[450]</a></span>
-we find many settlers enjoying most beautiful situations,
-and lands to a great extent. Here may
-be said to be the finest situations for growing
-wheat; falls of water for mills, and excellent water
-conveyance to ships wanting cargoes, who might
-with the greatest facility load and transport it all
-over Brazil, the Cape, Isle of France, &amp;c. An
-active people would soon enjoy a trade of their
-own instead of importing flour from the United
-States, which is even now the case.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d4.jpg" width="120" height="103"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2><a name="c20" id="c20">CHAP. XX.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="pc2 reduct"><i>General Observations on the Trade from England
-to Brazil.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="pn2">HAVING, in a preceding part of this work,
-stated the importance of Rio de Janeiro as a port
-which, from its locality, appears destined by nature
-to become the metropolis of a vast empire,
-and the centre of an extensive commerce, it may
-not be improper in this place to treat more at
-large on this interesting subject.</p>
-
-<p>The ships best calculated for trade from England
-are those which carry about four hundred
-tons, and sail well: it is particularly necessary
-that they should have the latter quality; for, if
-they have not, the voyage from thence to England<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[451]</a></span>
-is frequently rendered very tedious by their
-being driven too far to the westward by the north-east
-trade-wind. Owing to this circumstance, it
-is not uncommon for a packet, or fast-sailing ship,
-to make a passage from the coast of Brazil to
-England in five or six weeks, when a heavy-sailing
-vessel is double that time in arriving at her
-destination. The best season for sailing from
-England, and that which affords the greatest probability
-of making a short passage, is the month
-of February or March, because then the north-east
-winds prevail. I should advise crossing the
-line in not less than 22°, nor more than 25° west
-longitude, if the destination be the Plata or Rio
-de Janeiro, as I have twice experienced very
-long calms in crossing the line between 19° and
-20°. Ships bound to Bahia, Pernambuco, and
-ports more northerly, will of course cross the line
-more to the westward, as they will have nothing
-to fear: but the south-west trade-wind would generally
-cause ships going farther south to fall in
-with the land too soon. Should that be the case, I
-would advise them, if they make the land to the
-north of the Abrolhos<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a>, to keep in-shore, as the
-land-breeze is frequently from the northward until
-mid-day. The ports on this coast are in general
-good and secure, nevertheless it is highly desirable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[452]</a></span>
-to be provided with good anchors and
-cables, particularly in the Rio de la Plata. In
-the Portuguese territories the port-charges are
-not so expensive as formerly; a dollar per day is
-exacted for anchorage, which forms the principal
-charge. I particularly recommend that all homeward-bound
-ships should lay in a sufficiency of
-necessary stores, especially of water, so as to
-make the passage without being obliged to go
-into the Western Isles, as there the port-charges
-and attendant expenses are very exorbitant,
-though the only articles wanted may be a few casks
-of water, and a hundred weight or two of bread.</p>
-
-<p>Ships are loaded in Rio de Janeiro, and other
-ports of Brazil, as well as in the Plata, by lighters,
-which are very expensive, and difficult to be procured
-when many ships are receiving their cargoes;
-good boats are extremely useful and necessary.</p>
-
-<p>When a vessel enters any of the ports, the
-health-boat and custom-boat make a visit before
-she anchors, and their report is immediately made;
-after which, proper officers, called <i>guardas</i>, are
-sent on board. These men in general are not very
-liberally provided for; they are extremely civil
-and accommodating, and ought to be treated with
-respect. Since the establishment of the treaty of
-commerce between this government and that of
-Brazil the contraband trade has been almost done
-away; for the duties are now much reduced, and the
-accommodation which the judge and subordinate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[453]</a></span>
-officers of the custom-house are disposed to allow,
-is such, as to render that nefarious practice unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p>It may not be improper in this place to describe
-the consequences produced in Rio de Janeiro
-by the excessive commercial speculations
-into which our merchants entered, immediately
-after the emigration of the Court of Portugal,
-and which could only be equalled by those which
-followed our expeditions to the Rio de la Plata.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the incredible competition or struggle
-among our merchants, who should send most ships
-and cargoes to a country, whose civilized population,
-exclusive of slaves, did not exceed eight
-hundred thousand souls, (one-third, at least, of
-whom may be said to make use only of what their
-land produces), it is natural to suppose that the
-market would be almost instantly overstocked.
-So great and so unexpected was the influx of
-English manufactures into Rio de Janeiro, within
-a few days after the arrival of the Prince, that
-the rent of houses to put them into became enormously
-dear. The bay was covered with ships,
-and the custom-house soon overflowed with goods:
-even salt, casks of ironmongery, and nails, salt-fish,
-hogsheads of cheese, hats, together with an
-immense quantity of crates and hogsheads of
-earthen and glass ware, cordage, bottled and barrelled
-porter, paints, gums, resin, tar, &amp;c. were exposed,
-not only to the sun and rain, but general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[454]</a></span>
-depredation. The inhabitants of Rio de Janeiro,
-and more particularly some of the Creolians and
-strangers from the interior, thought that these
-goods were placed there for their benefit, and extolled
-the goodness and generosity of the English,
-who strewed the beach to a great extent with articles
-for which their own countrymen had heretofore
-charged them such high prices! It is true
-that the gentlemen entrusted with these valuable
-consignments did apply for sentinels to be placed
-to guard the articles thus exposed, and their request
-was immediately complied with. The result
-was such as might easily have been anticipated
-from such watchmen, many of whom did not fail
-to profit largely by the appointment. In the
-course of some weeks the beach began to assume
-a less crowded appearance; some few of the goods
-were taken to the residences of their owners, others
-were removed; but to what place, or by whom,
-there was no way of ascertaining; and a very
-great proportion was sold at the custom-house
-<i>for the benefit of the underwriters</i>. This stratagem,
-then so frequently practised, (and certainly
-deserving of the severest reprehension), afterwards
-operated as a very serious injury to the regular
-sale of articles; for, as the market was so overstocked,
-scarcely any one would offer money for
-goods, except at the custom-house sales. As the
-depreciation continued, numberless packages were
-there exposed for sale, in part damaged, or apparently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[455]</a></span>
-so. Indeed, little more than the mark
-of a cord on the outside of a single article, or a
-corner discolored, in a package however large,
-was a sufficient pretext for presuming and pronouncing
-the whole to be damaged. Great quantities
-of goods were brought to the hammer in the
-custom-house warehouses, under every disadvantage;
-thus the owners recovered the amount insured
-for, and the insurers lost the difference between
-that sum and the price they were sold at, also the
-attendant expenses. Many of the underwriters
-will, it is to be feared, retain a lasting remembrance
-of the sales which took place at Rio de Janeiro, and
-other parts of South America, <i>for their benefit</i>.</p>
-
-<p>To the serious losses thus occasioned by an
-overstocked market, and by the sacrifice of goods
-at whatever price could be obtained, may be added
-another, which originated in the ignorance of
-many persons who sent out articles to a considerable
-amount not at all suited to the country; one
-speculator, of wonderful foresight, sent large invoices
-of various sorts of stays for ladies who
-never heard of such armour; another sent skates,
-for the use of a people who are totally uninformed
-that water can become ice; a third sent out a considerable
-assortment of the most elegant coffin-furniture,
-not knowing that coffins are never used
-by the Brazilians, or in the Plata. To these absurd
-speculations may be added iron-stoves and
-fire-irons, candles, and numerous others, particularly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[456]</a></span>
-in articles of taste: elegant services of cut
-glass were little appreciated by men accustomed to
-drink out of a horn or a cocoa-nut-shell; and brilliant
-chandeliers were still less valued in a country
-where only lamps that afforded a gloomy light, were
-used. Superfine woollen cloths were equally ill-suited
-to the market; no one thought them sufficiently
-strong. An immense quantity of high-priced
-saddles, and thousands of whips<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>, were
-sent out to a people as incapable of adopting them
-as they were of knowing their convenience. They
-were astonished to see Englishmen ride on such
-saddles; nor could they imagine any thing more insecure.
-Of the bridles scarcely any use could be made,
-as the bit was not calculated to keep the horse or
-mule in subordination: these articles were of course
-sacrificed. Great quantities of the nails and ironmongery
-were useless, as they were not calculated for
-the general purposes of the people. Large cargoes of
-Manchester goods were sent; and, in a few months,
-more arrived than had been consumed in the course
-of twenty years preceding. No discrimination
-was used in the assortment of these articles, with
-respect either to quantity or fineness, so that common
-prints were disposed of at less than a shilling
-a yard, and frequently in barter. Fish from Newfoundland
-met with a similar fate; also porter,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[457]</a></span>
-large quantities of which, in barrels, arrived among
-a people, of whom a few only had tasted that article
-as a luxury. How the shippers in London,
-and other British ports, could imagine that porter,
-would at once become a general beverage, it is
-difficult to conceive, especially when sent in barrels.
-These cargoes, being unsaleable, were of
-course warehoused, and of course spoiled. Newfoundland
-fish, that was generally sold at from
-twelve to twenty dollars <i>per quintal</i>, was now unsaleable
-at four, and in many instances did not pay
-warehouse-room. Earthenware was perhaps rather
-more favorably received than many of the former
-articles, for plates, &amp;c. soon came into general
-use. Having enumerated various commodities
-which suffered a general depreciation, it may be
-sufficient to add that many invoices of fancy goods,
-and such as do not constitute a staple trade, were
-sold at from sixty to seventy <i>per cent.</i> under costs
-and charges, and others were totally lost. To enter
-more into detail would be unnecessary: it is
-hoped that the trade will in time find its regular
-course, and that the adventurers will derive from
-it some compensation for their former losses,
-though no possible change can repair the total
-ruin which numbers have incurred. Experience
-will now have fully shown the fallacy of those
-golden hopes which some persons conceived from
-the reputed wealth of South America, and we shall
-no longer hear of those absurdities which characterised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[458]</a></span>
-the first commercial speculations to the
-river Plata. What must have been the delusions
-of those traders who sent out tools, formed with
-a hatchet on one side and a hammer on the other,
-for the conveniency of breaking the rocks, and
-cutting the precious metals from them, as if they
-imagined that a man had only to go into the mountains,
-and cut out as much gold as would pay for
-the articles he wanted!</p>
-
-<p>Other evils resulted from these ill-judged and
-excessive speculations to South America, which
-might naturally have been anticipated. The first
-was, that the produce was bought up with such
-avidity that many articles were soon double their
-ordinary value, and continued to rise as our manufactures
-lowered. But this was not all: the
-purchasers suffered equally from their ignorance of
-the quality of the articles, as from their eagerness
-in purchasing them. For instance; any kind of
-sebaceous matter was greedily bought for tallow;
-and numberless hides, spoiled in the drying and
-eaten by the grub, met with ready sale. Little
-attention was paid to the state they were in; and
-thus it frequently happened that lots and cargoes
-of those articles, instead of reimbursing the adventurer
-to whom they were consigned, scarcely
-paid freight and charge. This was also the case
-with coffee and other staple articles. Many gentlemen,
-more knowing than others, sent home lots
-of curious wood, and even entered into the illicit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[459]</a></span>
-trade of shipping the dye-wood, which generally
-proved very disadvantageous, as the wood of that
-species grown in the vicinity of Rio de Janeiro is
-very inferior in quality to that of Pernambuco,
-from whence that trade is carried on for account
-of the Crown. The folly of speculation did not
-stop here: precious stones appeared to offer the
-most abundant source of riches; the general calculation
-was made upon the price at which they
-sold in London: but every trader bought them,
-more or less, at the price at which they were offered;
-invoices of goods were bartered for some, which
-in London would sell for, comparatively, a trifle,
-as they were taken without discrimination as to
-quality or perfection; green tourmalines were
-sold for emeralds, crystals for topazes, and both
-common stones and glass have been bought as
-diamonds to a considerable amount. Gold and
-diamonds were well known to be produced in Brazil;
-and their being by law contraband, was a sufficient
-temptation to eager speculators who had
-never before seen either in their native state. False
-diamonds were weighed with scrupulousness, and
-bought with avidity, to sell by the rules stated by
-Jefferies. Gold-dust, as it is commonly called, appeared
-in no inconsiderable quantity, and, after being
-weighed with equal exactness, was bought or
-bartered for. But previous to this many samples
-underwent the following easy and ingenious process:&mdash;The
-brass pans purchased at the stores<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[460]</a></span>
-were filed, and mixed with the gold in the proportion
-of from ten to twenty <i>per cent.</i> according to
-the opinion which the seller formed of the sagacity
-of the person with whom he had to deal: and
-thus, by a simple contrivance, some of our countrymen
-re-purchased at three or four guineas per
-ounce the very article which they had before sold
-at 2s. 6d. per pound!!!</p>
-
-<p>In enumerating the losses occasioned by the depreciation
-of goods, I have omitted to notice the
-heavy expenses upon them after the purchase, as
-packing, shipping, convoy-duty, freight, insurance,
-commission, and other incidental charges.
-Then suppose any staple article to be bought;
-there are the expenses of commission for buying
-of warehouse-room, shipping and the attendant
-fees, freight, and insurance; and, on the arrival
-of the merchandize in England, there are duties,
-dockage, warehouse-room, and many other items
-which leave no small interest in the hands of those
-who do the business.</p>
-
-<p>It is scarcely possible to imagine, much less to
-describe, the disappointment which prevailed
-among the young supercargoes a few months after
-their arrival in South America, particularly among
-those who had orders not to sell the goods entrusted
-to them lower than the prices specified in their
-invoices.</p>
-
-<p>They could scarcely awaken themselves from
-the chimerical delusion that their mind was filled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[461]</a></span>
-with; they disbelieved every thing, and continued
-to write to their employers to send out more goods,
-thinking the riches they had so fondly anticipated
-must yet roll down in torrents from the interior.
-The heart-breaking letters of those who sent them
-out, expressing the most poignant distress for want
-of remittances, at length awakened them, and
-their sanguine expectations of incalculable riches,
-heaps of dollars, or bars of gold, began to vanish.
-Many of the inhabitants came to look at their
-stores, but few offered to buy; and, incredible as
-it may appear, yet it is true, that when goods were
-offered to them at half the original cost, they invariably
-exclaimed, “Very dear.” Scenes of this
-kind I have repeatedly witnessed, and could scarcely
-suppress my indignation at seeing goods thus depreciated,
-which a few months before were so eagerly
-sought after, and bought at ten times the
-amount. Gentlemen consignees so situated were
-at a loss how to act: the duties, rents, charges,
-and other expenses were high, and must peremptorily
-be paid; their only resource was to open a
-shop or room for the purpose of selling their goods
-by retail, as the inhabitants wanted them.</p>
-
-<p>These young men most unfortunately had calculated
-upon doing business only in the large way,
-similar to our most opulent mercantile establishments:
-on their arrival they took the best houses,
-set apart their hours for morning rides and attending
-to business, for going to their country<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[462]</a></span>
-seats<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a>, and dinner-parties. The idea of vending by
-retail was a bitter which destroyed all their pleasing
-anticipations of doing business in style: they thought
-themselves merchants, expecting to sell at any
-price they pleased to ask, and to buy at what they
-thought proper to offer! and could not stoop to
-be shopkeepers; many of them, rather than yield
-to that, sent goods to auctions, and sold them at
-what they would fetch, thus rendering a ruinous
-account to their employers. Others with more
-prudence accommodated themselves to circumstances,
-and were not offended at being asked for
-a pair of boots or a hat. These persons reaped
-all the advantage of the trade, as they got their
-price by selling to those whose necessities prompted
-them to purchase, and were ever ready to sell
-by the package when opportunity offered. Many
-of these young men, it is true, have been deservedly
-much blamed by the consignors, who have
-expressed great dissatisfaction at their extravagant
-mode of living, and at their proceedings, both in
-the disposal of the property sent to them, and in
-the purchase of merchandize to return; these
-complaints were justly founded, though something
-may be said in extenuation of the former, not only
-on the ground of their want of knowledge, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[463]</a></span>
-the unexampled situation of affairs; for a respectable
-and useful clerk, however capable of copying
-an invoice, or attending his employer’s counting-house,
-must make a very poor figure so situated,
-being very incapable of ascertaining or stating the
-merits of manufactured goods, and still less qualified
-to purchase the staple articles and general produce
-of the country. These severe and grievous
-disadvantages frequently gave the Brazilians the
-double advantage of buying below the market-price,
-and of selling above it.</p>
-
-<p>From these and many other unfortunate and
-disastrous circumstances, the trade could not fail
-to become gradually worse and worse; hence it is
-very natural to imagine that necessitous consignors,
-eager to see the riches which they had so long
-and so vainly anticipated, became more pressing
-for remittances. One disappointment succeeded
-another; remonstrances were made; and powers
-of attorney were at length sent out almost by cargoes;
-property was removed from one consignee
-to another, at great expense, but to no purpose.
-At home the greatest confusion prevailed for want
-of money, until that lamentable and unfortunate
-epoch, when the columns of the Gazette were filled
-with the names of those very respectable merchants,
-who, before those ruinous speculations,
-were in a state of affluence. Many of those to
-whom immense sums were entrusted, have not even
-yet returned to their native country.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[464]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Misunderstandings frequently arose between
-the English and the Portuguese, either in making
-contracts, or in not complying with them;
-and they were continually prosecuting each other
-for injuries which both parties professed to have
-sustained. These litigations might have terminated
-very expensively, if not otherwise seriously,
-had not the wise measures of the <i>Juiz Conservador</i>
-prevented the perplexities of legal proceedings.
-The appeals of the English were always
-heard; they were strangers whom His Royal
-Highness protected, and they ever found in the
-Conde de Linhares a firm and powerful friend.</p>
-
-<p>In the Plata, the monied men bought very
-largely of the cargoes which first arrived, and
-were afterwards considerable losers by the overflow
-which took place, when men of less capital
-bought for ten thousand dollars, what a few weeks
-before sold for fifteen or twenty. In Rio de Janeiro
-the case was somewhat different; for the
-monied men thought the English manufactures
-inexhaustible, and therefore kept back their
-gold, leaving the trade principally to men of a secondary
-class, who bought with great caution,
-and sold very promptly, for fear of a further depreciation.</p>
-
-<p>Having stated the ruinous consequences of
-sending out goods not saleable, it may be proper
-to point out the articles in general consumption,
-though even these may be sold at great loss, if the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[465]</a></span>
-markets be overstocked, for trade must depend
-on the wants and necessities of the consumer. If
-an individual possesses seven or eight hats, as
-many coats, &amp;c. it is unreasonable to suppose that
-he can want more, though he may be tempted to
-purchase, if offered at very reduced prices: but
-even that must have an end, and a trade must
-soon expire where one party is constantly the
-loser. This has been too generally the result of
-our late speculations in South America, into
-which people hurried without calculation or foresight.</p>
-
-<p>Iron and steel are articles for which there is a
-general and constant demand. The smiths prefer
-Swedish iron, as they have been always accustomed
-to it, and do not know how to heat and work the
-English. The next article to be mentioned is
-salt, in which the Brazilians are by no means
-nice. It is made and loaded at one or two places
-on the coast, but that which is most esteemed
-comes from the Cape de Verde islands; that
-brought from Liverpool is generally used in the
-sea-ports. Common woollens, baizes, and some
-stout fine cloths, particularly blue and black, are
-generally worn; also kerseymeres. Cotton goods
-of almost every description, especially if low
-priced, meet with ready sale, as do German linens.
-Hats of all sorts, (particularly dress-hats), and
-boots and shoes of English manufacture, have of
-late been sold in great quantities; the leather is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[466]</a></span>
-much preferable to that made in Brazil. Common
-and finer earthenware, and glass; some sorts of
-fine and coarse hardware, and some plated goods,
-as candles now begin to be used instead of lamps.
-Bottled porter, Cheshire cheese, butter, cheap
-furniture, tin-plate, brass, lead in various shapes,
-shot of all sizes, gunpowder, drugs, some philosophical
-instruments, books, low-priced paper,
-watches, telescopes, salt provisions, as hams,
-tongues, and barrelled pork, low-priced saddlery,
-and most of all, India and other goods fit for the
-African coast. Marble mortars, mirrors, and many
-fancy articles of less note. Silk and cotton
-hosiery, fashionable dresses for ladies, particularly
-fine stockings and shoes.</p>
-
-<p>It is to be observed that the mother-country
-still continues to send oil, wine, brandy, linens,
-cottons, some silks, and a variety of articles of
-inferior consequence. India goods, consisting
-chiefly of cottons, are sent from the Malabar
-coast, and China goods are in great plenty. From
-North America are imported flour, salt provisions,
-turpentine, tar, staves, household furniture, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Naval stores, clothing for sailors, arms, &amp;c.
-may be said to be generally in demand.</p>
-
-<p>The staple articles of trade from Brazil and the
-river Plate which are most in demand in this
-country, when its markets are not overstocked,
-are cotton, sugar, coffee, hides, tallow of good
-quality, horns, horse and cow hair, fur-skins, and
-feathers. Brazil is well calculated for growing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[467]</a></span>
-sugar, having every convenience of situation, and
-all the materials requisite for machinery. To the
-above may be added some peculiar woods; that
-beautiful species, called <i>jacarandá</i>, in England
-denominated rose-wood, is generally in demand. I
-do not say any thing of indigo, as it is of inferior
-quality. Rice is cultivated to great extent. Tobacco,
-it is to be hoped, will be better cured, to
-suit the English market; for no where can a soil
-and climate be found more favorable to the production
-of that plant than in Brazil.</p>
-
-<p>In offering, by way of conclusion, a more detailed
-account of the resources of this rich and
-extensive country, I shall for obvious reasons
-avoid all speculation on the political changes now
-operating in the mother country, as well as in her
-colonies, and direct my remarks solely to commercial
-matters. According to recent estimates
-the annual value of British goods imported into
-Brazil exceeds three millions sterling, one half of
-which may be assigned to Rio de Janeiro, from
-whence the returns are made generally in produce,
-consisting of gold, diamonds, and precious
-stones, sugars, cottons, hides, tobacco, tallow, wax,
-indigo, woods, and many other articles.</p>
-
-<p>The commerce of Bahia ranks next in importance
-to that of Rio, and a considerable proportion
-of it is conducted by English merchants.
-The returns are principally made in produce, and
-this circumstance secures to the native cultivator
-an eminent advantage over the foreign trader.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[468]</a></span>
-The main articles of produce are sugar, cotton,
-and tobacco. The annual exports of the cotton,
-may be stated at from 30,000 to 36,000 bags. Its
-quality varies according to the district in which
-it is produced; that which is brought hither from
-the southern parts of the province of Pernambuco,
-is called <i>foras</i>, in contradistinction with the cotton
-of Bahia, which is denominated <i>dentros</i>. The
-former is considered of superior staple, being
-stronger and more silky, but it seldom arrives in
-a clean state, or free from seeds and other substances
-negligently left by the planters. The
-<i>dentros</i>, though neither so strong nor so silky
-as the <i>foras</i>, are generally much better dressed,
-and hence they are considered of almost equal
-value. Much of this cotton is grown in the extensive
-plantations near Villa Nova do Principe.
-Eight ninths of the cotton shipped at Bahia is exported
-to England, and principally to the port of
-Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p>The quantity of sugar annually exported from
-hence is very considerable, and in some years has
-exceeded a million of <i>arrobas</i><a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a>. The growth of
-tobacco varies according to the season; an average
-crop has been estimated at 600,000 <i>arrobas</i>. One
-third, and frequently one half of a crop is rejected
-as unfit for shipment to Europe. The refuse is
-sent to the Portuguese possessions in Africa, but
-the demand for it has greatly diminished since the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[469]</a></span>
-abolition of the slave trade in that continent,
-north of the equator, that being the quarter in
-which it was principally consumed. A great
-quantity is exported to the Plata, and from thence
-is sent to various parts of the interior.</p>
-
-<p>Upwards of 150 sail of vessels have been dispatched
-from hence in the course of one year, of
-which number one third was destined for the
-ports of the mother country, and little short of
-one third for those of Great Britain; besides the
-staple articles of cotton, sugar, and tobacco, the
-exports include large quantities of hides, molasses,
-rum, and woods. Many large and most excellent
-ships have been built at this place, the
-timber of which is of a superior quality.</p>
-
-<p>Pernambuco is celebrated for producing the
-best cotton in Brazil, and it owes this distinction
-to the careful scrutiny which that article undergoes.
-After inspection it is divided into three
-qualities; the second quality is allowed to pass
-with the first, and the purchaser receives for it an
-allowance of 500 <i>reas per arroba</i> from the planter;
-the third quality is wholly rejected<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a>. The bags are
-then weighed, and the export duty charged on them.
-About eighty thousand bags are annually exported,
-of which sixty thousand may be considered
-as destined for Great Britain, and the residue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[470]</a></span>
-principally to Lisbon. The annual export of sugar
-has been estimated at 25,000 cases, of which
-nearly one half goes to England, and the rest to
-the mother country. This product is considerably
-on the increase.</p>
-
-<p>The principal exports from Maranham are cotton,
-rice, hides, and Indian corn. Its cotton
-ranks next in quality to that of Pernambuco, and
-obtains a price very little inferior. The quantity
-annually exported has been estimated at sixty
-thousand bags, of which more than three fourths
-may be considered as destined for the English
-market. The annual export of rice exceeds three
-hundred thousand <i>arrobas</i>. It is calculated that
-the trade of this port employs yearly upwards of
-one hundred sail, of which one half are destined
-for England. Sugar is beginning to form a considerable
-article of commerce at this port, many
-extensive plantations having been made. Sweetmeats
-and confectionery are cured here, and at the
-above mentioned places in great perfection, and
-are exported in quantities almost beyond credibility.</p>
-
-<p>The foreign commerce of Para may be considered
-still in its infancy, as its principal city,
-Belem, is accessible only to vessels of small burthen.
-Its cottons are considered little inferior to
-those of Bahia. Its other exports consist of excellent
-cocoa, coffee, rice, in great quantities, sarsaparilla,
-raw and tanned hides, gums, various
-drugs, some sugar, molasses, timber, and curious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[471]</a></span>
-woods. The vast territories of this <i>capitania</i> are
-but little known, and very thinly peopled.</p>
-
-<p>In terminating the present work, the author
-cannot but express his earnest hope, that the new
-order of things now instituted in the mother
-country may tend to the permanent welfare of
-Brazil, to the developement of its rich and various
-resources, to the intellectual, moral, and
-social improvement of its people, to the extension
-of their commerce, and to the continuance
-of that connection with Great Britain, which has
-hitherto contributed, and may henceforth more
-largely contribute, to the prosperity of both nations.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[472]</a><br /><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[473]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4"><a name="app" id="app">APPENDIX.</a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pn">IN page 368 of this work, I have stated, that it was
-my intention to enquire into, and to make some observations
-on the present regulations relative to diamonds.
-These beautiful gems have been found in such abundance
-in Brazil, as to supply not only Europe, but Asia;
-as those of India are become extremely scarce, diamonds
-from Brazil have been often sent thither, and have usurped
-their name. The question we are at present about to examine
-is, how far it would be consistent with the interest
-of the Portuguese Government to permit the searching
-for diamonds, in the same way as for gold, under peculiar
-laws. The monopoly is ineffectual, because the diamonds
-are found in so many parts widely distant from
-each other, that it is impossible to prevent the searching
-for them. The attempt to preserve grounds known to
-contain these riches, by forming a <i>distacamento</i>, has not
-produced any good effect; and it is by no means improbable,
-that the best of these (supposed) preserved lands
-are already worked, therefore the soldiers are guarding
-the casket after the jewels have been taken away. How
-many places might be mentioned (out of the district of
-Cerro do Frio), where troops of negroes daily work! It
-has been stated, that government probably receive little
-more than a moiety of the gems found at their own expense;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[474]</a></span>
-if so, it is certainly time to abandon a trade so
-exposed, or to change the system altogether. Is it the
-interest of Brazil to keep her enterprizing subjects in
-continual torture and fear respecting these precious gifts,
-which the bounteous hand of Providence has placed
-there? But indeed as his majesty’s subjects increase
-and become more enlightened, this severe monopoly will
-destroy itself and soon begin to give way to a wise and
-political government, which will prefer a rich and powerful
-population in the very heart of the colony to a few
-individuals. How happens it, that diamonds, in the hands
-of private persons, meet a more ready sale than those of
-government? Because they are better stones, and are
-offered in quantities more convenient for the purchasers:
-next, because they can be sold cheaper since they cost
-less. If diamonds were subject to pay a fifth, government
-would have such power as to enable them to command
-the market; and if they should become cheaper in
-Europe, the demand for them would become more general,
-therefore their price would not be likely to fall in Brazil;
-and, even if it did, is it not the blindest policy for the
-court to put such a yoke round the neck of her valuable
-subjects, who venture their lives in trackless deserts
-searching for mines, and exposing themselves to every
-danger? Would it have been possible for Portugal to
-colonize Brazil if there had been no gold mines to attract
-adventurers? To deny men the treasures with
-which nature has enriched the country, is to oppose one
-great check to its population; for the example of one adventurer
-becoming rich, is the means of inducing hundreds
-to follow him. Under the present system, there is
-so great a struggle between the temptation of becoming
-suddenly rich, and the fear of being ruined by detection,
-that when a man finds a diamond by accident, he knows
-not whether to appropriate it, or to surrender it to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[475]</a></span>
-government; even in the latter case, he has little prospect
-of reward, and runs the risk of being accused as a smuggler.
-Instances have not been uncommon of men having
-found diamonds, who have thrown them away<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> rather than
-involve themselves and their families in ruin, either by
-keeping them, or delivering them to government.</p>
-
-<p>It has before been shewn, that Government are the
-greatest gainers by the diamonds which are sold clandestinely;
-and if individuals were allowed to trade in
-them, the state and the public would undoubtedly be benefited
-by it. For it is certain, that a Brazilian farmer or
-miner would prefer necessaries, such as iron utensils,
-clothing, &amp;c. which add to his comforts and conveniences
-of life, to articles of ideal value, which in reality have
-come into his hands probably without difficulty or expense.
-Thus the peasantry would draw valuable produce
-from other countries in exchange for what cost them
-comparatively nothing, and, by enriching themselves,
-would augment the revenues of the state.</p>
-
-<p>Is it not possible to make the diamonds liable to pay a
-fifth, either in kind or in value? In this case it is probable
-that there would be less smuggling: and that practice
-might be still more restrained, by something like the following
-regulation: every person finding diamonds should
-be obliged to register them; also, to take out a certificate
-authorising him to dispose of them in whatever manner
-he thinks proper. It would certainly add to their importance,
-to make them subject to a trivial duty<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a>, on being
-lawfully transferred from the buyer to the seller, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[476]</a></span>
-which means they would come into immediate circulation
-and represent real property: thus, after yielding a very
-small profit to each person through whose hands they
-passed, they would finally be exported; and, as long as
-diamonds continued an article of distinction, ornament,
-and elegance, Brazil would lay under tribute every court
-in the civilized world.</p>
-
-<p>The Dutch were artful enough to poison the ears of
-the ministers of Portugal against the proposal of making
-diamonds a free trade, and assisted in the persecutions
-against those unfortunate sufferers who were detected in
-possessing them. But surely that narrow-minded and self-interested
-policy is now done away with; nor would it be
-credited in modern history, that the government of Brazil,
-for a trivial, pecuniary profit, should be the dupes of
-their own bank and a few interested strangers.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc reduct"><i>View of the State of Society among the Middling Classes,
-employed in Mining and Agriculture.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1">We are naturally led to imagine, that, in a country
-where mines of gold and diamonds are found, the
-riches of the inhabitants must be immense, and their
-condition most enviable; the Portuguese themselves,
-who reside in the mining districts, encourage this supposition;
-and whenever they go to Rio de Janeiro, do
-not fail to make all possible show and parade. But
-let us view them in the centre of their wealth; and as
-a fair criterion of the middling classes of society, let us
-select a man possessing a property of fifty or sixty negroes,
-with <i>datas</i> of gold mines, and the necessary
-utensils for working them. The negroes alone are worth,
-at the low valuation of 100 <i>milreis</i>, a sum equal to £1,200,
-or £1,500 sterling; the <i>datas</i> and utensils, though of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[477]</a></span>
-value, need not be taken into the account. Suppose this
-man to be married, and to have a family: What is the
-state of their domestic concerns, their general way of
-life? May I be allowed to describe them in the language
-which truth dictates, without exaggeration or extenuation?
-Their dwelling scarcely merits the name of a
-house; it is the most wretched hovel that imagination
-can describe, consisting of a few apartments built up to
-each other without regularity; the walls wicker-work,
-filled up with mud; a hole left for a frame serves as a
-window, or a miserable door answers that purpose. The
-cracks in the mud are rarely filled up; and in very few
-instances only have I seen a house repaired. The floors
-are of clay, moist in itself, and rendered more disagreeable
-by the filth of its inhabitants, with whom the pigs
-not unfrequently dispute the right of possession. Some
-<i>ranchos</i>, it is true, are built upon piles; and underneath
-are the stables, &amp;c.; these are certainly a little superior
-to the former. They are built so from necessity, where
-the ground is uneven or swampy; but it may be easily
-conceived, that the disagreeable effects produced by want
-of cleanliness, must in these instances be increased by
-the effluvia from the animals underneath, which I have
-frequently found intolerable.</p>
-
-<p>The furniture of the house is such as might be expected
-from the description above given. The beds are
-very coarse cotton cases, filled with dry grass, or the
-leaves of Indian corn. There are seldom more than two
-in a house; for the servants generally sleep upon mats,
-or dried hides laid on the floor. The furniture consists
-of one or two chairs, a few stools and benches, one table,
-or perhaps two, a few coffee-cups and a coffee-pot of
-silver; a silver drinking cup, and, in some instances, a
-silver wash-hand basin, which, when strangers are present,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[478]</a></span>
-is handed round, and forms a striking contrast to
-the rest of the utensils.</p>
-
-<p>The general diet of the family consists of the same
-articles which have already been particularized in treating
-of S. Paulo. The only beverage is water; and nothing
-can be more frugal than the whole economy of the
-table. So intent is the owner on employing his slaves
-solely in employments directly lucrative, that the garden,
-on which almost the entire subsistence of the family depends,
-is kept in the most miserable disorder.</p>
-
-<p>In the article of dress, they do not appear more extravagant
-than in that of food. The children are generally
-naked; the youths go without shoes, in an old
-jacket, and cotton trowsers; the men in an old capote or
-mantle wrapped around them, and wooden clogs, except
-when they go from home; and, on those occasions, they
-appear in all their splendor, forming as great a contrast
-to their domestic attire, as the gaudy butterfly does to the
-chrysalis from which it springs.</p>
-
-<p>It might be expected, that however penuriously the
-general concerns of the family were conducted, at least
-some degree of attention and expense would be bestowed
-on the dress of the females; for the test of civilization
-among all nations is the regard paid to the fair sex, on
-whom the happiness of domestic life depends. Yet the
-general poverty and meanness of their attire is such, that
-they reluctantly appear before any one, except the individuals
-of their own family.</p>
-
-<p>In short, in all those departments of domestic economy,
-which to the middle classes of other civilized nations are
-objects of expense, the Brazilians exercise the most rigid
-parsimony. At first, I was inclined to attribute this disposition
-to a love of money, which prompted them to
-avoid all extravagance; but, on closer observation, I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[479]</a></span>
-surprised to find that it originated in necessity. They
-generally take credit for the few articles they have to
-purchase, and sometimes find it difficult to maintain their
-negroes. If they purchase a mule, it is to be paid for at
-the end of one or two years, and, of course, at double its
-ordinary price.</p>
-
-<p>In such a family as that above described, the sons, as
-might be expected, are not brought up to industry; they
-are merely taught to read and write; rarely do they attend
-to the mining department; they learn no trade, nor
-are they instructed in any useful employment: perhaps
-an ensign or a lieutenant of militia, would think it a disgrace
-to put his son apprentice to a mechanic. Suppose
-the father of this family to die when the sons have just
-attained the age of puberty. They are now for the first
-time obliged to think of providing for themselves. With
-little knowledge of the world, ill educated, and poor,
-they have learned to think all occupations servile, and
-their own is generally hateful to them. If they agree
-not to divide the negroes, it often happens that they run
-into debt, and continue in wretchedness; if they divide
-them, each takes his course, and adventures for himself,
-and in a short time, they are generally obliged to part
-with their slaves, and exist in indigence. Every useful
-pursuit and every comfort is neglected for the sake of
-seeking hidden treasures which very rarely are found,
-and which when found are as rarely employed to advantage,
-but rather serve to increase the wants of the
-owners.</p>
-
-<p>Few, very few of the numerous class of miners from
-which the above instance is selected are rich, few are
-even comfortable; how wretched then must be the state
-of those who possess only eight or ten negroes, or whose
-property does not exceed three or four hundred pounds.</p>
-
-<p>Thus situated in one of the finest climates in the world,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[480]</a></span>
-with rich lands full of the finest timber, abounding in
-rivulets and water-falls in every direction, containing,
-besides precious minerals, iron ores, and almost every
-other useful product, the inhabitants of Brazil, though
-secured from absolute want, remain in indigence. It is
-true, the miner procures his gold by great labor, but this
-need not preclude him from improving his domestic condition.
-Were his hovel converted into a house, his slaves
-better fed and lodged, and his family better provided for,
-his whole affairs would receive a new impulse, and every
-part of his property would become doubly productive.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc reduct"><i>Negroes employed as Messengers.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1">One description of men whom I have omitted to mention
-before, are negroes employed as messengers by the
-various chiefs in the Capitania of Minas Geraes. The
-men selected for this employment are the most trusty and
-able-bodied that can be found. Their letters are locked
-up in a leathern bag, which they buckle round them, and
-never take off until they deliver its contents. They
-carry a gun and ammunition with them to defend themselves,
-as well as to provide themselves with food.
-Wherever they halt, they are sure of a kind and friendly
-reception, for nothing can exceed the cordiality with
-which the negroes welcome each other. These men are
-trusted on very important missions, and are despatched
-to every part of the Capitania. On urgent occasions,
-some of them have performed journeys with astonishing
-celerity. I was most credibly informed, that one of them
-had been known to travel seven hundred miles on a
-mountainous road in sixteen days, though that distance
-usually occupies twenty or twenty-one days. The men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[481]</a></span>
-are generally tall, and of spare habit; they are accustomed
-to light food and long abstinence.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc reduct"><i>Diseases peculiar to the Country.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1">Of diseases I did not hear of any that were contagious,
-except Psora, which sometimes prevails among the lower
-orders, who rarely use any remedy against it, nor will
-they hear of sulphur, as they believe it to be fatal. Colds,
-attended with fever, are the most general complaints;
-but consumptions are rarely heard of. Among the
-miners, I saw no symptoms of elephantiasis, though that
-disease is so common in many other parts of Brazil, particularly
-on the sea-coast. The sciatica which afflicts
-travellers after long journeys on mules, is attributed by
-the people of the country to the bodily heat of those
-animals, which is much greater than that of horses, and
-communicates to the loins of the rider, occasioning almost
-constant excruciating pain, which frequently becomes
-chronic, and sometimes incurable. Being, on my return
-from the diamond district, much tormented with this
-complaint, I was naturally led to make inquiries on the
-subject, and was informed, that a person in the house
-where I then resided, had returned from a long journey
-in the same predicament, and was about to undergo the
-mode of cure commonly practised in the country. I was
-desirous of inquiring the nature of it, and begged to be
-introduced to him. On conversing with him, I found
-that his symptoms were similar to mine; he complained
-of great pain in the os sacrum, and down the left thigh
-to the knee, which afflicted him most when in bed, where
-he could not bear to lie in any posture for half an hour
-together, but was obliged to rise and wait until the
-warmth was abated, when he lay down again. Thus he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[482]</a></span>
-could get no sleep night or day. On asking if he had
-tried any external application as a stimulus, he replied,
-that neither that nor any other remedy was of the smallest
-avail, except the one peculiar to the country. The operation
-was as follows:&mdash;The patient lay down on a bench
-with his back upwards, and a youth, twelve or fourteen
-years of age, knelt upon his loins, and continued to
-trample them (as it were) with his knees for about the
-space of half an hour, until the muscles were entirely
-bruised. In a few hours afterwards, the part became
-highly discolored. If one operation had not the desired
-effect, another, and even a third, would be had recourse
-to. It must be confessed, that this remedy, in removing
-one evil, occasions another; but the advantage is, that the
-latter is of short duration, whereas the former endures
-sometimes for life, and gives continual affliction. In some
-cases the remedy has been applied with success, but in
-others it has entirely failed.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc reduct"><i>On the Use of Mercury in the Mining Department.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1">The Government of Brazil would find it highly to their
-interest to promote the use of mercury in the gold district.
-The process of amalgamation is so simple, that there
-would be no difficulty in introducing it generally among
-miners; and it would save much time and labor in the
-last operation of washing, or what is called purifying.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it may not be improper, in this place, to describe
-the method pursued in working the silver mines
-on the coast of Chili, which may be estimated to produce
-about a million of dollars annually. Some of these mines
-are full fifty yards deep; and we are told of one nearly
-as many fathoms. It is probable that they are sunk upon
-veins of ore; and they are so ill secured, that they frequently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[483]</a></span>
-fill, and bury those within them. The metal is
-generally a sulphuret of silver with antimony, lead, and
-blende: it is brought up on the shoulders of wretched
-Indians, who descend and ascend by insecure posts with
-notches cut in them. They are total strangers to the
-operations of boring and blasting, and use only miserable
-hammers and wedges. The vein stuff with the metal is,
-in some places, reduced by means of a large stone, ill-constructed,
-rolling on its edge; in others, it is pounded
-by hand, and, when sufficiently fine, it is washed by
-several operations in a slovenly manner, until the metallic
-part alone remains, which is not unlike lead ore
-dust. This is formed into small heaps, perhaps about
-100lb, to each of which are added about 20 or 25lb of
-muriate of soda<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a>. This is triturated and worked both by
-hands and feet for three or four days. When the salt is
-judged to be sufficiently incorporated with the metal, mercury
-is used in the proportion of from five to ten per cent.
-and is triturated until it loses its globular form; to prove
-which, a small bit is rubbed upon a horn, or upon the
-thumb-nail, and if any globules appear, however minute,
-the trituration is continued until they totally disappear<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a>.
-To this mixture the workmen frequently add filth, rags
-torn into small bits, &amp;c. place crosses upon the heaps,
-and use many ridiculous ceremonies dictated by folly and
-a belief in necromancy. At length the mercury unites
-with the silver, and forms with it a paste-like mass
-separating itself from the remainder, which is thrown
-away. This mass is put into goat-skins, and, by twisting
-and squeezing, a great part of the mercury passes through,
-leaving a portion of nearly pure silver, which is afterwards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">[484]</a></span>
-melted. The remainder is sublimed by heat, and is condensed
-with more or less loss, according to the mode
-applied, and the skill of the operator. Some little gold
-is procured from some of the mines on this coast, by a
-similar process.</p>
-
-<p>In this part of Chili, the state of society is wretched;
-gambling is a general vice, and assassinations are scarcely
-regarded as criminal. The greatest depredations are
-committed with impunity, nor do the crosses placed on
-the heaps protect them; so that, when a mine proves good,
-the hopes of the proprietor are often frustrated through
-the poverty and envy of his neighbours.</p>
-
-<p>The copper mines of Guasco, Copiapo, and Coquimbo,
-are wretchedly worked, nor would it perhaps be safe to
-introduce other methods. The copper is smelted in a
-hearth with bellows and wood; and if, when it runs into
-cakes, it has the appearance of copper, they do not smelt
-it again, but if it is so covered and intermixed with slag
-as not to be known, it is broken up and undergoes a
-second smelting, when not unfrequently slag is placed so
-as to be in the centre. These, and other deceptions, have
-brought the trade into great discredit. The copper is
-sold from eight to eleven dollars per 104lb. It is considered
-a poor trade, though the Spaniards generally think
-the Chilian copper, and even the timber which serves for
-fuel, <i>to be full of gold</i>!!</p>
-
-<p>Of the mines of Chili I have lately received a very
-particular account, from which it appears that they are
-not under any regulations, and are extremely ill worked.
-They are considered a very bad species of property; and
-almost every metallic vein hitherto discovered, whether
-worked or not, has numerous claimants, who are continually
-litigating with each other, so as totally to prevent
-their being worked to advantage. Chili contains abundance
-of copper, some lead, a little gold, a portion of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[485]</a></span>
-silver, and a great quantity of iron, and would, in the
-possession of an industrious and civilized people, be,
-without doubt, very productive. The mines in Peru, on
-the contrary, are subject to regular laws, and the property
-is secured to its owner, particularly in Pasco, where they
-are now working to great advantage, under the control
-of liberal and enlightened men. It must be observed,
-that their proprietors are much richer than those of Chili,
-where numerous individuals claim what is scarcely worth
-being possessed by one. This state of things discourages
-adventurers; for who would erect an engine and free a
-mine, to be claimed by another? Society there is still in
-a wretched state; the miners are in the lowest state of
-indigence; and though paid for their work, it would be
-dangerous to prevent them from carrying some of the
-produce away as their own, thefts of this sort being very
-general in this province.</p>
-
-<p>Several Cornish miners have lately been sent out, at
-very high wages, and under very flattering circumstances,
-but some disappointments have occurred in the undertaking
-to which they were destined. In the course of
-the year 1820, some Derbyshire miners, men of good
-character, were engaged to proceed to Chili for the purpose
-of instructing the natives in the various branches of
-their art. Since their arrival I have received very gratifying
-accounts from them, announcing that they have commenced
-their labors by clearing the mines of water, and
-that they have immense masses of silver to work upon,
-some lumps of which, weighing above 10lb. each, they
-have sent over as specimens.</p>
-
-<p class="pc4 mid">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[486]</a><br /><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">[487]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4"><a name="ind" id="ind">INDEX.</a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/d1.jpg" width="150" height="10"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pni p2">ABAITE, rivulet, diamonds found in, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Alto do Morro, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Alto de Virginia, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Araguaya, or Grande, river, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Arinos, river, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Armaçao, village of, near St. Catherine&#8217;s, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">A fishing station, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Asumpcion, city of, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="pni p2">BAHIA, account of, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Sugar plantations, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Tobacco, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Cotton, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Indigo, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Bandeira de Coelho, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Barbacena, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Barro e Castro, near Villa Rica, visit to the estates of, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Barriga Negra, journey to, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Baugre, mode of fishing for the, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Belmonte, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Bertioga, harbour of, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Borda do Campo, village of, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Brazil: arrival at St. Catherine&#8217;s, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Description of the island, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Arrival at Armaçao, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Bay of dos Ganchos, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Garoupas, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Plain of Coritiva described, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Port of S. Francisco, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Santos, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Journey to S. Paulo, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">[488]</a></span></p>
-<p class="pnii">Description of S. Paulo, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Gold washings at Jaragua, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Manners of the Paulistas, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Character, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Coasting voyage from Santos to Sapitiva, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Journey to Rio de Janeiro, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">City described, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Trade, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">State of society, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Visit to Santa Cruz, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Province of the Rio, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Journey to Canta Gallo, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Gold-washing of Santa Rita, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Rio Grande, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Reputed silver mine, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Agriculture, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Journey to the diamond mines, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">A topaz mine, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Arrival at Villa Rica, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Its origin and present state, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Notice on the Buticudos, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Villa do Principe, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Arrival at Tejuco, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Diamond works on the river Jiquitinhonha, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Account of Minas Novas and Paracatu, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Of Tejuco and Cerro do Frio, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Management of the diamond works, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Return to Rio de Janeiro, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">General view of Minas Geraes, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">S. João d&#8217;El Rey, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Sabara, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Bahia, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Pernambuco, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Seara, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Maranham, <a href="#Page_402"><i>ib.</i></a></p>
-<p class="pnii">Pará, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Matto Grosso, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Rio Grande do Sul, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">General observations on the trade with England, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Buticudos, Indians, measures of the Brazilian government for</p>
-<p class="pniiii">converting, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">A boy belonging to them described, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Buenos Ayres, its population, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Races composing it, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">CAMAPUA, river, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Camara, Dr. his reception of the author at Tejuco, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Camarro, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Canta Gallo, journey to, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Description of, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Capao, topaz mine near, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Cará, an esculent root, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Carrapato, gold-work at, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">[489]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pni">Cascalho, a species of gravel containing gold, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">And diamonds, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Catas Altas, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Cerro do Frio, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Observations on, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Diamond ground described, <a href="#Page_349"><i>ib.</i></a></p>
-<p class="pnii">Animals peculiar to the district, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Chingu, river, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Clara e Maria, farm of, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Conceiçao, village of, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Corgo do Inficionado, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Coritiva, plain of, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Its climate, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Its advantages, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Corolina, visit to a diamond work at, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Cubatao, village of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Cuiaba, account of, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">DEVOLUTO, meaning of the term applied to land, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Diamond District, entrance into, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">(See <a href="#Tejuco">Tejuco</a>).</p>
-<p class="pnii">Mode of washing for diamonds, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">A view of those deposited in the treasury at Tejuco, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Observations on the diamond district, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Illicit trade, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">How to be prevented, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Disperteros, a sort of birds so called, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">ENGORDA Cavallos, a species of grass, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">FARINHA de milho, mode of cooking, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Felicio, Senhor, his mansion, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Ferreira, Antonio, fazenda of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">&#8212;&#8212;, Capt. his plantation, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Flax, culture of, in Brazil, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">GAMA, fazenda do, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Garoupas, harbour of, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Gaspar Soares, village of, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">[490]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pni">Goyaz, account of, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Grimpeiros, treated as smugglers, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">INDIAN Corn, mill for grinding, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Inferninho, river, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Itambe, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">JACARANDA, rose-wood, common in S. Paulo, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Jaraguá, gold washings at, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Mode of working, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Jiquitinhonha, river, visit to the diamond works on, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Juruena, river, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">LAGOS, village of, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Lavras Velhas, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Lichen, from Minas Geraes, containing coloring matter, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">MACHADO, farm of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Madeira, isle of, on the coast of Brazil, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Madeiras, farm of, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Mandanga, visit to the diamond works at, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Mandioca, how cultivated, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Mantiqueira, farm of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Maranham, account of, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Mariana, city of, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Marimbondos, insects so called, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Mate, herb, of Paraguay, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Mathias Barbosa, register of, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Matto Grosso, geographical description of, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Meni, a species of ground-nut, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Minas Geraes, general view of, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Minas Novas, account of, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Monteiro, diamond work at, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Monte Video, arrival at, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Confinement there, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Adventure at the signal-house, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Description of the town, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">[491]</a></span></p>
-<p class="pnii">Inhabitants, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Trade, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Climate, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Vicinity, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Farms, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Fazendas, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Breeding of cattle, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Defective state of agriculture, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Town taken by the British, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Moremim, river, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Morro de St. Anna, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Morro Queimado, fazenda do, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">NEGROES employed in the diamond works, observations on, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">OURO Branco, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">PARA, account of, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Paracatu, account of, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Paraguay, river, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Paraibuna, river, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Parana, river, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Pardo, river, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Pecari, or pig of the woods, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Peons of Paraguay, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Mode of catching cattle, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Their habits of life, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Dress, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Exploit of a female, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Pernambuco, account of, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Piabunha, river, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Piranga, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Plata, Rio de la, voyage to, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Origin of the name, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Porto Negro, near Ilha Grande, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Pounding machine for Indian corn, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Purpura, a shell of the murex genus, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">REGISTRO Velho, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Resequinha, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Rio de Janeiro, arrival at, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Description of, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Trade, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">State of society, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Rio do Carmo, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">[492]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pni">Rio Grande do Sul, account of, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Rio Pardo, visit to the diamond works on, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Rosina de Negra, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">SABARA, account of, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Gold-washing, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Santo Antonio, farm of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Santa Cruz, royal farm of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">St. Catherine&#8217;s, isle of, voyage to, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Arrival, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Description, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Trade, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Its parishes, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">St. Francisco, river, described, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Harbour of, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">San Gonzal, diamond work at, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">S. João d&#8217;El Rey, account of, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">San Jose da Barra Longa, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">San Paulo, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Described, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Population, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Manufactures, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">System of farming, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Manners and customs of the inhabitants, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">St. Pedro d&#8217;El Rey, settlement of, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Santa Rita, gold washing at, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Santos, harbour of, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Its intercourse with S. Paulo, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Voyage from, to Sapitiva, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Sapitiva, arrival at, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Journey from, to Rio de Janeiro, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Savages, measures of the Brazilian government for converting, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Seara, its trade, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Sebollati, river, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Serpents, large, in Minas Novas, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Silver-mine, account of a reputed one, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Sorocaba, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Sugar, process of making, in Bahia, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Sumidouro, river, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">TAPAJOS, River, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Tapinhoa canga, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni"><a name="Tejuco" id="Tejuco">Tejuco</a>, capital of the diamond district, arrival at, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">[493]</a></span></p>
-<p class="pnii">Description of, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Visit to the treasury, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Observations on, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Civil and military establishments at, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Mode of preventing illicit trade, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">State of society in, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Thomas, father, his farm, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Tiete, river, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Tigreno, river, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Tocaya, advantages of its situation, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Topaz mine near Capao, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Toque Toque, harbour of, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">URUGUAY, river, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">VAZ, hamlet of, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Vermelho, river, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Villa do Principe, a pretended diamond found at, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Arrival at, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni">Villa Rica, arrival at, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Description of, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Its origin and present state, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Visit to the mint, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Visit to the estates of Barro e Castro, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Revisited on returning to the capital, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</p>
-<p class="pnii">Military establishment there, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">WOODS, species peculiar to Brazil, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="pni p2">ZURILLA, description of that animal, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="pc4 mid">FINIS.</p>
-
-<div class="limit2 p4">
-
-<div class="figd1">
- <img src="images/d5.jpg" width="120" height="22"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc reduct"><i>W. M’Dowall, Printer, Pemberton Row,<br />
-Gough Square.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">[494]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="pc4 mid">ERRATUM.</p>
-
-<p class="pc1">Page 411, line 13, and note, for <i>Sutâo</i>, read <i>Sertâo</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a></span>
-<span class="smcap">Note.</span> Of the objects in the lower compartment of this plate, the Pine is
-mentioned at p. 81; the Aloe at p. 130; the Cara is described at p. 97, and the
-Mandioca at p. 101.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a></span>
-Here I found mint, caraway, balm, wormwood, and many other
-aromatic herbs, growing wild in the greatest luxuriance. The stratum
-of vegetable earth was at least two yards thick.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a></span>
-At a small town called Minas, ten leagues from Maldonado, I
-was informed that there was a lead mine in limestone. A piece of
-that substance was sent to me; it was flesh-colored, granular, and
-close in texture.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a></span>
-The people of Paraguay are a more inactive and listless race than
-any I ever met with. They seem to be conscious of no wants beyond
-those of mere animal existence, and these they choose to supply at the
-smallest possible expense of bodily exertion. Their supreme enjoyment
-is to remain at home in a state of quietism or rather torpor,
-leaving to the negroes the little agricultural toil that is required.
-They are reserved, slothful, and patient, yet, with all their apathy,
-they are friendly and somewhat courteous to strangers, provided they
-be not required to go much into society or to bear an active part in
-conversation. Commerce is almost unknown among them, and there
-is very little specie in circulation. To a stranger, who has mingled in
-the busy scenes of life, they seem absolutely weary of existence as of a
-burthen. Blest with a fine climate and a land flowing with milk and
-honey, they are unable to appreciate and turn to advantage the bounties
-which divine Providence has lavished upon them; and from these
-and other causes the population is very scanty compared with the extent
-of the country. Such is the native land of the Peons of Monte
-Video and Buenos Ayres. The state of society in that remote region is
-deteriorated by the admission of refugees from Europe, who here find
-shelter from justice, and propagate, in safe obscurity and with perfect
-impunity, their vices among a people too much predisposed by indolence
-for such contaminations, and unfitted by the same failing for receiving
-any tincture of civilization, which a more lively and apprehensive race
-of men might imbibe from foreign settlers, however dissolute in morals.
-The Peons, who migrate southward to seek employment, soon
-acquire a taste for ardent spirits, and thus heighten, sometimes to an
-uncontrolable degree, the ferocity engendered by the habit of torturing
-and killing cattle. They have no strong sense of danger to deter
-them from crime, but, on the contrary, are aware, that on any breach
-of the law they can elude its penalties by galloping three or four hundred
-miles into the interior, where their crimes will be unknown, and
-where they can bid defiance to pursuit or detection.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">In some parts of Paraguay timber grows in abundance; it is cut,
-and floated down the river to Buenos Ayres, not in rafts but in single
-trees.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a></span>
-A platted lash, about twenty yards long, with an iron ring at one
-end, through which the other end being passed forms a noose.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a></span>
-Such indeed is their excessive propensity to gambling, that they frequently
-carry cards in their pocket, and, when an opportunity occurs,
-form parties, and retire to a convenient place, where one of them spreads
-his <i>poncho</i> or mantle on the ground, in lieu of a table. When the
-loser has parted with his money, he will stake his clothes, so that the
-game generally continues until one of them goes away almost naked.
-This bad practice often leads to serious consequences. I once observed
-a party playing in the neighbourhood of a chapel after mass had been
-said, when the clergyman came and kicked away the cards in order to
-put an end to the game. On this, one of the Peons rose up, and retiring
-a few paces, thus accosted the intruder: “Father, I will obey
-you as a priest; but” (laying his hand on his knife) “you must beware
-how you molest our diversion.” The clergyman knew the desperate
-character of these men too well to remonstrate, and retired very hastily,
-not a little chagrined.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">On another occasion a Peon was gambling with a Spanish corporal
-in the prison-yard, when a dispute arising, the latter drew his
-sword on his unarmed antagonist, and wounded him so severely in the
-arm, that he was obliged to undergo amputation the day following.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">It is usual for a Peon who has been fortunate at play, to go to Monte
-Video and clothe himself anew in the shop of a slop-seller. While the
-shopman is looking out the articles he calls for, he deliberately places his
-dollars on the counter, in separate piles, assigning each to its destined
-purpose. He then retires to a corner, and attires himself; an unfortunate
-comrade invariably attends him, who examines his cast clothes,
-and, if better than his own, puts them on. After passing a few days in
-idleness, he sets out on his return home, where he appears in his new
-dress.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a></span>
-Among the many daring and active feats performed by the Peons,
-one of the most extraordinary of late years, was the capture of a tiger
-by a female of that tribe. She was a mulatto-woman, brought up in
-the vicinity of Barriga Negra. She was accustomed at an early age
-to ride horses, and prided herself in doing offices which belonged to
-the stronger sex, such as catching cattle with the noose, killing them,
-&amp;c. Her form was masculine, and she became so inured to men’s
-work, that she was hired as a Peon, and fulfilled that office much to
-the satisfaction of her employers. She was noted for selecting spirited
-horses, and for riding them at full speed. One day on her return from
-labor, as she was passing a rivulet, she observed a large tiger at no
-great distance. Surprised that the animal did not steal away, as is
-generally the case when he sees a person mounted, she drew nearer,
-still keeping her horse’s head from him, so as to be ready to gallop off
-if he should make a spring. He was still inattentive and motionless;
-the woman observing this, and thinking he ailed something, after some
-minutes’ pause backed her horse until she came within twenty yards
-of him, loosening at the same time her noose from the saddle, which
-she threw most dexterously over his neck, and immediately galloped
-away with him to a considerable distance. Whether maimed or not
-before, she knew he must now be dead; she therefore alighted, flayed
-him, and carried home the skin as a trophy. The animal was above
-the ordinary size, and not smaller than a calf six weeks old. This
-exploit was long the talk of the neighbourhood, and I have heard the
-woman herself relate the adventure.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a></span>
-<i>Sus Tajassu.</i>&mdash;Lin. <i>Tajaçu.</i>&mdash;Buffon.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a></span>
-One mode which they adopted for displaying their triumph over
-their late conquerors was singular enough; they collected all the sign
-boards belonging to the English warehouses and shops, and made a
-bonfire of them. A great quantity of these boards was from the
-<i>pulperias</i>, the masters of which had been obliged to have on them the
-following inscription, painted in large characters, “Licensed to sell
-liquor.”</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a></span>
-The fishery of the <i>baugre</i> here is very considerable, and the mode of
-catching the fish, by means of a curved line of boats, by night, (from
-each of which is held a flambeau of straw to scare the fish toward the
-shore), is singularly picturesque, and might remind the imaginative
-spectator of a crescent of wild fire dancing on the waves. The fish is
-called at Rio de Janeiro the <i>mulatto velho</i>; the negroes eat it during
-Lent, and on Fridays and Saturdays.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a></span>
-This very rarely happens.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a></span>
-Forty years ago they caught a whale a day; but they now catch
-only one in the course of a month.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a></span>
-The oil, in consequence of not being well refined, is black and <i>sooty</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a></span>
-Three leagues from Sorocaba, which is twenty leagues distant
-from the capital. S. Paulo is the famous mountain of Varessoiba. It
-contains such an abundance of iron, <i>solta e á garnel</i>, (loose or in
-heaps), that ten foundries, each melting 10,000 quintals <i>per annum</i>,
-would not exhaust it in a century; and it has wood for charcoal,
-which the same number would be unable to consume in that space of
-time. A company of Swedish miners was established here in 1810,
-but the undertaking was frustrated by intrigue.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a></span>
-According to a statistical report, dated 1811, the city of S. Paulo
-contains 4017 houses, (<i>fogos</i>, hearths); 5219 whites (males), 6319
-whites (females); 377 free negroes, 485 free negresses; 1967 male, and
-1914 female captive negroes; 2394 free mulattoes, 3279 free mulattas;
-745 male, and 896 female captive mulattoes; making the whole population
-23,764. In this year (1811), the births were 1301, the deaths
-785, the marriages 233.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a></span>
-Probably the coloring matter arises from the decomposition of the hornblende;
-I have frequently observed a mass of granite having its surface
-decomposed into a red clay, in which the particles of mica were hardly
-perceptible, while the compact rock below contained a very fair proportion.
-These granites contain hornblende with mica.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a></span>
-In one part of the town is found a beautiful species of decomposed
-granite, consisting of extremely white feldspar, quartz, and very
-little mica.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a></span>
-Mandioca requires a dry hot soil, of a sandy nature.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a></span>
-This generous root requires but little preparation to make it serve
-as a substitute for bread. When taken out of the ground they wash
-and scrape it clean, and then rasp it on a coarse grater of iron or copper,
-press the juice from it, and place it on a hot surface, a shallow
-copper-pan for instance, four or five feet in diameter, or a clay one,
-with a brick fire underneath; while drying it is constantly stirred, and
-when the moisture is completely evaporated, it is immediately fit for
-use. If preserved from wet, it will keep good a long time. In broths
-and soups it becomes gelatinous, and affords rich nourishment; it is
-particularly good when eaten with cheese. The wild or spurious mandioca,
-called <i>Aipim</i>, is little inferior, when roasted, to fine chesnuts.
-The Portuguese introduce it at table, boiled as well as roasted.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a></span>
-Its leaf is shaped like a heart.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a></span>
-The <i>Spur-winged Plover</i>. In the Spanish territories they are called
-<i>disperteros</i> (awakeners), on account of the noise they make when disturbed
-in the night. A flock of them in any plantation answers the
-purpose of an alarm-bell against thieves.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a></span>
-Fr. Gaspar da Madre de Deos.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a></span>
-I may also add their public spirit in resenting injuries done to individuals,
-and in supporting the cause of the oppressed; a singular instance
-of which I have often heard related. Some seventy years ago,
-one of their governors, who was a nobleman, had an intrigue with the
-daughter of a mechanic. The whole town espoused the cause of the
-injured female, and compelled the governor, at the peril of his life,
-to marry her.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a></span>
-Had I approached this city by sea, I might have been enabled to
-give a more animated description of its aspect; but I feel it incumbent
-on me to adhere to veracity, the first duty of a traveller, and to describe
-the impression made on my mind by the view as I approached
-by land on my route from S. Paulo.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a></span>
-Several have been established since the time when this narrative
-was written.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a></span>
-By way of experiment, I had some fat ewes killed, and the mutton
-was acknowledged to be excellent; but the male lambs are never
-prepared for the table.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a></span>
-A name given to those persons who go about the country seeking
-gold-washings, and do not give notice, or solicit a grant when they
-discover any. They are considered and treated as smugglers.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a></span>
-Ere they departed, I saw an instance of that dangerous excess to
-which the passions of savages are liable when once excited; for, on
-presenting a few bottles of liquor, there was a general strife for them,
-and the person, man or woman, who first obtained one, would have
-drank the whole of its contents, had it not been forcibly taken away.
-It is very unsafe to give them ardent spirits, for when intoxicated it is
-necessary to confine them. If preference is given to one, the rest are
-insolent and unruly until they obtain the same mark of favor.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a></span>
-I was well informed that a few hundred pounds, judiciously employed,
-would defray the expense of making a good road from Canta
-Gallo to Porto das Caixas, which loaded mules might travel in two
-days.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a></span>
-The mode of crossing a river with horses or mules in these parts,
-is to tie one to the canoe, and drive him into the water; the rest
-follow.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a></span>
-The little lime which they use here is made of shells, and is
-brought from Porto das Caixas.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a></span>
-In one part of the road we passed a nest of insects (called <i>marimbondos</i>),
-which are extremely troublesome to cattle, and cause the
-mules to be very violent and unruly. They attack with great pertinacity,
-and pursue to a considerable distance; we took a devious route
-to get rid of them, but I was followed by some which stung me as
-painfully as an irritated wasp could have done. There is a singular
-variety of them, having a horny pointed proboscis, with which they
-pierce most keenly and give intolerable pain.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a></span>
-No person can be permitted to see the diamonds in the Treasury
-without a joint order from the ministers to that effect.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a></span>
-This name is given to what we should call a huckster’s shop, where
-various articles, such as liquors, Indian corn, and sometimes sugar, are
-sold. Though they profess to answer the purpose of inns, they are
-destitute of conveniences; travellers who carry their beds and cooking
-utensils with them, generally prefer lodging in a <i>rancho</i> or <i>estallage</i>.
-Shelter from rain and night air is the only convenience which a lodging
-in these districts can be expected to afford.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a></span>
-In this country the practice of cutting flax is attended with great
-success, and is preferred to that of pulling it, which prevails elsewhere.
-The fibres, though cut, are considered sufficiently long to be spun and
-made into good common linen. The old roots produce fresh shoots incredibly
-soon.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a></span>
-They also informed me that green topazes were sometimes found,
-which I very much doubted. If any substance of that color, resembling
-topaz, did occur, it was most probably <i>Euclase</i>. It is now
-known that Euclase is found with topazes.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a></span>
-Our mules required at least six penny-worth each per day, exclusive
-of their corn.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a></span>
-In England I once knew an instance in which an ingot with mercury
-adhering to it, in the possession of a person ignorant of metallurgy,
-was sold at a reduced price, as if the discolored part had really
-been lead; the purchaser also supposing that to be the case.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a></span>
-The finest parts of these tracts, in the best season, are by no
-means so rich in grass as an English meadow.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a></span>
-This species of sublimation on a small scale interested me greatly.
-Could it proceed from any glimmering of science in the minds of the
-negroes, or was it merely an accidental discovery?</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a></span>
-This substance contains fine-formed octahedral crystals of magnetic
-iron.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a></span>
-An owner of mules, who travels with a number of them, carrying
-goods for other persons, as well as on his own account.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a></span>
-<i>Canga</i> is the name of ferruginous quartz, fragments of which
-abound in this town, and are used for paving the streets.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a></span>
-Four <i>vintens</i> are nearly equal to a shilling of our money. When
-this rivulet was first washed for gold, the quantity produced by each
-<i>gamella</i> amounted in value to that sum. As the <i>cascalho</i> then lay near
-the surface, and required very little trouble to get at, one washer could
-clear about twelve bowls-full per hour, which was considered a comparatively
-rich return.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">In the mines they have two methods of estimating the quantity produced:
-for example; <i>Quatro Vintens</i>, here mean four <i>vintens</i> of gold,
-which is equal to eight of copper; whereas, in Rio de Janeiro, the
-same expression implies four <i>vintens</i> of copper.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a></span>
-In order to insure the vigilance of the overseers, these chairs are
-constructed without backs or any other support on which a person can
-recline.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a></span>
-The negroes employed in these works are the property of individuals,
-who let them to hire at the daily rate of three <i>vintens</i> of gold,
-equal to about eight-pence, Government supplying them with victuals.
-Every officer of the establishment is allowed the privilege of having a
-certain number of negroes employed.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a></span>
-The negroes are constantly attending to the <i>cascalho</i> from the very
-commencement of the washings, and frequently find diamonds before
-this last operation.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a></span>
-Probably fugitive negroes, who subsist in this remote district by
-plunder and smuggling.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a></span>
-It was then in seed, of which I collected a small quantity; since
-my return, I have sent part of it to the Agricultural Society, and the
-remainder I have distributed among gentlemen who endeavoured to
-promote its growth in this country, but without effect. It is rather a
-hardy grass, as it grew in situations which were all so cold, that the
-bananas and coffees were frequently blighted.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a></span>
-The ladies particularly wished to have the cheese of a fine color,
-like that sent thither from England; and I was at no loss for an ingredient
-for tinging the milk, as the tree, which produces the seed from
-which annatto is made, grew spontaneously in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a></span>
-On the road there are numerous farm houses, which afford sufficient
-accommodation for a traveller. They in general belong to persons
-resident in Tejuco, where their produce is sold.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a></span>
-In some of the low swampy tracts large serpents are not uncommon.
-At Tejueo I was shown the skin of a young one, of the Boa
-Constrictor genus. It was twenty-four feet in length, and about
-twenty inches in circumference. These formidable reptiles have been
-killed forty feet long! The strength of such a serpent is not easily to be
-imagined; they have an undulating motion, and carry their head erect
-four or five feet from the ground; their jaws, &amp;c. are capable of inconceivable
-dilatation.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a></span>
-Since my return, His Excellency the Conde de Funchall, ordered
-a model of a ballast-lighter, which I got constructed for him, and
-which will one day or other be found extremely useful.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a></span>
-It may become useful at Villa Rica; but the quantity required
-there at present is so trivial as scarcely to merit attention.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a></span>
-If salt were cheaper they might be cured, and would become an
-article of commerce, particularly during Lent.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a></span>
-Exclusive of this amount there is a vast quantity smuggled.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a></span>
-One Sunday morning during my stay, an owner of a washing
-came to the house of the Intendant, and brought him two miserable
-diamonds of bad color, which did not weigh together above five grains,
-and these, he said, were all which his ten negroes had found in six
-weeks. In the course of conversation, the Intendant observed that all
-the smugglers were either imprisoned or dispersed, when the man immediately
-assumed an appearance of great disgust at the mention of
-persons of so vile a description, and was liberal in his epithets of abuse
-on them. If I durst have enquired how it happened that his negroes
-in six weeks could find only two <i>bad-colored</i> diamonds, what emotions
-would this immaculate miner have manifested!</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a></span>
-From all accounts relative to the Indians, either by the officers
-employed against them, and better acquainted with their habits than
-other men, or from any of the settlers who live near the coast, it does
-not appear that they have the smallest knowledge of gold or of precious
-stones; hence they can in no degree have contributed to the discovery
-of those treasures in the district.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a></span>
-At a place called Caldeiroens, near to Ouro Branco, I received
-two bits of this metal, but they were so small and disfigured, as to
-leave strong doubts respecting their being natural; the more so, by
-reason of the many impositions that were attempted to be practised
-upon me by false specimens of copper-ores, silver, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a></span>
-A part of the lichen which I brought home with me I presented
-to a gentleman who was fond of chemical experiments: he obtained
-from the small quantity of three grains as much coloring matter as imparted
-to an ounce of fluid a deep purple, sufficiently strong for every
-purpose of dying.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">The following are the results of some experiments which he did me
-the favor to make:</p>
-<p class="pfc4">White sewing-silk, put into an alcoholic solution only once, received
-a fine strong purple.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">Part of a skein of the same material, was put into a solution of potash,
-which produced a purple deeper in hue than the former.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">Cotton thread and worsted yarn, immersed only once in the same solution,
-produced very nearly the same colors.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">The part of a skein of silk died in the alcoholic solution was immersed
-in a solution of muriate of tin, which produced a beautiful
-lilac, approaching to dove-colored blue. The same substance died in
-a solution of potash, and immersed in a solution of muriate of tin, became
-a few shades darker, and rather more of a pink hue. These are
-not unfavorable results from a quantity so minute; and I feel confident
-that this substance may be rendered a very valuable article of trade.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">A few weeks ago, I received another sample of excellent lichen, very
-full of color, which I hope may be turned to some advantage.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a></span>
-In many parts of the coast, the plant which produces the barilla
-would probably florish abundantly, if introduced, and would form an
-excellent article of commerce, not only for exportation, but for home
-consumption.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a></span>
-There are several rivulets in various parts that bear this name.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a></span>
-If necessary, another channel might be made at a convenient distance
-from the first.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a></span>
-It cannot be too much recommended to Government to introduce
-the process of amalgamation generally throughout the mines.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a></span>
-<i>Bucking-irons</i>, are pieces of cast-iron with wood handles, used at
-the lead mines, to break the ore from what it adheres to.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a></span>
-A lixivium of strong ashes is made, and a quantity of lime is put
-into it: or sometimes the ashes are mixed with a larger proportion
-of lime, and the clear fluid running from the mixture is added
-to the juice in various quantities, at the discretion of the negro who
-manages the process: respecting this <i>temper</i> various opinions prevail.
-Every negro has his peculiar mode of making, mixing, and applying it.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a></span>
-In skimming, lading, and managing the syrup during the operation,
-the negroes display great dexterity.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a></span>
-Large trees are cut into planks of these dimensions for making the
-cases, which are preferred to hogsheads.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a></span>
-The West India sugars are not clayed, consequently much stronger
-and fit for refining and making loaves.</p>
-<p class="pfc4">It is much to be desired that the very excellent work, written by
-Bryan Edwards, upon sugar making, and distilling rum, was introduced
-in Brazil.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a></span>
-It is considered bad policy to subject the raw material, as cotton, to
-a heavy duty, and very discouraging to planters, who must have large
-capitals employed, and who are greatly exposed to loss if the crops
-fail. Too much stimulus cannot be given to the growers; and they
-ought to be encouraged by a premium, rather than to pay a tax on the
-unmanufactured article.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a></span>
-During the past few years, the Governors of Matto Grosso have
-used every effort to shorten the distance from these remote provinces to
-the sea ports, by making roads, cutting down woods, and forming establishments
-to accommodate passengers, so that canoes, &amp;c. may be transported
-over land, and make straight-forward communications from one
-river to another, which has shortened this journey at least two months.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a></span>
-Sutaò. This is a place understood to be uninhabitable for Europeans,
-being the residence of uncivilized Indians, and covered with
-almost impenetrable woods.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a></span>
-So called, because they abound with these animals.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a></span>
-This river being the grand channel of communication from Rio
-de Janeiro, Santos, S. Paulo, and other places, to the interesting districts
-of Cuiaba, Matto Grosso, the whole of Paraguay, the river
-Plata, Potosi, Chiquisaca, and a great part of Peru, I have preserved
-the particular detail given in this paper, of its numerous falls, and the
-difficulties of its navigation, as it is now well known, and there is great
-reason to suppose, that it will soon be much more frequented.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a></span>
-The labor of dragging the canoes over-land to avoid the cataracts
-might be much lessened (where the finest timber is in such abundance),
-if Government were to order rail-ways to be made, upon which
-loaded canoes might easily be drawn on wheels. This would more
-facilitate the intercourse than any other measure, and, from the present
-enterprising spirit and wisdom of his Majesty’s ministers, we may soon
-hope to see it put in practice.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a></span>
-The Silver from Potosi, which some years has exceeded twenty
-millions of dollars, came down the Rio de la Plata to Buenos Ayres.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a></span>
-Some English settlers, disappointed in the river Plata, went to
-Rio Grande to establish concerns for curing beef, refining tallow, &amp;c.
-which they soon abandoned from the want of practical knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a></span>
-Almost every vessel brings a greater or smaller number of negroes,
-it being the practice at Rio de Janeiro to ship off all those who are ill-disposed
-and troublesome for Rio Grande, whence, if they continue
-refractory, they are frequently sold into the neighbouring colony.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a></span>
-It has been found, however, from modern surveys, that those
-rocks are by no means so dangerous as they have been represented.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a></span>
-In Brazil and the Plata the bridle is made of sufficient length to
-serve the purpose of a whip.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a></span>
-Delicate connections were soon formed, and females of the obscurest
-class appeared dressed in the most costly extreme of English
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a></span>
-An <i>arroba</i> is equal to 32lbs. avoirdupois.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a></span>
-Cotton of third quality is manufactured in the country into coarse
-cloth for bags, negroes’ dresses, &amp;c. and exported to the Spanish colonies
-in large quantities.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a></span>
-Formerly, if any diamonds were found in a gold-washing, the
-owner was obliged to desist from working it, and the ground was appropriated
-by government. This law is now no longer in force.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a></span>
-It is reasonable to suppose, that few persons would hazard the
-penalty incurred by dealing in diamonds clandestinely, when, by paying
-a duty, they could bring them fairly into circulation.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a></span>
-Bay salt.</p>
-
-<p class="pfn4"><span class="ln1"><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a></span>
-It would be interesting to enquire, in what manner the salt acts
-upon the ore containing silver, for without it the mercury has no
-effect.</p></div></div>
-
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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