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+Project Gutenberg's Through Five Republics on Horseback, by G. Whitfield Ray
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Through Five Republics on Horseback
+
+Author: G. Whitfield Ray
+
+Posting Date: August 24, 2012 [EBook #7499]
+Release Date: February, 2005
+First Posted: May 11, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THRU FIVE REPUBLICS ON HORSEBACK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE AUTHOR AND HIS GUIDES THREE FAITHFUL MEN]
+
+
+
+
+THROUGH FIVE REPUBLICS ON HORSEBACK
+
+BEING AN ACCOUNT OF MANY WANDERINGS IN SOUTH AMERICA
+
+
+BY
+
+
+G. WHITFIELD RAY, F. R. G. S. Pioneer Missionary and Government Explorer
+
+
+With an Introduction by the Rev. J. G. Brown, D. D. Secretary for the
+Foreign Missions of the Canadian Baptist Church
+
+
+TWELFTH EDITION--REVISED
+
+EVANGELICAL PUBLISHING HOUSE C. HAUSER, Agent CLEVELAND, OHIO, U. S. A.
+1915
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: SOUTH AMERICA]
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The _Missionary Review of the World_ has described South America as THE
+DARKEST LAND. That I have been able to penetrate into part of its
+unexplored interior, and visit tribes of people hitherto untouched and
+unknown, was urged as sufficient reason for the publishing of this
+work. In perils oft, through hunger and thirst and fever, consequent on
+the many wanderings in unhealthy climes herein recorded, the writer
+wishes publicly to record his deep thankfulness to Almighty God for His
+unfailing help. If the accounts are used to stimulate missionary
+enterprise, and if they give the reader a clearer conception of and
+fuller sympathy with the conditions and needs of those South American
+countries, those years of travel will not have been in vain.
+
+"Of the making of books there is no end," so when one is acceptably
+received, and commands a ready sale, the author is satisfied that his
+labor is well repaid. The 4th edition was scarcely dry when the
+Consul-General of the Argentine Republic at Ottawa ordered a large
+number of copies to send to the members of his Government. Much of it
+has been translated into German, and I know not what other languages.
+Even the _Catholic Register_ of Toronto has boosted its sale by
+printing much in abuse of it, at the same time telling its readers that
+the book "sold like hot cakes." A wiser editor would have been discreet
+enough not to refer to "Through Five Republics on Horseback." His
+readers bought it, and--had their eyes opened, for the statements made
+in this work, and the authorities quoted, are unanswerable.
+
+Seeing that there is such an alarming ignorance regarding Latin
+America, I have, for this edition, written an Introductory Chapter on
+South America, and also a short Foreword especially relating to each of
+the Five Republics here treated. As my portrayal of Romanism there has
+caused some discussion, I have, in those pages, sought to incorporate
+the words of other authorities on South American life and religion.
+
+That the following narratives, now again revised, and sent forth in new
+garb, may be increasingly helpful in promoting knowledge, is the
+earnest wish of the author.
+
+G. W. R.
+
+Toronto, Ont.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+"Through Five Republics on Horseback" has all the elements of a great
+missionary book. It is written by an author who is an eye-witness of
+practically all that he records, and one who by his explorations and
+travels has won for himself the title of the "Livingstone of South
+America." The scenes depicted by the writer and the glimpses into the
+social, political and religious conditions prevailing in the Republics
+in the great Southern continent are of thrilling interest to all lovers
+of mankind. We doubt if there is another book in print that within the
+compass of three hundred pages begins to give as much valuable
+information as is contained in Mr. Ray's volume. The writer wields a
+facile pen, and every page glows with the passion of a man on fire with
+zeal for the evangelization of the great "Neglected Continent." We are
+sure that no one can read this book and be indifferent to the claims of
+South America upon the Christian Church of this generation.
+
+To those who desire to learn just what the fruits of Romanism as a
+system are, when left to itself and uninfluenced by Protestantism, this
+book will prove a real eye-opener. We doubt if any Christian man, after
+reading "Through Five Republics on Horseback," will any longer conclude
+that Romanism is good enough for Romanists and that Missions to Roman
+Catholic countries are an impertinence. We trust the book will awaken a
+great interest in the evangelization of the Latin Republics of South
+America.
+
+Of course, this volume will have interest for others besides missionary
+enthusiasts. Apart from the religious and missionary purpose of the
+book, it contains very much in the way of geographical, historical and
+scientific information, and that, too, in regard to a field of which as
+yet comparatively little is known. The writer has kept an open mind in
+his extensive travels, and his record abounds in facts of great
+scientific value.
+
+We have known Mr. Ray for several years and delight to bear testimony
+to his ability and faithfulness as a preacher and pastor. As a lecturer
+on his experiences in South America he is unexcelled. We commend
+"Through Five Republics on Horseback" especially to parents who are
+anxious to put into the hands of their children inspiring and
+character-forming reading. A copy of the book ought to be in every
+Sunday School Library.
+
+J. G. Brown.
+
+626 Confederation Life Building, Toronto.
+
+
+
+
+A PRELIMINARY WORD ON SOUTH AMERICA
+
+The Continent of South America was discovered by Spanish navigators
+towards the end of the fifteenth century. When the tidings of a new
+world beyond the seas reached Europe, Spanish and Portuguese
+expeditions vied with each other in exploring its coasts and sailing up
+its mighty rivers.
+
+In 1494 the Pope decided that these new lands, which were nearly twice
+the size of Europe, should become the possession of the monarchs of
+Spain and Portugal. Thus by right of conquest and gift South America
+with its seven and a half million miles of territory and its millions
+of Indian inhabitants was divided between Spain and Portugal. The
+eastern northern half, now called Brazil, became the possession of the
+Portuguese crown and the rest of the continent went to the crown of
+Spain. South America is 4,600 miles from north to south, and its
+greatest breadth from east to west is 3,500 miles. It is a country of
+plains and mountains and rivers. The Andean range of mountains is 4,400
+miles long. Twelve peaks tower three miles or more above ocean level,
+and some reach into the sky for more than four miles. Many of these are
+burning mountains; the volcano of Cotopaxi is three miles higher than
+Vesuvius. Its rivers are among the longest in the world. The Amazon,
+Orinoco and La Plata systems drain an area of 3,686,400 square miles.
+Its plains are almost boundless and its forests limitless. There are
+deserts where no rain ever falls, and there are stretches of coast line
+where no day ever passes without rain. It is a country where all
+climates can be found. As the northern part of the continent is
+equatorial the greatest degree of heat is there experienced, while the
+south stretches its length toward the Pole Quito, the capital of
+Ecuador, is on the equator, and Punta Arenas, in Chile, is the
+southernmost town in the world.
+
+For hundreds of years Spain and Portugal exploited and ruled with an
+iron hand their new and vast possessions. Their coffers were enriched
+by fabulous sums of gold and treasure, for the wildest dream of riches
+indulged in by its discoverers fell infinitely short of the actual
+reality. Large numbers of colonists left the Iberian peninsula for the
+newer and richer lands. Priests, monks and nuns went in every vessel,
+and the Roman Catholicism of the Dark Ages was soon firmly established
+as the only religion. The aborigines were compelled to bow before the
+crucifix and worship Mary until, in a peculiar sense, South America
+became the Pope's favorite parish. For the benefit of any, native or
+colonist, who thought that a purer religion should be, at any rate,
+permitted, the Inquisition was established at Lima, and later on at
+Cartagena, where, Colombian history informs us, 400,000 were condemned
+to death. Free thought was soon stamped out when death became the
+penalty.
+
+Such was the wild state of the country and the power vested in the
+priests that abuses were tolerated which, even in Rome, had not been
+dreamed of. The priests, as anxious for spiritual conquest as the rest
+were for physical, joined hands with the heathenism of the Indians,
+accepted their gods of wood and stone as saints, set up the crucifix
+side by side with the images of the sun and moon, formerly worshipped;
+and while in Europe the sun of the Reformation arose and dispelled the
+terrible night of religious error and superstition, South America sank
+from bad to worse. Thus the anomaly presented itself of the old, effete
+lands throwing off the yoke of religious domination while the younger
+ones were for centuries to be content with sinking lower and lower.
+[Footnote: History is repeating itself, for here in Canada we see
+Quebec more Catholic and intolerant than Italy. The Mayor of Rome dared
+to criticize the Pope in 1910, but in the same year at the Eucharistic
+Congress at Montreal his emissaries receive reverent "homage" from
+those in authority. No wonder, therefore, that, while the Romans are
+being more enlightened every year, a Quebec young man, who is now a
+theological student in McMaster University, Toronto, declared, while
+staying in the writer's home, that, as a child he was always taught
+that Protestants grew horns on their heads, and that he attained the
+age of 15 before ever he discovered that such was not the case. Even
+backward Portugal has had its eyes opened to see that Rome and progress
+cannot walk together, but the President of Brazil is so "faithful" that
+the Pope, in 1910, made him a "Knight of the Golden Spur."]
+
+If the religious emancipation of the old world did not find its echo in
+South America, ideas of freedom from kingly oppression began to take
+root in the hearts of the people, and before the year 1825 the Spanish
+colonies had risen against the mother country and had formed themselves
+into several independent republics, while three years before that the
+independence of Brazil from Portugal had been declared. At the present
+day no part of the vast continent is ruled by either Spain or Portugal,
+but ten independent republics have their different flags and
+governments.
+
+Since its early discovery South America has been pre-eminently a
+country of bloodshed. Revolution has succeeded revolution and hundreds
+of thousands of the bravest have been slain, but, phoenix-like, the
+country rises from its ashes.
+
+Fifty millions of people now dwell beneath the Southern Cross and speak
+the Portuguese and Spanish languages, and it is estimated that, with
+the present rate of increase, 180 millions of people will speak these
+languages by 1920.
+
+South America is, pre-eminently, the coming continent. It is more
+thinly settled than any other part of the world. At least six million
+miles of its territory are suitable for immigrants--double the
+available territory of the United States. "No other tract of good land
+exists that is so large and so unoccupied as South America." [Footnote:
+Dr. Wood, Lima, Peru, in "Protestant Missions in South America."] "One
+of the most marvellous of activities in the development of virgin lands
+is in progress. It is greater than that of Siberia, of Australia, or
+the Canadian North-West." [Footnote: The Outlook, March, 1908.]
+Emigrants are pouring into the continent from crowded Europe, the old
+order of things is quickly passing away, and docks and railroads are
+being built. Bolivia is spending more than fifty million dollars in new
+work. Argentina and Chile are pushing lines in all directions. Brazil
+is preparing to penetrate her vast jungles, and all this means enormous
+expense, for the highest points and most difficult construction that
+have ever been encountered are found in Peru, and between Chile and
+Argentina there has been constructed the longest tunnel in the world.
+[Footnote: One railway ascends to the height of 12,800 feet.]
+
+Most important of all, the old medieval Romanism of the Dark Ages is
+losing its grip upon the masses, and slowly, but surely, the leaven is
+working which will, before another decade, bring South America to the
+forefront of the nations.
+
+The economic possibilities of South America cannot be overestimated. It
+is a continent of vast and varied possibilities. There are still
+districts as large as the German Empire entirely unexplored, and tribes
+of Indians who do not yet know that America has been "discovered."
+
+This is a continent of spiritual need. The Roman Catholic Church has
+been a miserable failure. "Nearly 7,000,000 of people in South America
+still adhere, more or less openly, to the fetishisms of their
+ancestors, while perhaps double that number live altogether beyond the
+reach of Christian influence, even if we take the word Christian in its
+widest meaning." [Footnote: Report of Senor F. de Castello] The Rev. W.
+B. Grubb, a missionary in Paraguay, says: "The greatest unexplored
+region at present known on earth is there. It contains, as far as we
+know, 300 distinct Indian nations, speaking 300 distinct languages, and
+numbering some millions, all in the darkest heathenism." H. W. Brown,
+in "Latin America," says, "There is a pagan population of four to five
+millions." Then, with respect to the Roman Catholic population, Rev. T.
+B. Wood, LL.D., in "Protestant Missions in South America," says, "South
+America is a pagan field, properly speaking. Its image-worship is
+idolatry. Abominations are grosser and more universal than among Roman
+Catholics in Europe and the United States, where Protestantism has
+greatly modified Catholicism. But it is _worse_ off than any other
+great _pagan_ field in that it is dominated by a single mighty
+hierarchy--the mightiest known in history. For centuries priestcraft
+has had everything its own way all over the continent, and is now at
+last yielding to outside pressure, but with desperate resistance."
+
+"South America has been for nearly four hundred years part of the
+parish of the Pope. In contrast with it the north of the New
+World--Puritan, prosperous, powerful, progressive--presents probably
+the most remarkable evidence earth affords of the blessings of
+Protestantism, while the results of Roman Catholicism _left to itself_
+are writ large in letters of gloom across the priest-ridden, lax and
+superstitious South. Her cities, among the gayest and grossest in the
+world, her ecclesiastics enormously wealthy and strenuously opposed to
+progress and liberty, South America groans under the tyranny of a
+priesthood which, in its highest forms, is unillumined by, and
+incompetent to preach, the gospel of God's free gift; and in its lowest
+is proverbially and habitually drunken, extortionate and ignorant. The
+fires of her unspeakable Inquisition still burn in the hearts of her
+ruling clerics, and although the spirit of the age has in our
+nineteenth century transformed all her monarchies into free Republics,
+religious intolerance all but universally prevails." [Footnote:
+Guiness's "Romanism and Reformation."]
+
+Prelates and priests, monks and nuns exert an influence that is
+all-pervading. William E. Curtis, United States Commissioner to South
+America, wrote: "One-fourth of all the property belongs to the bishop.
+There is a Catholic church for every 150 inhabitants. Ten per cent. of
+the population are priests, monks or nuns, and 272 out of the 365 days
+of the year are observed as fast or feast days. The priests control the
+government and rule the country as absolutely as if the Pope were its
+king. As a result, 75 per cent. of the children born are illegitimate,
+and the social and political condition presents a picture of the dark
+ages." It is said that, in one town, every fourth person you meet is a
+priest or a nun, or an ecclesiastic of some sort.
+
+Yet, with all this to battle against, the Christian missionary is
+making his influence felt.
+
+_La Razon_, an important newspaper of Trujillo, in a recent issue says:
+"In homage to truth, we make known with pleasure that the ministers of
+Protestantism have benefited this town more in one year than all the
+priests and friars of the Papal sect have done in three centuries."
+
+"Last year," writes Mr. Milne, of the American Bible Society, "one of
+our colporteurs in Ayacucho had to make his escape by the roof of a
+house where he was staying, from a mob of half-castes, led on by a
+friar. Finding their prey had escaped, they took his clothes and
+several boxes of Bibles to the plaza of the city and burnt them."
+
+It was not such a going-back as the outside world thought, but, oh, it
+was a deeply significant one, when recently the leading men of the
+Republic of Guatemala met together and solemnly threw over the religion
+of their fathers, which, during 400 years of practice, had failed to
+uplift, and re-established the old paganism of cultured Rome. So
+serious was this step that the _Palace of Minerva_, the goddess of
+trade, is engraved on the latest issue of Guatemalan postage stamps.
+Believing that the few Protestants in the Republic are responsible for
+the reaction, the Archbishop of Guatemala has promised to grant one
+hundred days' indulgence to those who will pray for the overthrow of
+Protestantism in that country.
+
+"Romanism is not Christianity," so the few Christian workers are
+fighting against tremendous odds. What shall the harvest be?
+
+
+
+
+PART I.
+
+THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC
+
+The country to which the author first went as a self-supporting
+missionary in the year 1889.
+
+ And Nature, the old nurse, took
+ The child upon her knee,
+ Saying, "Here is a story book
+ Thy Father hath written for thee."
+
+ "Come, wander with me," she said,
+ "Into regions yet untrod,
+ And read what is still unread
+ In the manuscripts of God."
+
+ And he wandered away and away
+ With Nature, the dear old nurse,
+ Who sung to him night and day
+ The rhymes of the universe.
+
+ --_Longfellow._
+
+
+THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC
+
+The Argentine Republic has an area of one and a quarter million square
+miles. It is 2,600 miles from north to south, and 500 miles at its
+widest part. It is twelve times the size of Great Britain. Although the
+population of the country is about seven millions, only one per cent,
+of its cultivable area is now occupied, yet Argentina has an
+incomparable climate.
+
+It is essentially a cattle country. She is said to surpass any other
+nation in her numbers of live stock. The Bovril Co. alone kills 100,000
+a year. On its broad plains there are _estandas_, or cattle ranches, of
+fifty and one hundred thousand acres in extent, and on these cattle,
+horses and sheep are herded in millions. Argentina has over twenty-nine
+million cattle, seventy-seven million sheep, seven and a half million
+horses, five and a half million mules, a quarter-million of donkeys,
+and nearly three million swine and three million goats. Four billion
+dollars of British capital are invested in the country.
+
+Argentina has sixteen thousand miles of railway. This has been
+comparatively cheap to build. On the flat prairie lands the rails are
+laid, and there is a length of one hundred and seventy-five miles
+without a single curve.
+
+Three hundred and fifty thousand square miles of this prairie is
+specially adapted to the growing of grain. In 1908-9 the yield of wheat
+was 4,920,000 tons. Argentina has exported over three million tons of
+wheat, over three million tons of corn, and one million tons of
+linseed, in one year, while "her flour mills can turn out 700,000 tons
+of flour a year." [Footnote: Hirst's Argentina, 1910.]
+
+"It is a delight often met with there to look on a field of twenty
+square miles, with the golden ears standing even and close together,
+and not a weed nor a stump of a tree nor a stone as big as a man's fist
+to be seen or found in the whole area."
+
+"To plant and harvest this immense yield the tillers of the ground
+bought nine million dollars of farm implements in 1908. Argentina's
+record in material progress rivals Japan's. Argentina astonished the
+world by conducting, in 1906, a trade valued at five hundred and sixty
+million dollars, buying and selling more in the markets of foreign
+nations than Japan, with a population of forty millions, and China,
+with three hundred millions." [Footnote: John Barrett, in Munsey's
+Magazine]
+
+To this Land of Promise there is a large immigration. Nearly three
+hundred thousand have entered in one single year. About two hundred
+thousand have been going to Buenos Ayres, the capital, alone, but in
+1908 nearly five hundred thousand landed there. [Footnote: "Despite the
+Government's efforts, emigration from Spain to South America takes
+alarming proportions. In some districts the men of the working classes
+have departed in a body. In certain villages in the neighborhood of
+Cadiz there arc whole streets of deserted houses."-Spanish Press.] In
+Belgium 220 people are crowded into the territory occupied by one
+person in Argentina, so yet there is room. Albert Hale says: "It is
+undeniable that Argentina can give lodgment to 100,000,000 people, and
+can furnish nourishment, at a remarkably cheap rate, for as many more,
+when her whole area is utilized."
+
+Argentina's schools and universities are the best in the
+Spanish-speaking world. In Buenos Ayres you will find some of the
+finest school buildings in the world, while 4,000 students attend one
+university.
+
+Buenos Ayres, founded in 1580, is to-day the largest city in the world
+south of the equator, and is "one of the richest and most beautiful
+places of the world." The broad prairies around the city have made the
+people "the richest on earth."
+
+Kev. John F. Thompson, for forty-five years a resident of that country,
+summarizes its characteristics in the following paragraph: "Argentina
+is a _land of plenty_; plenty of room and plenty of food. If the actual
+population were divided into families of ten persons, each would have a
+farm of eight square miles, with ten horses, fifty-four cows, and one
+hundred and eighty-six sheep, and after they had eaten their fill of
+bread they would have half a ton of wheat and corn to sell or send to
+the hungry nations."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+BUENOS AYRES IN 1889.
+
+
+In the year 1889, after five weeks of ocean tossing, the steamer on
+which I was a passenger anchored in the River Plate, off Buenos Ayres.
+Nothing but water and sky was to be seen, for the coast was yet twenty
+miles away, but the river was too shallow for the steamer to get
+nearer. Large tugboats came out to us, and passengers and baggage were
+transhipped into them, and we steamed ten miles nearer the still
+invisible city. There smaller tugs awaited us and we were again
+transhipped. Sailing once more toward the land, we soon caught sight of
+the Argentine capital, but before we could sail nearer the tugs
+grounded. There we were crowded into flat-bottomed, lug-sailed boats
+for a third stage of our landward journey. These boats conveyed us to
+within a mile of the city, when carts, drawn by five horses, met us in
+the surf and drew us on to the wet, shingly beach. There about twenty
+men stood, ready to carry the females on their backs on to the dry,
+sandy shore, where was the customs house. The population of the city we
+then entered was about six hundred thousand souls.
+
+After changing the little gold I carried for the greasy paper currency
+of the country, I started out in search of something to eat. Eventually
+I found myself before a substantial meal. At a table in front of me sat
+a Scotsman from the same vessel. He had arrived before me (Scotsmen say
+they are always before the Englishmen) and was devouring part of a leg
+of mutton. This, he told me, he had procured, to the great amusement of
+Boniface, by going down on all fours and _baa-ing_ like the sheep of
+his native hills. Had he waited until I arrived he might have feasted
+on lamb, for my voice was not so gruff as his. He had unconsciously
+asked for an old sheep. I think the Highlander in that instance
+regretted that he had preceded the Englishman.
+
+How shall I describe the metropolis of the Argentine, with its
+one-storied, flat-roofed houses, each with grated windows and centre
+_patio_? Some of the poorer inhabitants raise fowls on the roof, which
+gives the house a barnyard appearance, while the iron-barred windows
+below strongly suggest a prison. Strange yet attractive dwellings they
+are, lime-washed in various colors, the favorite shades seeming to be
+pink and bottle green. Fires are not used except for cooking purposes,
+and the little smoke they give out is quickly dispersed by the breezes
+from the sixty-mile-wide river on which the city stands.
+
+The Buenos Ayres of 1889 was a strange place, with its long, narrow
+streets, its peculiar stores and many-tongued inhabitants. There is the
+dark-skinned policeman at the corner of each block sitting silently on
+his horse, or galloping down the cobbled street at the sound of some
+revolver, which generally tells of a life gone out. Arriving on the
+scene he often finds the culprit flown. If he succeeds in riding him
+down (an action he scruples not to do), he, with great show, and at the
+sword's point, conducts him to the nearest police station.
+Unfortunately he often chooses the quiet side streets, where his
+prisoner may have a chance to buy his freedom. If he pays a few
+dollars, the poor _vigilante_ is perfectly willing to lose him, after
+making sometimes the pretence of a struggle to blind the lookers-on, if
+there be any curious enough to interest themselves. This man in khaki
+is often "the terror of the innocent, the laughing-stock of the
+guilty." The poor man or the foreign sailor, if he stagger ever so
+little, is sure to be "run in." The Argentine law-keeper (?) is
+provided with both sword and revolver, but receives small remuneration,
+and as his salary is often tardily paid him, he augments it in this way
+when he cannot see a good opportunity of turning burglar or something
+worse on his own account. When he is low in funds he will accost the
+stranger, begging a
+ cigarette, or inviting himself at your expense to the nearest
+_cafe_, as "the day is so unusually hot." After all, we must not blame
+him too much--his superiors are far from guiltless, and he knows it.
+When Minister Toso took charge of the Provincial portfolio of Finance,
+he exclaimed, "_C-o! Todos van robando menos yo!_" ("Everybody is
+robbing here except I.") It is public news that President Celman
+carried away to his private residence in the country a most beautiful
+and expensive bronze fountain presented by the inhabitants of the city
+to adorn the principal _plaza_. [Footnote: Public square.] The
+president is elected by the people for a term of three years, and
+invariably retires a rich man, however poor he may have been when
+entering on his office. The laws of the country may be described as
+model and Christian, but the carrying out of them is a very different
+matter.
+
+Some of the laws are excellent and worthy of our imitation, such as,
+for example, the one which decrees that _bachelors shall be taxed_.
+Civil elections are held on Sundays, the voting places being Roman
+Catholic churches.
+
+Both postmen and telegraph boys deliver on horseback, but such is the
+lax custom that everything will do to-morrow. That fatal word is the
+first the stranger learns--_manana_.
+
+Comparatively few people walk the streets. "No city in the world of
+equal size and population can compare with Buenos Ayres for the number
+and extent of its tramways." [Footnote: Turner's "Argentina."] A writer
+in the _Financial News_ says: "The proportion of the population who
+daily use street-cars is _sixty-six times greater in Buenos Ayres than
+in the United Kingdom_."
+
+This _Modern Athens_, as the Argentines love to term their city, has a
+beautiful climate. For perhaps three hundred days out of every year
+there is a sky above as blue as was ever seen in Naples.
+
+The natives eat only twice a day--at 10.30 a.m., and at 7 p.m.--the
+common edibles costing but little. I could write much of Buenos Ayres,
+with its _carnicerias_, where a leg of mutton may be bought for 20
+cts., or a brace of turkeys for 40 cts.; its _almacenes_, where one may
+buy a pound of sugar or a yard of cotton, a measure of charcoal (coal
+is there unknown) or a large _sombrero_, a package of tobacco (leaves
+over two feet long) or a pair of white hemp-soled shoes for your
+feet--all at the same counter. The customer may further obtain a bottle
+of wine or a bottle of beer (the latter costing four times the price of
+the former) from the same assistant, who sells at different prices to
+different customers.
+
+There the value of money is constantly changing, and almost every day
+prices vary. What to-day costs $20 to-morrow may be $15, or, more
+likely, $30. Although one hundred and seventy tons of sugar are
+annually grown in the country, that luxury is decidedly expensive. I
+have paid from 12 cts. to 30 cts. a pound. Oatmeal, the Scotsman's
+dish, has cost me up to 50 cts. a pound.
+
+Coming again on to the street you hear the deafening noises of the cow
+horns blown by the streetcar drivers, or the _pescador_ shrilly
+inviting housekeepers to buy the repulsive-looking red fish, carried
+over his shoulder, slung on a thick bamboo. Perhaps you meet a beggar
+on horseback (for there wishes _are_ horses, and beggars _do_ ride),
+who piteously whines for help. This steed-riding fraternity all use
+invariably the same words: _"Por el amor de Dios dame un centavo!"_
+("For the love of God give me a cent.") If you bestow it, he will call
+on his patron saint to bless you. If you fail to assist him, the curses
+of all the saints in heaven will fall on your impious head. This often
+causes such a shudder in the recipient that I have known him to turn
+back to appease the wrath of the mendicant, and receive instead--a
+blessing.
+
+It is not an uncommon sight to see a black-robed priest with his hand
+on a boy's head giving him a benediction that he may be enabled to sell
+his newspapers or lottery tickets with more celerity.
+
+The National Lottery is a great institution, and hundreds keep
+themselves poor buying tickets. In one year the lottery has realized
+the sum of $3,409,143.57. The Government takes forty per cent. of this,
+and divides the rest between a number of charitable and religious
+organizations, all, needless to say, being Roman Catholic. Amongst the
+names appear the following: Poor Sisters of St. Joseph, Workshop of Our
+Lady, Sisters of St. Anthony, etc.
+
+Little booths for the sale of lottery tickets are erected in the
+vestibules of some of the churches, and the Government, in this way,
+repays the church.
+
+The gambling passion is one of Argentina's greatest curses. Tickets are
+bought by all, from the Senator down to the newsboy who ventures his
+only dollar.
+
+You meet the water-seller passing down the street with his barrel cart,
+drawn by three or four horses with tinkling bells, dispensing water to
+customers at five cents a pail. The poorer classes have no other means
+of procuring this precious liquid. The water is kept in a corner of the
+house in large sun-baked jars. A peculiarity of these pots is that they
+are not made to stand alone, but have to be held up by something.
+
+At early morning and evening the milkman goes his rounds on horseback.
+The milk he carries in six long, narrow cans, like inverted
+sugar-loaves, three on each side of his raw-hide saddle, he himself
+being perched between them on a sheepskin. In some cans he carries pure
+cream, which the jolting of his horse soon converts into butter. This
+he lifts out with his hands to any who care to buy. After the addition
+of a little salt, and the subtraction of a little buttermilk, this
+_manteca_ is excellent. After serving you he will again mount his
+horse, but not until his hands have been well wiped on its tail, which
+almost touches the ground. The other cans of the _lechero_ contain a
+mixture known to him alone. I never analyzed it, but have remarked a
+chalky substance in the bottom of my glass. He does not profess to sell
+pure milk; that you can buy, but, of course, at a higher price, from
+the pure milk seller. In the cool of the afternoon he will bring round
+his cows, with bells on their necks and calves dragging behind. The
+calves are tied to the mothers' tails, and wear a muzzle. At a _sh-h_
+from the sidewalk he stops them, and, stooping down, fills your pitcher
+according to your money. The cows, through being born and bred to a
+life in the streets, are generally miserable-looking beasts. Strange to
+add, the one milkman shoes his cows and the other leaves his horse
+unshod. It is not customary in this country for man's noble friend to
+wear more than his own natural hoof. A visit to the blacksmith is
+entertaining. The smith, by means of a short lasso, deftly trips up the
+animal, and, with its legs securely lashed, the cow must lie on its
+back while he shoes its upturned hoofs.
+
+Many and varied are the scenes. One is struck by the number of horses,
+seven and eight often being yoked to one cart, which even then they
+sometimes find difficult to draw. Some of the streets are very bad,
+worse than our country lanes, and filled with deep ruts and drains,
+into which the horses often fall. There the driver will sometimes
+cruelly leave them, when, after his arm aches in using the whip, he
+finds the animal cannot rise. For the veriest trifle I have known men
+to smash the poor dumb brute's eyes out with the stock of the whip, and
+I have been very near the Police Station more than once when my
+righteous blood compelled me to interfere. Where, oh, where is the
+Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals? Surely no suffering
+creatures under the sun cry out louder for mercy than those in
+Argentina?
+
+As I have said, horses are left to die in the public streets. It has
+been my painful duty to pass moaning creatures lying helplessly in the
+road, with broken limbs, under a burning sun, suffering hunger and
+thirst, for three consecutive days, before kind death, the sufferer's
+friend, released them. Looking on such sights, seeing every street
+urchin with coarse laugh and brutal jest jump on such an animal's
+quivering body, stuff its parched mouth with mud, or poke sticks into
+its staring eyes, I have cried aloud at the injustice. The policeman
+and the passers-by have only laughed at me for my pains.
+
+In my experiences in South America I found cruelty to be a marked
+feature of the people. If the father thrusts his dagger into his enemy,
+and the mother, in her fits of rage, sticks her hairpin into her maid's
+body, can it be wondered at if the children inherit cruel natures? How
+often have I seen a poor horse fall between the shafts of some loaded
+cart of bricks or sand! Never once have I seen his harness undone and
+willing hands help him up, as in other civilized lands. No, the lashing
+of the cruel whip or the knife's point is his only help. If, as some
+religious writers have said, the horse will be a sharer of Paradise
+along with man, his master, then those from Buenos Ayres will feed in
+stalls of silver and have their wounds healed by the clover of eternal
+kindness. "God is Love."
+
+I have said the streets are full of holes. In justice to the
+authorities I must mention the fact that sometimes, especially at the
+crossings, these are filled up. To carry truthfulness still further,
+however, I must state that more than once I have known them bridged
+over with the putrefying remains of a horse in the last stages of
+decomposition. I have seen delicate ladies, attired in Parisian
+furbelows, lift their dainty skirts, attempt the crossing--and sink in
+a mass of corruption, full of maggots.
+
+In my description of Buenos Ayres I must not omit to mention the large
+square, black, open hearses so often seen rapidly drawn through the
+streets, the driver seeming to travel as quickly as he can. In the
+centre of the coach is the coffin, made of white wood and covered with
+black material, fastened on with brass nails. Around this gruesome
+object sit the relatives and friends of the departed one on their
+journey to the _chacarita_, or cemetery, some six miles out from the
+centre of the city. Cemeteries in Spanish America are divided into
+three enclosures. There is the "cemetery of heaven," "the cemetery of
+purgatory," and "the cemetery of hell." The location of the soul in the
+future is thus seen to be dependent on its location by the priests
+here. The dead are buried on the day of their death, when possible, or,
+if not, then early on the following morning; but never, I believe, on
+feast days. Those periods are set apart for pleasure, and on important
+saint days banners and flags of all nations are hung across the
+streets, or adorn the roofs of the flat-topped houses, where the
+washing is at other times dried.
+
+After attending mass in the early morning on these days, the people
+give themselves up to revelry and sin at home, or crowd the street-cars
+running to the parks and suburbs. Many with departed relatives (and who
+has none?) go to the _chacarita_, and for a few _pesos_ bargain with
+the black-robed priest waiting there, to deliver their precious dead
+out of Purgatory. If he sings the prayer the cost is double, but
+supposed to be also doubly efficacious. Mothers do not always inspire
+filial respect in their offspring, for one young man declared that he
+"wanted to get his mother out of Purgatory before he went in."
+
+A Buenos Ayres missionary writes "There are two large cemeteries here.
+From early morn until late at night the people crowd into them, and I
+am told there were 100,000 at one time in one of them. November 1 is a
+special day for releasing thousands of souls out of Purgatory. We
+printed thousands of tracts and the workers started out to distribute
+them. By ten o'clock six of them were in jail, having been given into
+custody by a 'holy father.' They were detained until six in the evening
+without food, and then were released through the efforts of a Methodist
+minister."
+
+The catechisn reads: "Attend mass all Sundays and Feast days. Confess
+at least once a year, or oftener, if there is any fear of death. Take
+Sacrament at Easter time. Pay a tenth of first-fruits to God's Church."
+The fourth commandment is condensed into the words: "Sanctify the Feast
+days." From this it will be seen that there is great need for mission
+work. Of course Romanism in this and other cities is losing its old
+grip upon the people, and because of this the priest is putting forth
+superhuman effort to retain what he has. _La Voz de la Iglesia_ ("The
+Voice of the Church"), the organ of the Bishop of Buenos Ayres, has
+lately published some of the strongest articles we have ever read. A
+late article concludes: "One thing only, one thing: OBEY; OBEY BLINDLY.
+Comply with her (the Church's) commands with faithful loyalty. If we do
+this, it is impossible for Protestantism to invade the flowery camp of
+the Church, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman."
+
+Articles such as this, however, and the circulation of a tract by one
+of the leading church presses, are not calculated to help forward a
+losing cause. The tract referred to is entitled, "Letter of Jesus about
+the Drops of Blood which He shed whilst He went to Calvary." "You know
+that the soldiers numbered 150, twenty-five of whom conducted me bound.
+I received fifty blows on the head and 108 on the breast. I was pulled
+by the hair 23 times, and 30 persons spat in my face. Those who struck
+me on the upper part of the body were 6,666, and 100 Jews struck me on
+the head. I sighed 125 times. The wounds on the head numbered 20; from
+the crown of thorns, 72; points of thorns on the forehead, 100. The
+wounds on the body were 100. There came out of my body 28,430 drops of
+blood." This letter, the tract states, was found in the Holy Sepulchre
+and is preserved by his holiness the Pope. Intelligent, thinking men
+can only smile at such an utter absurdity.
+
+An "Echoes from Argentina" extract reads: "Not many months ago,
+Argentina was blessed by the Pope. Note what has happened since:--The
+Archbishop, who was the bearer of the blessing and brought it from
+Rome, has since died very suddenly; we have had a terrible visitation
+of heat suffocation, hundreds being attacked and very many dying; we
+have had the bubonic pest in our midst; a bloody provincial revolution
+in Entre Rios; and now at the time of writing there is an outbreak of a
+serious cattle disease, and England has closed her ports against
+Argentine live stock. Of course, we do not say that these calamities
+are the _result_ of the Pope's blessing, but we would that Catholics
+would open their eyes and see that it is a fact that whereas Protestant
+countries, _anathematized_ by the Pope, prosper, Catholic countries
+which have been blessed by him are in a lamentable condition."
+
+BUENOS AYRES AT THE PRESENT TIME.
+
+Perhaps no city of the world has grown and progressed more during this
+last decade than the city of Buenos Ayres. To-day passengers land in
+the centre of the city and step on "the most expensive system of
+artificial docks in all America, representing an expenditure of seventy
+million dollars."
+
+To this city there is a large emigration. It has grown at the rate of
+4,000 adults a week, with a birthrate of 1,000 a week added. The
+population is now fast climbing up to 1 1-2 millions of inhabitants.
+There are 300,000 Italians, 100,000 Spaniards, a colony of 20,000
+Britishers, and, of course, Jews and other foreigners in proportion.
+"Buenos Ayres is one of the most cosmopolitan cities of the world.
+There are 189 newspapers, printed in almost every language of the
+globe. Probably the only Syrian newspaper in America, _The Assudk_, is
+issued in this city." To keep pace with the rush of newcomers has
+necessitated the building of 30,000 houses every year. There is here
+"the finest and costliest structure ever built, used exclusively by one
+newspaper, the home of _La Prensa_; the most magnificent opera house of
+the western hemisphere, erected by the government at the cost of ten
+million dollars; one of the largest banks in the world, and the
+handsomest and largest clubhouse in the world." [Footnote: John
+Barrett, In Munsey's Magazine.] The entrance fee to this club is
+$1,500. The Y.M.C.A. is now erecting a commodious building, for which
+$200,000 has already been raised, and there is a Y.W.C.A., with a
+membership of five hundred. Dr. Clark, in "The Continent of
+Opportunity," says, "More millionaires live in Buenos Ayres than in any
+other city of the world of its size. The proportion of well-clothed,
+well-fed people is greater than in American cities, the slums are
+smaller, and the submerged classes less in proportion. The constant
+movement of carriages and automobiles here quite surpasses that of
+Fifth Avenue." The street cars are of the latest and most improved
+electric types, equal to any seen in New York or London, and seat one
+hundred people, inside and out. Besides these there is an excellent
+service of motor cabs, and _tubes_ are being commenced. Level crossings
+for the steam roads are not permitted in the city limits, so all trains
+run over or under the streets.
+
+"The Post Office handles 40,000,000 pieces of mail and 125,000 parcel
+post packages a month. The city has 1,209 automobiles, 27 theatres and
+50 moving picture shows. Five thousand vessels enter the port of Buenos
+Ayres every year, and the export of meat in 1910 was valued at
+$31,000,000. No other section of the world shows such growth."
+[Footnote: C. H. Furlong, in The World's Work.]
+
+The city, once so unhealthy, is now, through proper drainage, "the
+second healthiest large city of the world." The streets, as I first saw
+them, were roughly cobbled, now they are asphalt paved, and made into
+beautiful avenues, such as would grace any capital of the world.
+Avenida de Mayo, cut right through the old city, is famed as being one
+of the most costly and beautiful avenues of the world.
+
+On those streets the equestrian milkman is no longer seen. Beautiful
+sanitary white-tiled _tambos_, where pure milk and butter are sold,
+have taken his place. The old has been transformed and PROGRESS is
+written everywhere.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+_REVOLUTION._
+
+
+South America, of all lands, has been most torn asunder by war.
+Revolutions may be numbered by hundreds, and the slaughter has been
+incredible. Even since the opening of the year 1900, thirty thousand
+Colombians have been slain and there have been dozens of revolutions.
+Darwin relates the fact that in 1832 Argentina underwent fifteen
+changes of government in nine months, owing to internal strife, and
+since then Argentina has had its full share.
+
+During my residence in Buenos Ayres there occurred one of those
+disastrous revolutions which have from time to time shaken the whole
+Republic. The President, Don Juarez Celman, had long been unpopular,
+and, the mass of the people being against him, as well as nearly half
+of the standing army, and all the fleet then anchored in the river, the
+time was considered ripe to strike a blow.
+
+On the morning of July 26, 1890, the sun rose upon thousands of
+stern-looking men bivouacking in the streets and public squares of the
+city. The revolution had commenced, and was led by one of the most
+distinguished Argentine citizens, General Joseph Mary Campos. The
+battle-cry of these men was "_Sangre! Sangre!_" [Footnote: "Blood!
+Blood!"] The war fiend stalked forth. Trenches were dug in the streets.
+Guns were placed at every point of vantage. Men mounted their steeds
+with a careless laugh, while the rising sun shone on their burnished
+arms, so soon to be stained with blood. Battalions of men marched up
+and down the streets to the sound of martial music, and the low,
+flat-roofed housetops were quickly filled with sharpshooters.
+
+The Government House and residence of the President was guarded in all
+directions by the 2nd Battalion of the Line, the firemen and a
+detachment of police, but on the river side were four gunboats of the
+revolutionary party.
+
+The average South American is a man of quick impulses and little
+thought. The first shot fired by the Government troops was the signal
+for a fusilade that literally shook the city. Rifle shots cracked, big
+guns roared, and shells screaming overhead descended in all directions,
+carrying death and destruction. Street-cars, wagons and cabs were
+overturned to form barricades. In the narrow, straight streets the
+carnage was fearful, and blood soon trickled down the watercourses and
+dyed the pavements. That morning the sun had risen for the last time
+upon six hundred strong men; it set upon their mangled remains. Six
+hundred souls! The Argentine soldier knows little of the science of
+"hide and seek" warfare. When he goes forth to battle, it is to
+fight--or die. Of the future life he unfortunately thinks little, and
+of Christ, the world's Redeemer, he seldom or never hears. The Roman
+Catholic chaplain mumbles a few Latin prayers to them at times, but as
+the knowledge of these _resos_ does not seem to improve the priest's
+life, the men prefer to remain in ignorance.
+
+The average Argentine soldier is a man of little intelligence. The
+regiments are composed of Patagonian Indians or semi-civilized
+Guaranis, mixed with all classes of criminals from the state prisons.
+Nature has imprinted upon them the unmistakable marks of the
+savage--sullen, stupid ferocity, indifference to pain, bestial
+instincts. As for his fighting qualities, they more resemble those of
+the tiger than of the cool, brave and trained soldier. When his blood
+is roused, fighting is with him a matter of blind and indiscriminate
+carnage of friend or foe. A more villainous-looking horde it would be
+difficult to find in any army. The splendid accoutrements of the
+generals and superior officers, and the glittering equipments of their
+chargers, offer a vivid contrast to the mean and dirty uniforms of the
+troops.
+
+During the day the whole territory of the Republic was declared to be
+in a state of siege. Business was at a complete standstill. The stores
+were all closed, and many of them fortified with the first means that
+came to hand. Mattresses, doors, furniture, everything was
+requisitioned, and the greatest excitement prevailed in commercial
+circles generally. All the gun-makers' shops had soon been cleared of
+their contents, which were in the hands of the adherents of the
+revolution.
+
+That evening the news of the insurrection was flashed by "Reuter's" to
+all parts of the civilized world. The following appeared in one of the
+largest British dailies:
+
+"BUENOS AYRES, July 27, 5.40 p.m.
+
+"The fighting in the streets between the Government troops and the
+insurgents has been of the most desperate character.
+
+"The forces of the Government have been defeated.
+
+"The losses in killed and wounded are estimated at 1,000.
+
+"The fleet is in favor of the Revolutionists.
+
+"Government house and the barracks occupied by the Government troops
+have been bombarded by the insurgent artillery."
+
+That night as I went in and out of the squads of men on the
+revolutionary side, seeking to do some acts of mercy, I saw many
+strange and awful sights. There were wounded men who refused to leave
+the field, although the rain poured. Others were employed in cooking or
+ravenously eating the dead horses which strewed the streets. Some were
+lying down to drink the water flowing in the gutters, which water was
+often tinged with human blood, for the rain was by this time washing
+away many of the dark spots in the streets. Others lay coiled up in
+heaps under their soaking _ponchos_, trying to sleep a little, their
+arms stacked close at hand. There were men to all appearances fast
+asleep, standing with their arms in the reins of the horses which had
+borne them safely through the leaden hail of that day of terror.
+Numerous were the jokes and loud was the coarse laughter of many who
+next day would be lying stiff in death, but little thought seemed to be
+expended on that possibility.
+
+Men looted the stores and feasted, or wantonly destroyed valuables they
+had no use for. None stopped this havoc, for the officers were
+quartered in the adjacent houses, themselves holding high revelry.
+Lawless hordes visited the police offices, threw their furniture into
+the streets, tore to shreds all the books, papers and records found,
+and created general havoc. They gorged and cursed, using swords for
+knives, and lay down in the soaking streets or leaned against the guns
+to smoke the inevitable _cigarillo_. A few looked up at the gilded keys
+of St. Peter adorning the front of the cathedral, perhaps wondering if
+they would be used to admit them to a better world.
+
+Next day, as I sallied forth to the dismal duty of caring for the dead
+and dying, the guns of the Argentine fleet [Footnote: British-built
+vessels of the latest and most approved types.] in the river opposite
+the city blazed forth upon the quarter held by the Government's loyal
+troops. One hundred and fifty-four shots were fired, two of the largest
+gunboats firing three-hundred and six-hundred pounders. Soon every
+square was a shambles, and the mud oozed with blood. The Buenos Ayres
+_Standard_, describing that day of fierce warfare, stated:
+
+"At dawn, the National troops, quartered in the Plaza Libertad, made
+another desperate attack on the Revolutionary positions in the Plaza
+Lavalle. The Krupp guns, mitrailleuses and gatlings went off at a
+terrible rate, and volleys succeeded each other, second for second,
+from five in the morning till half-past nine. The work of death was
+fearful, and hundreds of spectators were shot down as they watched from
+their balconies or housetops. Cannon balls riddled all the houses near
+the Cinco Esquinas. In the attack on the Plaza Lavalle, three hundred
+men must have fallen."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"At ten a.m. the white flag of truce was hoisted on both sides, and the
+dismal work of collecting the dead and wounded began. The ambulances of
+the Asistencia Publica, the cars of the tram companies and the wagons
+of the Red Cross were busily engaged all day in carrying away the dead.
+It is estimated that in the Plaza Lavalle above 600 men were wounded
+and 300 killed. Considering that the Revolutionists defended an
+entrenched position, whilst the National troops attacked, we may
+imagine that the losses of the latter were enormous."
+
+"General Lavalle, commander-in-chief of the National forces, gave
+orders for a large number of coffins, which were not delivered, as the
+undertaker wished to be paid cash. It is to be supposed that these
+coffins were for the dead officers."
+
+"When the white flags were run up, Dr. Del Valle, Senator of the
+Nation, sent, in the name of the Revolutionary Committee, an ultimatum
+to the National Government, demanding the immediate dismissal of the
+President of the Republic and dissolution of Congress. Later on it was
+known that both parties had agreed on an armistice, to last till
+mid-day on Monday."
+
+Of the third day's sanguinary fighting, the _Standard_ wrote:
+
+"The Plaza Libertad was taken by General Lavalle at the head of the
+National troops under the most terrible fire, but the regiments held
+well together and carried the position in a most gallant manner,
+confirming the reputation of indomitable valor that the Argentine
+troops won at the trenches of Curupayti. Our readers may imagine the
+fire they suffered in the straight streets swept by Krupp guns,
+gatlings and mitrailleuses, while every housetop was a fortress whence
+a deadly fire was poured on the heads of the soldiers. Let anybody take
+the trouble to visit the Calles [Footnote: Streets] Cerrito, Libertad
+and Talcahuano, the vicinity of the Plazas Parque and Lavalle, and he
+will be staggered to see how all the houses have been riddled by
+mitrailleuses and rifle bullets. The passage of cannon balls is marked
+on the iron frames of windows, smashed frames and demolished balconies
+of the houses.
+
+"The Miro Palace, in the Plaza Parque, is a sorry picture of wreckage:
+the 'mirador' is knocked to pieces by balls and shells; the walls are
+riddled on every side, and nearly all the beautiful Italian balconies
+and buttresses have been demolished. The firing around the palace must
+have been fearful, to judge by the utter ruin about, and all the
+telephone wires dangling over the street in meshes from every house.
+Ruin and wreckage everywhere.
+
+"By this time the hospitals of the city, the churches and public
+buildings were filled with the wounded and dying, borne there on
+stretchers made often of splintered and shattered doors. Nearly a
+hundred men were taken into the San Francisco convent alone." Yet with
+all this the lust for blood was not quenched. It could still be written
+of the fourth day:
+
+"At about half-past two, a sharp attack was made by the Government
+troops on the Plaza Parque, and a fearful fire was kept up. Hundreds
+and hundreds fell on both sides, but the Government troops were finally
+repulsed. People standing at the corners of the streets cheering for
+the Revolutionists were fired on and many were killed. Bodies of
+Government troops were stationed at the corners of the streets leading
+to the Plaza, Large bales of hay had been heaped up to protect them
+from the deadly fire of the Revolutionists.
+
+"It was at times difficult to remember that heavy slaughter was going
+on around. In many parts of the city people were chatting, joking and
+laughing at their doors. The attitude of the foreign population was
+more serious; they seemed to foresee the heavy responsibilities of the
+position and to accurately forecast the result of the insurrection.
+
+"The bulletins of the various newspapers during the revolution were
+purchased by the thousand and perused with the utmost avidity; fancy
+prices were often paid for them. The Sunday edition of _The Standard_
+was sold by enterprising newsboys in the suburbs as high as $3.00 per
+copy, whilst fifty cents was the regulation price for a momentary peep
+at our first column."
+
+Towards the close of that memorable 29th of July the hail of bullets
+ceased, but the insurgent fleet still kept up its destructive
+bombardment of the Government houses for four hours.
+
+The Revolutionists were defeated, or, as was seriously affirmed, had
+been sold for the sum of one million Argentine dollars.
+
+_"Estamos vendidos!" "Estamos vendidos!"_ (We are sold! We are sold!)
+was heard on every hand. Because of this surrender officers broke their
+swords and men threw away their rifles as they wept with rage. A
+sergeant exclaimed: "And for this they called us out--to surrender
+without a struggle! Cowards! Poltroons!" And then with a stern glance
+around he placed his rifle to his breast and shot himself through the
+heart. After the cessation of hostilities both sides collected their
+dead, and the wounded were placed under the care of surgeons, civil as
+well as military.
+
+Notwithstanding the fact that the insurgents were said to be defeated,
+the President, Dr. Celman, fled from the city, and the amusing
+spectacle was seen of men and youths patrolling the streets wearing
+cards in their hats which read: _"Ya se fue el burro"_ (At last the
+donkey has gone). A more serious sight, however, was when the effigy of
+the fleeing President was crucified.
+
+Thus ended the insurrection of 1890, a rising which sent three thousand
+brave men into eternity.
+
+What changes had taken place in four short days! At the Plaza Libertad
+the wreckage was most complete. The beautiful partierres were trodden
+down by horses; the trees had been partially cut down for fuel; pools
+of blood, remnants of slaughtered animals, offal, refuse everywhere.
+
+Since the glorious days of the British invasion--glorious from an
+Argentine point of view--Buenos Ayres had never seen its streets turned
+into barricades and its housetops into fortresses. In times of
+electoral excitement we had seen electors attack each other in bands
+many years, but never was organized warfare carried on as during this
+revolution. The Plaza Parque was occupied by four or five thousand
+Revolutionary troops; all access to the Plaza was defended by armed
+groups on the house-tops and barricades in the streets, Krupp guns and
+that most infernal of modern inventions, the mitrailleuse, swept all
+the streets, north, south, east and west. The deadly grape swept the
+streets down to the very river, and not twenty thousand men could have
+taken the Revolutionary position by storm, except by gutting the houses
+and piercing the blocks, as Colonel Garmendia proposed, to avoid the
+awful loss of life suffered in the taking of the Plaza Libertad on
+Saturday morning.
+
+At the close of the revolution the great city found itself suffering
+from a quasi-famine. High prices were asked for everything. In some
+districts provisions could not be obtained even at famine prices. The
+writer for the first time in his life had to go here and there to beg a
+loaf of bread for his family's needs.
+
+A reporter of the _Argentine News_, July 31st of that same year, wrote:
+
+"There is a revolution going on in Rosario. It began on Saturday, when
+the Revolutionists surprised the Government party, and by one on Sunday
+most of the Government buildings were in their hands. It is now eight
+in the morning and the firing is terrible. Volunteers are coming into
+the town from all parts, so the rebels are bound to win the stronghold
+shortly. News has just come that the Government troops have
+surrendered. Four p.m.--I have been out to see the dead and wounded
+gathered up by the ambulance wagons. I should think the dead are less
+than a hundred, and the wounded about four times that number. The
+surprise was so sudden that the victory has been easy and with little
+loss of life. The Revolutionists are behaving well and not destroying
+property as they might have done. The whole town is rejoicing; flags of
+all nations are flying everywhere. The saddest thing about the affair
+is that some fifty murderers have escaped from the prison. I saw many
+of them running away when I got upon the spot. The order has been given
+to recapture them. I trust they may be caught, for we have too many of
+that class at liberty already. * * * * It is estimated that over
+100,000 rounds of ammunition were fired in the two days. * * * The
+insurgents fed on horse-meat and beef, the former being obtained by
+killing the horses belonging to the police, the latter from the various
+dairies, from which the cows were seized."
+
+In 1911 the two largest Dreadnoughts of the world, the _Rivadavia_ and
+the _Moreno_, were launched for the Argentine Government. These two
+battleships are _half as powerful again_ as the largest British
+Dreadnought.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+_THE CRIOLLO VILLAGE_.
+
+
+The different centres of trade and commerce in the Argentine can easily
+be reached by train or river steamer. Rosario, with its 140,000
+inhabitants, in the north; Bahia Blanca, where there is the largest
+wheat elevator in the world, in the south, and Mendoza, at the foot of
+the Andes, several times destroyed by earthquake, five hundred miles
+west--all these are more or less like the capital.
+
+To arrive at an isolated village of the interior the traveller must be
+content to ride, as I did, on horseback, or be willing to jolt along
+for weeks in a wagon without springs. These carts are drawn by eight,
+ten, or more bullocks, as the weight warrants, and are provided with
+two very strong wheels, without tires, and often standing eight and ten
+feet high. The patient animals, by means of a yoke fastened to their
+horns with raw-hide, draw these carts through long prairie grass or
+sinking morass, through swollen rivers or oozing mud, over which
+malaria hangs in visible forms.
+
+The _voyager_ must be prepared to suffer a little hunger and thirst on
+the way. He must sleep amongst the baggage in the cart, or on the
+broader bed of the ground, where snakes and tarantulas creep and the
+heavy dew saturates one through and through.
+
+As is well known, the bullock is a slow animal, and these never travel
+more than two or three miles an hour.
+
+Time with the native is no object. The words, "With patience we win
+heaven," are ever on his lips.
+
+The Argentine countryman is decidedly lazy.
+
+Darwin relates that he asked two men the question: "Why don't you
+work?" One said: "The days are too long!" Another answered: "I am too
+poor."
+
+With these people nothing can succeed unless it is begun when the moon
+is on the increase. The result is that little is accomplished.
+
+You cannot make the driver understand your haste, and the bullocks
+understand and care still less.
+
+The mosquitoes do their best to eat you up alive, unless your body has
+already had all the blood sucked out of it, a humiliating, painful and
+disfiguring process. You must carry with you sufficient food for the
+journey, or it may happen that, like me, you are only able to shoot a
+small ring dove, and with its entrails fish out of the muddy stream a
+monster turtle for the evening meal.
+
+If, on the other hand, you pass a solitary house, they will with
+pleasure give you a sheep. If you killed one without permission your
+punishment would perhaps be greater than if you had killed a man.
+
+If a bullock becomes ill on the road, the driver will, with his knife,
+cut all around the sod where the animal has left its footprint. Lifting
+this out, he will cut a cross on it and replace it the other side
+uppermost. This cure is most implicitly believed in and practised.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The making of the cross is supposed to do great wonders, which your
+guide is never tired of recounting while he drinks his _mate_ in the
+unbroken stillness of the evening. Alas! the many bleaching bones on
+the road testify that this, and a hundred other such remedies, are not
+always effectual, but the mind of the native is so full of
+superstitious faith that the testimony of his own eyes will not
+convince him of the absurdity of his belief. As he stoops over the fire
+you will notice on his breast some trinket or relic--anything will do
+if blessed by the priest--and that, he assures you, will save him from
+every unknown and unseen danger in his land voyage. The priest has said
+it, and he rests satisfied that no lightning stroke will fell him, no
+lurking panther pounce upon him, nor will he die of thirst or any other
+evil. I have remarked men of the most cruel, cutthroat description
+wearing these treasures with zealous care, especially one, of whom it
+was said that he had killed two wives.
+
+When your driver is young and amorously inclined you will notice that
+he never starts for the regions beyond without first providing himself
+with an owl's skin. This tied on his breast, he tells you, will ensure
+him favor in the eyes of the females he may meet on the road, and on
+arrival at his destination.
+
+I once witnessed what at first sight appeared to be a heavy fall of
+snow coming up with the wind from the south. Strange to relate, this
+phenomenon turned out to be millions of white butterflies of large
+size. Some of these, when measured, I found to be four and five inches
+across the wings. Darwin relates his having, in 1832, seen the same
+sight, when his men exclaimed that it was "snowing butterflies."
+
+The inhabitants of these trackless wilds are very, very few, but in all
+directions I saw numbers of ostriches, which run at the least sign of
+man, their enemy. The fastest horse could not outstrip this bird as
+with wings outstretched he speeds before the hunter. As Job, perhaps
+the oldest historian of the world, truly says: "What time she lifteth
+herself up on high, she scorneth the horse and his rider." The male
+bird joins his spouse in hatching the eggs, sitting on them perhaps
+longer turns than the female, but the weather is so hot that little
+brooding is required. I have had them on the shelf of my cupboard for a
+week, when the little ones have forced their way out Forty days is the
+time of incubation, so, naturally, those must have been already sat on
+for thirty-three days. With open wings these giant birds often manage
+to cover from twenty-five to forty-five eggs, although, I think, they
+seldom bring out more than twenty. The rest they roll out of the nest,
+where, soon rotting, they breed innumerable insects, and provide tender
+food for the coming young. The latter, on arrival, are always reared by
+the male ostrich, who, not being a model husband, ignominiously drives
+away the partner of his joys. It might seem that he has some reason for
+doing this, for the old historian before referred to says: "She is
+hardened against her young ones as though they were not hers."
+
+As the longest road leads somewhere, the glare of the whitewashed
+church at last meets your longing gaze on the far horizon. The village
+churches are always whitewashed, and an old man is frequently employed
+to strike the hours on the tower bell by guess.
+
+I was much struck by the sameness of the many different interior towns
+and villages I visited. Each wore the same aspect of indolent repose,
+and each was built in exact imitation of the other. Each town possesses
+its plaza, where palms and other semi-tropical plants wave their leaves
+and send out their perfume.
+
+From the principal city to the meanest village, the streets all bear
+the same names. In every town you may find a _Holy Faith street_, a
+_St. John street_ and a _Holy Ghost street_, and these streets are
+shaded by orange, lemon, pomegranate, fig and other trees, the fruit of
+which is free to all who choose to gather. All streets are in all parts
+in a most disgraceful condition, and at night beneath the heavy foliage
+of the trees Egyptian darkness reigns. Except in daylight, it is
+difficult to walk those wretched roads, where a goat often finds
+progress a difficulty. Rotten fruit, branches of trees, ashes, etc.,
+all go on the streets. A hole is often bridged over by a putrefying
+animal, over which run half-naked urchins, pelting each other with
+oranges or lemons--common as stones. When the highways are left in such
+a state, is it to be wondered at that, while standing on my own
+door-step, I have been able to count eleven houses where smallpox was
+doing its deadly work, all within a radius of one hundred yards?
+
+Even in the city of La Plata, the second of importance in Argentina, I
+once had the misfortune to fall into an open drain while passing down
+one of the principal streets. The night was intensely dark, and yet
+there was no light left there to warn either pedestrian or
+vehicle-driver, and _this sewer was seven feet deep_.
+
+Simple rusticity and ignorance are the chief characteristics of the
+country people. They used to follow and stare at me as though I were a
+visitor from Mars or some other planet. When I spoke to them in their
+language they were delighted, and respectfully hung on my words with
+bared heads. When, however, I told them of electric cars and
+underground railways, they turned away in incredulity, thinking that
+such marvels as these could not possibly be.
+
+Old World towns they seem to be. The houses are built of sun-baked mud
+bricks, kneaded by mares that splash and trample through the oozy
+substance for hours to mix it well. The poorer people build ranches of
+long, slender canes or Indian cornstalks tied together by grass and
+coated with mud. These are all erected around and about the most
+imposing edifice in the place--the whitewashed adobe church.
+
+All houses are hollow squares. The _patio_, with its well, is inside
+this enclosure. Each house is lime-washed in various colors, and all
+are flat-roofed and provided with grated windows, giving them a
+prison-like appearance. The window-panes are sometimes made of mica.
+Over the front doors of some of the better houses are pictures of the
+Virgin. The nurse's house is designated by having over the doorway a
+signboard, on which is painted a full-blooming rose, out of the petals
+of which is peeping a little babe.
+
+If you wish to enter a house, you do not knock at the door (an act that
+would be considered great rudeness), but clap your hands, and you are
+most courteously invited to enter. The good woman at once sets to work
+to serve you with _mate_, and quickly rolls a cigar, which she hands to
+you from her mouth, where she has already lighted it by a live ember of
+charcoal taken from the fire with a spoon. Matches can be bought, but
+they cost about ten cents a hundred. If you tell the housewife you do
+not smoke she will stare at you in gaping wonder. Their children use
+the weed, and I have seen a mother urge her three-year-old boy to whiff
+at a cigarette.
+
+Bound each dwelling is a _ramada_, where grapes in their season hang in
+luxuriant clusters; and each has its own garden, where palms, peaches,
+figs, oranges, limes, sweet potatoes, tobacco, nuts, garlic, etc., grow
+luxuriantly. The garden is surrounded by a hedge of cacti or other
+kindred plants. The prickly pear tree of that family is one of the
+strangest I have seen. On the leaves, which are an inch or more in
+thickness, grows the fruit, and I have counted as many as thirteen
+pears growing on a single leaf. When ripe they are a deep red color,
+and very sweet to the taste. The skin is thick, and covered with
+innumerable minute prickles. It is, I believe, a most refreshing and
+healthful food.
+
+Meat is very cheap. A fine leg of mutton may be bought for the
+equivalent of twelve cents, and good beef at four cents a pound. Their
+favorite wine, _Lagrimas de San Juan_ (Tears of Holy John), can be
+bought for ten cents a quart.
+
+All cooking is done on braziers--a species of three-legged iron bucket
+in which the charcoal fire is kindled. On this the little kettle,
+filled from the well in the _patio_, is boiled for the inevitable
+_mate_. About this herb I picked up, from various sources, some
+interesting information. The _mate_ plant grows chiefly In Paraguay,
+and is sent down the river in bags made of hides. From the village of
+Tacurti Pucu in that country comes a strange account of the origin of
+the _yerba mate_ plant, which runs thus: "God, accompanied by St. John
+and St. Peter, came down to the earth and commenced to journey. One
+day, after most difficult travel, they arrived at the house of an old
+man, father to a virgin young and beautiful. The old man cared so much
+for this girl, and was so anxious to keep her ever pure and innocent,
+that they had gone to live in the depths of a forest. The man was very,
+very poor, but willingly gave his heavenly visitors the best he could,
+killing in their honor the only hen he possessed, which served for
+supper. Noting this action, God asked St. Peter and St. John, when they
+were alone, what they would do if they were Him. They both answered Him
+that they would largely reward such an unselfish host. Bringing him to
+their presence, God addressed him in these words: 'Thou who art poor
+hast been generous, and I will reward thee for it. Thou hast a daughter
+who is pure and innocent, and whom thou greatly lovest. I will make her
+immortal, and she shall never disappear from earth.' Then God
+transformed her into the plant of the yerba mate. Since then the herb
+exists, and although it is cut down it springs up again." Other stories
+run that the maiden still lives; for God, instead of turning her into
+the mate plant, made her mistress of it, and she lives to help all
+those who make a compact with her, Many men during "Holy week," if near
+a town, visit the churches of Paraguay and formally promise to dedicate
+themselves to her worship, to live in the woods and have no other
+woman. After this vow they go to the forest, taking a paper on which
+the priest has written their name. This they pin with a thorn on the
+mate plant, and leave it for her to read. Thus she secures her devotees.
+
+Roman Catholicism is not "_Semper Idem_," but adapts itself to its
+surroundings.
+
+Mate is drunk by all, from the babe to the centenarian; by the rich
+cattle-owner, who drinks it from a chased silver cup through a golden
+_bombilla_, to his servant, who is content with a small gourd, which
+everywhere grows wild, and a tin tube. Tea, as we know it, is only to
+be bought at the chemist's as a remedy for _nerves_. In other countries
+it is said to be bad for nerves.
+
+Each house possesses its private altar, where the saints are kept. That
+sacred spot is veiled off when possible--if only by hanging in front of
+it a cow's hide--from the rest of the dwelling. It consists, according
+to the wealth or piety of the housewife, in expensive crosses, beads,
+and pictures of saints decked out with costly care; or, it may be, but
+one soiled lithograph surrounded by paper flowers or cheap baubles of
+the poorer classes; but all are alike sacred. Everything of value or
+beauty is collected and put as an offering to these deities--pieces of
+colored paper, birds' eggs, a rosy tomato or pomegranate, or any
+colored picture or bright tin. Descending from the ridiculous to the
+gruesome, I have known a mother scrape and clean the bones of her dead
+daughter in order that _they_ might be given a place on the altar.
+Round this venerated spot the goodwife, with her palm-leaf broom,
+sweeps with assiduous care, and afterwards carefully dusts her crucifix
+and other devotional objects with her brush of ostrich feathers. Here
+she kneels in prayer to the different saints. God Himself is never
+invoked. Saint Anthony interests himself in finding her lost ring, and
+Saint Roque is a wonderful physician in case of sickness. If she be a
+maiden Saint Carmen will find her a suitable husband; if a widow, Saint
+John will be a husband to her; and if an orphan, the sacred heart of
+the Virgin of Carmen gives balsam to the forlorn one. Saint Joseph
+protects the artisan, and if a candle is burnt in front of Saint Ramon,
+he will most obligingly turn away the tempest or the lightning stroke.
+In all cases one candle at least must be promised these mysterious
+benefactors, and rash indeed would be the man or woman who failed to
+burn the candle; some most terrible vengeance would surely overtake him
+or his family.
+
+God, as I have said, is never invoked. Perhaps He is supposed to sit in
+solitary grandeur while the saints administer His affairs? These latter
+are innumerable, and whatever may be their position in the minds of
+Romanists in other lands, in South America they are distinct and
+separate gods, and their graven image, picture or carving is worshipped
+as such.
+
+When religious questions have not arisen, life in those remote villages
+has passed very pleasantly. The people live in great simplicity,
+knowing scarcely anything of the outside world and its progress.
+
+At the Feast of St. John the women take sheep and lambs, gaily
+decorated with colored ribbons, to church with them. That is an act of
+worship, for the priest puts his hand on each lamb and blesses it. A
+_velorio_ for the dead, or a dance at a child's death, are generally
+the only meetings beside the church; but, as the poet says:
+
+ "'Tis known, at least it should be, that throughout
+ All countries of the Catholic persuasion,
+ Some weeks before Shrove Tuiesiday comes about,
+ The people take their fill of recreation,
+ And buy repentance ere they grow devout,
+ However high their rank or low their station,
+ With fiddlling, feasting, dancing, drinking, masking,
+ And other things which may be had for asking."
+
+Carnival is a joyous time, and if for only once in the year the quiet
+town then resounds with mirth. Pails of water are carried up to the
+flat roofs of the houses, and each unwary pedestrian is in turn
+deluged. At other times flour is substituted, and on the last day of
+the feast ashes are thrown on all sides. At other seasons of the year
+the streets are quiet, and after the rural pursuits of the day are
+over, the guitar is brought out, and the evening breeze wafts waves of
+music to each listening ear. The guitar is in all South America what
+the bag-pipes are to Scotland-the national musical instrument of the
+people. The Criollo plays mostly plaintive, broken airs--now so low as
+to be almost inaudible, then high and shrill. Here and there he
+accompanies the music with snatches of song, telling of an exploit or
+describing the dark eyes of some lovely maiden. The airs strike one as
+being very strange, and decidedly unlike the rolling songs of British
+music.
+
+In those interior towns a very quiet life may be passed, far away from
+the whistle of the railway engine. Everything is simplicity itself, and
+it might almost be said of some that _time itself seems at a
+standstill_. During the heat of the day the streets are entirely
+deserted; shops are closed, and all the world is asleep, for that is
+the _siesta_ time. "They eat their dinners and go to sleep--and could
+they do better?"
+
+After this the barber draws his chair out to the causeway and shaves or
+cuts his customer's hair. Women and children sit at their doors
+drinking mate and watching the slowly drawn bullock-carts go up and
+down the uneven, unmade roads, bordered, not by the familiar maple, but
+with huge dust-covered cactus plants, The bullocks all draw with their
+horns, and the indolent driver sits on the yoke, urging forward his
+sleepy animals with a poke of his cane, on the end of which he has
+fastened a sharp nail. The _buey_ is very thick-skinned and would not
+heed a whip. The wheels of the cart are often cut from a solid piece of
+wood, and are fastened on with great hardwood pins in a most primitive
+style. Soon after sunset all retire to their trestle beds.
+
+In early morning the women hurry to mass. The Criollo does not break
+his fast until nearly mid-day, so they have no early meal to prepare.
+Even before it is quite light it is difficult to pass along the streets
+owing to the custom they have of carrying their praying-chairs with
+them to mass. The rich lady will be followed by her dark-skinned maid
+bearing a sumptuously upholstered chair on her head. The middle classes
+carry their own, and the very poor take with them a palm-leaf mat of
+their own manufacture. When mass is over religion is over for the day.
+After service they make their way down to the river or pond, carrying
+on their heads the soiled linen. Standing waist-high in the water, they
+wash out the stains with black soap of their own manufacture, beating
+each article with hardwood boards made somewhat like a cricketer's bat.
+The cloths are then laid on the sand or stones of the shore. The women
+gossip and smoke until these are dry and ready to carry home again ere
+the heat becomes too intense.
+
+In a description of Argentine village life, I could not possibly omit
+the priest, the "all in all" to the native, the temporal and spiritual
+king, who bears in his hands the destinies of the living and the dead.
+These men are the potentates of the people, who refer everything to
+them, from the most trivial matter to the weightier one of the saving
+of their souls after death. Bigotry and superstition are extreme.
+
+Renous, the naturalist, tells us that he visited one of these towns and
+left some caterpillars with a girl. These she was to feed until his
+return, that they might change to butterflies. When this was rumored
+through the village, priest and governor consulted together and agreed
+that it must be black heresy. When poor Renous returned some time
+afterwards he was arrested.
+
+The Argentine village priest is a dangerous enemy to the Protestant.
+Many is the time he has insulted me to my face, or, more cowardly,
+charged the school-boys to pelt and annoy me. In the larger towns the
+priest has defamed me through the press, and when I have answered him
+also by that means, he has heaped insult upon injury, excluded me from
+society, and made me a pariah and a byword to the superstitious people.
+I have been stoned and spat upon, hurled to the ground, had half-wild
+dogs set on me, and my horse frightened that he might throw me. I have
+been refused police help, or been called to the office to give an
+account of myself, all because I was a Protestant, or infidel, as they
+prefer to term it. At those times great patience was needed, for at the
+least sign of resistance on my part I should have been attacked by the
+whole village in one mass. The policeman on the street has looked
+expectantly on, eager to see me do this, and on one occasion he
+escorted me to the station for snatching a bottle from the hand of a
+boy who was in the act of throwing it at my head. Arriving there I was
+most severely reprimanded, although, fortunately, not imprisoned.
+
+Women have crossed themselves and run from me in terror to seek the
+holy water bottle blessed by the father. Doors have been shut in my
+face, and angry voices bade me begone, at the instigation of this
+black-robed believer in the Virgin. Congregations of worshippers in the
+dark-aisled church have listened to a fabulous description of my
+mission and character, until the barber would not cut my hair or the
+butcher sell me his meat! Many a mother has hurriedly called her
+children in and precipitately shut the door, that my shadow in passing
+might not enter and pollute her home. Perhaps a senorita, more
+venturesome, with her black hair hanging in two long plaits behind each
+shoulder, has run to her iron-barred window to smile at me, and then
+penitently fallen before her patron saint imploring forgiveness, or
+hurried to confess her sin to the wily _padre_. If the confession was
+accompanied by a gift, she has been absolved by him; if she were poor,
+her tear-stained face, perhaps resembling that of the suffering Madonna
+over the confessional, has moved his heart to tenderness, for well he
+knows that
+
+ "Maidens, like moths, are ever caught by glare,
+ And Mammon wins his way where seraphs might despair."
+
+The punishment imposed has only been that she repeat fifty or a hundred
+_Ave Marias_ or _Paternosters_. Poor deluded creature! Her sin only
+consisted in permitting her black eyes to gaze on me as I passed down
+the street.
+
+"These poor creatures often go to confession, not to be forgiven the
+wretched past, but to get a new license to commit sin. One woman, to
+whom we offered a tract, refused it, and, showing us an indulgence of
+three hundred days, said: 'These are the papers I like.'"
+
+A young university man in the capital confessed that he had never read
+the New Testament and never would read it, because he knew it was
+against the Church of Rome. The mass of the people have not the
+slightest notion of goodness, as we count piety, and lying is not
+considered wrong. A native will often entreat the help of his favorite
+saint to commit a theft.
+
+"To the Protestant the idea of religion without morals is
+inconceivable; but in South America Romanism divorces morals and
+religion. It is quite possible to break every command of the Decalogue
+and yet be a devoted, faithful Romanist." [Footnote: Rev. J. H. La
+Fetra, in "Protestant Missions in South America"]
+
+I can only describe Roman Catholicism on the South American continent
+as a species of heathenism. The Church, to gain proselytes, accepted
+the old gods of the Indians as saints, and we find idolatrous
+superstition and Catholic display blended together. The most ignorant
+are invariably the most pious. The more civilized the Criollo becomes,
+the less he believes in the Church, and the priest in return condemns
+him to eternal perdition.
+
+"It is not necessary to detail the multitude of pagan superstitions
+with which the religion of South America is encumbered. It is enough to
+point out that it does not preach Christ crucified and risen again. It
+preaches Mary, whom it proclaims from the lips of thousands of
+lecherous priests to be of perpetual virginity. And it is by its
+deliberate falsehood and deceit, as well as by its misrepresentation,
+that the Roman Catholic Church in South America has not only not taught
+Christianity, but has directly fostered deception and untruth of
+character." [Footnote: Missions in South America. Robert E. Speer.]
+
+When I desired respectfully to enter a church with bared head and
+deferential mien, they have followed me to see that I did not steal the
+trinkets from the saints or desecrate the altar. If I have touched the
+font of holy water, instead of it purifying me, I have defiled it for
+their use; and when I have looked at the images of the saints the
+people have seen them frown at me. After my exit the priest would
+sprinkle holy water on the spots where I had stood, to drive away "the
+evil influence."
+
+In those churches one may see an image, with inscription beneath,
+stating that those who kiss it receive an indulgence for sin and a
+promise of heaven. When preaching in Parana I inadvertently dropped a
+word in disparagement of the worship of the Virgin, when, quick as
+thought, a man dashed towards me with gleaming steel. The Criollo's
+knife never errs, and one sharp lunge too well completes his task; but
+an old Paraguayan friend then with me sprang upon him and dashed the
+knife to the ground, thus leaving my heart's blood warm within me, and
+not on the pavement. I admired my antagonist for the strength of his
+convictions--true loyalty he displayed for his goddess, who, however,
+does not, I am sure, teach her devotees to assassinate those who prefer
+to put their faith rather in her Divine Son. Had I been killed the
+priest would on no account have buried me, and would most willingly
+have absolved the assassin and kept him from the "arm of justice." That
+arm in those places is very short indeed, for I have myself met dozens
+of murderers rejoicing in their freedom. Hell is only for Protestants.
+
+On the door of my lodging I found one morning a written paper, well
+pasted on, which read:
+
+MUERA! VIVA LA VIRGEN CON TODOS LOS SANTOS!
+
+"_Die! Live the Virgin and all the Saints!_" That paper I took from the
+door and keep as a souvenir of fanaticism.
+
+The Bible is an utterly unknown book, except to the priests, who forbid
+its entrance to the houses. It, however, could do little good or harm,
+for the masses of the people are utterly unlettered. All Protestant
+literature stolen into the town is invariably gathered and burned by
+the priest, who would not hesitate also to burn the bringer if he could
+without fear of some after-enquiry into the matter.
+
+
+[Illustration: THE WORLD'S LARGFST ROCKING STONE, TANDIL, ARGENTINA.
+This immense stone is so evenly poised that the wind or the slightest
+touch of the hand sets it in motion but the storms of the centuries
+have failed to dislodge it.]
+
+
+Rome is to-day just what she always was. Her own claim and motto is:
+_Semper idem_ (Always the same). But for this age of enlightenment her
+inquisitorial fires would still burn. "Rome's contention is, not that
+she does not persecute, but only that she does not persecute _saints_.
+She punishes heretics--a very different thing. In the Rhemish New
+Testament there is a note on the words, 'drunken with the blood of
+saints,' which runs as follows: 'Protestants foolishly expound this of
+Rome _because heretics are there put to death_. But _their_ blood is
+not called _the blood of saints_, any more than the blood of thieves or
+man-killers, or other malefactors; and for the shedding of it no
+commonwealth shall give account.'"
+
+During my residence in Argentina a Jesuit priest in Cordoba publicly
+stated that if he had his way he would burn to death every Protestant
+in the country.
+
+The following statements are from authorized documents, laws and
+decrees of the Papacy:
+
+"The papacy teaches all her adherents that it is a sacred duty to
+exterminate heresy.
+
+"Urban II. issued a decree that the murder of heretics was excusable.
+'We do not count them murderers who, burning with the zeal of their
+Catholic mother against the excommunicate, may happen to have slain
+some of them.'" [Footnote: "Romanism and Reformation."]
+
+In Argentine life the almanac plays an important part; in that each day
+is dedicated to the commemoration of some saint, and the child born
+must of necessity be named after the saint on whose day he or she
+arrives into the world. The first question is, "What name does it
+bring?" The baby may have chosen to come at a time when the calendar
+shows an undesirable name, still the parents grumble not, for a saint
+is a saint, and whatever names they bear must be good. The child is,
+therefore, christened "Caraciollo," or "John Baptist," when, instead of
+growing up to be a forerunner of Christ, he or she may, with more
+likelihood, be a forerunner of the devil. Whatever name a child brings,
+however, has Mary tacked on to it.
+
+All names serve equally well for male or female children, as a
+concluding "o" or "a" serves to distinguish the sex. Many men bear the
+name of Joseph Mary. Numbers, also, both male and female, have been
+baptized by the name of "Jesus," "Saviour," or "Redeemer." If I were
+asked the old question, "What's in a name?" I should answer, "Very
+little," for in South America the most insolent thief will often boast
+in the appellation of _Don Justice_, and the lowest girl in the village
+may be _Senorita Celestial_. _Don Jesus_ may be found incarcerated for
+riotous conduct, and I have known _Don Saviour_ throw his unfortunate
+wife and children down a well; _Don Destroyer_ would have been a more
+appropriate name for him. _Mrs. Angel_ her husband sometimes finds not
+such an angel after all, when she puts poison into his mate cup, a not
+infrequent occurrence. Let none be deceived in thinking that the
+appellation is any index to a man's character.
+
+Dark, needy people--Rome's true children!
+
+The school-books read: Which is the greatest country? _Ans._, Spain.
+Who is the greatest man? _Ans._, The Pope. Why? Because he is
+infallible.
+
+It is his wish, and the priest's duty, to keep them in this darkness.
+Yet,--One came from God, "a light to lighten the Gentiles," and He
+said, "I am the Light of the world." Some day they may hear of Him and
+themselves see the Light.
+
+Already the day is breaking, and superstition must prepare to hide
+itself. The uneducated native no longer pursues the railway train at
+thundering pace to lasso it because the priest raved against its being
+built. He even in some cases doubts if it is "an invention of hell," as
+he was taught.
+
+The educated native, Alberdi, a publicist and an advocate of freedom,
+in the discussion over religious rights of foreigners in the Argentine,
+wrote: "Spanish America reduced to Catholicism, with the exclusion of
+any other cult, represents a solitary and silent convent of monks. The
+dilemma is fatal,--either Catholics and unpopulated, or populated and
+prosperous and tolerant in the matter of religion."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TEE PRAIRIE AND ITS INHABITANTS.
+
+
+The Pampas, or prairie lands of the Argentine, stretch to the south and
+west of Buenos Ayres, and cover some 800,000 square miles. On this vast
+level plain, watered by sluggish streams or shallow lakes, boundless as
+the ocean, seemingly limitless in extent, there is an exhilarating air
+and a rich herbage on which browse countless herds of cattle, horses,
+and flocks of sheep. The grass grows tall, and miles upon miles of rich
+scarlet, white, or yellow flowers mingle with or overtop it. Beds of
+thistles, in which the cattle completely hide themselves, stretch away
+for leagues and leagues, and present an almost unbroken sheet of purple
+flowers. So vast are these thistle-beds that a day's ride through them
+only leaves the traveller with the same purple forest stretching away
+to the horizon. The florist would be enchanted to see whole tracts of
+land covered by the _Verbena Melindres_, which appears, even long
+before you reach it, to be of a bright scarlet. There are also acres
+and acres of the many-flowered camomile and numberless other plants;
+while large tracts of low-lying land are covered with coarse pampa
+grass, affording shelter for numberless deer, and many varieties of
+ducks, cranes, flamingoes, swans and turkeys. Wood there is none, with
+the exception of a solitary tree here and there at great distances,
+generally marking the site of some cattle establishment OP _estancia_.
+An _ombu_, or cluster of blue gums, is certain to be planted there.
+
+On this prairie, man, notwithstanding the fact that he is the "lord of
+creation," is decidedly in the minority. Millions of four-footed
+animals roam the plains, but he may be counted by hundreds. Let us turn
+to him, however, in his isolated home, for the _Gaucho_ has been
+described as one of the most interesting races on the face of the
+earth. A descendant of the old conquerors, who, leaving their fair ones
+in the Spanish peninsula, took unto them as wives the unclothed women
+of the new world, he inherits the color and habits of the one with the
+vices and dignity of the other. Living the wild, free life of the
+Indian, and retaining the language of Spain; the finest horseman of the
+world, and perhaps the worst assassin; the most open-handed and
+hospitable, yet the accomplished purloiner of his neighbor's cattle;
+imitating the Spaniard in the beautifully-chased silver trappings of
+his horse, and the untutored Indian in his miserable adobe hovel;
+spending his whole wealth in heavy gold or silver bell-shaped stirrups,
+bridle, or spurs (the rowel of the latter sometimes having a diameter
+of six inches), and leaving his home destitute of the veriest
+necessities of life--such is the Gaucho. A horn or shell from the
+river's bed makes his spoon, gourds provide him with his plates and
+dishes; but his knife, with gold or silver handle and sheath, is almost
+a little fortune in itself. Content in his dwelling to sit on a
+bullock's skull, on horseback his saddle must be mounted in silver. His
+own beard and hair he seldom trims, but his horse's mane and tail must
+be assiduously tended. The baked-mud floor of his abode is littered
+with filth and dirt, while he raves at a speck of mud on his
+embroidered silk saddle-cloth.
+
+The Gaucho is a strange contradiction. He has blushed at my good but
+plain-looking saddle, yet courteously asked me to take a skull seat. He
+may possess five hundred horses, but you search his kitchen in vain for
+a plate. If you please him he will present you with his best horse,
+waving away your thanks. If you displease him, his long knife will just
+as readily find its way to your heart, for he kills his enemies with as
+little compunction as he kills the ostrich. "The Gaucho, with his proud
+and dissolute air, is the most unique of all South American characters.
+He is courageous and cruel, active and tireless. Never more at ease
+than when on the wildest horse; on the ground, out of his element. His
+politeness is excessive, his nature fierce." The children do not, like
+ours, play with toys, but delight the parents' hearts by teasing a cat
+or dog. These they will stick with a thorn or pointed bone to hear them
+yell, or, later on, lasso and half choke them. "They will put out their
+eyes, and such like childish games, innocent little darlings that they
+are." Cold-blooded torture is their delight, and they will cheer at the
+sight of blood.
+
+To describe the dress of this descendant of Adam I feel myself
+incapable. A shirt and a big slouch hat seem to be the only articles of
+attire like ours. Coat, trousers or shoes he does not wear. Instead of
+the first mentioned, he uses the _poncho_, a long, broad blanket, with
+a slit in the centre to admit his head. For trousers he wears very wide
+white drawers, richly embroidered with broad needlework and stiffly
+starched. Over these he puts a black _chiripa_, which really I cannot
+describe other than as similar to the napkins the mother provides for
+her child. Below this black and white leg covering come the long boots,
+made from one piece of seamless hide. These boots are nothing more than
+the skin from the hind legs of an animal--generally a full-grown horse.
+The bend of the horse's leg makes the boot's heel. Naturally the toes
+protrude, and this is not sewn up, for the Gaucho never puts more than
+his big toe in the stirrup, which, like the bit in his horse's mouth,
+must be of solid silver. A dandy will beautifully scallop these rawhide
+boots around the tops and toes, and keep them soft with an occasional
+application of grease. No heel is ever attached. Around the man's
+waist, holding up his drawers and chiripa, is wound a long colored
+belt, with tasseled ends left hanging over his boot, down the right
+side; and over that he invariably wears a broad skin belt, clasped at
+the front with silver and adorned all around with gold or silver coins.
+In this the long knife is carried.
+
+What shall I say of the domestic life of these people? Unfortunately,
+marriage is practically unknown among them. The father gives his son a
+few cattle, and the young man, after building himself a house, conducts
+thither his chosen one. Unhappily, constancy in either man or woman is
+a rare virtue.
+
+Of the superstitious side of the Gancho race I might speak much. In the
+saints the female especially implicitly believes. These, her deities,
+are all-powerful, and to them she appeals for the satisfaction of her
+every desire. Saint Clementina's help is sought by the girl when her
+lover betrays her. Another saint will aid her in poisoning him. If the
+wife thinks her husband long in bringing the evening meal, she has
+informed me, a word with Saint Anthony is sufficient, and she hears the
+sound of his horse's hoofs. Saint Anthony seems to be useful on many
+occasions of distress. One evening I called at a _rancho_ made of dry
+thistle-stalks bound together with hide and thatched with reeds,
+Finding the inmates very hospitable, I stayed there two or three hours
+to rest. Coming out of the house again, I found to my dismay that
+during our animated gossip my horse had broken loose and left me. Now
+the loss of a horse is too trivial a matter to interest Anthony the
+saint, but a horse having saddle and bridle attached to him makes it
+quite a different matter, for these often cost ten times the price of
+the horse. One of the saint's especial duties is to find a lost saddled
+horse, if the owner or interested one only promises to burn a candle in
+his honor. The night was very dark, and no sign of the animal was to be
+seen. Mine host laid his ear to the ground and listened, then, leaping
+on his horse, he galloped into the darkness, from whence he brought my
+lost animal. I did not learn until afterwards that Mrs. Jesus, for such
+was the woman's name, had sought the help of Saint Anthony on my
+behalf. I am sure she lost her previous good opinion of me when I
+thanked her husband but did not offer a special colored candle to her
+saint.
+
+Among these strange people I commenced a school, and had the joy of
+teaching numbers of them to read the Spanish Bible. Boys and girls came
+long distances on horseback, and, although some of them had perhaps
+never seen a book before, I found them exceedingly quick to learn. In
+four or five months the older ones were able to read any ordinary
+chapter. In arithmetic they were inconceivably dull, and after three
+months' tuition some of them could not count ten.
+
+I have said the saints are greatly honored among these people. My
+Christmas cards generally found their way to adorn their altars. Every
+house has its favorite, and some of these are regarded as especially
+clever in curing sickness. It being a very unhealthful, low-lying
+district where my school was, I contracted malarial fever, and went to
+bed very sick. Every day some of the children would come to enquire
+after me, but Celestino, one of the larger boys, came one morning with
+a very special message from his mother. This communication was to the
+effect that they did not wish the school-teacher to die, he being
+"rather a nice kind of a man and well liked." Because of this she would
+be pleased to let me have her favorite saint. This image I could stand
+at the head of my bed, and its very presence would cure me. When I
+refused this offer and smiled at its absurdity, the boy thought me very
+strange. To be so wise in some respects, and yet so ignorant as to
+refuse such a chance, was to him incomprehensible. The saints, I found,
+are there often lent out to friends that they may exercise their
+healing powers, or rented out to strangers at so much a day, When they
+are not thus on duty, but in a quiet corner of the hut, they get
+lonely. The woman will then go for a visit, taking her saint with her,
+either in her arms or tied to the saddle. This image she will place
+with the saint her host owns, and _they will talk together and teach
+one another_. A saint is supposed to know only its own particular work,
+although one named Santa Rita is said to be a worker of
+impossibilities. Some of them are only very rudely carved images,
+dressed in tawdry finery. I have sometimes thought that a Parisian doll
+of modern make, able to open and close its eyes, etc., would in their
+esteem be even competent to raise the dead! [Footnote: Writing of
+Spanish American Romanism, Everybody's Magazine says: "To the student
+of human nature, which means the study of evil as well as good, this
+religious body is of absorbing interest. One would look to find these
+enthusiasts righteous and virtuous in their daily life; but, apart from
+the annual week of penance, their religion influences them not at all,
+and on the whole the members of the Brotherhood constitute a desperate
+class, dangerous to society."]
+
+In cases of sickness very simple remedies are used, and not a few
+utterly nonsensical. To cure pains in the stomach they tie around them
+the skin of the _comadreka_, a small, vile-smelling animal. This they
+told me was a sovereign remedy. If the sufferer be a babe, a cross made
+on its stomach is sufficient to perfectly cure it. I have seen seven
+pieces of the root of the white lily, which there grows wild, tied
+around the neck of an infant in order that its teeth might come with
+greater promptitude and less pain. A string of dog's teeth serves the
+same purpose. To cure a bad wound, the priest will be called in that he
+may write around the sore some Latin prayer backwards. Headache is
+easily cured by tying around the head the cast-off skin of a snake. Two
+puppies are killed and bound one on each side of a broken limb. If a
+charm is worn around the neck no poison can be harmful. For a sore
+throat it is sufficient to expectorate in the fire three times, making
+a cross. Lockjaw is effectually stopped by tying around the sufferer's
+jaws the strings from a virgin's skirt; and they say also that powdered
+excrement of a dog, taken in a glass of water, cures the smallpox
+patient,
+
+As Mrs. Jesus sent her boy to my school, so Mrs. Flower sent her girl.
+The latter was perhaps the most deluded woman I have met. Her every act
+was bad in itself or characterized by superstitious devotion. She was
+one of the Church's favorite worshippers, and while I was in the
+neighborhood she sold her cows and horses and presented the priest at
+the nearest town with a large and expensive silver cross--the emblem of
+suffering purity. Near her lived a person for whom she had an especial
+aversion, but that enemy she got rid of in surely the strangest of
+ways, which she described to me. Catching a snake, and holding it so
+that its poison might not reach her, she passed a threaded needle
+through both its eyes. When this was done she let it go again, alive,
+and, carefully guarding the needle, approached the person from behind
+and made a cross with the thread. The undesired one disappeared, having
+probably heard of the enchantment, and being equally superstitious,
+or--the charm worked!
+
+Mrs. Flower was a most repulsive-looking creature. Her skin was exactly
+the color of an old copper coin. She did not resemble any _flower_ I
+have seen in either hemisphere. Far was she from being a rose, but she
+certainly possessed the thorn. Her love for the saints was most marked,
+and I have known her promise St. Roque that she would walk six miles
+carrying his image if he would only grant her a certain prayer. This
+petition he granted, and off she trudged with her divine (?) load.
+Those acquainted with dwellers on the prairie know that this was indeed
+a great task, horses being so cheap and riding so universal. Mrs.
+Flower was unaccustomed to walk even the shortest distance. I myself
+can bear witness to the fact that even strong men find it hard to walk
+a mile after spending years in equestrian travel. The native tells you
+that God formed your legs so that you might be able to sit on a horse
+rather than to walk with them. A favorite expression with them is, "I
+was born on horseback."
+
+Stone not being found on the pampas, these people generally build their
+houses of square sods, with a roof of plaited grasses--sometimes I have
+observed these beautifully woven together. Two or more holes, according
+to the size of the house, are left to serve for door and window. Wood
+cannot be obtained, glass has not been introduced, so the holes are
+left as open spaces, across which, when the pampa wind blows, a hide is
+stretched. No hole is left in the roof for the smoke of the fire to
+escape, for this to the native is no inconvenience whatever. When I
+have been compelled to fly with racking cough and splitting head, he
+has calmly asked the reason. Never could I bear the blinding smoke that
+issues from his fire of sheep or cow dung burning on the earthen floor,
+though he heeds it not as, sitting on a bullock's skull, he ravenously
+eats his evening meal.
+
+If entertaining a stranger, he will press uncut joint after joint of
+his _asado_ upon him. This asado is meat roasted over the fire on a
+spit; if beef, with the skin and hair still attached. Meat cooked in
+this way is a real delicacy. A favorite dish with them (I held a
+different opinion) is a half-formed calf, taken before its proper time
+of birth. The meat is often dipped in the ashes in lieu of salt. I have
+said the Gaucho has no chair. I might add that neither has he a table,
+for with his fingers and knife he eats the meat off the fire. Forks he
+is without, and a horn or shell spoon conveys the soup to his mouth
+direct from the copper pan. So universal is the use of the shell for
+this service that the native does not speak of it as _caracol_, the
+real word for shell, but calls it _cuchara del agua_, or water spoon.
+Of knives he possesses more than enough, and heavy, long, sharp-pointed
+ones they are. When his hunger is appeased the knife goes, not to the
+kitchen, but to his belt, where, when not in his hand, you may always
+see it. With that weapon he kills a sheep, cuts off the head of a
+serpent--seemingly, however, not doing it much harm, for it still
+wriggles--sticks his horse when in anger, and, alas, as I have said,
+sometimes stabs his fellow-man. Being so far isolated from the coast,
+he is necessarily entirely uneducated. The forward march of the outer
+world concerns him not; indeed he imagines that his native prairie
+stretches away to the end of the world. He will gaze with wonder on
+your watch, for his only mode of ascertaining the time is by the shadow
+the sun casts. As that luminary rises and sets, so he sleeps and wakes.
+His only bed is the sheepskin, which when riding he fastens over his
+saddle, and the latter article forms his pillow. His coverlet is the
+firmament of heaven, the Southern Cross and other constellations,
+unseen by dwellers in the Northern Hemisphere, seeming to keep watch
+over him; or in the colder season his poncho, which I have already
+described. Around his couch flit the fireflies, resembling so many
+stars of earth with their strangely radiant lights. The brightness of
+one, when held near the face of my watch, made light enough to enable
+me to ascertain the hour, even on the darkest night.
+
+The Gaucho with his horse is at home anywhere. When on a journey he
+will stop for the evening meal beside the dry bones of some dead
+animal. With these and grass he will make a fire and cook the meat he
+carries hanging behind him on the saddle. I have known an animal killed
+and the meat cooked with its own bones, but this is not usual. Dry
+bones burn better, and thistle-stalks better still. He will then lie
+down on mother earth with the horse-cloth under him and the saddle for
+a pillow. When travelling with these men I have known them, without any
+comment, stretch themselves on the ground, even though the rain was
+falling, and soon be in dreamland. After having passed a wretched night
+myself, I have asked them, "How did you sleep?" _"Muy Bien, Senor"_
+(Very good, sir), has been the invariable answer. They would often
+growl much, however, over the wet saddle-cloths, for these soon cause a
+horse's back to become sore.
+
+Here and there, but sometimes at long distances apart, there is a
+_pulperia_ on the road. This is always designated by having a white
+flag flying on the end of a long bamboo. At these places cheap spirits
+of wine and very bad rum can be bought, along with tobacco, hard
+ship-biscuits (very often full of maggots, as I know only too well),
+and a few other more necessary things. I have observed in some of these
+wayside inns counters made of turf, built in blocks as bricks would be.
+Here the natives stop to drink long and deep, and stew their meagre
+brains in bad spirits. These draughts result in quarrels and sometimes
+in murder.
+
+The Gaucho, like the Indian, cannot drink liquor without becoming
+maddened by it. He will then do things which in his sober moments he
+would not dream of. I was acquainted with a man who owned a horse of
+which he was very fond This animal bore him one evening to a pulperia
+some miles distant, and was left tied outside while he imbibed his fill
+inside. Coming out at length beastly intoxicated, he mounted his horse
+and proceeded homeward. Arriving at a fork in the path, the faithful
+horse took the one leading home, but the rider, thinking in his stupor
+that the other way was the right one, turned the horse's head. As the
+poor creature wanted to get home and have the saddle taken off, it
+turned again. This affront was too much for the Gaucho, who is a man of
+volcanic passions, so drawing his knife, he stabbed it in the neck, and
+they dropped to the ground together. When he realized that he had
+killed his favorite horse he cried like a child. I passed this dead
+animal several times afterwards and saw the vultures clean its bones.
+It served me as a witness to the results of ungoverned passion.
+
+The Gaucho does not, and would not under any consideration, ride a
+mare; consequently, for work she is practically valueless. Strain, who
+rode across the pampas, says: "In a single year ten million hides were
+exported." For one or two dollars each the buyer may purchase any
+number; indeed, of such little worth are the mares that they are very
+often killed for their hide, or to serve as food for swine. At one
+estancia I visited I was informed that one was killed each day for pig
+feed. The mare can be driven long distances, even a hundred miles a
+day, for several successive days, The Argentine army must surely be the
+most mobile of any in the world, for its soldiers, when on the march,
+get nothing but mare's flesh and the custom gives them great facility
+of movement. The horse has, more or less, its standard value, and costs
+four or five times the price of the mare.
+
+
+[Illustration: THE AUTHOR IN GAUCHO DRESS.]
+
+
+Sometimes it happens that the native finds a colt which is positively
+untamable. On the cheek of such an animal the Gaucho will burn a cross
+and then allow it to go free, like the scape-goat mentioned in the book
+of Leviticus.
+
+The native horse is rather small, but very wiry and wild. I was once
+compelled, through sickness, to make a journey of ninety-seven miles,
+being in the saddle for seventeen consecutive hours, and yet my poor
+horse was unable to get one mouthful of food on the journey, and the
+saddle was not taken off his back for a moment. He was very wild, yet
+one evening between five and eight o'clock, he bore me safely a
+distance of thirty-six miles, and returned the same distance with me on
+the following morning. He had not eaten or drunk anything during the
+night, for the locusts had devoured all pasturage and no rain had
+fallen for a space of five months.
+
+The horse is not indigenous to America, although Darwin tells us that
+South America had a native horse, which lived and disappeared ages ago.
+Spanish history informs us that they were first landed in Buenos Ayres
+in 1537. We are further told that the Indians flew away in terror at
+the sight of a man on horseback, which they took to be one animal of a
+strange, two-headed shape. When the colony was for a time deserted
+these horses were suffered to run wild. Those animals so multiplied and
+spread over such a vast area that they were found, forty-three years
+later, even down to the Straits of Magellan, a distance of eleven
+hundred miles. With good pasture and a limitless expanse to roam over,
+they soon turned from the dozens to thousands, and may now be counted
+by millions. The Patagonian "foot" Indians quickly turned into "horse"
+Indians, for on those wide prairie lands a man without a horse is
+almost comparable to a man without legs. In former years, thousands of
+wild horses roamed over these extensive plains, but the struggle of
+mankind in the battle of life turned men's attention to them, and they
+were captured and branded by whomsoever had the power and cared to take
+the trouble. In the more isolated districts, there may still be found
+numbers which are born and die without ever feeling the touch of saddle
+or bridle. Far away from the crowded busses and perpetually moving
+hansoms of the city, they feel not the driver's whip nor the strain of
+the wagon, as, with tail trailing on the ground and head erect, they
+gallop in freedom of life. Happy they!
+
+In all directions on the prairie ostriches are found. The natives catch
+them with _boliadoras_, an old Indian weapon, which is simply three
+round stones, incased in bags of hide, tied together by twisted ropes,
+also of hide. When the hunters have, by galloping from different
+directions, baffled the bird in his flight, they thunder down upon him,
+and, throwing the _boliadoras_ round his legs, where they entangle,
+effectually stop his flight. I have seen this weapon thrown a distance
+of about eighty yards.
+
+The ostrich is a bird with wonderful digestive powers, which I often
+have envied him; he eats grass or pebbles, insects or bones, as suits
+his varying fancy. If you drop your knife or any other article, he will
+stop to examine it, being most inquisitive, and, if possible, he will
+swallow it. The flesh of the ostrich is dry and tough, and its feathers
+are not to be compared in beauty with those of the African specimen.
+Generally a very harmless bird, he is truly formidable during breeding
+time. If one of the eggs is so much as touched he will break the whole
+number to shivers. Woe to the man whom he savagely attacks at such
+times; one kick of his great foot, with its sharp claws, is sufficient
+to open the body of man or horse. The Gaucho uses the skin from the
+neck of this bird as a tobacco pouch, and the eggs are considered a
+great delicacy. One is equal to about sixteen hen's eggs.
+
+As all creation has its enemy, the ostrich finds his in the _iguana_,
+or lizard--an unsightly, scaly, long-tailed species of land crocodile.
+This animal, when full-grown, attains the length of five feet, and is
+of a dark green color. He, when he can procure them, feeds on the
+ostrich eggs, which I believe must be a very strengthening diet. The
+lizard, after fattening himself upon them during the six hotter months
+of the year, is enabled to retire to the recesses of his cave, where he
+tranquilly sleeps through the remaining six. The shell of the ostrich's
+egg is about the thickness of an antique china cup, but the iguana
+finds no difficulty in breaking it open with a slash of his tail This
+wily animal is more astute than the bird, which lays its eggs in the
+open spaces, for the lizard, with her claws, digs a hole in the ground,
+in which hers are dropped to the number of dozens. The lizard does not
+provide shells for her eggs, but only covers them with a thick, soft
+skin, and they, buried in the soil, eventually hatch themselves.
+
+When the Gaucho cannot obtain a better meal, the tail of the lizard is
+not considered such a despicable dish by him, for he is no epicure.
+When he has nothing he is also contented. His philosophy is: _"Nunca
+tenga hambre cuando no hay que comer"_ (Never be hungry when no food is
+to be had).
+
+The estancia, or catile ranch, is a feature of the Argentine prairie.
+Some of these establishments are very large, even up to one hundred
+square miles in extent. On them hundreds of thousands of cattle, sheep
+and horses are herded. "It is not improbable that there are more cattle
+in the pampas and llanos of South America than in all the rest of the
+world." [Footnote: Dr. Hartwig in "Argentina," 1910] An estancia is
+almost invariably called by the name of some saint, as are the
+different fields belonging to it. "Holy Mary field" and "Saint Joseph
+field" are common names. Notwithstanding the fact that there may be
+thousands of cows on a ranch, the visitor may be unable to get a drop
+of milk to drink. "Cows are not made to milk, but to eat," they say.
+Life on these establishments is rough and the fare generally very
+coarse. Even among the wealthy people I have visited you may sit down
+to dinner with nothing but meat put before you, without a bite of bread
+or any vegetables. All drink water out of an earthenware pitcher of
+peculiar shape, which is the centrepiece of the table.
+
+Around the ranches of the people are many mice, which must be of a
+ferocious nature, for if one is caught in a trap it will be found next
+morning half, if not almost wholly, eaten by its own comrades. Well is
+it called "the cannibal mouse."
+
+In times of drought the heat of the sun dries up all vegetation. The
+least spark of fire then suffices to create a mighty blaze, especially
+if accompanied by the _pampero_ wind, which blows with irresistible
+force in its sweep over hundreds of miles of level ground. The fire,
+gathering strength as it goes, drives all before it, or wraps
+everything in its devouring flames. Casting a lurid light in the
+heavens, towards which rise volumes of smoke, it attracts the attention
+of the native, who lifts his starting eyes towards heaven in a
+speechless prayer to the Holy Virgin. Madly leaping on his fleetest
+horse, without saddle, and often without bridle, he wildly gallops down
+the wind, as the roaring, crackling fire gains upon him. In this mad
+race for life, men, horses, ostriches, deer, bullocks, etc., join,
+striving to excel each other in speed. Strange to say, the horse the
+native rides, cheered on by the touch of his master, is often the first
+to gain the lake or river, where, beneath its waters at least, refuge
+may be found. In their wild stampede, vast herds of cattle trample and
+fall on one another and are drowned. A more complete destruction could
+not overtake the unfortunate traveller than to be caught by this
+remorseless foe, for not even his ashes could be found by mourning
+friends. The ground thus burnt retains its heat for days. I have had
+occasion to cross blackened wastes a week after this most destructive
+force in nature had done its work, and my horse has frequently reared
+in the air at the touch of the hot soil on his hoofs.
+
+The Gaucho has a strange method of fighting these fires. Several mares
+are killed and opened, and they, by means of lassos, are dragged over
+the burning grass.
+
+The immensity of the pampas is so great that one may travel many miles
+without sighting a single tree or human habitation. The weary traveller
+finds his only shade from the sun's pitiless rays under the broad brim
+of his sombrero. At times, with ears forward and extended nostrils, the
+horse gazes intently at the rippling blue waters of the _mirage_, that
+most tantalizingly deceptive phenomenon of nature. May it never be the
+lot of my reader to be misled by the illusive mirage as I have been.
+How could I mistake vapor for clear, gurgling water? Yet, how many
+times was I here deceived! Visions of great lakes and broad rivers rose
+up before me, lapping emerald green shores, where I could cool my
+parched tongue and lave in their crystal depths; yet to-day those
+waters are as far off as ever, and exist only in my hopes of Paradise.
+Not until I stand by the "River of Life" shall I behold the reality.
+
+The inhabitant of these treeless, trackless solitudes, which, with
+their waving grass, remind one of the bosom of the ocean, develops a
+keen sight Where the stranger, after intently gazing, descries nothing,
+he will not only inform him that animals are in sight, but will,
+moreover, tell him what they are. I am blest with a very clear vision,
+but even when, after standing on my horse's back, I have made out
+nothing, the Gaucho could tell me that over there was a drove of
+cattle, a herd of deer, a troop of horses, or a house.
+
+It is estimated that there are two hundred and forty millions of acres
+of wheat land in the Argentine, and of late years the prairie has
+developed into one of the largest wheat-producing countries in the
+world, and yet only one per cent, of its cultivable area is so far
+occupied.
+
+The Gaucho is no farmer, and all his land is given up to cattle
+grazing, so _chacras_ are worked generally by foreign settlers. The
+province of Entre Rios has been settled largely by Swiss and Italian
+farmers from the Piedmont Hills. Baron Hirsch has also planted a colony
+of Russian Jews there, and provided them with farm implements. Wheat,
+corn, and linseed are the principal crops, but sweet potatoes, tobacco,
+and fruit trees do well in this virgin ground, fertilized by the dead
+animals of centuries. The soil is rich, and two or three crops can
+often be harvested in a year.
+
+No other part of the world has in recent years suffered from such a
+plague of locusts as the agricultural districts of Argentina. They come
+from the north in clouds that sometimes darken the sun. Some of the
+swarms have been estimated to be sixty miles long and from twelve to
+fifteen miles wide. Fields which in the morning stand high with waving
+corn, are by evening only comparable to ploughed or burnt lands. Even
+the roots are eaten up.
+
+In 1907 the Argentine Government organized a bureau for the destruction
+of locusts, and in 1908 $4,500,000 was placed by Congress at the
+disposal of this commission. An organized service, embracing thousands
+of men, is in readiness at any moment to send a force to any place
+where danger is reported. Railway trains have been repeatedly stopped,
+and literally many tons of them have had to be taken off the track. A
+fine of $100 is imposed upon any settler failing to report the presence
+of locust swarms or hopper eggs on his land. Various means are adopted
+by the land-owner to save what he can from the voracious insects. Men,
+women and children mount their horses and drive flocks of sheep to and
+fro over the ground to kill them. A squatter with whom I stayed got his
+laborers to gallop a troop of mares furiously around his garden to keep
+them from settling there. All, however, seemed useless. About midsummer
+the locust lays its eggs under an inch or two of soil. Each female will
+drop from thirty to fifty eggs, all at the same time, in a mass
+resembling a head of wheat. As many as 50,000 eggs have been counted in
+a space less than three and a half feet square.
+
+During my sojourn in Entre Rios, the province where this insect seems
+to come in greatest numbers, a law was passed that every man over the
+age of fourteen years, whether native or foreigner, rich or poor, was
+compelled to dig out and carry to Government depots, four pounds weight
+of locusts' eggs. It was supposed that this energetic measure would
+lessen their numbers. Many tons were collected and burnt, but, I assure
+the reader, no appreciable difference whatever was made in their
+legions. The young _jumpers_ came, eating all before them, and their
+numbers seemed infinite. Men dug trenches, kindled fires, and burned
+millions of them. Ditches two yards wide and deep and two hundred feet
+long were completely filled up by these living waves. But all efforts
+were unavailing--the earth remained covered. A Waldensian acquaintance
+suffered for several years from this fearful plague. Some seasons he
+was not even able to get back so much as the seed he planted. If the
+locusts passed him, it so happened that the _pampero_ wind blew with
+such terrific force that we have looked in vain even for the straw. The
+latter was actually torn up by the roots and whirled away, none knew
+whither. At other times large hailstones, for which the country is
+noted, have destroyed everything, or tens of thousands of green
+paroquets have done their destructive work. When a five-months' drought
+was parching everything, I have heard him reverently pray that God
+would spare him wheat sufficient to feed his family. This food God gave
+him, and he thankfully invited me to share it. I rejoice in being able
+to say that he afterwards became rich, and had his favorite saying,
+_"Dios no me olvidae"_ (God will not forget me), abundantly verified.
+
+Notwithstanding natural drawbacks, which every country has, Argentina
+can claim to have gone forward as no other country has during the last
+ten years. There are many estates worth more than a million dollars.
+Dr. W. A. Hirot, in "Argentina," says: "Argentina has more live stock
+than any other country of the world. Ten million hides have been
+exported in one year, and it is not improbable that there are more
+cattle in South America than there are in all the rest of the world
+combined." Belgium has 220 people occupying the space one person has in
+Argentina, so who can prophesy as to its future?
+
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+BOLIVIA
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ Have you gazed on naked grandeur where there's nothing
+ else to gaze on,
+ Set pieces and drop curtain scenes galore,
+ Big mountains heaved to heaven, which the blinding sunsets
+ blazon,
+ Black canyons where the rapids rip and roar?
+
+ --_Robert W. Service._
+
+
+
+
+BOLIVIA
+
+Bolivia, having no sea-coast, has been termed the Hermit Republic of
+South America. Its territory is over 600,000 square miles in extent,
+and within its bounds Nature displays almost every possible panorama,
+and all climates. There are burning plains, the home of the emu,
+armadillos, and ants; sandy deserts, where the wind drifts the sand
+like snow, piling it up in ever-shifting hills about thirty feet in
+height. Bolivia, shut in geographically and politically, is a world in
+itself--a world of variety, in scenery, climate, products and people.
+Its capital city, La Paz, has a population of 70,000, but the vast
+interior is almost uninhabited. In the number of inhabitants to the
+square mile, Bolivia ranks the lowest of all the nations of the earth.
+
+Perhaps no country of the world has been, and is, so rich in precious
+metals as Bolivia. "The mines of Potosi alone have furnished the world
+over $1,500,000,000 worth of silver since the Spaniards first took
+possession of them." [Footnote: "Protestant Missions in South America."]
+
+Bolivia can lay claim to the most wonderful body of water in the
+world--Lake Titicaca. This lake, nearly two and a half miles high in
+the air, is literally in the clouds. "Its lonely waters have no outlet
+to the sea, but are guarded on their southern shores by gigantic ruins
+of a prehistoric empire--palaces, temples, and fortresses--silent,
+mysterious monuments of a long-lost golden age." Some of the largest
+and most remarkable ruins of the world are found on the shores of Lake
+Titicaca, and as this was the centre of the great Incan Dynasty, that
+remarkable people have also left wonderful remains, to build which
+stones thirty-eight feet long, eighteen feet wide, and six feet thick,
+were quarried, carried and elevated. The Temple of the Sun. the most
+sacred edifice of the Incas, was one of the richest buildings the sun
+has ever shone upon, and it was itself a mine of wealth. From this one
+temple, Pizarro, the Spanish conqueror, took 24,000 pounds of gold and
+82,000 pounds of silver. "Ninety million dollars' worth of precious
+metals was torn from Inca temples alone." The old monarch of the
+country, Atahuallpa, gave Pizarro twenty-two million dollars in gold to
+buy back his country and his liberty from the Spaniards, but their
+first act on receiving the vast ransom was to march him after a
+crucifix at the head of a procession, and, because he refused to become
+a Roman Catholic, put him to death. Perhaps never in the world's
+history was there a baser act of perfidy, but this was urged by the
+soldier-priest of the conquerors, Father Valverde, who himself signed
+the King's death-warrant. This priest was afterwards made Bishop of
+Atahuallpa's capital.
+
+Surely no country of the world has had a darker or a sadder history
+than this land of the Incas. The Spaniards arrived when the "Children
+of the Sun" were at the height of their prosperity. "The affair of
+reducing the country was committed to the hands of irresponsible
+individuals, soldiers of fortune, desperate adventurers who entered on
+conquest as a game which they had to play in the most unscrupulous
+manner, with little care but to win it. The lands, and the persons as
+well, of the conquered races were parcelled out and appropriated by the
+victors as the legitimate spoils of victory. Every day outrages were
+perpetrated, at the contemplation of which humanity shudders. They
+suffered the provident arrangements of the Incas to fall into decay.
+The poor Indian, without food, now wandered half-starved and naked over
+the plateau. Even those who aided the Spaniards fared no better, and
+many an Inca noble roamed a mendicant over the fields where he once
+held rule; and if driven, perchance, by his necessities to purloin
+something from the superfluity of his conquerors, he expiated it by a
+miserable death." [Footnote: Prescott's "Conquest of Peru."]
+
+Charles Kingsley says there were "cruelties and miseries unexampled in
+the history of Christendom, or perhaps on earth, save in the conquests
+of Sennacherib and Zinghis-Khan." Millions perished at the forced labor
+of the mines, The Incan Empire had, it is calculated, a population of
+twenty millions at the arrival of the Spaniards, In two centuries the
+population fell to four millions.
+
+When the groans of these beasts of burden reached the ears of the good
+(?) Queen Isabel of Spain, she enacted a law that throughout her new
+dominions no Indian, man or woman, should be compelled to carry more
+than three hundred pounds' weight at one load! Is it cause for wonder
+that the poor, down-trodden natives, seeing the flaunting flag of
+Spain, with its stripe of yellow between stripes of red, should regard
+it as representing a river of gold between two rivers of blood?
+
+"Not infrequently," said a reliable witness, "I have seen the
+Spaniards, long after the Conquest, amuse themselves by hunting down
+the natives with blood hounds, for mere sport, or in order to train
+their dogs to the game. The most unbounded scope was given to
+licentiousness. The young maiden was torn remorselessly from the arms
+of her family to gratify the passion of her brutal conqueror. The
+sacred houses of the Virgins of the Sun were broken open and violated,
+and the cavalier swelled his harem with a troop of Indian girls, making
+it seem that the crescent would have been a more fitting emblem for his
+banner than the immaculate cross."
+
+With the inexorable conqueror came the more inexorable priest.
+"Attendance at Roman Catholic worship was made compulsory. Men and
+women with small children were compelled to journey as much as
+thirty-six miles to attend mass. Absentees were punished, therefore the
+Indian feared to disobey." [Footnote: Neely, "Spanish America."]
+
+As is well known, the ancient inhabitants worshipped the sun and the
+moon. The Spanish priest, in order to gain proselytes with greater
+facility, did not forbid this worship, but placed the crucifix between
+the two. Where the Inca suns and moons were of solid gold and silver,
+they were soon replaced by painted wooden ones. The crucifix, with sun
+and moon images on each side, is common all over Bolivia to-day.
+
+Now, four hundred years later, see the Indian under priestly rule. The
+following is taken from an official report of the Governor of
+Chimborazo: "The religious festivals that the Indians celebrate--not of
+their own will, but by the inexorable will of the priest--are, through
+the manner in which they are kept, worse than those described to us of
+the times of Paganism, and of monstrous consequences to morality and
+the national welfare ... they may be reckoned as a barbarous mixture of
+idolatry and superstition, sustained by infamous avarice. The Indian
+who is chosen to make a feast either has to use up in it his little
+savings, leaving his family submerged in misery, or he has to rob in
+order to invest the products of his crime in paying the fees to the
+priest and for church ceremonies. These are simply brutal orgies that
+last many days, with a numerous attendance, and in which all manner of
+crimes and vices have free license."
+
+"For the idols of the aborigines were substituted the images of the
+Virgin Mary and the Roman saints. The Indians gave up their old idols,
+but they went on with their image-worship. Image-worship is idolatry,
+whether in India, Africa, or anywhere else, and the worship of Roman
+images is essentially idolatry as much as the worship of any other kind
+of images. Romanism substituted for one set of idols another set. So
+the Indians who were idolaters continued to be idolaters, only the new
+idols had other names and, possibly, were a little better-looking."
+[Footnote: Neely, "South America."]
+
+What has Romanism done for the Indians of Bolivia in its four hundred
+years of rule? Compare the people of that peaceful, law-keeping dynasty
+which the Spaniards found with the Bolivian Indian of to-day! Now the
+traveller can report: "The Indians are killing the whites wherever they
+find them, and practising great cruelties, having bored holes in the
+heads of their victims and sucked the brains out while they were yet
+alive. Sixteen whites are said to have been killed in this way! These
+same Indians are those who have been Christianized by the Roman priests
+for the past three centuries, but such cruelties as they have been
+practising show that as yet not a ray of Christ's love has entered
+their darkened minds." How can the priest teach what he is himself
+ignorant of?
+
+Where the Indian has been civilized, as well as Romanized, Mr. Milne,
+of the American Bible Society, could write:
+
+"Since the Spanish conquest the progress of the Indians has been in the
+line of deterioration and moral degradation. They are oppressed by the
+Romish clergy, who can never drain contributions enough out of them,
+and who make the children render service to pay for masses for deceased
+parents and relatives. Tears came to our eyes as Mr. Penzotti and I
+watched them practising their heathen rites in the streets of La Paz,
+the chief city of Bolivia. They differ from the other Indians in that
+they are domesticated, but _they know no more of the Gospel than they
+did under the rule of the Incas."_
+
+What is to be the future of these natives? Shall they disappear from
+the stage of the world's history like so many other aborigines, victims
+of civilization, or will a hand yet be stretched out to help them?
+Civilization, after all, is not entirely made up of greed and lust, but
+in it there is righteousness and truth. May the day soon dawn when some
+of the latter may be extended to them ere they take the long, dark
+trail after their fathers, and have hurled the last malediction at
+their cursed white oppressors!
+
+ "We suffer yet a little space
+ Until we pass away,
+ The relics of an ancient race
+ That ne'er has had its day."
+
+For four hundred years Bolivia has thus been held in chains by Romish
+priestcraft. Since its Incan rulers were massacred, its civilization
+has been of the lowest. Buildings, irrigation dams, etc., were suffered
+to fall into disrepair, and the country went back to pre-Incan days.
+
+The first Christian missionaries to enter the country were imprisoned
+and murdered. Now "the morning light is breaking." A law has been
+passed granting liberty of worship.
+
+Bolivia, with its vast natural riches, must come to the forefront, and
+already strides are being taken forward. She can export over five
+million dollars' worth of rubber in one year, and is now spending more
+than fifty million dollars on railways. So Bolivia is a country of the
+past and the future.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+JOURNEY TO "THE UNEXPLORED LAKE."
+
+
+Since the days when Pizarro's adventurers discovered the hitherto
+undreamed-of splendor of the Inca Dynasty, Bolivia has been a land of
+surprises and romantic discovery. Strange to say, even yet much of the
+eastern portion of this great republic remains practically unexplored.
+The following account of exploration in those regions, left for men of
+the twentieth century, may not, I am persuaded, be without interest to
+the general reader. Bolivia has for many years been seriously
+handicapped through having no adequate water outlet to the sea, and the
+immense resources of wealth she undoubtedly possesses have, for this
+reason, been suffered to go, in a measure, unworked. Now, however, in
+the onward progress of nations, Bolivia has stepped forward. In the
+year 1900, the Government of that country despatched an expedition to
+locate and explore Lake Gaiba, a large sheet of water said to exist in
+the far interior of Bolivia and Brazil, on the line dividing the two
+republics. The expedition staff consisted of Captain Bolland, an
+Englishman; M. Barbiere, a Frenchman; Dr. Perez, Bolivian; M. Gerard
+D'Avezsac, French artist and hunter, and the writer of these pages. The
+crew of ten men was made up of Paraguayans and Argentines, white men
+and colored, one Bolivian, one Italian, and one Brazilian. Strange to
+relate, there was no Scotchman, even the ship's engineer being French.
+Perhaps the missing Scotch engineer was on his way to the Pole, in
+order to be found sitting there on its discovery by----(?)
+
+The object of this costly journey was to ascend the rivers La Plata,
+Paraguay and Alto Paraguay, and see if it were possible to establish a
+port and town in Bolivian territory on the shores of the lake. After
+some months of untiring energy and perseverance, there was discovered
+for Bolivia a fine port, with depth of water for any ordinary river
+steamer, which will now be known to the world as _Puerto Quijarro_. A
+direct fluvial route, therefore, exists between the Atlantic and this
+far inland point.
+
+The expedition left Buenos Ayres, the capital of the Argentine
+Republic. Sailing up the western bank of the River of Silver, we
+entered the Parana River, and after an uneventful voyage of six days,
+passed the mouth of the River of Gold, and turned into the Paraguay.
+
+Three hundred miles up the Higher Parana, a mighty stream flowing from
+the northeast, which we here left to our right, are the Falls of
+Yguasu. These falls have been seen by few white men. The land on each
+side of the river is infested by the Bugres Indians, a tribe of
+cannibals, of excessively ferocious nature. The Falls of Big Water must
+be the largest in the world--and the writer is well acquainted with
+Niagara.
+
+The river, over two and a half miles wide, containing almost as much
+water as all the rivers of Europe together, rushes between
+perpendicular cliffs. With a current of forty miles an hour, and a
+volume of water that cannot be less than a million tons a minute, the
+mighty torrent rushes with indescribable fury against a rocky island,
+which separates it into two branches, so that the total width is about
+two miles and a half. The Brazilian arm of the river forms a tremendous
+horseshoe here, and plunges with a deafening roar into the abyss two
+hundred and thirteen feet below. The Argentine branch spreads out in a
+sort of amphitheatre form, and finishes with one grand leap into the
+jagged rocks, more than two hundred and twenty-nine feet below, making
+the very earth vibrate, while spray, rising in columns, is visible
+several miles distant.
+
+"Below the island the two arms unite and flow on into the Parana River.
+From the Brazilian bank the spectator, at a height of two hundred and
+eighty feet, gazes out over two and a half miles of some of the wildest
+and most fantastic water scenery he can ever hope to see. Waters
+stream, seethe, leap, bound, froth and foam, 'throwing the sweat of
+their agony high in the air, and, writhing, twisting, screaming and
+moaning, bear off to the Parana.' Under the blue vault of the sky, this
+sea of foam, of pearls, of iridescent dust, bathes the great background
+in a shower of beauty that all the more adds to the riot of tropical
+hues already there. When a high wind is blowing, the roar of the
+cataract can be heard nearly twenty miles away. A rough estimate of the
+horse-power represented by the falls is fourteen million."
+
+Proceeding up the Paraguay River, we arrived at Asuncion, the capital
+of Paraguay, and anchored in a beautiful bay of the river, opposite the
+city. As many necessary preparations had still to be made, the
+expedition was detained in Asuncion for fifteen days, after which we
+boarded the S.S. _Leda_, for the second stage of our journey.
+
+Steaming up the Alto Paraguay, we passed the orange groves of that
+sunny land on the right bank of the river, and on the left saw the
+encampments of the Tobas Indians, The dwellings of these people are
+only a few branches of trees stuck in the ground. Further on, we saw
+the Chamococos Indians, a fine muscular race of men and women, who
+cover their bronze-colored bodies with the oil of the alligator, and
+think a covering half the size of a pocket-handkerchief quite
+sufficient to hide their nakedness. As we stayed to take in wood, I
+tried to photograph some of these, our brothers and sisters, but the
+camera was nothing but an object of dread to them. One old woman, with
+her long, black, oily hair streaming in the breeze, almost withered me
+with her flashing eyes and barbarous language, until I blushed as does
+a schoolboy when caught in the act of stealing apples. Nevertheless, I
+got her photo.
+
+The Pilcomayo, which empties its waters into the Paraguay, is one of
+the most mysterious of rivers. Rising in Bolivia, its course can be
+traced down for some considerable distance, when it loses itself in the
+arid wastes, or, as some maintain, flows underground. Its source and
+mouth are known, but for many miles of its passage it is invisible.
+Numerous attempts to solve its secrets have been made. They have almost
+invariably ended disastrously. The Spanish traveller, Ibarete, set out
+with high hopes to travel along its banks, but he and seventeen men
+perished in the attempt. Two half-famished, prematurely-old, broken men
+were all that returned from the unknown wilds. The Pilcomayo, which has
+proved itself the river of death to so many brave men, remains to this
+day unexplored. The Indians inhabiting these regions are savage in the
+extreme, and the French explorer, Creveaux, found them inhuman enough
+to leave him and most of his party to die of hunger. The Tobas and the
+Angaitaes tribes are personally known to me, and I speak from
+experience when I say that more cruel men I have never met. The
+Argentine Government, after twenty years of warfare with them, was
+compelled, in 1900, to withdraw the troops from their outposts and
+leave the savages in undisputed possession. If the following was the
+type of civilization offered them, then they are better left to
+themselves: "Two hundred Indians who have been made prisoners are
+_compelled to be baptized_. The ceremony takes place in the presence of
+the Governor and officials of the district, and a great crowd of
+spectators. The Indians kneel between two rows of soldiers, an officer
+with drawn sword compels each in turn to open his mouth, into which a
+second officer throws a handful of salt, amid general laughter at the
+wry faces of the Indians. Then a Franciscan padre comes with a pail of
+water and besprinkles the prisoners. They are then commanded to rise,
+and each receives a piece of paper inscribed with his new name, a
+scapulary, and--_a glass of rum_" [Footnote: Report of British and
+Foreign Bible Society, 1900.] What countries these for missionary
+enterprise!
+
+After sailing for eighteen days up the river, we transhipped into a
+smaller steamer going to Bolivia. Sailing up the bay, you pass, on the
+south shore, a small Brazilian customs house, which consists of a
+square roof of zinc, without walls, supported on four posts, standing
+about two meters from the ground. A Brazilian, clothed only in his
+black skin, came down the house ladder and stared at us as we passed.
+The compliment was returned, although we had become somewhat accustomed
+to that style of dress--or undress. A little farther up the bay, a
+white stone shone out in the sunlight, marking the Bolivian boundary,
+and giving the name of Piedra Blanca to the village. This landmark is
+shaded by a giant tamarind tree, and numerous barrel trees, or _palo
+boracho_, grow in the vicinity. In my many wanderings in tropical
+America, I have seen numerous strange trees, but these are
+extraordinarily so. The trunk comes out of the ground with a small
+circumference, then gradually widens out to the proportions of an
+enormous barrel, and at the top closes up to the two-foot circumference
+again. Two branches, like giant arms spread themselves out in a most
+weird-looking manner on the top of all. About five leaves grow on each
+bough, and, instinctively, you consider them the fingers of the arms.
+
+It was only three leagues to the Bolivian town of Piedra Blanca, but
+the "Bahia do Marengo" took three hours to steam the short distance,
+for five times we had to stop on the way, owing to the bearings
+becoming heated. These the Brazilian engineer cooled with pails of
+water.
+
+In the beautiful Bay of Caceres, much of which was grown over with
+lotus and Victoria Regia, we finally anchored. This Bolivian village is
+about eighteen days' sail up the river from Montevideo on the seacoast.
+
+Chartering the "General Pando," a steamer of 25 h.p. and 70 ft. long,
+we there completed our preparations, and finally steamed away up the
+Alto Paraguay, proudly flying the Bolivian flag of red, yellow, and
+green. As a correct plan of the river had to be drawn, the steamer only
+travelled by day, when we were able to admire the grandeur of the
+scenery, which daily grew wilder as the mountains vied with each other
+in lifting their rugged peaks toward heaven. From time to time we
+passed one of the numerous islands the Paraguay is noted for. These are
+clothed with such luxuriant vegetation that nothing less than an army
+of men with axes could penetrate them. The land is one great, wild,
+untidy, luxuriant hot-house, "built by nature for herself." The puma,
+jaguar and wildcat are here at home, besides the anaconda and boa
+constrictor, which grow to enormous lengths. The Yaci Reta, or Island
+of the Moon, is the ideal haunt of the jaguar, and as we passed it a
+pair of those royal beasts were playing on the shore like two enormous
+cats. As they caught sight of us, one leapt into the mangrove swamp,
+out of sight, and the other took a plunge into the river, only to rise
+a few yards distant and receive an explosive bullet in his head. The
+mangrove tree, with its twisting limbs and bright green foliage, grows
+in the warm water and foetid mud of tropical countries. It is a type of
+death, for pestilence hangs round it like a cloud. At early morning
+this cloud is a very visible one. The peculiarity of the tree is that
+its hanging branches themselves take root, and, nourished by such
+putrid exhalations, it quickly spreads.
+
+There were also many floating islands of fantastic shape, on which
+birds rested in graceful pose. We saw the _garza blanca_, the aigrets
+of which are esteemed by royalty and commoner alike, along with other
+birds new and strange. To several on board who had looked for years on
+nothing but the flat Argentine pampas, this change of scenery was most
+exhilarating, and when one morning the sun rose behind the "Golden
+Mountains," and illuminated peak after peak, the effect was glorious.
+So startlingly grand were some of the colors that our artist more than
+once said he dare not paint them, as the world would think that his
+coloring was not true to nature.
+
+Many were the strange sights we saw on the shore. Once we were amused
+at the ludicrous spectacle of a large bird of the stork family, which
+had built its nest in a tree almost overhanging the river. The nest was
+a collection of reeds and feathers, having two holes in the bottom,
+through which the legs of the bird were hanging. The feet, suspended
+quite a yard below the nest, made one wonder how the bird could rise
+from its sitting position.
+
+Every sight the traveller sees, however, is not so amusing. As darkness
+creeps over earth and sky, and the pale moonbeams shed a fitful light,
+it is most pathetic to see on the shore the dead trunk and limbs of a
+tree, in the branches of which has been constructed a rude platform, on
+which some dark-minded Indian has reverently lifted the dead body of
+his comrade. The night wind, stirring the dry bones and whistling
+through the empty skull, makes weird music!
+
+The banks of the stream had gradually come nearer and nearer to us, and
+the great river, stretching one hundred and fifty miles in width where
+it pours its volume of millions of tons of water into the sea at
+Montevideo, was here a silver ribbon, not half a mile across.
+
+Far be it from me to convey the idea that life in those latitudes is
+Eden. The mosquitos and other insects almost drive one mad. The country
+may truly be called a naturalists' paradise, for butterflies, beetles,
+and creeping things are multitudinous, but the climate, with its damp,
+sickly heat, is wholly unsuited to the Anglo-Saxon. Day after day the
+sun in all his remorseless strength blazes upon the earth, is if
+desirous of setting the whole world on fire. The thermometer in the
+shade registered 110, 112 and 114 degrees Fahrenheit, and on one or two
+memorable days 118 degrees. The heat in our little saloon at times rose
+as high as 130 degrees, and the perspiration poured down in streams on
+our almost naked bodies. We seemed to be running right into the brazen
+sun itself.
+
+One morning the man on the look-out descried deer on the starboard bow,
+and arms were quickly brought out, ready for use. Our French hunter was
+just taking aim when it struck me that the deer moved in a strange way.
+I immediately asked him to desist. Those dark forms in the long grass
+seemed, to my somewhat trained eyes, naked Indians, and as we drew
+nearer to them so it proved, and the man was thankful he had withheld
+his fire.
+
+After steaming for some distance up the river several dug-outs, filled
+with Guatos Indians, paddled alongside us. An early traveller in those
+head-waters wrotes of these: "Some of the smaller tribes were but a
+little removed from the wild brutes of their own jungles. The lowest in
+the scale, perhaps, were the Guatos, who dwell to the north of the Rio
+Apa. This tribe consisted of less than one hundred persons, and they
+were as unapproachable as wild beasts. No other person, Indian or
+foreigner, could ever come near but they would fly and hide in
+impenetrable jungles. They had no written language of their own, and
+lived like unreasoning animals, without laws or religion."
+
+The Guato Indian seems now to be a tame and inoffensive creature, but
+well able to strike a bargain in the sale of his dug-out canoes,
+home-made guitars and other curios. In the wrobbling canoe they are
+very dexterous, as also in the use of their long bows and arrows; the
+latter have points of sharpened bone. When hungry, they hunt or fish.
+When thirsty, they drink from the river; and if they wish clothing,
+wild cotton grows in abundance.
+
+These Indians, living, as they do, along the banks of the river and
+streams, have recently been frequently visited by the white man on his
+passage along those natural highways. It is, therefore superfluous for
+me to add that they are now correspondingly demoralized. It is a most
+humiliating fact that just in proportion as the paleface advances into
+lands hitherto given up to the Indian so those races sink. This
+degeneration showed itself strikingly among the Guatos in their
+inordinate desire for _cachaca_, or "firewater." Although extremely
+cautious and wary in their exchanges to us, refusing to barter a bow
+and arrows for a shirt, yet, for a bottle of cachaca, they would gladly
+have given even one of their canoes. These _ketchiveyos_, twenty or
+twenty-five feet long by about twenty inches wide, they hollow from the
+trunk of the cedar, or _lapacho_ tree. This is done with great labor
+and skill; yet, as I have said, they were boisterously eager to
+exchange this week's work for that which they knew would lead them to
+fight and kill one another.
+
+As a mark of special favor, the chief invited me to their little
+village, a few miles distant. Stepping into one of their canoes--a
+large, very narrow boat, made of one tree-trunk hollowed out by fire--I
+was quickly paddled by three naked Indians up a narrow creek, which was
+almost covered with lotus. The savages, standing in the canoe, worked
+the paddles with a grace and elegance which the civilized man would
+fail to acquire, and the narrow craft shot through the water at great
+speed. The chief sat in silence at the stern. I occupied a palm-fibre
+mat spread for me amidships. The very few words of Portuguese my
+companions spoke or understood rendered conversation difficult, so the
+stillness was broken only by the gentle splash of the paddles. On each
+side the dense forest seemed absolutely impenetrable, but we at last
+arrived at an opening. As we drew ashore I noticed that an Indian path
+led directly inland.
+
+Leaving our dug-out moored with a fibre rope to a large mangrove tree,
+we started to thread our way through the forest, and finally reached a
+clearing. Here we came upon a crowd of almost naked and extremely
+dejected-looking women. Many of these, catching sight of me, sped into
+the jungle like frightened deer. The chief's wife, however, at a word
+from him, received me kindly, and after accepting a brass necklace with
+evident pleasure, showed herself very affable. Poor lost Guatos! Their
+dejected countenances, miserable grass huts, alive with vermin, and
+their extreme poverty, were most touching. Inhabiting, as they do, one
+of the hottest and dampest places on the earth's surface, where
+mosquitos are numberless, the wonder is that they exist at all. Truly,
+man is a strange being, who can adapt himself to equatorial heat or
+polar frigidity. The Guatos' chief business in life seemed to consist
+in sitting on fibre mats spread on the ground, and driving away the
+bloodthirsty mosquitos from their bare backs. For this they use a fan
+of their own manufacture, made from wild cotton, which there seems to
+abound. Writing of mosquitos, let me say these Indian specimens were a
+terror to us all. What numbers we killed! I could write this account in
+their blood. It was _my_ blood, though--before they got it! Men who
+hunt the tiger in cool bravery boiled with indignation before these
+awful pests, which stabbed and stung with marvellous persistency, and
+disturbed
+ the solitude of nature with their incessant humming. I write the
+word _incessant_ advisedly, for I learned that there are several kinds
+of mosquitos. Some work by day and others by night. Naturalists tell us
+that only the female mosquito bites. Did they take a particular liking
+to us because we were all males?
+
+Some of the Indians paint their naked bodies in squares, generally with
+red and black pigment. Their huts were in some cases large, but very
+poorly constructed. When any members of the tribe are taken sick they
+are supposed to be "possessed" by a stronger evil power, and the
+sickness is "starved out." When the malady flies away the life
+generally accompanies it. The dead are buried under the earth inside
+the huts, and in some of the dwellings graves are quite numerous. This
+custom of interior burial has probably been adopted because the wild
+animals of the forest would otherwise eat the corpse. Horrible to
+relate, their own half-wild dogs sometimes devour the dead, though an
+older member of the tribe is generally left home to mount guard.
+
+Seeing by the numerous gourds scattered around that they were drinking
+_chicha_, I solicited some, being anxious to taste the beverage which
+had been used so many centuries before by the old Incas. The wife of
+the chief immediately tore off a branch of the feather palm growing
+beside her, and, certainly within a minute, made a basket, into which
+she placed a small gourd. Going to the other side of the clearing, she
+commenced, with the agility of a monkey, to ascend a long sapling which
+had been laid in a slanting position against a tall palm tree. The
+long, graceful leaves of this cabbage palm had been torn open, and the
+heart thus left to ferment. From the hollow cabbage the woman filled
+the gourd, and lowered it to me by a fibre rope. The liquid I found to
+be thick and milky, and the taste not unlike cider.
+
+Prescott tells us that Atahuallpa, the Peruvian monarch, came to see
+the conqueror, Pizarro, "quaffing chicha from golden goblets borne by
+his attendants." [Footnote: Este Embajador traia servicio de Senor, i
+cinco o seis Vasos de Oro fino, con que bebia, i con ellos daba a beber
+a los Espanoles de la chicha que traia."--Xerez.] Golden goblets did
+not mean much to King Atahuallpa, however, for his palace of five
+hundred different apartments is said to have been tiled with beaten
+gold.
+
+In these Guato Indians I observed a marked difference to any others I
+had visited, in that they permitted the hair to grow on their faces.
+The chief was of quite patriarchal aspect, with full beard and mild,
+intelligent-looking eyes. The savages inhabiting the Chaco consider
+this custom extremely "dirty."
+
+Before leaving these people I procured some of their bows and arrows,
+and also several cleverly woven palm mats and cotton fans.
+
+Some liquor our cook gave away had been taken out by the braves to
+their women in another encampment. These spirits had so inflamed the
+otherwise retiring, modest females that they, with the men, returned to
+the steamer, clamoring for more. All the stores, along with some
+liquors we carried, were under my care, and I kept them securely locked
+up, but in my absence at the Indian camp the store-room had been broken
+open, and our men and the Indians--men and women--had drunk long and
+deep. A scene like Bedlam, or Dante's "Inferno," was taking place when
+I returned. Willing as they were to listen to my counsel and admit that
+I was certainly a great white teacher, with superior wisdom, on this
+love for liquor and its debasing consequences they would hear no words.
+The women and girls, like the men, would clamor for the raw alcohol,
+and gulp it down in long draughts. When ardent spirits are more sought
+after by women and girls than are beads and looking-glasses it surely
+shows a terribly depraved taste. Even the chattering monkeys in the
+trees overhead would spurn the poison and eagerly clutch the bright
+trinket. Perhaps the looking-glasses I gave the poor females would,
+after the orgies were over, serve to show them that their beauty was
+not increased by this beastly carousal, and thus be a means of
+blessing. It may be asked, Can the savage be possessed of pride and of
+self-esteem? I unhesitatingly answer yes, as I have had abundant
+opportunity of seeing. They will strut with peacock pride when wearing
+a specially gaudy-colored headdress, although that may be their only
+article of attire.
+
+Having on board far more salt than we ourselves needed, I was enabled
+to generously distribute much of that invaluable commodity among them.
+That also, working in a different way, might be a means of restoring
+them to a normal soundness of mind after we left.
+
+Poor lost creatures! For this draught of the white man's poison, far
+more terrible to them than the deadly nightshade of their forests, more
+dangerous than the venom of the loathsome serpent gliding across their
+path, they are willing to sell body or soul. Soul, did I say? They have
+never heard of that. To them, so far as I could ascertain, a future
+life is unknown. The explorer has penetrated some little way into their
+dark forests in search of rubber, or anything else which it would pay
+to exploit, but the missionary of the Cross has never sought to
+illumine their darker minds. They live their little day and go out into
+the unknown unconscious of the fact that One called Jesus, who was the
+Incarnate God, died to redeem them. As a traveller, I have often
+wondered why men should be willing to pay me hundreds of dollars to
+explore those regions for ultimate worldly gain, and none should ever
+offer to employ me in proclaiming the greatest wonder of all the
+ages--the story of Calvary--for eternal gain. After all, are the
+Indians more blind to the future than we are? Yet, strange to say, we
+profess to believe in the teachings of that One who inculcated the
+practice of laying up treasure in heaven, while they have not even
+heard His name. For love of gain men have been willing to accompany me
+through the most deadly fever-breeding morass, or to brave the poisoned
+arrows of the lynx-eyed Indian, but few have ever offered to go and
+tell of Him whom they profess to serve.
+
+The suffocating atmosphere quite precluded the idea of writing, for a
+pen, dipped in ink, would dry before reaching the paper, and the latter
+be saturated with perspiration in a few seconds; so these observations
+were penned later. So far as I could ascertain, the Romish Church has
+never touched the Guatos, and, notwithstanding all I have said about
+them, I unhesitatingly affirm that it is better so. Geo. R. Witte,
+missionary to Brazil, says: "With one exception, all the priests with
+whom I came in contact (when on a journey through Northern Brazil) were
+immoral, drunken, and ignorant. The tribes who have come under priestly
+care are decidedly inferior in morals, industry, and order to the
+tribes who refuse to have anything to do with the whites. The Charentes
+and Apinages have been, for years, under the care of Catholic
+friars--this is the way I found them: both men and women walk about
+naked."
+
+"We heard not one contradiction of the general testimony that the
+people who were not under the influence of the Roman Catholic Church as
+it is in S. America were better morally than those who were."
+[Footnote: Robert E. Speer, "Missions in South America."]
+
+In Christendom organs peal out the anthems of Divine love, and
+well-dressed worshippers chant in harmonious unison, "Lord, incline our
+hearts to keep Thy law." That law says: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor
+as thyself." To the question: "Who is my neighbor?" the Divine voice
+answers: "A certain man." May he not be one of these neglected Indians?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ARRIVAL AT THE LAKE.
+
+ "It sleeps among a hundred hills
+ Where no man ever trod,
+ And only Nature's music fills
+ The silences of God."
+
+
+After going about two thousand three hundred miles up this serpentine
+river, we discovered the entrance to the lake. Many had been the
+conjectures and counsels of would-be advisers when we started. Some
+said that there was no entrance to the lake from the river; others,
+that there was not sufficient depth of water for the steamer to pass
+through. On our port bow rose frowning rocks of forbidding aspect.
+Drawing nearer, we noticed, with mingled feelings of curiosity and
+wonder, that the face of these rocks was rudely carved by unmistakably
+Indian art. There were portrayed a rising sun, tigers' feet, birds'
+feet, etc. Why were they thus carved? Are those rocks the everlasting
+recorders of some old history--some deed of Indian daring in days of
+old? What these hieroglyphics signify we may never know; the workman is
+gone, and his stone hammer is buried with him. To twentieth century
+civilization his carving tells nothing. No Indians inhabit the shores
+of the lake now, perhaps because of this "writing on the wall."
+
+With the leadsman in his place we slowly and cautiously entered the
+unexplored lake, and thus for the first time in the world's history its
+waters were ploughed by a steamer's keel.
+
+Soon after our arrival the different guards were told off for the
+silent watches. Night shut in upon the lake, and all nature slept. The
+only lights on shore were those of the fire-flies as they danced
+through the myrtle boughs. The stars in the heavens twinkled above us.
+Now and again an alligator thrust his huge, ugly nose out of the water
+and yawned, thus disturbing for the moment its placid surface, which
+the pale moon illuminated with an ethereal light; otherwise stillness
+reigned, or, rather, a calm mysterious peace which was deep and
+profound. Somehow, the feeling crept upon us that we had become
+detached from the world, though yet we lived. Afterwards, when the
+tigers [Footnote: Jaguars are invariably called tigers in South
+America.] on shore had scented our presence, sleep was often broken by
+angry roars coming from the beach, near which we lay at anchor; but
+before dawn our noisy visitors always departed, leaving only their
+footprints. Early next morning, while the green moon was still shining
+(the color of this heavenly orb perplexed us, it was a pure bottle
+green), each one arose to his work. This was no pleasure excursion, and
+duties, many and arduous, lay before the explorers. The hunter sallied
+forth with his gun, and returned laden with pheasant and mountain hen,
+and over his shoulder a fine duck, which, unfortunately, however, had
+already begun to smell--the heat was so intense. In his wanderings he
+had come upon a huge tapir, half eaten by a tiger, and saw footprints
+of that lord of the forest in all directions.
+
+Let me here say, that to our hunter we were indebted for many a good
+dish, and when not after game he lured from the depths of the lake many
+a fine perch or turbot. Fishing is an art in which I am not very
+skilled, but one evening I borrowed his line. After a few moments'
+waiting I had a "bite," and commenced to haul in my catch, which
+struggled, kicked, and pulled until I shouted for help. My fish was one
+of our Paraguayan sailors, who for sport had slipped down into the
+water on the other side of the steamer, and, diving to my cord, had
+grasped it with both hands. Not every fisher catches a man!
+
+Lake Gaiba is a stretch of water ten miles long, with a narrow mouth
+opening into the River Paraguay. The lake is surrounded by mountains,
+clad in luxuriant verdure on the Bolivian side, and standing out in
+bare, rugged lines on the Brazilian side. The boundary of the two
+countries cuts the water into two unequal halves. The most prominent of
+the mountains are now marked upon the exhaustive chart drawn out. Their
+christening has been a tardy one, for who can tell what ages have
+passed since they first came into being? Looking at Mount Ray, the
+highest of these peaks, at sunset, the eye is startled by the strange
+hues and rich tints there reflected. Frequently we asked ourselves: "Is
+that the sun's radiance, or are those rocks the fabled 'Cliffs of Opal'
+men have searched for in vain?" We often sat in a wonder of delight
+gazing at the scene, until the sun sank out of sight, taking the "opal
+cliffs" with it, and leaving us only with the dream.
+
+On the shores of the lake the beach is covered with golden sand and
+studded with innumerable little stones, clear as crystal, which
+scintillate with all the colors of the rainbow. Among these pebbles I
+found several arrowheads of jasper. In other parts the primeval forest
+creeps down to the very margin, and the tree-roots bathe in the warm
+waters. Looking across the quivering heat-haze, the eye rests upon
+palms of many varieties, and giant trees covered with orchids and
+parasites, the sight of which would completely intoxicate the
+horticulturist. Butterflies, gorgeous in all the colors of the rainbow,
+flit from flower to flower; and monkeys, with curiously human faces,
+stare at the stranger from the tree-tops. White cotton trees,
+tamarinds, and strangely shaped fruits grow everywhere, and round about
+all are entwined festoons of trailing creepers, or the loveliest of
+_scarlet_ mistletoe, in which humming-birds build their nests. Blue
+macaws, parrots, and a thousand other birds fly to and fro, and the
+black fire-bird darts across the sky, making lightning with every
+flutter of his wings, which, underneath, are painted a bright, vivid
+red. Serpents of all colors and sizes creep silently in the
+undergrowth, or hang from the branches of the trees, their emerald eyes
+ever on the alert; and the broad-winged eagle soars above all,
+conscious of his majesty.
+
+Here and there the coast is broken by silent streams flowing into the
+lake from the unexplored regions beyond. These _riachos_ are covered
+with lotus leaves and flowers, and also the Victoria Regia in all its
+gorgeous beauty. Papyrusa, reeds and aquatic plants of all descriptions
+grow on the banks of the streams, making a home for the white stork or
+whiter _garza_. Looking into the clear warm waters you see little
+golden and red fishes, and on the bed of the stream shells of pearl.
+
+On the south side of the Gaiba, at the foot of the mountains, the beach
+slopes gently down, and is covered with golden sand, in which crystals
+sparkle as though set in fine gold by some cunning workman. A Workman,
+yes--but not of earth, for nature is here untouched, unspoilt as yet by
+man, and the traveller can look right away from it to its Creator.
+
+During our stay in these regions the courses of several of the larger
+streams were traced for some distance. On the Brazilian side there was
+a river up which we steamed. Not being acquainted with the channel, we
+had the misfortune to stick for two days on a tosca reef, which
+extended a distance of sixty-five feet. [Footnote: The finding of tosca
+at this point confirms the extent inland of the ancient Pampean
+sea.--Colonel Church, in "Proceedings of the Royal Geographical
+Society," January, 1902.] During this time, a curious phenomenon
+presented itself to our notice. In one day we clearly saw the river
+flow for six hours to the north-west, and for another six hours to the
+south-east. This, of course, proved to us that the river's course
+depends on the wind.
+
+On the bank, right in front of where we lay, was a gnarled old tree,
+which seemed to be the home, or parliament house, of all the paroquets
+in the neighborhood. Scores of them kept up an incessant chatter the
+whole time. In the tree were two or three hanging nests, looking like
+large sacks suspended from the boughs. Ten or twenty birds lay in the
+same nest, and you might find in them, at the one time, eggs just laid,
+birds recently hatched, and others ready to fly. Sitting and rearing go
+on concurrently. I procured a tame pair of this lovely breed of
+paroquets from the Guatos. Their prevailing color was emerald green,
+while the wings and tail were made up of tints of orange, scarlet, and
+blue, and around the back of the bird was a golden sheen rarely found
+even in equatorial specimens. Whether the bird is known to
+ornithologists or not I cannot tell. One night our camp was pitched
+near an anthill, inhabited by innumerable millions of those insects.
+None of us slept well, for, although our hammocks were slung, as we
+thought, away from them, they troubled us much. What was my horror next
+morning when the sun, instead of lighting up the rainbow tints of my
+birds, showed only a black moving mass of ants! My parrots had
+literally been eaten alive by them!
+
+But I am wandering on and the ship is still aground on the reef! After
+much hauling and pulling and breaking of cables, she at last was got
+off into deep water. We had not proceeded far, however, when another
+shock made the vessel quiver. Were we aground again? No, the steamer
+had simply pushed a lazy alligator out of its way, and he resented the
+insult by a diabolical scowl at us.
+
+Continuing on our way, we entered another body of hitherto unexplored
+water, a fairy spot, covered with floating islands of lotus, anchored
+with aquatic cables and surrounded by palm groves. On the shallow,
+pebbly shore might be seen, here and there, scarlet flamingoes. These
+beautiful birds stood on one leg, knee deep, dreaming of their
+enchanted home. Truly it is a perfect paradise, but it is almost as
+inaccessible as the Paradise which we all seek. What long-lost
+civilizations have ruled these now deserted solitudes? Penetrate into
+the dark, dank forest, as I have done, and ask the question. The only
+answer is the howling of the monkeys and the screaming of the
+cockatoos. You may start when you distinctly hear a bell tolling, but
+it is no call to worship in some stately old Inca temple with its
+golden sun and silver moon as deities. It is the wonderful bell-bird,
+which can make itself heard three miles away, but it is found only
+where man is not. Ruins of the old Incan and older pre-Incan
+civilizations are come across, covered now with dense jungle, but their
+builders have disappeared. To have left behind them until this day
+ruins which rank with the pyramids for extent, and Karnak for grandeur,
+proves their intelligence.
+
+The peculiar rasping noise you now hear in the undergrowth has nothing
+to do with busy civilization--'tis only the rattlesnake drawing his
+slimy length among the dead leaves or tangled reeds. No, all that is
+past, and this is an old new world indeed, and romance must not rob you
+of self possession, for the rattle means that in the encounter either
+he dies--or you.
+
+Meanwhile the work on shore progressed. Paths were cut in different
+directions and the wonders of nature laid bare. The ring of the axe and
+the sound of falling trees marked the commencement of civilization in
+those far-off regions. Ever and anon a loud report rang out from the
+woods, for it might almost be said that the men worked with the axe in
+one hand and a rifle in the other. Once they started a giant tapir
+taking his afternoon snooze. The beast lazily got up and made off, but
+not before he had turned his piercing eyes on the intruders, as though
+wondering what new animals they were. Surely this was his first sight
+of the "lords of creation," and probably his last, for a bullet quickly
+whizzed after him. Another day the men shot a puma searching for its
+prey, and numerous were the birds, beasts and reptiles that fell before
+our arms. The very venomous _jaracucu_, a snake eight to twelve feet
+long, having a double row of teeth in each jaw, is quite common here.
+
+The forests are full of birds and beasts in infinite variety, as also
+of those creatures which seem neither bird nor beast. There are large
+black howling monkeys, and little black-faced ones with prehensile
+tails, by means of which they swing in mid-air or jump from tree to
+tree in sheer lightness of heart. There is also the sloth, which, as
+its name implies, is painfully deliberate in its motions. Were I a
+Scotchman I should say that "I dinna think that in a' nature there is a
+mair curiouser cratur." Sidney Smith's summary of this strange animal
+is that it moves suspended, rests suspended, sleeps suspended, and
+passes its whole life in suspense. This latter state may also aptly
+describe the condition of the traveller in those regions; for man,
+brave though he may be, does not relish a _vis-a-vis_ with the enormous
+anaconda, also to be seen there at most inconvenient times. I was able
+to procure the skins of two of these giant serpents.
+
+The leader of the "forest gang," a Paraguayan, wore round his neck a
+cotton scapular bought from the priest before he started on the
+expedition. This was supposed to save him from all dangers, seen and
+unseen. Poor man, he was a good Roman Catholic, and often counted his
+beads, but he was an inveterate liar and thief.
+
+Taking into consideration the wild country, and the adventurous mission
+which had brought us together, our men were not at all a bad class. One
+of them, however, a black Brazilian, used to boast at times that _he
+had killed his father while he slept._ In the quiet of the evening hour
+he would relate the story with unnatural gusto.
+
+We generally slept on the deck of the steamer, each under a thin
+netting, while the millions of mosquitos buzzed outside--and inside
+when they could steal a march. Mosquitos? Why _"mosquitos a la Paris"_
+was one of the items on our menu one day. The course was not altogether
+an imaginary one either. Having the good fortune to possess candles, I
+used sometimes to read under my gauzy canopy. This would soon become so
+black with insects of all descriptions as to shut out from my sight the
+outside world.
+
+After carefully surveying the Bolivian shore, we fixed upon a site for
+the future port and town. [Footnote: The latitude of Port Quijarro is
+17 deg. 47' 35", and the longitude, west of Greenwich, 57 deg. 44' 38". Height
+above the sea, 558 feet.] Planting a hugh palm in the ground, with a
+long bamboo nailed to the crown, we then solemnly unfurled the Bolivian
+flag. This had been made expressly for the expedition by the hands of
+Senora Quijarro, wife of the Bolivian minister residing in Buenos
+Ayres. As the sun for the first time shone upon the brilliant colors of
+the flag, nature's stillness was broken by a good old English hurrah,
+while the hunter and several others discharged their arms in the air,
+until the parrots and monkeys in the neighborhood must have wondered
+(or is wondering only reserved for civilized man?) what new thing had
+come to pass. There we, a small company of men in nature's solitudes,
+each signed his name to the _Act of Foundation_ of a town, which in all
+probability will mean a new era for Bolivia. We fully demonstrated the
+fact that Puerto Quijarro will be an ideal port, through which the
+whole commerce of south-eastern Bolivia can to advantage pass.
+
+Next day the Secretary drew out four copies of this _Act_. One was for
+His Excellency General Pando, President of the Bolivian Republic;
+another for the Mayor of Holy Cross, the nearest Bolivian town, 350
+miles distant; a third for Senor Quijarro; while the fourth was
+enclosed in a stone bottle and buried at the foot of the flagstaff,
+there to await the erection of the first building. Thus a commencement
+has been made; the lake and shores are now explored. The work has been
+thoroughly done, and the sweat of the brow was not stinted, for the
+birds of the air hovered around the theodolite, even on the top of the
+highest adjacent mountain. [Footnote: The opening of the country must,
+from its geographical situation, be productive of political
+consequences of the first magnitude to South America.--Report of the
+Royal Geographical Society, January, 1902.]
+
+At last, this work over and an exhaustive chart of the lake drawn up,
+tools and tents collected, specimens of soil, stones, iron, etc.,
+packed and labelled, we prepared for departure.
+
+The weather had been exceptionally warm and we had all suffered much
+from the sun's vertical rays, but towards the end of our stay the heat
+was sweltering--killing! The sun was not confined to one spot in the
+heavens, as in more temperate climes; here he filled all the sky, and
+he scorched us pitilessly! Only at early morning, when the eastern sky
+blushed with warm gold and rose tints, or at even, when the great
+liquid ball of fire dropped behind the distant violet-colored hills,
+could you locate him. Does the Indian worship this awful majesty out of
+fear, as the Chinaman worships the devil?
+
+Next morning dawned still and portentous. Not a zephyr breeze stirred
+the leaves of the trees. The sweltering heat turned to a suffocating
+one. As the morning dragged on we found it more and more difficult to
+breathe; there seemed to be nothing to inflate our lungs. By afternoon
+we stared helplessly at each other and gasped as we lay simmering on
+the deck. Were we to be asphyxiated there after all? I had known as
+many as two hundred a day to die in one South American city from this
+cause. Surely mortal men never went through such awful, airless heat as
+this and lived. We had been permitted to discover the lake, and if the
+world heard of our death, would that flippant remark be used again, as
+with previous explorers, "To make omelettes eggs must be broken"?
+
+However, we were not to _melt_. Towards evening the barometer, which
+had been falling all day, went lower and lower. All creation was still.
+Not a sound broke the awful quiet; only in our ears there seemed to be
+an unnatural singing which was painful, and we closed our eyes in
+weariness, for the sun seemed to have blistered the very eyeballs. When
+we mustered up sufficient energy to turn our aching eyes to the
+heavens, we saw black storm-clouds piling themselves one above another,
+and hope, which "springs eternal in the human breast," saw in them our
+hope, our salvation.
+
+The fall of the barometer, and the howling of the monkeys on shore
+also, warned us of the approaching tempest, so we prepared for
+emergencies by securing the vessel fore and aft under the lee of a
+rugged _sierra_ before the storm broke--and break it did in all its
+might.
+
+Suddenly the wind swept down upon us with irresistible fury, and we
+breathed--we lived again. So terrific was the sweep that giant trees,
+which had braved a century's storms, fell to the earth with a crash.
+The hurricane was truly fearful. Soon the waters of the lake were
+lashed into foam. Great drops of rain fell in blinding torrents, and
+every fresh roll of thunder seemed to make the mountains tremble, while
+the lightning cleft asunder giant trees at one mighty stroke.
+
+
+[Illustration: VICTORIA REGIA, THE WORLD'S LARGEST FLOWER]
+
+
+In the old legends of the Inca, read on the "Quipus," we find that
+Pachacamac and Viracocha, the highest gods, placed in the heavens
+"Nusta," a royal princess, armed with a pitcher of water, which she was
+to pour over the earth whenever it was needed. When the rain was
+accompanied by thunder, lightning, and wind, the Indians believed that
+the maiden's royal brother was teasing her, and trying to wrest the
+pitcher from her hand. Nusta must indeed have been fearfully teased
+that night, for the lightning of her eyes shot athwart the heavens and
+the sky was rent in flame.
+
+Often in those latitudes no rain falls for long months, but when once
+the clouds open the earth is deluged! Weeks pass, and the zephyr
+breezes scarcely move the leaves of the trees, but in those days of
+calm the wind stores up his forces for a mighty storm. On this dark,
+fearful night he blew his fiercest blasts. The wild beast was
+affrighted from his lair and rushed down with a moan, or the mountain
+eagle screamed out a wail, indistinctly heard through the moaning
+sounds. During the whole night, which was black as wickedness, the wind
+howled in mournful cadence, or went sobbing along the sand. As the
+hours wore on we seemed to hear, in every shriek of the blast, the
+strange tongue of some long-departed Indian brave, wailing for his
+happy hunting-grounds, now invaded by the paleface. Coats and rugs,
+that had not for many months been unpacked, were brought out, only in
+some cases to be blown from us, for the wind seemed to try his hardest
+to impede our departure. The rain soaked us through and through. Mists
+rose from the earth, and mists came down from above. Next morning the
+whole face of nature was changed.
+
+After the violence of the tempest abated we cast off the ropes and
+turned the prow of our little vessel civilizationward. When we entered
+the lake the great golden sun gave us a warm welcome, now, at our
+farewell, he refused to shine. The rainy season had commenced, but,
+fortunately for us, after the work of exploration was done. This
+weather continued--day after day clouds and rain. Down the rugged,
+time-worn face of the mountains foaming streams rushed and poured, and
+this was our last view--a good-bye of copious tears! Thus we saw the
+lake in sunshine and storm, in light and darkness. It had been our aim
+and ambition to reach it, and we rejoiced in its discovery. Remembering
+that "we were the first who ever burst into that silent sea," we seemed
+to form part of it, and its varying moods only endeared it to us the
+more. In mining parlance, we had staked out our claims there, for--
+
+ "O'er no sweeter lake shall morning break,
+ Or noon cloud sail;
+ No fairer face than this shall take
+ The sunset's golden veil."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+_PIEDRA BLANCA_.
+
+
+In due time we again reached Piedra Blanca, and, notwithstanding our
+ragged, thorn-torn garments, felt we were once more joined on to the
+world.
+
+The bubonic plague had broken out farther down the country, steamboats
+were at a standstill, so we had to wait a passage down the river.
+Piedra Blanca is an interesting little spot. One evening a tired mule
+brought in the postman from the next town, Holy Joseph. He had been
+eight days on the journey. Another evening a string of dusty mules
+arrived, bringing loads of rubber and cocoa. They had been five months
+on the way.
+
+When the Chiquitana women go down to the bay for water, with their
+pitchers poised on their heads, the sight is very picturesque.
+Sometimes a little boy will step into one of the giant, traylike leaves
+of the Victoria Regia, which, thus transformed into a fairy boat, he
+will paddle about the quiet bay.
+
+The village is built on the edge of the virgin forest, where the red
+man, with his stone hatchet, wanders in wild freedom. It contains,
+perhaps, a hundred inhabitants, chiefly civilized Chiquitanos Indians.
+There is here a customs house, and a regular trade in rubber, which is
+brought in from the interior on mule-back, a journey which often takes
+from three to four months.
+
+One evening during our stay two men were forcibly brought into the
+village, having been caught in the act of killing a cow which they had
+stolen. These men were immediately thrown into the prison, a small,
+dark, palm-built hut. Next morning, ere the sun arose, their feet were
+thrust into the stocks, and a man armed with a long hide whip thrashed
+them until the blood flowed in streamlets down their bare backs! What
+struck us as being delicately thoughtful was that while the whipping
+proceeded another official tried his best to drown their piercing
+shrieks by blowing an old trumpet at its highest pitch!
+
+The women, although boasting only one loose white garment, walk with
+the air and grace of queens, or as though pure Inca blood ran in their
+veins. Their only adornment is a necklace of red corals and a few
+inches of red or blue ribbon entwined in their long raven-black hair,
+which hangs down to the waist in two plaits. Their houses are
+palm-walled, with a roof of palm-leaves, through which the rain pours
+and the sun shines. Their chairs are logs of wood, and their beds are
+string hammocks. Their wants are few, as there are no electric-lighted
+store windows to tempt them. Let us leave them in their primitive
+simplicity. Their little, delicately-shaped feet are prettier without
+shoes and stockings, and their plaited hair without Parisian hats and
+European tinsel. They neither read nor write, and therefore cannot
+discuss politics. Women's rights they have never heard of. Their
+bright-eyed, naked little children play in the mud or dust round the
+house, and the sun turns their already bronze-colored bodies into a
+darker tint; but the Chiquitana woman has never seen a white baby, and
+knows nothing of its beauty, so is more than satisfied with her own.
+The Indian child does not suffer from teething, for all have a small
+wooden image tied round the neck, and the little one, because of this,
+is supposed to be saved from all baby ailments! Their husbands and sons
+leave them for months while they go into the interior for rubber or
+cocoa, and when one comes back, riding on his bullock or mule, he is
+affectionately but silently received. The Chiquitano seldom speaks, and
+in this respect he is utterly unlike the Brazilian. The women differ
+from our mothers and sisters and wives, for they (the Chiquitanas) have
+nothing to say. After all, ours are best, and a headache is often
+preferable to companioning with the dumb. I unhesitatingly say, give me
+the music, even if I have to suffer the consequences.
+
+The waiting-time was employed by our hunter in his favorite sport. One
+day he shot a huge alligator which was disporting itself in the water
+some five hundred yards from the shore. Taking a strong rope, we went
+out in an Indian dug-out to tow it to land. As my friend was the more
+dexterous in the use of the paddle, he managed the canoe, and I, with
+much difficulty, fixed the rope by a noose to the monster's tail. When
+the towing, however, commenced, the beast seemed to regain his life. He
+dived and struggled for freedom until the water was lashed into foam.
+He thrust his mighty head out of the water and opened his jaws as
+though warning us he could crush the frail dug-out with one snap. Being
+anxious to obtain his hide, and momentarily expecting his death, for he
+was mortally wounded, I held on to the rope with grim persistency. He
+dived under the boat and lifted it high, but as his ugly nose came out
+on the other side the canoe regained its position in the water. He then
+commenced to tow us, but, refusing to obey the helm, took us to all
+points of the compass. After an exciting cruise the alligator gave a
+deep dive and the rope broke, giving him his liberty again. On leaving
+us he gave what Waterton describes as "a long-suppressed, shuddering
+sigh, so loud and so peculiar that it can be heard a mile." The bullet
+had entered the alligator's head, but next morning we saw he was still
+alive and able to "paddle his own canoe." The reader may be surprised
+to learn that these repulsive reptiles lay an egg with a pure white
+shell, fair to look upon, and that the egg is no larger than a hen's.
+
+One day I was called to see a dead man for whom a kind of wake was
+being held. He was lying in state in a grass-built hovel, and raised up
+from the mud floor on two packing-cases of suspiciously British origin.
+His hard Indian face was softened in death, but the observant eye could
+trace a stoical resignation in the features. Several men and women were
+sitting around the corpse counting their beads and drinking native
+spirits, with a dim, hazy belief that that was the right thing to do.
+They had given up their own heathen customs, and, being civilized,
+must, of course, be Roman Catholics. They were "reduced," as Holy
+Mother Church calls it, long ago, and, of course, believe that
+civilization and Roman Catholicism are synonymous terms. Poor souls!
+How they stared and wondered when they that morning heard for the first
+time the story of Jesus, who tasted death for us that we might live. To
+those in the home lands this is an old story, but do they who preach it
+or listen to it realize that to millions it is still the newest thing
+under the sun?
+
+Next day the man was quietly carried away to the little forest clearing
+reserved for the departed, where a few wooden crosses lift their heads
+among the tangled growth. Some of these crosses have four rudely carved
+letters on them, which you decipher as I. N. R. I. The Indian cannot
+tell you their meaning, but he knows they have something to do with his
+new religion.
+
+As far as I could ascertain, the departed had no relatives. One after
+another had been taken from him, and now he had gone, for "when he is
+forsaken, withered and shaken, what can an old man do but die?"--it is
+the end of all flesh. Poor man! Had he been able to retain even a spark
+of life until Holy Week, he might then have been saved from purgatory.
+Rome teaches that on two days in the year--Holy Thursday and Corpus
+Christi--the gates of heaven are unguarded, because, they say, _God is
+dead_. All people who die on those days go straight to heaven, however
+bad they may have been! At no other time is that gate open, and every
+soul must pass through the torments of purgatory.
+
+A missionary in Oruru wrote: "The Thursday and Friday of so-called Holy
+Week, when Christ's image lay in a coffin and was carried through the
+streets, _God being dead_, was the time for robberies, and some one
+came to steal from us, but only got about fifty dollars' worth of
+building material. Holy Week terminates with the 'Saturday of Glory,'
+when spirits are drunk till there is not a dram left in the
+drink-shops, which frequently bear such names as 'The Saviour of the
+World,' 'The Grace of God,' 'The Fountain of Our Lady,' etc. The poor
+deluded Romanists have a holiday on that day over the tragic end of
+Judas. A life-size representation of the betrayer is suspended high in
+the air in front of the cafes. At ten a.m. the church bells begin to
+ring, and this is the signal for lighting the fuse. Then, with a flash
+and a bang, every vestige of the effigy has disappeared! At night, if
+the town is large enough to afford a theatre, the crowds wend their way
+thither. This place of very questionable amusement will often bear the
+high-sounding name, _Theatre of the Holy Ghost!_"
+
+There is no church or priest in the village of Piedra Blanca. Down on
+the beach there is a church bell, which the visitor concludes is a
+start in that direction, but he is told that it is destined for the
+town of Santa Cruz de la Sierra, three hundred miles inland. The bell
+was a present to the church by some pious devotee, but the money
+donated did not provide for its removal inland. This cost the priests
+refuse to pay, and the Chiquitanos equally refuse to transport it free.
+There is no resident priest to make them, so there it stays. In the
+meantime the bell is slung up on three poles. It was solemnly beaten
+with a stick on Christmas Eve to commemorate the time when the "Mother
+of Heaven" gave birth to her child Jesus. In one of the principal
+houses of the village the scene was most vividly reproduced. A small
+arbor was screened off by palm leaves, in which were hung little
+colored candles. Angels of paper were suspended from the roof, that
+they might appear to be bending over the Virgin, which was a
+highly-colored fashion-plate cut from a Parisian journal that somehow
+had found its way there. The child Jesus appeared to be a Mellin's
+Food-fed infant. Round this fairy scene the youth and beauty of the
+place danced and drank liberal potations of chicha, the Bolivian
+spirits, until far on into morning, when all retired to their hammocks
+to dream of their goddess and her lovely babe.
+
+After this paper Virgin the next most prominent object of worship I saw
+in Piedra Blanca was a saint with a dress of vegetable fibre, long hair
+that had once adorned a horse's tail, and eyes of pieces of clamshell.
+
+Poor, dark Bolivia! It would be almost an impossible thing to
+exaggerate the low state of religion there. A communication from Sucre
+reads: "The owners of images of Jesus as a child have been getting
+masses said for their figures. A band of music is employed, and from
+the church to the house a procession is formed. A scene of intoxication
+follows, which only ends when a good number lie drunk before the
+image--the greater the number the greater the honor to the image?" The
+peddler of chicha carries around a large stone jar, about a yard in
+depth. The payment for every drink sold is dropped into the jar of
+liquor, so the last customers get the most "tasty" decoction.
+
+Naturally the masses like a religion of license, and are as eager as
+the priests to uphold it. Read a tale of the persecution of a
+nineteenth century missionary there. Mr. Payne in graphic language
+tells the story:
+
+"Excommunication was issued. To attend a meeting was special sin, and
+only pardoned by going on the knees to the bishop. Sermons against us
+were preached in all the churches. I was accused before the Criminal
+Court. It was said I carried with me the 'special presence' of the
+devil, and had blasphemed the Blessed Virgin, and everyone passing
+should say: 'Maria, Joseph.' One day a crowd collected, and sacristans
+mixed with the multitude, urging them on to 'vengeance on the
+Protestants.' About two p.m. we heard the roar of furious thousands,
+and like a river let loose they rushed down on our house. Paving-stones
+were quickly torn up, and before the police arrived windows and doors
+were smashed, and about a thousand voices were crying for blood. We
+cried to the Lord, not expecting to live much longer. The Chief of
+Police and his men were swept away before the mob, and now the door
+burst in before the huge stones and force used. There were two parties,
+one for murder and one for robbery. I was beaten and dragged about,
+while the cry went up, 'Death to the Protestant!' The fire was blazing
+outside, as they had lots of kerosene, and with all the forms, chairs,
+texts, clothes and books the street was a veritable bonfire. Everything
+they could lay hands on was taken. At this moment the cry arose that
+the soldiers were coming, and a cavalry regiment charged down the
+street, carrying fear into the hearts of the people. A second charge
+cleared the street, and several soldiers rode into the _patio_ slashing
+with their swords."
+
+In this riot the missionary had goods to the value of one thousand
+dollars burnt, and was himself hauled before the magistrates and, after
+a lengthy trial, condemned to _die_ for heresy!
+
+Baronius, a Roman Catholic writer, says: "The ministry of Peter is
+twofold--to feed and to kill; for the Lord said, 'Feed My sheep,' and
+he also heard a voice from heaven saying, 'Kill and eat.'" Bellarmine
+argues for the necessity of _burning_ heretics. He says: "Experience
+teaches that there is no other remedy, for the Church has proceeded by
+slow steps, and tried all remedies. First, she only excommunicated.
+Then she added a fine of money, and afterwards exile. Lastly she was
+compelled to come to the punishment of death. If you threaten a fine of
+money, they neither fear God nor regard men, knowing that fools will
+not be wanting to believe in them, and by whom they may be sustained.
+If you shut them in prison, or send them into exile, they corrupt those
+near to them with their words, and those at a distance with their
+books. Therefore, the only remedy is to send them betimes into their
+own place."
+
+As this mediaeval sentence against Mr. Payne could hardly be carried
+out in the nineteenth century, he was liberated, but had to leave the
+country. He settled in another part of the Republic. In a letter from
+him now before me as I write he says: "The priests are circulating all
+manner of lies, telling the people that we keep images of the Virgin in
+order to scourge them every night. At Colquechaca we were threatened
+with burning, as it was rumored that our object was to do away with the
+Roman Catholic religion, which would mean a falling off in the
+opportunities for drunkenness." So we see he is still persecuted.
+
+The Rev. A. G. Baker, of the Canadian Baptist Mission, wrote: "The
+Bishop of La Paz has sent a letter to the Minister of Public Worship of
+which the following is the substance: 'It is necessary for me to call
+attention to the Protestant meetings being held in this city, which
+cause scandal and alarm throughout the whole district, and which are
+contrary to the law of Bolivia. Moreover, it is indispensable that we
+prevent the sad results which must follow such teachings, so contrary
+to the true religion. On the other hand, if this is not stopped, _we
+shall see a repetition of the scenes that recently took place in
+Cochabamba_.'" [Footnote: Referring to the sacking and burning of Mr.
+Payne's possessions previously referred to.]
+
+Bolivia was one of the last of the Republics to hold out against
+"liberty of worship," but in 1907 this was at last declared. Great
+efforts were made that this law should not be passed.
+
+In my lectures on this continent I have invariably stated that in South
+America the priest is the real ruler of the country. I append a recent
+despatch from Washington, which is an account of a massacre of
+revolutionary soldiers, under most revolting circumstances, committed
+at the instigation of the ecclesiastical authorities: "The Department
+of State has been informed by the United States Minister at La Paz,
+Bolivia, that Col. Pando sent 120 men to Ayopaya. On arriving at the
+town of Mohoza, the commander demanded a loan of two hundred dollars
+from the priest of the town, and one hundred dollars from the mayor.
+These demands being refused, the priest and the mayor were imprisoned.
+Meanwhile, however, the priest had despatched couriers to the Indian
+village, asking that the natives attack Pando's men. A large crowd of
+Indians came, and, in spite of all measures taken to pacify them, the
+arms of the soldiers were taken away, the men subjected to revolting
+treatment, and finally locked inside the church for the night. In the
+morning the priest, after celebrating the so-called 'mass of agony,'
+allowed the Indians to take out the unfortunate victims, two by two,
+and 103 were deliberately murdered, each pair by different tortures.
+Seventeen escaped death by having departed the day previous on another
+mission."
+
+After Gen. Pando was elected President of the Republic of Bolivia,
+priestly rule remained as strong as ever. To enter on and retain his
+office he must perforce submit to Church authority. When in his employ,
+however, I openly declared myself a Protestant missionary; and, because
+of exploration work, was made a Bolivian citizen.
+
+In 1897 it was my great joy to preach the gospel in Ensenada. Many and
+attentive were the listeners as for the first time in their lives they
+were told of the Man of Calvary who died that they might live. With
+exclamations of wonder they sometimes said: "What fortunate people we
+are to have heard such words!" Four men and five women were born again.
+Ensenada, built on a malarial swamp, was reeking with miasma, and the
+houses were raised on posts about a yard above the slime. I was in
+consequence stricken with malarial fever. One day a man who had
+attended the meetings came into my room, and, kneeling down, asked the
+Lord not to let me suffer, but to take me quickly. After long weeks of
+illness, God, however, raised me up again, and the meetings were
+resumed, when the reason of the priest's non-interference was made
+known to me. He had been away on a long vacation, and, on his return,
+hearing of my services, he ordered the church bells rung furiously. On
+my making enquiries why the bells clanged so, I was informed that a
+special service was called in the church. At that service a special
+text was certainly taken, for I was the text. During the course of the
+sermon, the preacher in his fervid eloquence even forbade the people to
+look at me. After that my residence in the town was most difficult. The
+barber would not cut my hair, nor would the butcher sell me his meat,
+and I have gone into stores with the money ostentatiously showing in my
+hand only to hear the word, "_Afuera_!" (Get out!) When I appeared on
+the street I was pelted with stones by the men, while the women ran
+away from me with covered faces! It was now a sin to look at me!
+
+I reopened the little hall, however, for public services. It had been
+badly used and was splashed with mud and filth. The first night men
+came to the meetings in crowds just to disturb, and one of these shot
+at me, but the bullet only pierced the wall behind. A policeman marched
+in and bade me accompany him to the police station, and on the way
+thither I was severely hurt by missiles which were thrown at me. An
+official there severely reprimanded me for thus disturbing the quiet
+town, and I was ushered in before the judge. That dignified gentleman
+questioned me as to the object of my meetings. Respectfully answering,
+I said: "To tell the people how they can be saved from sin." Then, as
+briefly as possible, I unfolded my mission. The man's countenance
+changed. Surely my words were to him an idle tale--he knew them not.
+After cautioning me not to repeat the offence, he gave me my liberty,
+but requested me to leave the town. Rev. F. Penzotti, of the B. & F. B.
+Society, was imprisoned in a dungeon for eight long months, so I was
+grateful for deliverance.
+
+An acquaintance who was eye-witness to the scene, though himself not a
+Christian, tells the following sad story:
+
+"Away near the foot of the great Andes, nestling quietly in a fertile
+valley, shut away, one would think, from all the world beyond, lay the
+village of E---. The inhabitants were a quiet, home-loving people, who
+took life as they found it, and as long as they had food for their
+mouths and clothes for their backs, cared little for anything else. One
+matter, however, had for some little time been troubling them, viz.,
+the confession of their sins to a priest. After due consideration, it
+was decided to ask Father A., living some seventeen leagues distant, to
+state the lowest sum for which he would come to receive their
+confessions. 'One hundred dollars,' he replied, 'is the lowest I can
+accept, and as soon as you send it I will come.'
+
+"After a great effort, for they were very poor, forty dollars was
+raised amongst them, and word was sent to Father A. that they could not
+possibly collect any more. Would he take pity on them and accept that
+sum? 'What! only forty dollars in the whole of E---,' was his reply,
+'and you dare to offer me that! No! I will not come, and, furthermore,
+from this day I pronounce a curse on your village, and every living
+person and thing there. Your children will all sicken and die, your
+cattle all become covered with disease, and you will know no comfort
+nor happiness henceforth. I, Father A., have said it, and it will come
+to pass.'
+
+"Where was the quiet, peaceful scene of a few weeks before? Gone, and
+in its place all terror and confusion. These ignorant people, believing
+the words of the priest, gathered together their belongings and fled.
+As I saw those poor, simple people leaving the homes which had
+sheltered them for years, as well as their ancestors before them, and
+with feverish haste hurrying down the valley--every few minutes looking
+back, with intense sorrow and regret stamped on their faces--I thought
+surely these people need some one to tell them of Jesus, for, little as
+I know about Him, I am convinced that He does not wish them to be
+treated thus."
+
+The priest is satisfied with nothing less than the most complete
+submission of the mind and body of his flock. A woman must often give
+her last money for masses, and a man toil for months on the
+well-stocked land of the divine father to save his soul. If he fail to
+do this, or any other sentence the priest may impose, he is condemned
+to eternal perdition.
+
+Mr. Patrick, of the R. B. M. U., has described to me how, soon after he
+landed in Trujilla, he attended service at a Jesuit church. He had
+introduced some gospels into the city, and a special sermon was
+preached against the Bible. During the service the priest produced one
+of the gospels, and, holding it by the covers, solemnly put the leaves
+into the burning candle by his side, and then stamped on the ashes on
+the pulpit floor. The same priest, however, Ricardo Gonzales by name,
+thought it no wrong to have seventeen children to various mothers, and
+his daughters were leaders in society. "Men love darkness rather than
+light because their deeds are evil." In Trujilla, right opposite my
+friend's house, there lived, at the same time, a highly respected
+priest, who had, with his own hands, lit the fire that burnt alive a
+young woman who had embraced Christianity through missionary preaching.
+Bear in mind, reader, I am not writing of the dark ages, but of what
+occurred just outside Trujilla during my residence in the country. Even
+in 1910, Missionary Chapman writes of a convert having his feet put in
+the stocks for daring to distribute God's Word. [Footnote: I never saw
+greater darkness excepting in Central Africa. I visited 70 of the
+largest cathedrals, and, after diligent enquiry, found only one Bible,
+and that a Protestant Bible about to be burned--Dr. Robert E. Speer, in
+"Missionary Review of the World," August, 1911.]
+
+Up to four years ago, the statute was in force that "Every one who
+directly or through any act conspires to establish in Bolivia any other
+religion than that which the republic professes, namely, that of the
+Roman Catholic Apostolic Church, is a traitor, and shall suffer the
+penalty of death."
+
+After a week's stay in Piedra Blanca, during which I had ample time for
+such comparisons as these I have penned, quarantine lifted, and the
+expedition staff separated. I departed on horseback to inspect a tract
+of land on another frontier of Bolivia 1,300 miles distant.
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+PARAGUAY
+
+[Illustration: AN INDIAN AND HIS GOD NANDEYARA]
+
+
+ "I need not follow the beaten path;
+ I do not hunt for any path;
+ I will go where there is no path,
+ And leave a trail."
+
+
+
+
+PARAGUAY
+
+Paraguay, though one of the most isolated republics of South America,
+is one of the oldest. A hundred years before the "Mayflower" sailed
+from old Plymouth there was a permanent settlement of Spaniards near
+the present capital. The country has 98,000 square miles of territory,
+but a population of only 800,000. Paraguay may almost be called an
+Indian republic, for the traveller hears nothing but the soft Guarani
+language spoken all over the country. It is in this republic that the
+yerba mate grows. That is the chief article of commerce, for at least
+fifteen millions of South Americans drink this tea, already frequently
+referred to. Thousands of tons of the best oranges are grown, and its
+orange groves are world-famed.
+
+The old capital, founded in 1537, was built without regularity of plan,
+but the present city, owing to the despotic sway of Francia, is most
+symmetrical. That South American Nero issued orders for all houses that
+were out of his lines to be demolished by their owners. "One poor man
+applied to know what remuneration he was to have, and the dictator's
+answer was: 'A lodgment gratis in the public prison.' Another asked
+where he was to go, and the answer was, 'To a state dungeon.' Both
+culprits were forthwith lodged in their respective new residences, and
+their houses were levelled to the ground."
+
+"Such was the terror inspired by the man that the news that he was out
+would clear the streets. A white Paraguayan dared not utter his name.
+During his lifetime he was 'El Supremo,' and after he was dead for
+generations he was referred to simply as 'El Difunto.'" [Footnote:
+Robertson's "Reign of Terror."]
+
+Paraguay, of all countries, has been most under the teaching of the
+Jesuit priest, and the people in consequence are found to be the most
+superstitious. Being an inland republic, its nearest point a thousand
+miles from the sea-coast, it has been held in undisputed possession.
+
+Here was waged between 1862 and 1870 what history describes as the most
+annihilating war since Carthage fell. The little republic, standing out
+for five and a half years against five other republics, fought with
+true Indian bravery and recklessness, until for every man in the
+country there could be numbered nine women (some authorities say
+eleven); and this notwithstanding the fact that the women in thousands
+carried arms and fought side by side with the men. The dictator Lopez,
+who had with such determination of purpose held out so long, was
+finally killed, and his last words, "_Muero con la patria_" (I die with
+the country) were truly prophetic, for the country has never risen
+since.
+
+Travellers agree in affirming that of all South Americans the
+Paraguayans are the most mild-mannered and lethargic; yet when these
+people are once aroused they fight with tigerish pertinacity. The pages
+of history may be searched in vain for examples of warfare waged at
+such odds; but the result is invariably the same, the weaker nation,
+whether right or wrong, goes under. Although the national mottoes vary
+with the different flags, yet the Chilian is the most universally
+followed in South America, as elsewhere: "_Por la razon o la fuerza_"
+(By right or by might). The Paraguayans contended heroically for what
+they considered their rights, and such bloody battles were fought that
+at Curupaita alone 5,000 dead and dying were left on the field! Added
+to the carnage of battle was disease on every hand. The worst epidemic
+of smallpox ever known in the annals of history was when the Brazilians
+lost 43,000 men, while this war was being waged against Paraguay. One
+hundred thousand bodies were left unburied, and on them the wild
+animals and vultures gorged themselves. The saying now is a household
+word, that the jaguar of those lands is the most to be dreaded, through
+having tasted so much human blood.
+
+"Lopez, the cause of all this sacrifice and misery, has gone to his
+final account, his soul stained with the blood of seven hundred
+thousand of his people, the victims of his ambition and cruelty."
+
+Towns which flourished before the outbreak of hostilities were sacked
+by the emboldened Indians from the Chaco and wiped off the map, San
+Salvador (Holy Saviour) being a striking example. I visited the ruins
+of this town, where formerly dwelt about 8,000 souls. Now the streets
+are grass-grown, and the forest is creeping around church and barracks,
+threatening to bury them. I rode my horse through the high portal of
+the cannon-battered church, while the stillness of the scene reminded
+me of a city of the dead. City of the dead, truly--men and women and
+children who have passed on! My horse nibbled the grass growing among
+the broken tiles of the floor, while I, in imagination, listened to the
+"passing bell" in the tower above me, and under whose shade I sought
+repose. A traveller, describing this site, says: "It is a place of
+which the atmosphere is one great mass of malaria, and the heat
+suffocating--where the surrounding country is an uninterrupted
+marsh--where venomous insects and reptiles abound." San Salvador as a
+busy mart has ceased to exist, and the nearest approach to "the human
+form divine," found occasionally within its walls, is the howling
+monkey. Such are the consequences of war! During the last ten years
+Paraguay has been slowly recovering from the terrible effects of this
+war, but a republic composed mostly of women is severely handicapped.
+[Footnote: Would the suffragettes disagree with the writer here?]
+
+Paraguay is a poor land; the value of its paper currency, like that of
+most South American countries, fluctuates almost daily. In 1899 the
+dollar was worth only twelve cents, and for five gold dollars I have
+received in exchange as many as forty-six of theirs. Yet there is a
+great future for Paraguay. It has been called the Paradise of South
+America, and although the writer has visited sixteen different
+countries of the world, he thinks of Paraguay with tender longing. It
+is perhaps the richest land on earth naturally, and produces so much
+mate that one year's production would make a cup of tea for every man,
+woman and child on the globe. Oranges and bananas can be bought at six
+cents a hundred, two millions of cattle fatten on its rich pasture
+lands; but, of all the countries the writer has travelled in, Mexico
+comes first as a land of beggars, and poor Paraguay comes second.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ASUNCION.
+
+
+Being in England in 1900 for change and rest, I was introduced to an
+eccentric old gentleman of miserly tendencies, but possessed of
+$5,000,000. Hearing of my wanderings in South America, he told me that
+he owned a tract of land thirteen miles square in Paraguay, and would
+like to know something of its value. The outcome of this visit was that
+I was commissioned by him to go to that country and explore his
+possession, so I proceeded once more to my old field of labor. Arriving
+at the mouth of the River Plate, after five weeks of sea-tossing, I
+was, with the rest, looking forward to our arrival in Buenos Ayres,
+when a steam tug came puffing alongside, and we were informed that as
+the ship had touched at the infected port of Bahia, all passengers must
+be fumigated, and that we must submit to three weeks' quarantine on
+Flores Island. The Port doctor has sent a whole ship-load to the island
+for so trifling a cause as that a sailor had a broken collar-bone, so
+we knew that for us there was nothing but submission. Disembarking from
+the ocean steamer on to lighters, we gave a last look at the coveted
+land, "so near and yet so far," and were towed away to three small
+islands in the centre of the river, about fifty miles distant. One
+island is set apart as a burial ground, one is for infected patients,
+and the other, at which we were landed, is for suspects. On that desert
+island, with no other land in sight than the sister isles, we were
+given time to chew the cud of bitter reflection. They gave us little
+else to chew! The food served up to us consisted of strings of dried
+beef, called _charqui_, which was brought from the mainland in dirty
+canvas bags. This was often supplemented by boiled seaweed. Being
+accustomed to self-preservation, I was able to augment this diet with
+fish caught while sitting on the barren rocks of our sea-girt prison.
+Prison it certainly was, for sentries, armed with Remingtons, herded us
+like sheep.
+
+The three weeks' detention came to an end, as everything earthly does,
+and then an open barge, towed by a steam-launch, conveyed us to
+Montevideo. Quite a fresh breeze was blowing, and during our eleven
+hours' journey we were repeatedly drenched with spray. Delicate ladies
+lay down in the bottom of the boat in the throes of seasickness, and
+were literally washed to and fro, and saturated, as they said, to the
+heart. We landed, however, and I took passage up to Asuncion in the
+"Olympo."
+
+The "Olympo" is a palatial steamer, fitted up like the best Atlantic
+liners with every luxury and convenience. On the ship there were
+perhaps one hundred cabin passengers, and in the steerage were six
+hundred Russian emigrants bound for Corrientes, three days' sail north.
+Two of these women were very sick, so the chief steward, to whom I was
+known, hurried me to them, and I was thankful to be able to help the
+poor females.
+
+The majestic river is broad, and in some parts so thickly studded with
+islands that it appears more like a chain of lakes than a flowing
+stream. As we proceeded up the river the weather grew warmer, and the
+native clothing of sheepskins the Russians had used was cast aside. The
+men, rough and bearded, soon had only their under garments on, and the
+women wore simply that three-quarter length loose garment well known to
+all females, yet they sweltered in the unaccustomed heat.
+
+At midnight of the third day we landed them at Corrientes, and the
+women, in their white (?) garments, with their babies and ikons, and
+bundles--and husbands--trod on terra firma for the first time in seven
+weeks.
+
+After about twelve days' sail we came to Bella Vista, at which point
+the river is eighteen miles wide. Sixteen days after leaving the mouth
+of the river, we sighted the red-tiled roofs of the houses at Asuncion,
+the capital of Paraguay, built on the bank of the river, which is there
+only a mile wide, but thirty feet deep. The river boats land their
+passengers at a rickety wooden wharf, and Indians carry the baggage on
+their heads into the dingy customs house. After this has been inspected
+by the cigarette-smoking officials, the dark-skinned porters are
+clamorously eager to again bend themselves under the burden and take
+your trunks to an hotel, where you follow, walking over the exceedingly
+rough cobbled streets. There is not a cab for hire in the whole city.
+The two or three hotels are fifth-rate, but charge only about thirty
+cents a day.
+
+Asuncion is a city of some 30,000 inhabitants Owing to its isolated
+position, a thousand miles from the sea-coast, it is perhaps the most
+backward of all the South American capitals. Although under Spanish
+rule for three hundred years, the natives still retain the old Indian
+language and the Guarani idiom is spoken by all.
+
+The city is lit up at night with small lamps burning oil, and these
+lights shed fitful gleams here and there. The oil burned bears the
+high-sounding trade-mark, "Light of the World," and that is the only
+"light of the world" the native knows of. The lamps are of so little
+use that females never dream of going out at night without carrying
+with them a little tin farol, with a tallow dip burning inside.
+
+I have said the street lamps give little light. I must make exception
+of one week of the year, when there is great improvement. That week
+they are carefully cleaned and trimmed, for it is given up as a feast
+to the Virgin, and the lights are to shed radiance on gaudy little
+images of that august lady which are inside of each lamp. The Pal, or
+father priest, sees that these images are properly honored by the
+people. He is here as elsewhere, the moving spirit.
+
+San Bias is the patron saint of the country, It is said he won for the
+Paraguayans a great victory in an early war. St. Cristobel receives
+much homage also because he helped the Virgin Mary to carry the infant
+Jesus across a river on the way to Egypt.
+
+Asuncion was for many years the recluse headquarters of the Jesuits, so
+of all enslaved Spanish-Americans probably the Guaranis are the worst.
+During Lent they will inflict stripes on their bodies, or almost starve
+themselves to death; and their abject humility to the Pai is sad to
+witness. On special church celebrations large processions will walk the
+streets, headed by the priests, chanting in Latin. The people sometimes
+fall over one another in their eager endeavors to kiss the priest's
+garments, They prostrate themselves, count their beads, confess their
+sins, and seek the coveted blessing of this demi-god, "who shuts the
+kingdom of heaven, and keeps the key in his own pocket."
+
+A noticeable feature of the place is that all the inhabitants go
+barefooted. Ladies (?) will pass you with their stiffly-starched white
+dresses, and raven-black hair neatly done up with colored ribbons, but
+with feet innocent of shoes. Soldiers and policemen tramp the streets,
+but neither are provided with footwear, and their clothes are often in
+tatters. The Jesuits taught the Indians to _make_ shoes, but they alone
+_wore_ them, exporting the surplus. Shoes are not for common people,
+and when one of them dares to cover his feet he is considered
+presumptuous. Hats they never wear, but they have the beautiful custom
+of weaving flowers in their hair. When flowers are not worn the head is
+covered by a white sheet called the _tupoi_, and in some cases this
+garment is richly embroidered. These females are devoted Romanists, as
+will be seen from the following description of a feast held to St. John:
+
+"Dona Juana's first care was to decorate with uncommon splendor a large
+image of St. John, which, in a costly crystal box, she preserved as the
+chief ornament of her principal drawing-room. He was painted anew and
+re-gilded. He had a black velvet robe purchased for him, and trimmed
+with deep gold lace. Hovering over him was a cherub. Every friend of
+Dona Juana had lent some part of her jewellery for the decoration of
+the holy man. Rings sparkled on his fingers; collars hung around his
+neck; a tiara graced his venerable brow. The lacings of his sandals
+were studded with pearls; a precious girdle bound his slender waist,
+and six large wax candles were lighted up at the shrine. There,
+embosomed in fragrant evergreens--the orange, the lime, the
+acacia--stood the favorite saint, destined to receive the first homage
+of every guest that should arrive. These all solemnly took off their
+hats to the image."
+
+Such religious mummery as this is painful to witness, and to see the
+saint borne round in procession, with men carrying candles, and
+white-clad girls with large birds' wings fastened to their shoulders,
+dispels the idea of its being Christianity at all.
+
+The people are gentle and mild-spoken. White-robed women lead strings
+of donkeys along the streets, bearing huge panniers full of vegetables,
+among which frequently play the women's babies. The panniers are about
+a yard deep, and may often be seen full to the brim with live fowls
+pinioned by the legs. Other women go around with large wicker trays on
+their heads, selling _chipa_, the native bread, made from Indian corn,
+or _mandioca_ root, the staple food of the country. Wheat is not grown
+in Paraguay, and any flour used is imported. These daughters of Eve
+often wear nothing more than a robe-de-chambre, and invariably smoke
+cigars six or eight inches long. Their figure is erect and stately, and
+the laughing eyes full of mischief and merriment; but they fade into
+old age at forty. Until then they seem proud as children of their brass
+jewellery and red coral beads. The Paraguayans are the happiest race of
+people I have met; care seems undreamed of by them.
+
+In the post-office of the capital I have sometimes been unable to
+procure stamps, and "_Dypore_" (We have none) has been the civil answer
+of the clerk. When they _had_ stamps they were not provided with
+mucilage, but a brush and pot of paste were handed the buyer. If you
+ask for a one cent stamp the clerk will cut a two cent stamp and give
+you a half. They have, however, stamps the tenth part of a cent in
+value, and a bank note in circulation whose face value is less than a
+cent. There are only four numerals in the Guarani language: 1, _petei_;
+2,_moncoi_; 3,_bohapy_; 4,_irundu_. It is not possible to express five
+or six. No wonder, therefore, that when I bought five 40-cent stamps, I
+found the clerk was unable to count the sum, and I had to come to the
+rescue and tell him it was $2.00. At least eighty per cent. of the
+people are unable to read. When they do, it is of course in Spanish, A
+young man to whom I gave the Gospel of John carefully looked at it, and
+then, turning to me, said: "Is this a history of that wonderful lawyer
+we have been hearing about?" To those interested in the dissemination
+of Scriptures, let me state that no single Gospel has as yet been
+translated into Guarani.
+
+A tentative edition of the "Sermon on the Mount" has recently been
+issued by the British and Foreign Bible Society, a copy of which I had
+the honor to be the first to present to the head executive.
+
+Gentle simplicity is the chief characteristic of the people. If the
+traveller relates the most ordinary events that pass in the outside
+world, they will join in the exclamation of surprise-"_Ba-eh-pico!
+Ba-eh-pico!_"
+
+Information that tends to their lowering is not always accepted thus,
+however, for a colonel in the army, when told that Asuncion could be
+put into a large city graveyard, hastily got up from the dinner table
+and went away in wounded pride and incredulity. The one who is supposed
+to "know a little" likes to keep his position, and the Spanish proverb
+is exemplified: _"En tierra de los ciegos, el tuerto es rey"_ (In the
+blind country the one-eyed are kings). The native is most guileless and
+ignorant, as can well be understood when his language is an unwritten
+one.
+
+Paraguay is essentially a land of fruit, 200 oranges may be bought for
+the equivalent of six cents. Small mountains of oranges may always be
+seen piled up on the banks ready to be shipped down the river. Women
+are employed to load the vessels with this fruit, which they carry in
+baskets on their heads. Everything is carried on their heads, even to a
+glass bottle. My laundress, Cunacarai [Footnote: The Guarani idiom can
+boast of but few words, and Mr., Mrs. and Miss are simply rendered
+"carai" (man), "cuna-carai" (woman) and "cunatai" (young woman); "mita
+cuna" is girl, "mita cuimbai" is boy, and "mita mishi"--baby.] Jesus,
+although an old woman, could bear almost incredible weights on her hard
+skull.
+
+As the climate is hot, a favorite occupation for men and women is to
+sit half-submerged in the river, smoking vigorously "The Paraguayans
+are an amphibious race, neither wholly seamen nor wholly landsmen, but
+partaking of both." All sleep in cotton hammocks,--beds are almost
+unknown. The hammocks are slung on the verandah of the house in the
+hotter season and all sleep outside, taking off their garments with
+real _sang froid_. In the cooler season the visitor is invited to hang
+his hammock along with the rest inside the house, and in the early
+morning naked little children bring mate to each one. If the family is
+wealthy this will be served in a heavy silver cup and _bombilla_, or
+sucking tube, of the same metal. After this drink and a bite of
+_chipa_, a strangely shaped, thin-necked bottle, made of sun-baked
+clay, is brought, and from it water is poured on the hands. The towels
+are spotlessly white and of the finest texture. They are hand-made, and
+are so delicately woven and embroidered that I found it difficult to
+accustom myself to use them. The beautifully fine lace called _nanduti_
+(literally spider's web) is also here made by the Indian women, who
+have long been civilized. Some of the handkerchiefs they make are worth
+$50 each in the fashionable cities of America and Europe. A month's
+work may easily be expended on such a dainty fabric.
+
+The women seem exceptionally fond of pets. Monkeys and birds are common
+in a house, and the housewife will show you her parrot and say, "In
+this bird dwells the spirit of my departed mother." An enemy, somehow,
+has always turned into an alligator--a reptile much loathed by them.
+
+In even the poorest houses there is a shrine and a "Saint." These
+deities can answer all prayers if they choose to. Sometimes, however,
+they are not "in the humor," and at one house the saint had refused, so
+he was laid flat on the floor, face downwards. The woman swore that
+until he answered her petition she would not lift him up again. He laid
+thus all night; whether longer or not I do not know.
+
+Having heard much concerning the _moralite_ of the people, I asked the
+maid at a respectable private house where I was staying: "Have you a
+father?" "No, sir," she answered, "we Paraguayans are not accustomed to
+have a father." Children of five or six, when asked about that parent,
+will often answer, "Father died in the war." The war ended thirty-nine
+years ago, but they have been taught to say this by the mother.
+
+As in Argentina the first word the stranger learns is _manana_
+(to-morrow), so here the first is _dy-qui_ (I don't know). Whatever
+question you ask the Guarani, he will almost invariably answer,
+"_Dy-qui_." Ask him his age, he answers "_Dy-qui_" To your question:
+"Are you twenty or one hundred and twenty?" he will reply "_Dy-qui_."
+Through the long rule of the Jesuits the natives stopped thinking; they
+had it all done for them. "At the same time that they enslaved them,
+they tortured them into the profession of the religion they had
+imported; and as they had seen that in the old land the love of this
+world and the deceitfulness of riches were ever in the way of
+conversion to the true faith, they piously relieved the Indians of
+these snares of the soul, even going so far in the discharge of this
+painful duty as to relieve them of life at the same time, if necessary
+to get their possessions into their own hands," [Footnote: Robertson's
+"Letters on Paraguay."]
+
+"The stories of their hardness, and perfidy, and immorality beggar
+description. The children of the priests have become so numerous that
+the shame is no longer considered." [Footnote: Service.]
+
+As the Mahometans have their Mecca, so the Paraguayans have Caacupe;
+and the image of the Virgin in that village is the great wonder-worker.
+Prayers are directed to her that she will raise the sick, etc., and
+promises are made her if she will do this. One morning I had business
+with a storekeeper, and went to his office. "Is the carai in?" I asked.
+"No," I was answered, "he has gone to Caacupe to pay a promise." That
+promise was to burn so many candles before the Virgin, and further
+adorn her bejewelled robes. She had, as he believed, healed him of a
+sickness.
+
+The village of Caacupe is about forty miles from Asuncion. "The Bishop
+of Paraguay formally inaugurated the worship of the Virgin of Caacupe,
+sending forth an episcopal letter accrediting the practice, and
+promising indulgences to the pilgrims who should visit the shrine. Thus
+the worship became legal and orthodox. Multitudes of people visit her,
+carrying offerings of valuable jewels. There are several
+_well-authenticated_ cases of persons, whose offerings were of inferior
+quality, being overtaken with some terrible calamity." [Footnote:
+Washburn's "History of Paraguay."]
+
+Funds must be secured somehow, for the present Bishop's sons, to whom I
+was introduced as among the aristocrats of the capital, certainly need
+a large income from the lavish manner I noticed them "treat" all and
+sundry in the hotel. "It is admitted by all, that in South America the
+church is decadent and corrupt. The immorality of the priests is taken
+for granted. Priests' sons and daughters, of course not born in
+wedlock, abound everywhere, and no stigma attaches to them or to their
+fathers and mothers." [Footnote: "The Continent of Opportunity." Dr.
+Clark.] Hon. S. H. Blake, in the _Neglected Continent_, writes: "I was
+especially struck by the statement of a Roman Catholic--a Consular
+agent with a large amount of information as to the land and its
+inhabitants. He stopped me in speaking of the priests by saying, 'I
+know all that. You cannot exaggerate their immorality. Everybody knows
+it--but the Latin race is a degenerate race. Nothing can be done with
+it. The Roman Church has had four centuries of trial and has made a
+failure of it.'"
+
+When a person is dying, the Pai is hurriedly sent for. To this call he
+will readily respond. A procession will be formed, and, preceded by a
+boy ringing a bell, the _Host_, or, to use an everyday expression,
+_God_, will be carried from the church down the street to the sick one.
+All passers-by must kneel as this goes along, and the police will
+arrest you if you do not at least take off your hat. "Liberty of
+conscience is a most diabolical thing, to be stamped out at any cost,"
+is the maxim of Rome, and the Guarani has learned his lesson well. "In
+Inquisition Square men were burned for daring to think, therefore men
+stopped thinking when death was the penalty."
+
+Wakes for the dead are always held, and in the case of a child the
+little one lies in state adorned with gilded wings and tinselled
+finery. All in the neighborhood are invited to the dance which takes
+place that evening around the corpse. At a funeral the Pai walks first,
+followed by a crowd of men, women and children bearing candles, some of
+which are four and five feet long. The dead are carried through the
+streets in a very shallow coffin, and the head is much elevated. An old
+woman generally walks by the side, bearing the coffin lid on her head.
+The dead are always buried respectfully, for an old law reads: "No
+person shall ride in the dead cart except the corpse that is carried,
+and, therefore, nobody shall get up and ride behind. It is against
+Christian piety to bury people with irreverent actions, or drag them in
+hides, or throw them into the grave without consideration, or in a
+position contrary to the practice of the Church."
+
+All Saints Day is a special time for releasing departed ones out of
+purgatory. Hundreds of people visit the cemeteries then, and pay the
+waiting priests so much a prayer, If that "liberator of souls" sings
+the prayer the price is doubled, but it is considered doubly
+efficacious.
+
+A good feature of Romanism in Paraguay is that the people have been
+taught something of Christ, but there seems to be an utter want of
+reverence toward His person, for one may see a red flag on the public
+streets announcing that there are the "Auction Rooms of the child God."
+In his "Letters on Paraguay," Robertson relates the following graphic
+account of the celebration of His death: "I found great preparations
+making at the cathedral for the sermon of 'the agony on the cross.' A
+wooden figure of our Saviour crucified was affixed against the wall,
+opposite the pulpit; a large bier was placed in the centre of the
+cathedral, and the great altar at the eastern extremity was hung with
+black; while around were disposed lighted candles and other insignia of
+a great funeral. When the sermon commenced, the cathedral was crowded
+to suffocation, a great proportion of the audience being females. The
+discourse was interrupted alternately by the low moans and sobbings of
+the congregation. These became more audible as the preacher warmed with
+his discourse, which was partly addressed to his auditory and partly to
+the figure before him; and when at length he exclaimed, 'Behold!
+Behold! He gives up the ghost!' the head of the figure was slowly
+depressed by a spring towards the breast, and one simultaneous
+shriek--loud, piercing, almost appalling--was uttered by the whole
+congregation. The women now all struggled for a superiority in giving
+unbounded vent to apparently the most distracting grief. Some raved
+like maniacs, others beat their breasts and tore their hair.
+Exclamations, cries, sobs and shrieks mingled, and united in forming
+one mighty tide of clamor, uproar, noise and confusion. In the midst of
+the raging tempest could be heard, ever and anon, the stentorian voice
+of the preacher, reproaching in terms of indignation and wrath the
+apathy of his hearers! 'Can you, oh, insensate crowd!' he would cry,
+'Can you sit in silence?'--but here his voice was drowned in an
+overwhelming cry of loudest woe, from every part of the church; and for
+five minutes all further effort to make himself heard was unavailing.
+This singular scene continued for nearly half an hour; then, by
+degrees, the vehement grief of the congregation abated, and when I left
+the cathedral it had subsided once more into low sobs and silent tears.
+
+"I now took my way, with many others, to the Church of San Francisco,
+where, in an open space in front of the church, I found that the duty
+of the day had advanced to the funeral service, which was about being
+celebrated. There a scaffolding was erected, and the crucifixion
+exactly represented by wooden figures, not only of our Lord, but of the
+two thieves. A pulpit was erected in front of the scaffold; and the
+whole square was covered by the devout inhabitants of the city. The
+same kind of scene was being enacted here as at the cathedral, with the
+difference, however, of the circumstantial funeral in place of the
+death. The orator's discourse when I arrived was only here and there
+interrupted by a suppressed moan, or a struggling sigh, to be heard in
+the crowd. But when he commenced giving directions for the taking down
+of the body from the cross, the impatience of grief began to manifest
+itself on all sides, 'Mount up,' he cried, 'ye holy ministers, mount
+up, and prepare for the sad duty which ye have to perform!' Here six or
+eight persons, covered from head to foot with ample black cloaks,
+ascended the scaffold. Now the groans of the people became more
+audible; and when at length directions were given to strike out the
+first nail, the cathedral scene of confusion, which I have just
+described, began, and all the rest of the preacher's oratory was dumb
+show. The body was at length deposited in the coffin, and the groaning
+and shrieking of the assembled multitude ceased. A solemn funeral
+ceremony took place: every respectable person received a great wax
+taper to carry in the procession: the coffin after being carried all
+round was deposited in the church: the people dispersed; and the great
+day of Passion Week was brought to a close."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+EXPEDITION TO THE SUN-WORSHIPPERS. [Footnote: An account of this
+expedition was requested by and sent to the Royal Geographical Society
+of London, Eng.]
+
+
+I took passage on the "Urano," a steamer of 1,500 tons, for Concepcion,
+200 miles north of Asuncion.
+
+On the second day of our journey the people on board celebrated a
+church feast, and the pilot, in his anxiety to do it well, got
+helplessly drunk. The result was that during that night I was thrown
+out of the top berth I occupied by a terrific thud. The steamer had run
+on the sandbank of an uninhabited island, and there she stuck
+fast--immovable. We were landed on the shore, and there had further
+time for reflection on the mutability of things. In the white sand
+there were distinct footprints of a large jaguar and cub, probably come
+to prey on the lazy alligators that were lying on the beach; and I
+caught sight of a large spotted serpent, which glided into the low
+jungle where the tiger also doubtless was in hiding.
+
+After three days' detention here, a Brazilian packet took us off. On
+stepping aboard, I saw what I thought to be two black pigs lying on the
+deck. I assure the reader that it was some seconds before I discovered
+that one was not a pig, but a man!
+
+At sunset it is the custom on these river boats for all to have a bath.
+The females go to one side of the ship, and the males to the other;
+buckets are lowered, and in turn they throw water over each other.
+After supper, in the stillness of the evening, dancing is the order,
+and bare feet keep time to the twang of the guitar.
+
+We occasionally caught sight of savages on the west bank of the river,
+and the captain informed me that he had once brought up a bag of beans
+to give them. The beans had been _poisoned_, in order that the
+miserable creatures might be _swept off the earth!_
+
+We landed at Concepcion, and I walked ashore. I found the only British
+subject living there was a university graduate, but--a prodigal son
+Owing to his habit of constant drinking, the authorities of the town
+compelled him to work. As I passed up the street I saw him mending a
+road of the "far country" There I procured five horses, a stock of
+beads, knives, etc, for barter, and made ready for my land journey into
+the far interior. The storekeeper, hearing of my plans, strongly urged
+me not to attempt the journey, and soon all the village talked. Vague
+rumors of the unknown savages of the interior had been heard, and it
+was said the expedition could only end in disaster, especially as I was
+not even going to get the blessing of the Pai before starting. I was
+fortunate, however, in securing the companionship of an excellent man
+who bore the suggestive name of "Old Stabbed Arm"; and Dona Dolores
+(Mrs. Sorrows), true to her name, whom I engaged to make me about
+twenty pounds of chipa, said she would intercede with her saint for me.
+Loading the pack-horse with chipa, beads, looking-glasses, knives,
+etc., Old Stabbed Arm and I mounted our horses, and, each taking a
+spare one by the halter, drove the pack-saddle mare in front, leaving
+the tenderhearted Mrs. Sorrows weeping behind. The roads are simply
+paths through deep red sand, into which the horses sank up to their
+knees; and they are so uneven that one side is frequently two feet
+higher than the other, so we could travel only very slowly. From time
+to time we had to push our way into the dense forest on either side, in
+order to give space for a string of bullock carts to go past. These
+vehicles are eighteen or twenty feet long, but have only two wheels.
+They are drawn by ten or twelve oxen, which are urged on by goads
+fastened to a bamboo, twenty feet long, suspended from the roof of the
+cart, which is thatched with reeds. The goads are artistically trimmed
+with feathers of parrots and macaws, or with bright ribbons. These are
+of all colors, but those around the sharp nail at the end are further
+painted with red blood every time the goad is used.
+
+The carts, rolling and straining like ships in foul weather, can be
+heard a mile off, owing to the humming screech of the wheels, which are
+never greased, but on the contrary have powdered charcoal put in them
+to _increase_ the noise. Without this music (?) the bullocks do not
+work so well. How the poor animals could manage to draw the load was
+often a mystery to me, Sections of the road were partly destroyed by
+landslides and heavy rains, but down the slippery banks of rivers,
+through the beds of torrents or up the steep inclines they somehow
+managed to haul the unwieldy vehicle. Strings of loaded donkeys or
+mules, with jingling bells, also crawled past, and I noticed with a
+smile that even the animals in this idolatrous land cannot get on
+without the Virgin, for they have tiny statuettes of her standing
+between their ears to keep them from danger. Near the town the rivers
+and streams are bridged over with tree trunks placed longitudinally,
+and the crevices are filled in with boughs and sods. Some of them are
+so unsafe and have such gaping holes that I frequently dismounted and
+led my horse over.
+
+The tropical scenery was superb. Thousands of orange trees growing by
+the roadside, filled with luscious fruit on the lower branches, and on
+the top with the incomparable orange blossoms, afforded delight to the
+eye, and notwithstanding the heat, kept us cool, for as we rode we
+could pluck and eat. Tree ferns twenty and thirty feet high waved their
+feathery fronds in the gentle breeze, and wild pineapples growing at
+our feet loaded the air with fragrance.
+
+There was the graceful pepper tree, luxuriant hanging lichens, or
+bamboos forty feet high, which riveted the attention and made one think
+what a beautiful world God has made. Many of the shrubs and plants
+afford dyes of the richest hues, Azara found four hundred new species
+of the feathered tribe in the gorgeous woods and coppices of Paraguay,
+and all, with the melancholy _caw_, _caw_ of the toucans overhead,
+spoke of a tropical land. Parrots chattered in the trees, and sometimes
+a serpent glided across the red sand road. Unfortunately, flies were so
+numerous and so tormenting that, even with the help of a green branch,
+we could not keep off the swarms, and around the horses' eyes were
+dozens of them. Several menacing hornets also troubled us. They are
+there so fierce that they can easily sting a man or a horse to death!
+
+As night fell we came to an open glade, and there beside a clear,
+gurgling brook staked out our horses and camped for the night. Building
+a large fire of brushwood, we ate our supper, and then lay down on our
+saddlecloths, the firmament of God with its galaxy of stars as our
+covering overhead.
+
+By next evening we reached the village of Pegwaomi. On the way we had
+passed a house here and there, and had seen children ten or twelve
+years of age sucking sticks of sugar-cane, but content with no other
+clothing than their rosary, or an image of the Virgin round their
+necks, like those the mules wear. Pegwaomi, I saw, was quite a village,
+its pretty houses nestling among orange and lime trees, with luscious
+bananas in the background. There was no Pai in Pegwaomi, so I was able
+to hold a service in an open shed, with a roof but no walls. The chief
+man of the village gave me permission to use this novel building, and
+twenty-three people came to hear the stranger speak. After the service
+a poor woman was very desirous of confessing her sins to me, and she
+thought I was a strange preacher when I told her of One in heaven to
+whom she should confess.
+
+"Paraguay, from its first settlement, never departed from 'the age of
+faith' Neither doubt nor free-thinking in regard to spiritual affairs
+ever perplexed the people, but in all religious matters they accepted
+the words of the fathers as the unquestionable truth. Unfortunately,
+the priests were, with scarcely an exception, lazy and profligate; yet
+the people were so superstitious and credulous that they feared to
+disobey them, or reserve anything which they might be required to
+confess." [Footnote: Washburn's "History of Paraguay."]
+
+In the front gardens of many of the rustic houses I noticed a wooden
+cross draped with broad white lace. The dead are always interred in the
+family garden, and these marked the site of the graves. When the people
+can afford it, a priest is brought to perform the sad rite of burial,
+but the Paraguayan Pai is proverbially drunken and lazy. Once after a
+church feast, which was largely given up to drinking, the priest fell
+over on the floor in a state of intoxication. "While he thus lay drunk,
+a boy crawled through the door to ask his blessing, whereupon the
+priest swore horribly and waved him off, 'Not to-day, not to-day those
+farces! I am drunk, very drunk!'" Such an one has been described by
+Pollock: "He was a man who stole the livery of the court of heaven to
+serve the devil in; in holy guise transacted villainies that ordinary
+mortals durst not meddle with."
+
+Lest it might be thought that I am strongly prejudiced, I give this
+extract from a responsible historian of that unhappy land: "The
+simple-minded and superstitious Paraguayans reverenced a Pai, or
+father, as the immediate representative of God. They blindly and
+implicitly followed the instructions given to them, and did whatever
+was required at his hands. Many of the licentious brotherhood took
+advantage of this superstitious confidence placed in them by the people
+to an extent which, in a moral country, would not only shock every
+feeling of our nature to relate, but would, in the individual
+instances, appear to be incredible, and, in the aggregate, be counted
+as slanderous on humanity."
+
+During my stay in Pagwaomi, a dance was held on the sward outside one
+of the houses, and the national whirl, the _sarandiy_, gave pleasure to
+all. The females wove flowers in their hair, and made garlands of them
+to adorn their waists. Others had caught fire-flies, which nestled in
+the wavy tresses and lit up the semi-darkness with a soft light, like
+so many green stars. Love whisperings, in the musical Guarani, were
+heard by willing ears, and eyelight was thus added to starlight. As the
+dancers flitted here and there in their white garments, or came out
+from the shade of the orange trees, they looked ethereal, like the
+inhabitants of another world one sees at times in romantic dreams, for
+this village is surely a hundred years behind the moon.
+
+From this scene of innocent happiness I was taken to more than one
+sick-bed, for it soon became known that I carried medicines.
+
+Will the reader accompany me? Enter then--a windowless mud hut See,
+lying on sheepskins and burning with fever, a young woman-almost a
+girl-wailing "_Che raciy!>_" (I am sick!) Notice the intense eagerness
+of her eyes as she gazes into mine when I commence to minister to her.
+Watch her submit to my necessarily painful treatment with child-like
+faith. Then, before we quietly steal out again, listen to her
+low-breathed "_Acuerame_" (Already I feel better).
+
+In a larger house, a hundred yards away, an earthenware lamp, with
+cotton wick dipping in raw castor oil, sheds fitful gleams on a dying
+woman. The trail of sin is only too evident, even in thoughtless
+Pegwaomi. The tinselled saints are on the altar at the foot of the bed,
+and on the woman's breast, tightly clutched, is a crucifix, but Mrs.
+Encarnacion has never heard of the Incarnate One whom she is soon to
+meet. Perhaps, if Christians are awake by that time, her grandchildren
+may hear the "story."
+
+In that rustic cottage, half covered with jasmine, and shaded by a
+royal palm, a child lies very sick. Listen to its low, weak moaning as
+we cross the threshold. The mother has procured a piece of tape, the
+length of which, she says, is the exact measure of the head of Saint
+Blas. This she has repeatedly put around her babe's head as an
+unfailing cure. Somehow the charm does not work and the woman is sorely
+perplexed. While we helplessly look on the infant dies! Outside, the
+moon soared high, throwing a silver veil over the grim pathos of it
+all; but in the breast of the writer was a surging dissatisfaction
+and--anger, at his fellow--Christians in the homeland, who in their
+thoughtless selfishness will not reach out a helping hand to the
+perishing of other lands.
+
+Would the ever-present Spirit, who wrote "Be ye angry" not understand?
+Would the Master of patience and forbearance, who Himself showed
+righteous anger, enter into it? Is the Great God, who sees these sheep
+left without a shepherd, Himself angry? Surely it is well to ask?
+
+"Oh, heavy lies the weight of ill on many hearts, And comforters are
+needed sore of Christlike touch."
+
+In this village I made inquiries for another servant and guide, and was
+directed to "Timoteo, the very man." Liking his looks, and being able
+to come to satisfactory terms, I engaged him as my second helper.
+Timoteo had a sister called Salvadora (Saviour). She pounded corn in a
+mortar with a hardwood pestle, and made me another baking of chipa,
+with which we further burdened the pack-horse, and away we started
+again, with affectionate farewells and tears, towards the unknown.
+
+Next day we were joined by a traveller who was escaping to the
+interior. He plainly declared himself as a murderer, and told us he had
+shot one of the doctors in Asuncion. Through being well connected, he
+had, after three weeks' detention in prison, been liberated, as he
+boasted to us, _con todo buen nombre y fama (with good name and
+report). The relatives of the murdered man, however, did not agree with
+this verdict, and sought his life. During the day we shot an iguana,
+and after a meal from its fat tail our new acquaintance, finding the
+pace too slow for his hasty flight, left us, and I was not sorry. We
+met a string of bullock carts, each drawn by six animals and having a
+spare one behind. The lumbering wagons were on their way from the
+Paraguayan mate fields, and had a load of over two thousand pounds
+each. Jolting over huge tree-trunks, or anon sinking in a swamp,
+followed by swarms of gad-flies, the patient animals wended their way.
+
+Here and there one may see by the roadside a large wooden cross, with a
+rudely carved wooden rooster on the top, while below it are the nails,
+scourge, hammer, pincers and spear of gruesome crucifixion memory. At
+other places there are smaller shrines with a statuette of the Virgin
+inside, and candles invariably burning, provided by the generous
+wayfarers. It is interesting to note that the old Indians had, at the
+advent of the Spaniards, cairns of stones along their paths, and the
+pious Indian would contribute a stone when he passed as an offering to
+Pachacamac, who would keep away the evil spirits. That custom is still
+kept up by the Christian (?) Paraguayan, with the difference that _now_
+it is given to the Virgin. My guide would get down from his horse when
+we arrived at these altars, and contribute a stone to the ever-growing
+heap. If a specially bright one is offered, he told me it was more
+gratifying to the goddess. Feeling that we were very likely to meet
+with many _evil spirits_, Timoteo carefully sought for bright stones.
+The people are _very_ religious, yet with it all are terribly depraved!
+The truth is seldom spoken, and my guide was, unfortunately, no
+exception to the rule. As we left the haunts of men, and difficulties
+thickened, he would often entreat the help of Holy Mary, but in the
+same breath would lie and curse!
+
+Sighting a miserable hut, we called to inquire for meat. The master of
+the house, I discovered, was a leper, and I further learned, on asking
+if I might water my horses, that the nearest water was three miles
+away. The man and wife and their large family certainly looked as
+though water was a luxury too costly to use on the skin. The leper was
+most hospitable, however; he killed a sheep for us, and we sat down to
+a feast of mutton. After this we pushed on to water the horses. By
+sunset we arrived at a cattle ranch near the river Ipane, and there we
+stayed for the night. At supper all dipped in the same stew-pan, and
+afterwards rinsed out the mouth with large draughts of water, which
+they squirted back on the brick floor of the dining-room. The men then
+smoked cigarettes of tobacco rolled in corn leaves, and the women
+smoked their six-inch-long cigars. Finding that two of the men
+understood Spanish, I read some simple parts of scripture to them by
+the light of a dripping grease lamp. They listened in silence, and
+wondered at the strange new story. The mosquitoes were so troublesome
+that a large platform, twenty feet high, had been erected, and after
+reading all the inmates of the house, with us, ascended the ladder
+leading to the top. There the mosquitoes did not disturb us, so we
+slept peacefully on our aerial roost between the fire-flies of the
+earth and the stars of heaven.
+
+Next day we came to a solitary house, where I noticed strings of meat
+hung in the sun to dry. This is left, like so many stockings and
+handkerchiefs, hanging there until it is hard as wood; it will then
+keep for an indefinite time. There we got a good dinner of fresh beef,
+and about ten pounds of the dried meat (_charqui_) to take away with
+us. At this place I bought two more horses, and we each got a large
+bullock's horn in which to carry water, swinging from the saddle-tree.
+I was not sorry to leave this house, for, tearing up the offal around
+the building, I counted as many as sixty black vultures. Their king, a
+dirty white bird with crimson neck covered with gore and filth, had
+already gorged himself with all the blood he could get. "All his sooty
+subjects stand apart at a respectful distance, whetting their appetites
+and regaling their nostrils, but never dreaming of an approach to the
+carcass till their master has sunk into a state of repletion. When the
+kingly bird, by falling on his side, closing his eyes, and stretching
+on the ground his unclenched talons, gives notice to his surrounding
+and expectant subjects that their lord and master has gone to rest, up
+they hop to the carcass, which in a few minutes is stripped of
+everything eatable." Here we left the high-road, which is cut through
+to Punta Pona on the Brazilian frontier, and struck off to the west.
+Over the grassy plains we made good progress, and by evening were
+thirty miles farther on our journey. But when we had to cut the path
+before us through the forest, ten or twelve miles was a good day's
+work. When the growth was very dense, the morning and evening camps
+were perhaps only separated by a league. Anon we struggled through a
+swamp, or the horses stuck fast in a bog, and the _carapatas_ feasted
+on our blood. "What are carapatas?" you ask. They are leeches, bugs,
+mosquitos, gad-flies, etc., all compounded into one venomous insect!
+These voracious green ticks, the size of a bug, are indeed a terrible
+scourge. They fasten on the body in scores, and when pulled away,
+either the piece of flesh comes with them or the head of the carapata
+is torn off. _It was easy to pick a hundred of these bugs off the body
+at night_, but it was _not_ easy to sleep after the ordeal! The poor
+horses, brushing through the branches on which the ticks wait for their
+prey, were sometimes _half covered with them!_
+
+As we continued our journey, a house was a rare sight, and soon we came
+to "the end of Christianity," as Timoteo said, and all civilization was
+left behind. The sandy road became a track, and then we could no longer
+follow the path, for there was none to follow. Timoteo had traversed
+those regions before in search of the mate plant, however, and with my
+compass I kept the general direction.
+
+After about ten days' travel, during which time we had many reminders
+that the flesh-pots had been left behind, _"Che cane o"_ (I am tired)
+was frequently heard. Game was exceedingly scarce, and it was possible
+to travel for days without sighting any animal or ostrich. We passed no
+houses, and saw no human beings. For two days we subsisted on hard
+Indian corn. Water was scarce, and for a week we were unable to wash.
+Jiggers got into our feet when sleeping on the ground, and these caused
+great pain and annoyance. Someone has described a jigger as "a cross
+between Satan and a woodtick." The little insects lay their eggs
+between the skin and flesh. When the young hatch out, they begin
+feeding on the blood, and quickly grow half an inch long and cause an
+intense itching. My feet were swollen so much that I could not get on
+my riding-boots, and, consequently, my lower limbs were more exposed
+than ever. If not soon cut out, the flesh around them begins to rot,
+and mortification sometimes ensues.
+
+On some of the savannas we were able to kill deer and ostrich, but they
+generally were very scarce. Our fare was varied; sometimes we feaisted
+on parrot pie or vultures eggs; again we lay down on the hard, stony
+ground supperless. At such times I would be compelled to rise from time
+to time and tighten up my belt, until I must have resembled one of the
+ladies of fashion, so far as the waist was concerned. Again we came to
+marshy ground, filled with royal duck, teal, water-hens, snipe, etc,
+and forgot the pangs of past hunger. At such places we would fill our
+horns and drink the putrid water, or take off our shirts and wash them
+and our bodies. Mud had to serve for soap. Our washing, spread out on
+the reeds, would soon dry, and off we would start for another stage.
+
+The unpeopled state of the country was a constant wonder to me;
+generations have disappeared without leaving a trace of their
+existence. Sometimes I stopped to admire the pure white water-lilies
+growing on stagnant black water, or the lovely Victoria Regia, the leaf
+of which is at times so large as to weigh ten pounds. The flowers have
+white petals, tinted with rose, and the centre is a deep violet. Their
+weight is between two and three pounds.
+
+Wherever we camped we lit immense fires of brushwood, and generally
+slept peacefully, but with loaded rifle at arm's length.
+
+A portion of land which I rode over while in that district must have
+been just a thin crust covering a mighty cave. The horses' footfalls
+made hollow sounds, and when the thin roof shook I half expected to be
+precipitated into unknown depths.
+
+After many weeks of varied experiences we arrived at or near the land I
+was seeking. There, on the banks of a river, we struck camp, and from
+there I made short excursions in all directions in order to ascertain
+the approximate value of the old gentleman's estate. On the land we
+came upon an encampment of poor, half or wholly naked Caingwa Indians.
+By them we were kindly received, and found that, notwithstanding their
+extremely sunken condition and abject poverty, they seemed to have
+mandioca and bananas in abundance. In return for a few knives and
+beads, I was able to purchase quite a stock. Seeing that all the
+dishes, plates, and bottles they have grow in the form of gourds, they
+imagine all such things we use also grow. It was amusing to hear them
+ask for _seeds of the glass medicine bottles_ I carried with me.
+
+A drum, ingeniously made by stretching a serpent's skin over a large
+calabash, was monotonously beaten as our good-night lullaby when we
+stretched ourselves out on the grass.
+
+The Caingwa men all had their lower lip pierced, and hanging down over
+the breast was a thin stick about ten inches long. Their faces were
+also painted in strange patterns.
+
+Learning from their chief that the royal tribe to which they originally
+belonged lived away in the depths of the forest to the east, some moons
+distant, I became curious. After repeated enquiries I was told that a
+king ruled the people there, and that they daily worshipped the sun.
+Hearing of these sun-worshippers, I determined, if possible, to push on
+thither. The old chief himself offered to direct us if, in return, I
+would give him a shirt, a knife, and a number of white beads. The
+bargain was struck, and arrangements were made to start off at sunrise
+next day, My commission was not only to see the old gentleman's land,
+but to visit the surrounding Indians, with a view to missionary work
+being commenced among them.
+
+The morning dawned clear and propitious, but the chief had decided not
+to go. On enquiring the reason for the change of mind, I discovered
+that his people had been telling him that I only wanted to get him into
+the forest in order to kill him, and that I would not give him the
+promised shirt and beads. I thought that it was much more likely for
+him to kill me than I him, and I set his mind at rest about the reward,
+for on the spot I gave him the coveted articles. On receipt of those
+luxuries his doubts of me fled, and I soon assured him that I had no
+intention whatever of taking his life. Towards noon we started off,
+and, winding our way through the Indian paths in single file, we again
+soon left behind us all signs of man, and saw nothing to mark that any
+had passed that way before.
+
+That night, as we sat under a large silk-cotton tree silently eating
+supper off plates of palm leaves, the old chief suddenly threw down his
+meat, and, with a startled expression, said, "I hear spirits!" Never
+having heard such ethereal visitors myself, I smiled incredulously,
+whereupon the old savage glared at me, and, leaving his food upon the
+ground went away out of the firelight into the darkness. Afraid that he
+might take one of the horses and return to his people, I followed to
+soothe him, but his offended mood did not pass until, as he said, the
+_spirits_ had gone.
+
+On the third day scarcity of water began to be felt. We had been slowly
+ascending the rugged steeps of a mountain, and as the day wore on the
+thirst grew painful. That night both we and the horses had to be
+content with the dew-drops we sucked from the grass, and our dumb
+companions showed signs of great exhaustion. The Indian assured me that
+if we could push on we would, by next evening, come to a beautiful lake
+in the mountains: so, ere the sun rose next morning, we were in the
+saddle on our journey to the coveted water.
+
+All that day we plodded along painfully, silently. Our lips were dried
+together, and our tongues swollen. Thirst hurts! The horses hung their
+heads and ears, and we were compelled to dismount and go afoot. The
+poor creatures were getting so thin that our weight seemed to crush
+them to the earth. The sun again set, darkness fell, and the lake was,
+for all I could see, a dream of the chief, our guide. At night, after
+repeating the sucking of the dew, we ate a little, drank the blood of
+an animal, and tried to sleep. The patient horses stood beside us with
+closed eyes and bowed heads, until the sight was more than I could
+bear. Fortunately, a very heavy dew fell, which greatly helped us, and
+two hours before sunrise next morning the loads were equally
+distributed on the backs of the seven horses and we started off once
+again through the mist for water! water! When the sun illuminated the
+heavens and lit up the rugged peaks of the strangely shaped mountains
+ahead of us, hope was revived. We sucked the fruit of the date palm,
+and in imagination bathed and wallowed in the water--beautiful
+water--we so soon expected to behold. The poor horses, however, not
+buoyed up with sweet hopes as we were, gave out, one after the other,
+and we were compelled to cruelly urge them on up the steep. With it
+all, I had to leave two of the weaker ones behind, purposing, if God
+should in kindness permit us to reach water, to return and save them.
+
+That afternoon the Indian chief, who, though an old man, had shown
+wonderful fortitude and endurance, and still led the way, shouted:
+"_Eyoape! Eyoape!_" (Come! Come!) We were near the lake. With new-born
+strength I left all and ran, broke through the brushwood of the shore,
+jumped into the lake, and found--nothing but hard earth! The lake was
+dried up! I dug my heel into the ground to see if below the surface
+there might be soft mud, but failing to find even that, I dropped over
+with the world dancing in distorted visions before my eyes. More I
+cannot relate.
+
+How long I lay there I never knew. The Indian, I learned later,
+exploring a deep gully at the other side, found a putrid pool of slime,
+full of poisonous frogs and alive with insects. Some of this liquid he
+brought to me in his hands, and, after putting it in my mouth, had the
+satisfaction of seeing me revive. I dimly remember that my next act was
+to crawl towards the water-hole he guided me to. In this I lay and
+drank. I suppose it soaked into my system as rain in the earth after a
+drought. That stagnant pool was our salvation. The horses were brought
+up, and we drank, and drank again. Not until our thirst was slaked did
+we fully realize how the water stank! When the men were sufficiently
+refreshed they returned for the abandoned horses, which were found
+still alive. Had they scented water somewhere and drank? At the foot of
+the mountains, on the other side, we later discovered much better
+water, and there we camped, our horses revelling in the abundant
+pasturage.
+
+After this rest we continued our journey, and next day came to the edge
+of a virgin forest. Through that, the chief said, we must cut our way,
+for the royal tribe never came out, and were never visited. Close to
+the edge of the forest was a deep precipice, at the bottom of which we
+could discern a silvery streak of clear water. From there we must
+procure the precious fluid for ourselves and horses. Taking our kettle
+and horns, we sought the best point to descend, and after considerable
+difficulty, clinging to the branches of the overhanging trees and the
+dense undergrowth, we reached the bottom. After slaking our thirst we
+ascended with filled horns and kettle to water the horses. As may be
+supposed, this was a tedious task, and the descent had to be made many
+times before the horses were satisfied. My hat served for watering pail.
+
+Next morning the same process was repeated, and then the men, each with
+long _machetes_ I had provided, set to work to cut a path through the
+forest, and Old Stabbed Arm went off in search of game. After a two
+hours' hunt, a fat ostrich fell before his rifle, and he returned to
+camp. We still had a little chipa, which had by this time become as
+hard as stone, but which I jealously guarded to use only in case of the
+greatest emergency. At times we had been very hungry, but my order was
+that it should not be touched.
+
+Only the reader who has seen the virgin forest, with its interlacing
+_lianas_, thick as a man's leg--the thorns six inches long and sharp as
+needles--can form an idea of the task before us. As we penetrated
+farther and farther in the _selva_, the darkness became deeper and
+deeper. Giant trees reared their heads one hundred and fifty feet into
+the heavens, and beautiful palms, with slender trunks and delicate,
+feathery leaves, waved over us. The medicinal plants were represented
+by sarsaparilla and many others equally valuable. There was the cocoa
+palm, the date palm, and the cabbage palm, the latter of which
+furnished us good food, while the wine tree afforded an excellent and
+cooling drink. In parts all was covered with beautiful pendant
+air-flowers, gorgeous with all the colors of the rainbow. Monkeys
+chattered and parrots screamed, but otherwise there was a sombre
+stillness. The exhalations from the depth of rotting leaves and the
+decaying fallen wood rendered the steamy atmosphere most poisonous.
+Truly, the flora was magnificent, and the fauna, represented by the
+spotted jaguar, whose roar at times broke the awful quiet of the night,
+was equally grand.
+
+As the chief, ignorant of hours and miles, could not tell me the extent
+of the forest, I determined to let him and Timoteo make their way
+through as best they could, crawling through the branches, to the
+Sun-Worshippers, and secure their help in cutting a way for the horses.
+After dividing the food I had, we separated. Timoteo and the Indian
+crept into the forest and were soon lost sight of, while Old Stabbed
+Arm and I, with the horses, retraced our steps, and reached the open
+land again. After an earnest conversation my companion shouldered his
+rifle and went off to hunt, and I was left with only the companionship
+of the grazing horses. I remained behind to water the animals, and
+protect our goods from any prowling savage who might chance to be in
+the neighborhood. My saddle-bed was spread under a large _burning
+bush_, or incense tree, and my self-imposed duty was to keep a fire
+burning in the open, that its smoke might be seen by day and its light
+by night.
+
+Going exploring a little, I discovered a much better descent down the
+precipice, and water was more easily brought up. Indeed, I decided
+that, if a certain deep chasm were bridged over, it might be possible
+to get the horses themselves to descend by a winding way. With this
+object in view I felled saplings near the place, and in a few hours
+constructed a rough bridge, strong enough to bear a horse's weight.
+Whether the animals could smell the water flowing at the bottom, or
+were more agile than I had thought, I cannot tell, but they descended
+the almost perpendicular path most wonderfully, and soon were taking
+draughts of the precious liquid with great gusto. Leaving the horses to
+enjoy their drink, I ascended the stream for some distance, in order to
+discover, if possible, where the flow came from. Judge of my surprise
+when I found that the water ran out of a grotto, or cavern, in the face
+of the cliff-out of the unknown darkness into the sunlight! Walking up
+the bed of the stream, I entered the cave, and, striking a few matches,
+found it to be inhabited by hundreds of vampire bats, which were
+hanging from the sides and stalactites of the roof, like so many damp,
+black rags. On my entrance the unearthly creatures were disturbed, and
+many came flying in my face, so I made a quick exit. Several which I
+killed came floating down the stream with me; one that I measured
+proved to be twenty-two inches across the wings. My exploration had
+discovered the secret of the clots of blood we had been finding on the
+horses' necks every morning. The vampire-bats, in their nightly
+flights, had been sucking the life-blood of our poor, already starving
+animals! It is said these loathsome creatures--half beast, half
+bird--fan their victim to sleep while they drain out the red blood.
+Provided with palm torches, I again entered the cavern, but could not
+penetrate its depths; it seemed to go right into the bowels of the
+mountain. Exploring down stream was more successful, for large
+flamingoes and wild ducks and geese were found in plenty.
+
+That night I carefully staked out the horses all around the camp-fire
+and lay down to think and sleep and dream. Old Stabbed Arm had not
+returned, and I was alone with nature. Several times I rose to see if
+the horses were securely tied, and to kill any bats I might find
+disturbing them. Rising in the grey dawn, I watered the horses, cooked
+a piece of ostrich meat, and started off on foot for a short distance
+to explore the country to the north, where I saw many indications that
+tapirs were numerous. My first sight of this peculiar animal of
+Paraguay I shall never forget. It resembles no other beast I have ever
+seen, but seems half elephant, with its muzzle like a short trunk. In
+size it is about six feet long and three and a half feet high. There
+were also ant-bears, peculiar animals, without teeth, but provided with
+a rough tongue to lick up the ants. The length of this animal is about
+four feet, but the thick tail is longer than the body. Whereas the
+tapir has a hog-like skin, the ant-bear has long, bristly hairs.
+
+Returning to camp, judge of my surprise when I found it in possession
+of two savages of strange appearance. My first thought was that I had
+lost all, but, drawing nearer, I discovered that Timoteo and the chief
+were also there, squatting on the ground, devouring the remains of my
+breakfast. They had returned from the royal tribe, who had offered to
+cut a way from their side, and these two strangers were to assist us.
+
+With this additional help we again penetrated the forest. The men cut
+with a will, and I drove the horses after them. Black, howling monkeys,
+with long beards and grave countenances, leapt among the trees. Red and
+blue macaws screeched overhead, and many a large serpent received its
+death-blow from our machetes. Sometimes we were fortunate enough to
+secure a bees' nest full of honey, or find luscious fruit. At times I
+stopped to admire a giant tree, eight or ten feet in diameter, or
+orchids of the most delicate hues, but the passage was hard and trying,
+and the stagnant air most difficult to breathe. The fallen tree-trunks,
+over which we had to step, or go around or under, were very numerous,
+and sometimes we landed in a bed, not of roses, but of thorns. Sloths
+and strange birds' nests hung from the trees, while the mosquitos and
+insects made life almost unendurable. We were covered with carapatas,
+bruised and torn, and almost eaten up alive with insects.
+
+
+[Illustration: PARAGUAYAN FOREST INDIAN. These dwarf men use a very
+long bow, while the Patagonian uses a short one]
+
+
+Under the spreading branches of one of the largest trees we came upon
+an abandoned Indian camp. This, I was told, had belonged to the "little
+men of the woods," hairy dwarfs, a few of whom inhabit the depths of
+the forest, and kill their game with blow-pipes. Of course we saw none
+of the poor creatures. Their scent is as keen as an animal's; they are
+agile as monkeys, and make off to hide in the hollow trunks of trees,
+or bury themselves in the decaying vegetation until danger is past.
+Poor pigmy! What place will he occupy in the life that is to be?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+WE REACH THE SUN-WORSHIPPERS.
+
+
+After some days' journey we heard shouts, and knew that, like entombed
+miners, we were being dug out on the other side! The Caingwas soon met
+us, and I looked into their faces and gravely saluted. They stared at
+me in speechless astonishment, and I as curiously regarded them. Each
+man had his lower lip pierced and wore the _barbote_ I have described,
+with the difference that these were made of gum.
+
+With a clear path before us we now made better progress, and before
+long emerged from the living tomb, but the memory of it will ever
+remain a nightmare.
+
+We found a crowd of excited Indians, young and old, awaiting us. Many
+of the females ran like frightened deer on catching sight of me, but an
+old man, whom I afterwards learned was the _High Priest_ of the tribe,
+came and asked my business. Assuring him, through Timoteo, that my
+mission was peaceable, and that I had presents for them, he gave me
+permission to enter into the glade, where I was told _Nandeyara_
+[Footnote: "Our Owner," the most beautiful word for God I have ever
+heard.] had placed them at the beginning of the world. Had I discovered
+the _Garden of Eden_, the place from which man had been wandering for
+6,000 years? I was conducted by Rocanandiva (the high priest) down a
+steep path to the valley, where we came in view of several large
+peculiarly shaped houses, built of bamboo. Near these dwellings were
+perhaps a hundred men, women and children, remnants of a vanishing
+nation. Some had a mat around their loins, but many were naked. All the
+males had the _barbote_ in the lip, and had exceptionally thick hair,
+matted with grease and mud. Most of them had a repellant look on their
+pigment-painted faces, and I could very distinctly see that I was not a
+welcome visitor. No, I had not reached Eden! Only "beyond the clouds
+and beyond the tomb" would the bowers of Eden be discovered to me.
+Hearing domestic hens cackling around the houses, I bade Timoteo tell
+the priest that we were very hungry, and that if he killed two chickens
+for us I would give him a beautiful gift later on. The priest
+distinctly informed me, however, that I must give first, or no fowl
+would be killed. From that decision I tried to move him, urging that I
+was tired, the pack was hard to undo, and to-morrow, when I was rested,
+I would well repay them the kindness. My words were thrown away; not a
+bite should we eat until the promised knife was given. I was faint with
+hunger, but from the load on the packhorse I procured the knife, which
+I handed to my unwilling host with the promise of other gifts later. On
+receipt of this treasure he gave orders to the boys standing off at a
+distance to catch two chickens. The birds were knocked over by the
+stones thrown at them. Two women now came forward with clay pots on
+their heads and fire-sticks in their hands, and they superintended the
+cooking. Without cutting off either heads or legs, or pulling out the
+birds' feathers, the chickens were placed in the pots with water. Lying
+down near the fire, I, manlike, impatiently waited for supper. Perhaps
+a minute had dragged its weary length along when I picked up a stick
+from the ground and poked one of the fowls out of the water, which was
+not yet warm. Holding the bird in one hand, and pulling feathers out of
+my mouth with the other, I ate as my forefathers did ages ago. Years
+before this I had learned that a hungry man can eat what an epicure
+despises. After this feast I lay down on the ground behind one of the
+tepees, and, with my head resting on my most valued possessions, went
+to sleep.
+
+Having promised to give the priest and his wife another present, I was
+awakened very early next morning. They had come for their gifts. Rising
+from my hard bed, I stretched myself and awoke my servant, under whose
+head were the looking-glasses. I presented one of these to the woman,
+who looked in it with satisfaction and evident pleasure. Whether she
+was pleased with her reflection or with the glass I cannot tell, but I
+feel sure it must have been the latter! A necklace to the daughter and
+a further gift to the old man gained their friendship, and food was
+brought to us. After partaking of this I was informed that the king
+desired to see me, and that I must proceed at once to his hut.
+
+His majesty (?) lived on the other side of the river, close at hand.
+This water was of course unbridged, so, in order to cross, I was
+compelled to divest myself of my clothing and walk through it in
+nature's garb. The water came up to my breast, and once I thought the
+clothes I carried on my head would get wet. Dressing on the other side,
+I presented myself at the king's abode. There I was kindly received,
+being invited to take up my quarters with him and his royal family. The
+king was a tall man of somewhat commanding appearance, but, save for
+the loin cloth, he was naked, like the rest. The queen, a little woman,
+was as scantily dressed as her husband. She was very shy, and I noticed
+the rest of the inmates of the hut peeping through the crevices of the
+corn-stalk partition of an inner room. After placing around the shapely
+neck of the queen a specially fine necklace I had brought, and giving
+the king a large hunting-knife, I was regaled with roasted yams, and
+later on with a whole watermelon.
+
+Timoteo, my servant, whose native language was Guarani, could
+understand most of the idiom of the Sun Worshippers, which we found to
+be similar to that spoken by the civilized inhabitants of the country.
+There must therefore have been some connection between the two peoples
+at one time. The questions, "Where have you come from?" "Why have you
+come?" were asked and answered, and I, in return, learned much of this
+strange tribe. Mate was served, but whereas in the outside world a
+rusty tin tube to suck it through is in possession of even the poorest,
+here they used only a reed. I was astonished to find the mate
+sweetened. Knowing that they could not possibly have any of the
+luxuries of civilization, I made enquiries regarding this, and was told
+that they used a herb which grew in the valley, to which they gave the
+name of _ca-ha he-he_ (sweet herb). This plant, which is not unlike
+clover, is sweet as sugar, whether eaten green or in a dried state.
+
+There was not a seat of any description in the hut, but the king said,
+"_Eguapu_" ("Sit down"), so I squatted on the earthen floor. A broom is
+not to be found in the kingdom, and the house had never been swept!
+
+A curiosity I noticed was the calabash which the king carried attached
+to his belt. This relic was regarded with great reverence, and at first
+His Majesty declined to reveal its character; but after I had won his
+confidence by gifts of beads and mirrors, he became more communicative.
+One day, in a burst of pride, he told me that the gourd contained the
+ashes of his ancestors, who were the ancient kings. Though the
+Spaniards sought to carefully rout out and destroy all direct
+descendants of the royal family of the Incas, their historians tell us
+that some remote connections escaped. The Indians of Peru have legends
+to the effect that at the time of the Spanish invasion an Inca
+chieftain led an emigration of his people down the mountains. Humboldt,
+writing in the 18th century, said: "It is interesting to inquire
+whether any other princes of the family of Manco Capac have remained in
+the forests; and if there still exist any of the Incas of Peru in other
+places." Had I discovered some descendants of this vanished race? The
+Montreal _Journal_, commenting on my discovery, said: "The question is
+of extreme interest to the scientific enquirer, even if they are not
+what Mr. Ray thinks them."
+
+The royal family consisted of the parents, a son and his wife, a
+daughter and her husband, and two younger girls. I was invited to sleep
+in the inner room, which the parents occupied, and the two married
+couples remained in the common room. All slept in fibre hammocks, made
+greasy and black by the smoke from the fire burning on the floor in the
+centre of the room. No chimney, window, door, or article of furniture
+graced the house.
+
+"The court of the Incas rivalled that of Rome, Jerusalem, or any of the
+old Oriental countries, in riches and show, the palaces being decorated
+with a great profusion of gold, silver, fine cloth and precious
+stones." [Footnote: Rev. Thomas Wood, LL.D., Lima, Peru, In "Protestant
+Missions in South America."]
+
+An ancient Spanish writer who measured some of the stones of the Incan
+palace at Cuzco tells us there were stones so nicely adjusted that it
+was impossible to introduce even the blade of a knife between them, and
+that some of those stones were thirty-eight feet long, by eighteen feet
+broad, and six feet thick. What a descent for the "Children of the
+Sun"! "How are the mighty fallen!" Thoughts of the past and the mean
+present passed through my mind as I lay down in the dust of the earthen
+floor that first night of my stay with the king.
+
+Owing to the thousands of fleas in the dust of the room it was hard for
+me to rest much, and that night a storm brewing made sleep almost
+impossible. As the thunder pealed forth all the Indians of the houses
+hastily got out of their hammocks and grasped gourd rattles and
+beautifully woven cotton banners. The rattles were shaken
+ and the banners waved, while a droning chant was struck up by the
+high priest, and the louder the thunder rolled the louder their voices
+rose and the more lustily they shook the seeds in their calabashes.
+They were trying to appease the dread deity of Thunder, as did their
+Inca ancestors. The voice of the old priest led the worship, and for
+_four hours_ there was no cessation of the monotonous song, except when
+he performed some mystic ceremony which I understood not.
+
+Just as the old priest had awakened me the first morning to ask for his
+present, so the king came tapping me gently the second. In his hand he
+had a large sweet potato, and in my half-dreamy state I heard him
+saying, "Give me your coat. Eat a potato?" The change I thought was
+greatly to his advantage, but I was anxious to please him. I possessed
+two coats, while he was, as he said, a poor old man, and had no coat.
+The barter was concluded; I ate the potato, and he, with strange
+grimaces, donned a coat for the first time in his life. Think of this
+for an alleged descendant of the great Atahuallpa, whose robes and
+jewels were priceless!
+
+I offered to give the queen a feminine garment of white cotton if she
+would wear it, but this I could not prevail upon her to do; it was
+"ugly." As a loin-cloth, she would use it, but put it on--no! In the
+latter savage style the shaped garment was thereafter worn. Women have
+_fashions_ all over the globe.
+
+The few inches of clothing worn by the Caingwa women are never washed,
+and the only attempt at cleansing the body I saw when among them was
+that of a woman who filled her mouth with water and squirted it back on
+her hands, which she then wiped on her loin-cloth!
+
+Prescott, writing of the Incas, says: "They loved to indulge in the
+luxury of their baths, replenished by streams of crystal water which
+were conducted through subterraneous silver channels into basins of
+gold."
+
+The shapely little mouth of the queen was spoilt by the habit she had
+of smoking a _heavy_ pipe made of red clay. I was struck with the
+weight and shape of this, for it exactly resembled those made by the
+old cliff-dwellers, unknown centuries ago. One will weigh at least a
+quarter of a pound. For a mouth-piece they use a bird's quill. The
+tobacco they grow themselves.
+
+Near the royal abode were the kitchen gardens. A tract of forest had
+been fired, and this clearing planted with bananas, mandioca, sweet
+potatoes, etc. The blackened trunks of the trees rose up like so many
+evil spirits above the green foliage. The garden implements used were
+of the most primitive description; a crooked stick served for hoe, and
+long, heavy, sharpened iron-wood clubs were used instead of the steel
+plough of civilization.
+
+As I have already remarked, I found the people were sun-worshippers.
+Each morning, just as the rising sun lit up the eastern sky, young and
+old came out of their houses, the older ones carrying empty gourds with
+the dry seeds inside. At a signal from the high priest, a solemn
+droning chant was struck up, to the monotonous time kept by the
+numerous gourd rattles. As the sun rose higher and higher, the chanting
+grew louder and louder, and the echoes of _"He! he! he! ha! ha! ha!
+laima! laima!"_ were repeated by the distant hills. When the altar of
+incense (described later) was illuminated by the sun-god, the chanting
+ceased.
+
+After this solemn worship of the Orb of Day, the women, with quiet
+demeanor and in single file, went off to their work in the gardens. On
+returning, each carried a basket made of light canes, slung on the back
+and held up by plaited fibres forming a band which came across their
+foreheads. The baskets contained the day's vegetables. Meat was seldom
+eaten by them, but this was probably because of its scarcity, for when
+we killed an ostrich they clamored for a share. Reptiles of all kinds,
+and even caterpillars, are devoured by them when hungry.
+
+The Caingwas are under the average height, but use the longest bows and
+arrows I have ever seen. Some I brought away measure nearly seven feet
+in length. The points are made of sharpened iron-wood, notched like the
+back of a fish-hook, and they are poisoned with serpent venom. Besides
+these weapons, it was certainly strange to find them living in the
+_stone age_, for in the hands of the older members of the tribe were to
+be seen stone axes. The handles of these primitive weapons are scraped
+into shape by flints, as probably our savage forefathers in Britain did
+theirs two thousand years ago.
+
+Entering the low, narrow doorway of one of the bamboo frame houses, I
+saw that it was divided into ten-foot squares by corn-stalk partitions
+a yard high. These places, like so many stalls for horses, run down
+each side of the _hoga_. One family occupies a division, sleeping in
+net hammocks made of long, coarse grass. A "family man" usually has
+bands of human hair twisted around his legs below the knees, and also
+around the wrists. This hair is torn from his wife's head. Down the
+centre are numerous fires for cooking purposes, but the house was
+destitute of chimney. Wood is burned, and the place was at times so
+full of smoke that I could not distinguish one Indian from another.
+Fortunately, the walls of the house, as was also the roof, were in bad
+repair, and some of the smoke escaped through the chinks. Sixty people
+lived in the largest hoga, and I judged the number of the whole tribe
+to be about three hundred.
+
+The doorways of all the houses faced towards the east, as did those of
+the Inca. In the principal one, where the high priest lived, a square
+altar of red clay was erected. I quickly noticed that on this
+elevation, which was about a yard high, there burned a very carefully
+tended fire of holy wood. Enquiring the meaning of this, I was informed
+that, very many moons ago, Nande-yara had come in person to visit the
+tribe, and when with them had lit the fire, which, he said, they must
+not under any circumstances suffer to die out. Ever since then the
+smoke of the incense had ascended to their "Owner" in his far-off
+dwelling.
+
+How forcibly was I reminded of the scripture referring to the Jewish
+altar of long ago, "There the fire shall ever be burning upon the
+altar; it shall never go out." If I had not discovered Eden, I had at
+least found the altar and fire of Edenic origin.
+
+Behind the altar, occupying the stall directly opposite the doorway,
+stood the tribal god. As the Caingwas are sun-worshippers, I was
+surprised to see this, but Rocanandivia, with grave demeanor, told me
+that when Nandeyara departed from them he left behind him his
+representative. In the chapter on Mariolatry, I have traced the natural
+tendency of man to sink from spiritual to image worship, and I found
+that the Caingwas, like all pagans, had reverted to a something they
+could see and feel. Remembering that they had never heard the second
+commandment, written by God because of this failing in man, we can
+excuse them, but what shall be said of the enlightened Romanists?
+
+Being exceedingly anxious to procure their "Copy of God," I tried to
+bargain with the priest. I offered him one thing and another, but to
+all my proposals he turned a deaf ear, and finally, glaring at me, said
+that _nothing_ would ever induce him to part with it. The people would
+never allow the image to be taken away, as the life of the tribe was
+bound up with it Seeing that he was not to be moved, I desisted, though
+a covetous look in his eye when I offered a beautiful colored rug in
+exchange gave me hope, Rocanandiva was, like most idolatrous priests,
+very fanatical. When he learned that I professed and taught a different
+religion, his jealousy was most marked, and he often told me to go from
+them, I was not wanted. Living with the king, however, saved me from
+ejection.
+
+One day the priest, ever on the beg, was anxious to obtain some article
+from me, and I determined to give it only on one condition. Being
+anxious to tell the people the story of Jesus, I had repeatedly asked
+permission of him, but had been as often repulsed. They did not want
+_me_, or any new "words," he would reply. Turning to him now, I said,
+"Rocanandiva, if you will allow me to tell 'words' to the people you
+shall have the present." The priest turned on his heel and left me.
+Knowing his cupidity, I was not surprised when, later, he came to me
+and said that I could tell them _words_, and held out his hand for the
+gift.
+
+After sun-worship next morning the king announced that I had something
+new to tell them. When all were seated on the ground in wondering
+silence, I began in simple language to tell "the old, old story." My
+address was somewhat similar to the following: "Many moons ago,
+Nandeyara, looking down from his abode, saw that all the men and women
+and children in the world were bad; that is, they had done wrong
+things, such as . . . Now God has a Son, and to Him He said, Look down
+and see. All are doing wicked things! He looked and saw. The Father
+said that for their sin they should have to die, but that Jesus, His
+Son, could come down and die in their place. The Son came, and lived on
+earth many moons; but was hated, and at last caught, and large pieces
+of iron (like the priest's knife) were put into His hands and feet, and
+He was fastened to a tree. After this a man came, and, with a very long
+knife, brought the blood out of the side of Jesus, and He died."
+Purposing to further explain my story, I was not pleased when the
+priest stopped me, and, stepping forth, told the people that my account
+was not true. He then in eloquent tones related to them what he called
+the _real story_, to which I listened in amazed wonder.
+
+"Many moons ago," he began, "we were dying of hunger! One day the Sun,
+our god, changed into a man, and he walked down _that_ road." (Here he
+pointed to the east.) "The chief met him. 'All your people are dying of
+hunger,' said god. 'Yes, they are,' the chief replied. 'Will you die
+instead of all the people?' Nandeyara said. 'Yes, I will,' the chief
+answered. He immediately dropped down dead, and god came to the village
+where we all are now. 'Your chief is lying dead up the road,' he said,
+'go and bury him, and after three days are passed visit the grave, when
+you will find a plant growing out of
+ his mouth; that will be corn, and it will save you!'" Then, turning
+to me, the priest said: "This we did, and behold us alive! That is the
+story!" A strange legend, surely, and yet the reader will be struck
+with the grains of truth intermingled--life, resulting from the
+sacrificial death of another; the substitution of the one for the many;
+the life-giving seed germinating after _three days' burial_, reminding
+one of John 12:24: "Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and
+die, it abideth alone; but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit."
+Strange that so many aboriginal people have legends so near the truth.
+
+Some days later the chiefs son and I were alone, and I saw that
+something troubled him. He tried to tell me, but I was somewhat
+ignorant of his language, so, after looking in all directions to see
+that we were really alone, he led the way into a dark corner of the
+hoga, where we were. There, from under a pile of garden baskets,
+calabashes, etc., he brought out a peculiarly-shaped gourd, full of
+some red, powdery substance. This, with trembling haste, he put into my
+hand, and seemed greatly relieved when I had it securely. Going then to
+the corner where I kept my goods, he took up a box of matches and made
+signs for me to exchange, which I did. When Timoteo returned I learned
+that the young man was custodian of the devil--the only and original
+one--and that he had palmed him off on me for a box of matches! How the
+superstition of the visible presence of the devil originated I have no
+idea, but there might be some meaning in the man's earnest desire to
+exchange it for matches, or lights, the emblem of their fire or
+sun-worship. Was this simple deal fallen man's feeble effort to rid
+himself of the _Usurper_ and get back the _Father_, for it is very
+significant that the Caingwa word, _ta-ta_ (light), signifies also
+father. Do they need light, or are they sufficiently illumined for time
+and eternity? Will the reader reverently stand with me, in imagination,
+beside an Indian grave? A girl has died through snake poisoning. A
+shallow grave has been dug for her remains. Into this hole her body has
+been dropped, uncoffined, in a sitting position. Beside the body is
+placed some food and a few paltry trinkets, and the people stand around
+with that disconsolate look which is only seen upon the faces of those
+who know not the Father. As they thus linger, the witch-doctor asks,
+"Is the dog killed?" Someone replies, "Yes, the dog is killed." "Is the
+head cut off?" is then asked. "Yes, the head is off," is the reply.
+"Put it in the grave, then," says the medicine man; and then the dog's
+head is dropped at the girl's feet.
+
+Why do they do this? you ask. Question their _wise man_, and he will
+say: "A dog is a very clever animal. He can always find his way. A girl
+gets lost when alone. For that reason we place a dog's head with her,
+that it may guide her in the spirit life." I ask again, "Do they need
+missionaries?"
+
+My stay with the sun-worshippers, though interesting, was painful.
+Excepting when we cooked our own food, I almost starved. Their habits
+are extremely filthy, indeed more loathsome and disgusting than I dare
+relate.
+
+My horses were by now refreshed with their rest, and appeared able for
+the return journey, so I determined to start back to civilization. The
+priest heard of my decision with unfeigned joy, but the king and queen
+were sorrowful. These pressed me to return again some time, but said I
+must bring with me a _boca_ (gun) like my own for the king, with some
+more strings of white beads for the queen's wrists.
+
+While saddling our horses in the grey dawn, the wily priest came to me
+with a bundle, and, quietly drawing me aside, said that Nandeyara was
+inside, and in exchange for the bright rug I could take him away. The
+exchange was made, and I tied their god, along with bows and arrows,
+etc., on the back of a horse, and we said farewell. I had strict orders
+to cover up the idol from the eyes of the people until we got away.
+Even when miles distant, I kept looking back, fearing that the duped
+Indians were following in enraged numbers. Of course, the priest would
+give out that I had _stolen_ the image.
+
+Ah, Rocanandiva, you are not the first who has been willing to sell his
+god for worldly gain! The hand of Judas burned with "thirty pieces of
+silver," the earthly value of the Divine One. Pilate, for personal
+profit, said: "Let Him be crucified." And millions to-day sell Him for
+"a mess of pottage."
+
+The same horse bore away the _devil_ and _god_, so perhaps without the
+one there would be no need of the other.
+
+So prolific is the vegetation that during our few weeks' stay with the
+Indians the creeping thorns and briars had almost covered up the path
+we had cut through the forest, and it was again necessary to use our
+machetes. The larger growth, however, being down, this was not
+difficult, and we entered its sombre stillness once more. What strange
+creatures people its tangled recesses we knew not.
+
+ "For beasts and birds have seen and heard
+ That which man knoweth not."
+
+I hurried through with little wish to penetrate its secret. Mere
+existence was hard enough in its steaming semi-darkness. Our clothes
+were now almost torn to shreds (I had sought to mend mine with
+horse-hair thread, with poor results), and we duly emerged into
+daylight on the other side, ragged, torn and dirty.
+
+Our journey back to civilization was similar to the outward way. We
+selected a slightly different route, but left the old chief safe and
+well with his people.
+
+One night our horses were startled by a bounding jaguar, and were so
+terrified that they broke away and scattered in all directions.
+Searching for them detained us a whole day, but fortunately we were
+able to round them all up again. Two were found in a wood of
+strangely-shaped bushes, whose large, tough leaves rustled like
+parchment.
+
+One afternoon a heavy rain came on, and we stopped to construct a
+shelter of green branches, into which we crept. The downpour became so
+heavy that it dripped through our hastily-constructed arbor, and we
+were soon soaking wet. Owing to the dampness of the fuel, it was only
+after much patient work that we were able to light a fire and dry our
+clothes. There we remained for three days, Timoteo sighing for
+Pegwaomi, and the wind sighing still louder, to our discomfort.
+Everything we had was saturated. Sleeping on the soaking ground, the
+poisonous tarantula spiders crept over us. These loathsome creatures,
+second only to the serpent, are frequently so large as to spread their
+thick, hairy legs over a six-inch diameter.
+
+The storm passed, and we started off towards the river Ipane, which was
+now considerably swollen. Three times on the expedition we had halted
+to build rough bridges over chasms or mountain streams with
+perpendicular banks, but this was broad and had to be crossed through
+the water. As I rode the largest and strongest horse, it was my place
+to venture first into the rushing stream. The animal bravely stemmed
+the current, as did the rest, but Old Stabbed Arm, riding a weaker
+horse, nearly lost his life. The animal was washed down by the strong
+current, and but for the man's previous long experience in swimming
+rivers he would never have reached the bank. The pony also somehow
+struggled through to the side, landing half-drowned, and Old Stabbed
+Arm received a few hearty pats on the back. The load on the mare was
+further soaked, but most of our possessions had been ruined long ago.
+My cartridges I had slung around my neck, and I held the photographic
+plates in my teeth, while the left hand carried my gun, so these were
+preserved. To my care on that occasion the reader is indebted for some
+of the illustrations in this volume. Nandeyara got another wash, but he
+had been wet before, and never complained!
+
+On the farther side of the river was a deserted house, and we could
+distinctly trace the heavy footprints of a tapir leading up the path
+and through the open doorway. We entered with caution. Was the beast in
+then? No. He had gone out by a back way, probably made by himself,
+through the wattled wall. We could see the place was frequented very
+often by wild pigs, which had left hundreds of footprints in the
+three-inch depth of dust on the floor. There we lit a fire to again dry
+our clothes, and prepared to pass the night, expecting a visit from the
+hogs. Had they appeared when we were ready for them, the visit would
+not have been unwelcome. Food was hard to procure, and animals did not
+come very often to be shot. Had they found us asleep, however, the
+waking would have been terrible indeed, for they will eat human flesh
+just as ravenously as roots. After spreading our saddle-cloths on the
+dust and filth, Old Stabbed Arm and I were chatting about the Caingwas
+and their dirty habits, when Timoteo, heaving a sigh of relief, said:
+"Thank God, we are clean at last!" He was satisfied with the pigpen as
+he recalled the _hoga_ of the Sun-Worshippers.
+
+ At last the village of Pegwaomi was reached, and, oh, we were not
+sorry, for the havoc of the jiggers in our feet was getting terrible!
+The keen-eyed inhabitants caught sight of us while we were still
+distant, and when we reined up, Timoteo's aged mother tremblingly said,
+"_Yoape_" ("Come here") to him, and she wept as she embraced her boy.
+Truly, there was no sight so sweet to "mother" as that of her ragged,
+travel-stained son; and Timoteo, the strong man, wept. The fatted calf
+was then killed a few yards from the doorstep, by having its throat
+cut. Offal littered up the doorway, and the children in their glee
+danced in the red blood. The dogs' tails and the women's tongues wagged
+merrily, making us feel that we were joined on to the world again. I
+was surprised to find that we were days out of reckoning; I had been
+keeping Sunday on Thursday!
+
+During this stay at Pegwaomi I nearly lost Old Stabbed Arm. The day
+after we returned our hostess very seriously asked me if he might marry
+her daughter. Thinking he had sent her to ask, I consented. It was a
+surprise to learn afterwards that he knew nothing at all of the matter.
+
+Although Pegwaomi gained no new inhabitant, I secured what proved to be
+one of the truest and most faithful friends of my life--a little
+monkey. His name was Mr. Pancho. With him it was love at first sight,
+and from that time onward, I believe, he had only two things in his
+mind--his food and his master. He would cry when I left him, and hug
+and kiss me on my return. Pancho rode the pack-mare into the village of
+Concepcion, and busied himself on the way catching butterflies and
+trying to grasp the multi-colored humming-birds hovering over the
+equally beautiful passion-flowers growing in the bushes on each side of
+the path.
+
+Surely a stranger sight was never seen on the streets of Concepcion
+than that of a tired, dusty pack-horse bearing a live monkey, a dead
+god, and an equally dead devil on his back! Mrs. Sorrows was overjoyed
+to see me return, and earnestly told me that my first duty was to hurry
+down to the store and buy two colored candles to burn before her saint,
+who had brought me back, even though I was a heretic, which fact she
+greatly lamented. We had been given up as lost months before, for word
+came down that I had been killed by Indians. Here I was, however, safe
+and fairly well, saving that the ends of two of my toes had rotted off
+with jiggers, and fever burned in my veins! Mrs. Dolores doctored my
+feet with tobacco ashes as I reclined in a hammock under the lime trees
+surrounding her hut. I did not buy the candles, but she did; and while
+I silently thanked a Higher Power, and the _ta-tas_ burned to _her_
+deity, she informed me that my countryman, the prodigal, had been
+carried to the "potters' field." Not all prodigals reach home again;
+some are buried by the swine-troughs.
+
+For some time I was unable to put my feet to the ground; but Pancho,
+ever active, tied in a fig tree, helped himself to ripe fruit, and took
+life merrily. Pancho and I were eventually able to bid good-bye to Mrs.
+Sorrows, and, thousands of miles down life's pathway, this little
+friend and I journeyed together, he ever loving and true. I took him
+across the ocean, away from his tropical home, and--he died. I am not
+sentimental--nay, I have been accused of hardness--but I make this
+reference to Pancho in loving memory. Unlike some friends of my life,
+_he_ was constant and true. [Footnote: From letters awaiting me at the
+post-office, I learned, with intense sorrow and regret, that my strange
+patron had gone "the way of all flesh" The land I had been to explore,
+along-with a bequest of $250,000, passed into the hands of the Baptist
+Missionary Society, to the Secretary of which Society all my reports
+were given.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+CHACO SAVAGES.
+
+
+The Gran Chaco, an immense region in the interior of the continent,
+said to be 2,500,000 square miles in extent, is, without doubt, the
+darkest part of "The Darkest Land." From time immemorial this has been
+given up to the Indians; or, rather, they have proved so warlike that
+the white man has not dared to enter the vast plain. The Chaco contains
+a population of perhaps 3,000,000 of aborigines. These are divided into
+many tribes, and speak numerous languages. From the military outposts
+of Argentina at the south, to the Fort of Olimpo, 450 miles north, the
+country is left entirely to the savage. The former are built to keep
+back the Tobas from venturing south, and the latter is a Paraguayan
+fort on the Brazilian frontier. Here about one hundred soldiers are
+quartered and some fifty women banished, for the Paraguayan Government
+sends its female convicts there. [Footnote: The women are not provided
+with even the barest necessities of life. Here they are landed and,
+perforce, fasten themselves like leeches on the licentious soldiery. I
+speak from personal knowledge, for I have visited the "hell" of
+Paraguay.] Between these forts and Bolivia, on the west, I have been
+privileged to visit eight different tribes of Indians, all of them
+alike degraded and sunken in the extreme; savage and wild as man,
+though originally made in the image of God, can be.
+
+The Chaco is a great unknown land. The north, described by Mr. Minchin,
+Bolivian Government Explorer, as "a barren zone--an almost
+uninterrupted extent of low, thorny scrub, with great scarcity of
+water," and the centre and south, as I have seen in exploring journeys,
+great plains covered with millions of palm trees, through which the
+astonished traveller can ride for weeks without seeing any limit. In
+the dry season the land is baked by the intense heat of the tropical
+sun, and cracked into deep fissures. In the rainy season it is an
+endless marsh--a veritable dead man's land. During a 200-mile ride, 180
+lay through water with the sun almost vertical. All this country in
+past ages must have been the bed of a great salt sea.
+
+As I have said, the Chaco is peculiarly Indian territory, into which
+the white man steps at his peril. I accepted a commission, however, to
+examine and report on certain parts of it, so I left the civilized
+haunts of men and set foot on the forbidden ground.
+
+My first introduction to the savages in Chaco territory was at their
+village of Teepmuckthlawhykethy (The Place Where the Cows Arrived).
+They were busy devouring a dead cow and a newly-born calf, and I saw
+their naked bodies through such dense clouds of mosquitos that in one
+clap of the hands I could kill twenty or thirty. This Indian _toldo_
+consists of three large wigwams, in which live about eighty of the most
+degraded aborigines to be found on earth. When they learned I was not
+one of the _Christians_ from across the river, and that I came well
+introduced, they asked: Did I come across the _big water_ in a dug-out?
+Was it a day's journey? Would I give them some of "the stuff that
+resembles the eggs of the ant?" (their name for rice).
+
+I was permitted to occupy a palm hut without a roof, but I slept under
+a tiger's skin, and that kept off dew and rain. They reserved the right
+to come and go in it as they pleased. The women, with naked babies
+astride their hips, the usual way of carrying them, were particularly
+annoying. A little girl, however, perhaps ten years old, named Supupnik
+(Sawdust), made friends with me, and that friendship lasted during all
+my stay with them. Her face was always grotesquely painted, but she was
+a sweet child.
+
+These Indians are of normal stature, and are always erect and stately,
+perhaps because all burdens are borne by straps on the forehead. The
+expression of the savage is peculiar, for he pulls out all the hair on
+his face, even the eyelashes and eyebrows, and seems to think the
+omission of that act would be a terrible breach of cleanliness. These
+same individuals will, however, frequently be seen with their whole
+body so coated with dirt that it could easily be scraped off with a
+knife in cakes, as the housewife would scrape a burnt loaf! The first
+use to which the women put the little round tin looking-glasses, which
+I used for barter, was to admire their pretty (?) faces; but the men,
+with a sober look, would search for the detested hair on lip or chin.
+That I was so lost to decency as to suffer a moustache to cover my lip
+was to them a constant puzzle and wonder, for in every other respect
+the universal opinion was that I was a civilized kind of "thing." I
+write _thing_ advisedly, for the white man is to them an inferior
+creation--not a _person_.
+
+In place of a beard or moustache, the inhabitant of the Chaco prefers
+to paint his face, and sometimes he makes quite an artistic design.
+
+These wild inhabitants of Central South America generally wear a skin
+around the loins, or a string of ostrich feathers. Some tribes, as, for
+example, the Chamacocos, dispense with either. The height of fashion is
+to wear strings of tigers' teeth, deer's hoofs, birds' bills, etc.,
+around the neck. Strings of feathers or wool are twisted around ankles
+and wrists, while the thickly matted hair is adorned with plumes,
+standing upright.
+
+The men insert round pieces of wood in the lobe of the ear. Boys of
+tender age have a sharp thorn pushed through the ear, where more
+civilized nations wear earrings. This hole is gradually enlarged until
+manhood, when a round piece, two inches in diameter and one and a half
+inches thick, can be worn, not depending from the ear, but in the
+gristle of it. The cartilage is thus so distended that only a narrow
+rim remains around the ornament, and this may often be seen broken out.
+Sometimes three or four rattles from the tail of the rattlesnake also
+hang from the ear on to the shoulder.
+
+These tribes of the Chaco were all vassals of the Inca at the advent of
+the Spaniards. They had been by them reclaimed from savagery, and
+taught many useful arts, one or two of which, such as the making of
+blankets and string, they still retain. The Inca used the ear ornaments
+of solid gold, but made in the form of a wheel. The nearest approach to
+this old custom is when the wooden ear-plug is painted thus, as are
+some in the author's possession.
+
+I was fortunate in gaining the favor of the tribe living near the
+river, and because of certain favors conferred upon them, was adopted
+into the family. My face was painted, my head adorned with ostrich
+plumes, and I was given the name of Wanampangapthling ithma (Big Cactus
+Red Mouth). Because of this formal initiation, I was privileged to
+travel where I chose, but to the native Paraguayan or Argentine the
+Chaco is a forbidden land. The Indian describes himself as a _man_;
+monkeys are _little men_; I was a _thing_; but the Paraguayans are
+_Christians_, and that is the lowest degree of all. The priests they
+see on the other side of the river are _Yankilwana_ (neither man nor
+woman); and a _Yankilwana_, in his distinctive garb, could never tread
+this Indian soil. So abhorrent to them is the name of Christian, that
+the missionaries have been compelled to use another word to describe
+their converts, and they are called "Followers of Jesus." All the
+members of some large expeditions have been massacred just because they
+were _Christians_. Surely this is convincing corroboration of my
+remarks regarding the state of Roman Catholicism in those dark lands.
+
+A few miserable-looking, diminutive sheep are kept by some tribes, and
+the blankets referred to are made from the wool, which is torn off the
+sheep with a sharp shell, or, if near the coast, with a knife. The
+blankets are woven by hand across two straight branches of tree, and
+they are sometimes colored in various shades. A bulbous root they know
+of dyes brown, the cochineal insect red, and the bark of a tree yellow.
+String is made from the fibre of the _caraguatai_ plant, and snail
+shells are used to extract the fibre. This work is, of course, done by
+the women, as is also the making of the clay pots they use for cooking.
+The men only hunt.
+
+All sleep on the ground, men, women, children and dogs, promiscuously.
+The wigwams are nothing more than a few branches stuck in the ground
+and tied at the top. The sides are left open. Very often even this most
+primitive of dwellings is dispensed with, and the degraded beings crawl
+under the shelter of the bushes. Furniture of any kind they are, of
+course, wit-out, and their destitution is only equalled by the African
+pigmy or the Australian black.
+
+The Chaco is essentially a barren land, and the Indians' time seems
+almost fully taken up in procuring food. The men, with bows and arrows,
+hunt the deer, ostrich, fox, or wolf, while the women forage for roots
+and wild fruit.
+
+One tribe in the north of the Chaco are cannibals, and they
+occasionally make war on their neighbors just to obtain food.
+
+A good vegetable diet is the cabbage, which grows in the heart of
+certain palms, and weighs three or four pounds. To secure this the tree
+has perforce to be cut down. To the Indian without an axe this is no
+light task. The palm, as is well known, differs from other trees by its
+having the seat of life in the head, and not in the roots; so when the
+cabbage is taken out the tree dies.
+
+Anything, everything, is eaten for food, and a roasted serpent or
+boiled fox is equally relished. During my stay among them I ceased to
+ask of what the mess was composed; each dish was worse than the former.
+Among the first dishes I had were mandioca root, a black carrion bird,
+goat's meat, and fox's head. The puma, otter, ant-bear, deer,
+armadillo, and ostrich are alike eaten, as is also the jaguar, a
+ferocious beast of immense size. I brought away from those regions some
+beautiful skins of this animal, the largest of which measures nearly
+nine feet from nose to tail.
+
+In the sluggish, almost salt, streams, fish are numerous, and these are
+shot by the Indian with arrows, to which is attached a string of gut.
+Lakes and rivers are also filled with hideous-looking alligators of all
+sizes. These grow to the length of twelve or fifteen feet in these warm
+waters, and the tail is considered quite a delicacy. Besides these
+varied dishes, there is the electric eel; and, sunk in a yard depth of
+mud, is the _lollock_, of such interest to naturalists The lollock is a
+fish peculiar to the Chaco. Though growing to the length of three and
+four feet, it has only rudimentary eyes, and is, in consequence, quite
+blind; it is also unable to swim. The savage prods in the mud with a
+long notched lance, sometimes for hours, until he sticks the appetizing
+fish.
+
+The steamy waters are so covered with aquatic plants that in some
+places I have been able to walk across a living bridge. Once, when out
+hunting, I came upon a beautiful forest glade, covered with a carpet of
+green. Thinking it a likely place for deer, I entered, when lo, I sank
+in a foetid lake of slime. Throwing my gun on to the bank, I had quite a
+difficulty to regain dry land.
+
+In my journeyings here and there I employed one or another of the
+braves to accompany me. All they could eat and some little present was
+the pay. No sooner was the gift in their hand, however, after supper,
+than they would put it back in mine and say, "Give me some more food?"
+I was at first accompanied by Yantiwau (The Wolf Rider). Armed with a
+bow and arrows, he was a good hunter for me, and a faithful servant,
+but his custom of spitting on my knife and spoon to clean them I did
+not like. When my supplies were getting low, and I went to the river
+for a wash, he would say: "There's no _kiltanithliacack_ (soap)--only
+_clupup_ (sand)." Yantiwau was interested in pictures; he would gaze
+with wondering eyes at photos, or views of other lands, but he looked
+at them _the wrong side up_, as they all invariably do. While possessed
+of a profound respect for me in some ways, he thought me very lacking
+in common knowledge. While I was unable to procure game, through not
+seeing any, he could call the bird to him in a "ducky, ducky, come and
+be killed" kind of way; and my tongue was parched when he would scent
+water. This was sometimes very easy to smell, however, for it was
+almost impossible to drink out of a waterhole without holding the nose
+and straining the liquid through my closed teeth. Chaco water at best
+is very brackish, and on drying off the ground a white coat of salt is
+left.
+
+My Indian's first and last thought was of his stomach. While capable of
+passing two or three days without eating, and feeling no pangs of
+hunger, yet, when food was to hand, he gorged himself, and could put
+away an incredible amount. Truly, his make-up was a constant wonder to
+me. Riding through the "hungry belt" I would be famishing, but to my
+question: "Are you hungry?" he would answer, "No." After a toilsome
+journey, and no supper at the end: "Would you like to eat?" "No." But
+let an ostrich or a deer come in sight, and he could not live another
+minute without food! Another proof to Yantiwau of my incapacity was the
+fact that when my matches were all used I could not light the fire. He,
+by rubbing a blunt-pointed hard stick in a groove of soft wood, could
+cause such a friction that the dust would speedily ignite, and set fire
+to the dry twigs which he was so clever in collecting. Although such a
+simple process to the Indian, I never met a white man who could use the
+firesticks with effect.
+
+Sitting by the camp-fire in the stillness of evening, my guide would
+draw attention to a shooting star. "Look! That is a bad witch doctor,"
+he would say. "Did you notice he went to the west? Well, the Toothlis
+live there. He has gone for vengeance!"
+
+The wide palm plains are almost uninhabited; I have journeyed eighty
+miles without sighting human being or wigwam. In the rainy season the
+trees stand out of a sea-like expanse of steaming water, and one may
+wade through this for twenty miles without finding a dry place for
+bivouac. Ant hills, ten and fifteen feet high, with dome-shaped roofs,
+dot the wild waste like pigmy houses, and sometimes they are the only
+dry land found to rest on. The horses flounder through the mire, or
+sink up to the belly in slime, while clouds of flies make the life of
+man and beast a living death. Keys rust in the pocket, and boots mildew
+in a day. At other seasons, as I know by painful experience, the
+hard-baked ground is cracked up into fissures, and not a drop of water
+is to be found in a three days' journey. The miserable savages either
+sit in utter dejection on logs of wood or tree roots, viewing the
+watery expanse, or roam the country in search of _yingmin_ (water).
+
+Whereas the Caingwas may be described as inoffensive Indians, the
+inhabitants of the Chaco are _savages_, hostile to the white man, who
+only here and there, with their permission, has settled on the river
+bank. Generally a people of fine physique and iron constitution, free
+from disease of any kind, they are swept into eternity in an incredibly
+short space of time if _civilized_ diseases are introduced. Even the
+milder ones, such as measles, decimate a whole tribe; and I have known
+communities swept away as autumn leaves in a strong breeze with the
+_grippe_. I was informed that the hospital authorities at Asuncion gave
+them the cast-off fever clothing of their patients during an epidemic
+to sweep them off the face of the earth!
+
+The Indians have been ill-treated from the beginning. Darwin relates
+that, in their eagerness to exterminate the red men, the Argentine
+troops have pursued them for three days without food. On the frontier
+they are killed in hundreds; by submitting to the white man they die in
+thousands. Latin civilization is more terrible to them than war. Sad to
+state, their only hope is to fight, and this the savage affirms he will
+do for ever and ever.
+
+Francia, the Dictator of Paraguay, ordered every Indian found--man,
+woman or child--to be put to death! Lopez, a later ruler, took sport in
+hunting Indians like deer. We are told that on one occasion he was so
+successful as to kill forty-eight! The children he captured and sold
+into slavery at fifteen and twenty dollars each. The white settler
+considers himself very brave if he kills the savage with a rifle
+sighted at five hundred yards, while well out of range of the Indians'
+arrows, and I have known them shot just "for fun"! The Indians
+retaliate by _cutting off the heels_ of their white captives, or
+leaving them, _in statu naturae_, bound with thongs on an anthill; and
+a more terrible death could not be devised by even the inquisitor,
+Torquemada, of everlasting execration. The Indian is hard and cruel,
+indifferent to pain in himself or others. A serpent may sting a
+comrade, and he takes no notice; but let one find food and there is a
+general scamper to the spot. The Chaco savage is barbarous in the
+extreme. The slain enemies are often eaten, and the bones burnt and
+scattered over their food. The children of enemies are traded off to
+other tribes for more food.
+
+The Chaco Indian is a born warrior. Sad to say, his only hope is to
+fight against the Latin paleface.
+
+Most of us have at times been able to detect a peculiar aroma in the
+negro. The keen-scented savage detects that something in us, and we
+"smell" to them. Even I, _Big Cactus Red Mouth_, was not declared free
+from a subtle odor, although I washed so often that they wondered my
+skin did not come off. _They never wash_, and in damp weather the dirt
+peels from them in cakes. Of course they _don't_ smell!
+
+When a man or woman is, through age, no longer capable of looking after
+the needs of the body, a shallow grave is dug, the aged one doubled up
+until the knees are pressed into the hollow cheeks, and the back is
+broken. This terrible work done, the undesired one is dragged by one
+leg to the open tomb. Sometimes the face and whole body is so mangled,
+by being pulled through thorns and over uneven ground, that it is not
+recognizable, and the nose has at times been actually torn off. While
+sometimes still alive, the body is covered up with mother earth.
+Frequently the grave is so shallow that the matted hair may be seen
+coming out at the top. The burial is generally made near a wood, and,
+if passible, under the _holy wood tree_, which, in their judgment, has
+great influence with evil spirits. Wild beasts, attracted by the odor
+of the corpse, soon dig up the remains, and before next day it is
+frequently devoured.
+
+An _ordinary_ burial service may be thus described: A deep cut is first
+made in the stomach of the departed one. Into this incision a stone,
+some bone ash, and a bird's claw are introduced. The body is then
+placed over the grave on two sticks, a muttering incantation is said by
+the witch doctor, and the sticks are roughly knocked from under the
+body, so as to permit it to fall in a sitting posture. A bow and
+arrows, and some food and cooking utensils, are dropped into the grave.
+All shooting stars, according to the Indian belief, are flying stones;
+hence the custom of placing a stone in the stomach of the dead. It is
+supposed to be able to mount heavenward, and, assuming its true
+character, become the avenging adversary, and destroy the one who
+caused the death--always a bad witch doctor. The bird's claw scratches
+out the enemy's heart, and the ashes annihilate the spirit. One of the
+missionaries in the Lengua tribe stated that he assisted at the burial
+of a woman where the corpse fell head foremost into the grave, the feet
+remaining up. Four times the attempt to drop her in right was made,
+with similar results, and finally the husband deliberately broke his
+dead wife's neck, and bent the head on to the back; then he broke her
+limbs across his knee, and so the ghastly burial was at last completed!
+Truly, "the dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of
+cruelty." Let the one whose idea is to "leave the pagan in his
+innocency" visit these savages, and, if he lives to tell it, his ideas
+will have undergone a great change. They are _lost!_ and millions have
+not yet heard of the "Son of Man," who "came to seek and to save that
+which was lost."
+
+At the death of any member, the _toldo_ in which he lived is burnt, all
+his possessions are destroyed, and the people go into mourning. The
+hair of both sexes is cut short or pulled out, and each one has the
+face blackened with a vegetable dye, which, from experience, I know
+hardly ever wears off again. As I have said, everything the man owned
+in life is burnt and the village is deserted; all move right away to
+get out of the presence of the death-giving spirit. To me the _toldo_
+would not only seem abandoned, but the people gone without leaving a
+trace of their path; but not so to Wolf Rider, my guide. By the
+position of the half-burnt wood of the fire, he could tell the
+direction they had taken, and the number gone--although each steps in
+the other's footprints--whether they were stopping to hunt on the way,
+and much more he would never tell me. Some of the missionaries have
+spent ten years in the Chaco, but cannot get the savage to teach them
+this lesson of signs.
+
+In some tribes the aged ones are just _"left to die"_ sitting under a
+palm-leaf mat. All the members of the tribe move away and leave them
+thus. Many are the terrible things my eyes have witnessed, but surely
+the most pathetic was the sight of an old woman sitting under the mat.
+I was one day riding alone, but had with me two horses, when I caught
+sight of the palm-leaf erection and the solitary figure sitting under
+it. Getting down from my horse, I approached the woman and offered to
+take her to a place of safety, promising to feed her and permit her to
+live as long as she chose. Would she come with me? I begged and
+entreated, but the poor woman would not so much as lift her eyes to
+mine. The law of her tribe had said she must die, and the laws are to
+them unalterable. Most reluctantly, I left her to be eaten later on by
+the wild beasts.
+
+Terrible as this custom is, other tribes kill and eat their aged
+parents "as a mark of respect." Another tribe will not permit one
+member to go into the spirit world alone, so they hang another one, in
+order that there may be two to enter together.
+
+Whereas the Caingwas are a religious people, even attributing their
+custom of piercing the lip to divine commandment, the Chaco aborigines
+have no god and no religion. Missionaries in the solitary station I
+have referred to, after ten years' probing, have been unable to find
+any approach to worship in their darkened minda. "The miserable
+wretches who inhabit that vast wilderness are so low in the scale of
+reasoning beings that one might doubt whether or not they have human
+souls." [Footnote: Washburn's "History of Paraguay."] These "lost
+sheep" have no word to express God, and have no idols. "The poverty of
+the Indian dialects of the Chaco is scarcely surpassed by that of the
+dumb brutes."
+
+These wretched tribes have perfect community of goods; what is secured
+by one belongs equally to all. A piece of cloth is either torn up and
+distributed, or worn in turns by each one. The shirt which I gave my
+guide, Yantiwau, for much arduous toil, was worn by one and another
+alternately. Much as the savage at first desires to possess some
+garment, it does not take long for him to tire of it. All agree with
+Mark Twain, that "the human skin is the most comfortable of all
+costumes," and, clothed in the sunlight, the human form divine is not
+unlovely.
+
+Sometimes the Indians of the interior take skins, etc., to the
+Paraguayan towns across the river. Not knowing the use of money, their
+little trading is done by barter. Their knowledge of value is so crude
+that on one occasion they refused a two-dollar axe for an article, but
+gladly accepted a ten-cent knife. The Chaco Indian, however, is seldom
+seen in civilization. His home is in the interior of an unknown
+country, which he wanders over in wild freedom. While the Caingwas are
+homekeeping, these savages are nomadic, and could not settle down. The
+land is either burnt up or inundated, so they do not plant, but live
+only by the chase. So bold and daring are they that a man, armed only
+with a lance, will attack a savage jaguar; or, diving under an
+alligator, he will stab it with a sharpened bone. The same man will run
+in abject terror if he thinks he hears _spirits_.
+
+Though not religious, the savages are exceedingly superstitious, afraid
+of ghosts and evil spirits, and the fear of these spectral visitants
+pursues them through life. During a storm they vigorously shake their
+blankets and mutter incantations to keep away supernatural visitors.
+
+All diseases are caused by evil spirits, or the moon; and a comet
+brings the measles. The help of the witch doctor has to be sought on
+all occasions, for his special work is to drive away the evil spirit
+that has taken possession of a sick one. This he does by rattling a
+hollow calabash containing stones. That important person will perform
+his mystic _hocus pocus_ over the sick or dying, and charm away the
+spirits from a neighborhood. I have known an Indian, when in great pain
+through having eaten too much, send for the old fakir, who, after
+examination of the patient and great show of learning, declared that
+the suffering one _had two tigers in his stomach_. A very common remedy
+is the somewhat scientific operation of bleeding a patient, but the
+manner is certainly uncommon--the witch doctor sucks out the blood. One
+I was acquainted with, among the Lengua tribe, professed to suck three
+cats out of a man's stomach. His professional name was thereafter
+"Father of Kittens." The doctor's position is not one to be envied,
+however, for if three consecutive patients die, he must follow them
+_down the dark trail!_
+
+These medicine-men are experts in poisons, and their enemies have a way
+of dying suddenly. It cannot be denied that the Indians have a very
+real knowledge of the healing virtues of many plants. The writer has
+marvelled at the cures he has seen, and was not slow to add some of
+their methods to his medical knowledge. Not a few who have been healed,
+since the writer's return to civilization, owe their new life to the
+knowledge there learned.
+
+Infanticide is practised in every tribe, and in my extensive wanderings
+among eight _toldos_, I never met a family with more than two children.
+The rest are killed! A child is born, and the mother immediately knocks
+it on the head with a club! After covering the baby with a layer of
+earth, the woman goes about as if nothing had occurred. One chief of
+the Lengua tribe, that I met, had himself killed nineteen children. An
+ironwood club is kept in each _toldo_ for this gruesome work.
+Frequently a live child is buried with a dead parent; but I had better
+leave much of their doings in the inkpot.
+
+When a girl enters the matrimonial market, at about the age of twelve
+or thirteen, her face is specially colored with a yellow paint, made
+from the flower of the date palm, and the aspirant to her hand brings a
+bundle of firewood, neatly tied up, which he places beside her earthen
+bed at early morning. As the rising sun gilds the eastern sky, the girl
+awakes out of her sleep, rubs her eyes,--and sees the sticks. Well does
+she know the meaning of it, and a glad light flashes in her dark eyes
+as she cries out, "Who brought the sticks?" All men, women and
+children, take up the cry, and soon the whole encampment resounds with,
+"Who brought the sticks?" The medicine-man, who sleeps apart from the
+"common herd" under an incense-tree, hears the din, and, quickly
+donning his head-dress, hurries down to the scene. With an
+authoritative voice, which even the chief himself does not use, he
+demands, "Who brought the sticks?" until a young brave steps forward in
+front of him and replies, "Father of Kittens, I brought the sticks."
+This young man is then commanded to stand apart, the girl is hunted
+out, and together they wait while the witch-doctor X-rays them through
+and through. After this close scrutiny, they are asked: "Do you want
+this man?" "Do you want this girl?" To which they reply, "Yes, Father
+of Kittens, I do." Then, with great show of power, the medicine-man
+says, "Go!" and off the newly-married pair start, to live together
+until death (in the form of burial) does them part.
+
+It may be a great surprise to the reader to learn that these savages
+are exceedingly moral. Infidelity between man and wife is punished with
+death, but in all my travels I only heard of one such case. A man
+marries only one wife, and although any expression of love between them
+is never seen, they yet seem to think of one another in a tender way,
+and it is especially noticeable that the parents are kind to their
+children.
+
+One evening I rode into an encampment of savages who were celebrating a
+feast. About fifty specially-decked-out Indians were standing in a
+circle, and one of the number had a large and very noisy rattle, with
+which he kept time to the chant of Ha ha ha ha ha! u u u u u! o o o oo!
+au au au au au! The lurid lights of the fires burning all around lit up
+this truly savage scene. The witch-doctor, the old fakir named "Father
+of Kittens," came to me and looked me through and through with his
+piercing eyes. I was given the rattle, and, although very tired, had to
+keep up a constant din, while my wild companions bent their bodies in
+strange contortions. In the centre of the ring was a woman with a
+lighted pipe in her hand. She passed this from one to another and
+pushed it into the mouth of each one, who had "a draw." My turn came,
+and lo! the pipe was thrust between my teeth, and the din went on: Ha
+ha! u u! o o! au au! This feast lasted three nights and two days, but
+the music was not varied, and neither man nor woman seemed to sleep or
+rest. Food was cooking at the different fires, attended by the women,
+but my share was only a _roasted fox's head!_ The animal was laid on
+the wood, with skin, head and legs still attached, and the whole was
+burnt black. I was very hungry, and ate my portion thankfully.
+Christopher North said: "There's a deal of fine confused feeding about
+a sheep's head," and so I found with the fox's. Truly, as the Indian
+says, "hunger is a very big man."
+
+At these feasts a drum, made by stretching a serpent's skin over one of
+their clay pots, is loudly beaten, and the thigh-bone of an ostrich,
+with key-holes burned in, is a common musical instrument. From the
+_algarroba_ bean an intoxicating drink is made, called _ang-min_, and
+then yells, hellish sounds and murderous blows inspire terror in the
+paleface guest. "It is impossible to conceive anything more wild and
+savage than the scene of their bivouac. Some drink till they are
+intoxicated, others swallow the steaming blood of slaughtered animals
+for their supper, and then, sick from drunkenness, they cast it up
+again, and are besmeared with gore and filth."
+
+After the feast was over I held a service, and told how sin was
+_injected_ into us by the evil spirit, but that all are invited to the
+heavenly feast. My address was listened to in perfect silence, and the
+nodding heads showed that some, at least, understood it. When I
+finished speaking, a poor woman, thinking she must offer something,
+gave me her baby--a naked little creature that had never been washed in
+its life. I took it up and kissed it, and the poor woman smiled. Yes, a
+savage woman can smile.
+
+As already stated, many different tribes of Indians dwell in the Chaco,
+and each have their different customs. In the Suhin tribe the rite of
+burial may be thus described. "The digger of the grave and the
+performer of the ceremony was the chief, who is also a witch-doctor,
+and I was told that he was about to destroy the witch-doctor who had
+caused the man's death. A fire was lit, and whilst the digging was in
+progress a stone and two pieces of iron were being heated. Two bones of
+a horse, a large bird's nest built of sticks, and various twigs were
+collected. The skin of a jaguar's head, a tooth, and the pads of the
+same animal were laid out. A piece of wax and a stone were also heated;
+and in a heap lay a hide, some skins for bedding, and a quantity of
+sheep's wool. The grave being finished, the ceremony began by a wooden
+arrow being notched in the middle and waxed, then plunged into the
+right breast of the corpse, when it was snapped in two at the notch,
+and the remaining half was flung into the air, accompanied with a
+vengeful cry, in the direction of the Toothli tribe, one of whose
+doctors, it was supposed, had caused the man's death. Short pointed
+sticks, apparently to represent arrows, were also daubed with wax, two
+being plunged into the throat and one into the left breast, the cry
+again accompanying each insertion. One of the jaguar's pads was next
+taken, and the head of the corpse torn by the claws, the growl of the
+animal being imitated during the process. An incision was next made in
+the cheek, and the tooth inserted; then the head and face were daubed
+with the heated wax. The use of the wax is evidently to signify the
+desire that both arrows and animal may stick to the man if he be
+attacked by either. The arrows were plunged, one into the right breast
+downwards, and another below the ribs, on the same side, but in an
+upward direction, a third being driven into the right thigh. They also
+spoke about breaking one of the arms, but did not do so. An incision
+being made in the abdomen, the heated stone was then placed within the
+body. They place most reliance upon the work of the stone. The ceremony
+is known by the name of 'Mataimang' stone, and all the other things are
+said to assist it. Meteorites, when seen to pass along the sky, are
+regarded with awe; they are believed to be these stones in passage. The
+body was placed in the grave with the head to the west, the jaguar's
+head and pads being first placed under it. A bunch of grass, tied
+together, was placed upon the body; then the bird's nest was burned
+upon it. The bones were next thrown in, and over all the various
+articles before mentioned were placed. These were to accompany the soul
+in its passage to the west. In this act the idea of a future state is
+more distinctly seen than ever it has been seen amongst the Lenguas,
+who burn all a man's possessions at his death. The ceremony finished,
+the grave was covered in, logs and twigs being carelessly thrown on the
+top, apparently simply to indicate the existence of a grave. The thing
+which struck me most was the intense spirit of vengeance shown."
+
+Notwithstanding such terrible savagery, however, the Indian has ideas
+of right and wrong that put Christian civilization to shame. The people
+are perfectly _honest_ and _truthful_. I believe they _cannot lie_, and
+stealing is entirely unknown among them.
+
+Many are the experiences I have had in the Chaco. Some of them haunt me
+still like ghostly shadows. The evening camp-fire, the glare of
+ which lit up and made more hideous still my savage followers,
+gorging themselves until covered with filth and gore. The times when,
+from sheer hunger, I have, like them, torn up bird or beast and eaten
+it raw. The draughts of water from the Indian hole containing the
+putrefying remains of some dead animal; my shirt dropping off in rags
+and no wash for three weeks. The journeys through miles of malarial
+swamps and pathless wilderness. The revolting food, and the want of
+food. Ah! the memory is a bad dream from which I must awake.
+
+The other side, you say? Yes, there is another. A cloudless blue sky
+overhead. The gorgeous air-flowers, delicate and fragrant. Trees
+covered with a drapery of orchidaceae. The loveliest of flowers and
+shrubs. Birds of rainbow beauty, painted by the hand of God, as only He
+can. Flamingoes, parrots, humming-birds, butterflies of every size and
+hue. Arborescent ferns; cacti, thirty feet high, like huge candelabra.
+Creeping plants growing a hundred feet, and then passing from the top
+of one ever-vernal tree to another, forming a canopy for one from the
+sun's rays. Chattering monkeys. Deer, with more beautiful eyes than
+ever woman had since Eve fell. The balmy air wafting incense from the
+burning bush; and last, but oh, not least, the joy in seeing the
+degraded aborigine learning to love the "Light of the World"! Yes,
+there are delights; but "life is real, life is earnest," and a meal of
+_algarroba_ beans (the husks of the prodigal son of Luke XV.) is not
+any more tempting if eaten under the shade of a waving palm of
+surpassing beauty.
+
+The mission station previously referred to lies one hundred miles in
+from the river bank, three hundred miles north of Asuncion, among the
+Lengua Indians. As far as I am aware, no Paraguayan has ever visited
+there. The missionaries wish their influence to be the only one in
+training the Indian mind. The village bears the strange name of
+Waikthlatemialwa (The Place Where the Toads Arrived). At the invitation
+of the missionaries, I was privileged to go there and see their work. A
+trail leads in from the river bank, but it is so bad that bullock carts
+taking in provisions occupy ten and twelve days on the journey. Tamaswa
+(The Locust Eater), my guide, led me all during the first day out
+through a palm forest, and at night we slept on the hard ground. The
+Indian was a convert of the mission, and although painted, feathered
+and almost naked, seemed really an exemplary Christian. The
+missionaries labored for eleven years without gaining a single convert,
+but Tamaswa is not the only "follower of Jesus" now. During the day we
+shot a deer, and that evening, being very hungry, I ate perhaps two
+pounds of meat. Tamaswa finished the rest! True, it was only a small
+deer, but as I wish to retain my character for veracity, I dare not say
+how much it weighed. This meal concluded, we knelt on the ground. I
+read out of the old Book: "I go to prepare a place for you," and Locust
+Eater offered a simple prayer for protection, help and safety to the
+God who understands all languages.
+
+My blanket was wet through and through with the green slime through
+which we had waded and splashed for hours, but we curled ourselves up
+under a beer barrel tree and tried to sleep. The howling jaguars and
+other beasts of prey in the jungle made this almost impossible. Several
+times I was awakened by my guide rising, and, by the light of a palm
+torch, searching for wood to replenish the dying fire, in the smoke of
+which we slept, as a help against the millions of mosquitos buzzing
+around. Towards morning a large beast of some kind leaped right over
+me, and I rose to rekindle the fire, which my guide had suffered to die
+out, and then I watched until day dawned. As all the deer was consumed,
+we started off without breakfast, but were fortunate later on in being
+able to shoot two wild turkeys.
+
+That day we rode on through the endless forest of palms, and waded
+through a quagmire at least eight miles in extent, where the green
+slime reached up to the saddle-flaps. On that day we came to a sluggish
+stream, bearing the name of "Aptikpangmakthlaingwainkyapaimpangkya"
+(The Place Where the Pots Were Struck When They Were About to Feast).
+There a punt was moored, into which we placed our saddles, etc., and
+paddled across, while the horses swam the almost stagnant water.
+Saddling up on the other side, we had a journey of thirty miles to make
+before arriving at a waterhole, where we camped for the second night. I
+don't know what real nectar is, but that water was nectar to me,
+although the horses sniffed and at first refused to drink it.
+
+At sunset on the third day we emerged from the palm forest and endless
+marshes, and by the evening of the fourth day the church, built of palm
+logs, loomed up on the horizon. Many of the Indians came out to meet
+us, and my arrival was the talk of the village. The people seemed
+happy, and the missionaries made me at home in their roughly-built log
+shanties. Next morning I found a gift had been brought me by the
+Indians. It was a beautiful feather headdress, but it had just been
+left on the step, the usual way they have of making presents. The
+Indian expects no thanks, and he gives none. The women received any
+present I handed them courteously but silently. The men would accept a
+looking-glass from me and immediately commence to search their face for
+any trace of "dirty hairs," probably brought to their mind by the sight
+of mine, but not even a grunt of satisfaction would be given. No Chaco
+language has a word for "thanks."
+
+
+[Illustration: TAMASWA (THE LOCUST EATER) PROCURING FOOD. This young
+man could put the point of his arrow into a deer's eye a hundred yards
+distant]
+
+[Illustration: FASHIONS OF THE CHACO.]
+
+
+There is, among the Lenguas, an old tradition to the effect that for
+generations they have been expecting the arrival of some strangers who
+would live among them and teach them about the spirit-world. These
+long-looked-for teachers were called _The Imlah_. The tradition says
+that when the Imlah arrive, all the Indians must obey their teaching,
+and take care that the said Imlah do not again leave their country, for
+if so they, the Indians, would disappear from the land. When Mr. Grubb
+and his helpers first landed, they were immediately asked, "Are you the
+Imlah?" and to this question they, of course, answered yes. Was it not
+because of this tradition that the Indian who later shot Mr. Grubb with
+a poisoned arrow was himself put to death by the tribe?
+
+About twenty boys attend the school established at Waikthlatemialwa,
+and strange names some of them bear; let Haikuk (Little Dead One) serve
+as an example. It is truly a cheering sight to see this sign of a
+brighter day. When these boys return to their distant _toldos_ to tell
+"the news" to their dark-minded parents, the most wonderful of all to
+relate is "Liklamo ithnik nata abwathwuk enthlit God; hingyahamok
+hiknata apkyapasa apkyitka abwanthlabanko. Aptakmilkischik sat ankuk
+appaiwa ingyitsipe sata netin thlamokthloho abyiam." [Footnote: John
+3:16]
+
+Well might the wondering mother of "Dark Cloud" call her next-born
+"Samai" (The Dawn of Day).
+
+The Indian counts by his hands and feet. Five would be one hand, two
+hands ten, two hands and a foot fifteen, and a specially clever savage
+could even count "my two hands and my two feet." Now Mr. Hunt is
+changing that: five is _thalmemik_, ten _sohok-emek_, fifteen
+_sohokthlama-eminik_, and twenty _sohok-emankuk_.
+
+When a boy in school desires to say eighteen, he must first of all take
+a good deep breath, for _sohok-emek-wakthla-mok-eminick-antanthlama_ is
+no short word. This literally means: "finished my hands--pass to my
+other foot three."
+
+At the school I saw the skin of a water-snake twenty-six feet nine
+inches long, but a book of pictures I had interested the boys far more.
+
+The mission workers have each a name given to them by the Indians, and
+some of them are more than strange. Apkilwankakme (The Man Who Forgot
+His Face) used to be called Nason when he moved in high English
+circles; now he is ragged and torn-looking; but the old Book my mother
+used to read says: "He that loseth his life for My sake shall find it."
+Some of us have yet to learn that if we would remember _His face_ it is
+necessary for us to forget our own. If the unbeliever in mission work
+were to go to Waik-thlatemialwa, he would come away a converted man.
+The former witch-doctor, who for long made "havoc," but has since been
+born again, would tell him that during a recent famine he talked to the
+Unseen Spirit, and said: "Give us food, God!" and that, when only away
+a very short while, his arrows killed three ostriches and a deer. He
+would see Mrs. Mopilinkilana walking about, clothed and in her right
+mind. Who is she? The murderess of her four children--the woman who
+could see the skull of her own boy kicking about the _toldo_ for days,
+and watch it finally cracked up and eaten by the dogs. Can such as she
+be changed? The Scripture says: "Every one that believeth."
+
+The Lengua language contains no word for God, worship, praise,
+sacrifice, sin, holiness, reward, punishment or duty, but their
+meanings are now being made clear.
+
+The church at Waikthlatemialwa has no colored glass windows--old canvas
+bags take their place. The reverent worshippers assemble morning and
+evening, in all the pride of their paint and feathers, but there is no
+hideous idol inside; nay! they worship the invisible One, whom they can
+see even with closely shut eyes. To watch the men and women, with erect
+bearing, and each walking in the other's footsteps, enter the church,
+is a sight well worth the seeing. They bow themselves, not before some
+fetish, as one might suppose, but to the One whom, having not seen,
+some of them are learning to love.
+
+One of the missionaries translated my simple address to the dusky
+congregation, who listened with wondering awe to the ever-new story of
+Jesus. As the Lengua language contains no word for God, the Indians
+have adopted our English word, and both that name and Jesus came out in
+striking distinctness during the service, and in the fervent prayer of
+the old ex-witch-doctor which followed. With the familiar hymn, "There
+is a green hill far away," the meeting concluded. The women with
+nervous air silently retired, but the men saluted me, and some even
+went so far as to shake hands--with the left hand. Would that similar
+stations were established all over this neglected land! While churches
+and mission buildings crowd each other in the home lands, the Chaco,
+with an estimated population of three millions, must be content with
+this one ray of light in the dense night.
+
+On that far-off "green hill" we shall meet some even from the Lengua
+tribe. Christ said: "I am the door; by Me if _any_ man enter in, he
+shall be saved." But oh, "Painted Face," you spoke truth; the white
+"thing" _is_ selfish, and keeps this wondrous knowledge to himself.
+
+
+
+
+PART IV.
+
+BRAZIL
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+"There can be no more fascinating field of labor than Brazil,
+notwithstanding the difficulty of the soil and the immense tracts of
+country which have to be traversed. It covers half a continent, and is
+_three times the size of British India_. Far away in the interior there
+exist numerous Indian tribes with, as yet, no written language, and
+consequently no Bible. Thrust back by the white man from their original
+homes, these children of the forest and the river are, perhaps, the
+most needy of the tribes of the earth. For all that these millions
+know, the Gospel is non-existent and Jesus Christ has never visited and
+redeemed the world." [Footnote: The Neglected Continent]
+
+
+BRAZIL
+
+The Republic of Brazil has an area of 3,350,000 square miles. From
+north to south the country measures 2,600 miles, and from east to west
+2,500 miles. While the Republic of Bolivia has no sea coast, Brazil has
+3,700 miles washed by ocean waves. The population of this great empire
+is twenty-two millions. Out of this perhaps twenty millions speak the
+Portuguese language.
+
+"If Brazil was populated in the same proportion as Belgium is per
+square mile, Brazil would have a population of 1,939,571,699. That is
+to say, Brazil, a single country in South America, could hold and
+support the entire population of the world, and hundreds of millions
+more, the estimate of the earth's population at the beginning of the
+twentieth century being 1,600,000,000." [Footnote: Bishop Neely's
+"South America."]
+
+Besides the millions of mules, horses and other animals, there are, in
+the republic, twenty-five millions of cattle.
+
+Brazil is rich in having 50,000 miles of navigable waterways. Three of
+the largest rivers of the world flow through its territory. The Orinoco
+attains a width of four miles, and is navigable for 1,400 miles. The
+Amazon alone drains a basin of 2,500,000 square miles.
+
+Out of this mighty stream there flows every day three times the volume
+of water that flows from the Mississippi. Many a sea-captain has
+thought himself in the ocean while riding its stormy bosom. That most
+majestic of all rivers, with its estuary 180 miles wide, is the great
+highway of Brazil. Steamboats frequently leave the sea and sail up its
+winding channels into the far interior of Ecuador--a distance of nearly
+4,000 miles. All the world knows that both British and American
+men-of-war have visited the city of Iquitos in Peru, 2,400 miles up the
+Amazon River. The sailor on taking soundings has found a depth of 170
+feet of water at 2,000 miles from the mouth. Stretches of water and
+impenetrable forest as far as the eye can reach are all the traveller
+sees.
+
+Prof. Orton says: "The valley of the Amazon is probably the most
+sparsely populated region on the globe," and yet Agassiz predicted that
+"the future centre of civilization of the world will be in the Amazon
+Valley." I doubt if there are now 500 acres of tilled land in the
+millions of square miles the mighty river drains. Where cultivated,
+coffee, tobacco, rubber, sugar, cocoa, rice, beans, etc., freely grow,
+and the farmer gets from 500 to 800-fold for every bushel of corn he
+plants. Humboldt estimated that 4,000 pounds of bananas can be produced
+in the same area as 33 pounds of wheat or 99 pounds of potatoes.
+
+The natural wealth of the country is almost fabulous. Its mountain
+chains contain coal, gold, silver, tin, zinc, mercury and whole
+mountains of the very best iron ore, while in forty years five million
+carats of diamonds have been sent to Europe. In 1907 Brazil exported
+ten million dollars' worth of cocoa, seventy million dollars' worth of
+rubber; and from the splendid stone docks of Santos, which put to shame
+anything seen on this northern continent, either in New York or Boston,
+there was shipped one hundred and forty-two million dollars' worth of
+coffee. Around Rio Janeiro alone there are a hundred million coffee
+trees, and the grower gets two crops a year.
+
+Yet this great republic has only had its borders touched. It is
+estimated that there are over a million Indians in the interior, who
+hold undisputed possession of four-fifths of the country. Three and a
+quarter million square miles of the republic thus remains to a great
+extent an unknown, unexplored wilderness. In this area there are over a
+million square miles of virgin forest, "the largest and densest on
+earth." The forest region of the Amazon is twelve hundred miles east to
+west, and eight hundred miles north to south, and this sombre, primeval
+woodland has not yet been crossed. [Footnote: Just as this goes to
+press the newspapers announce that the Brazilian Government has
+appropriated $10,000 towards the expenses of an expedition into the
+interior, under the leadership of Henry Savage Landor, the English
+explorer.]
+
+Brazil's federal capital, Rio de Janeiro, stands on the finest harbor
+of the world, in which float ships from all nations. Proudest among
+these crafts are the large Brazilian gunboats. "It is a curious
+anomaly," says the _Scientific American_, "that the most powerful
+Dreadnought afloat should belong to a South American republic, but it
+cannot be denied that the _Minas Geraes_ is entitled to that
+distinction." This is one of the vessels that mutinied in 1910.
+
+Brazil is a strange republic. Fanatical, where the Bible is burned in
+the public plaza whenever introduced, yet, where the most obscene
+prints are publicly offered for sale in the stores. Where it is a
+"mortal sin" to listen to the Protestant missionary, and _not_ a sin to
+break the whole Decalogue. Backward--where the villagers are tied to a
+post and whipped by the priest when they do not please him.
+Progressive--in the cities where religion has been relegated to women
+and children and priests.
+
+Did I write the word religion? Senhor Ruy Barbosa, the most conspicuous
+representative of South America at the last Hague Conference, and a
+candidate for the Presidency of Brazil, wrote of it: "_Romanism is not
+a religion, but a political organization, the most vicious, the most
+unscrupulous, and the most destructive of all political systems. The
+monks are the propagators of fanaticism, the debasers of Christian
+morals. The history of papal influence has been nothing more nor less
+than the story of the dissemination of a new paganism, as full of
+superstition and of all unrighteousness as the mythology of the
+ancients--a new paganism organized at the expense of evangelical
+traditions, shamelessly falsified and travestied by the Romanists. The
+Romish Church in all ages has been a power, religious scarcely in name,
+but always inherently, essentially and untiringly a political power_."
+As Bishop Neely of the M. E. Church was leaving Rio, Dr. Alexander, one
+of Brazil's most influential gentlemen, said to him: "_It is sad to see
+my people so miserable when they might be so happy. Their ills,
+physical and moral, spring from lack of religion. They call themselves
+Catholics, but the heathen are scarcely less Christian_!" Is it
+surprising that the Italian paper _L'Asino_ (The Ass), which exists
+only to ridicule Romanism, has recently been publishing much in praise
+of what it calls authentic Christianity?
+
+"Rio Janeiro, the beautiful," is an imperial city of imposing grandeur.
+It is the largest Portuguese city of the world--greater than Lisbon and
+Oporto together. It has been called "the finest city on the continents
+of America,--perhaps in the world, with unqualifiedly the most
+beautiful street in all the world, the Avenida Central." [Footnote:
+Clark. "Continent of Opportunity."] That magnificent avenue, over a
+mile long and one hundred and ten feet wide, asphalt paved and superbly
+illuminated, is lined with costly modern buildings, some of them truly
+imposing. Ten people can walk abreast on its beautiful black and white
+mosaic sidewalks. The buildings which had to be demolished in order to
+build this superb avenue cost the government seven and a half millions
+of dollars, and they were bought at their _taxed_ value, which, it was
+estimated, was only a third of the actual. [Footnote: "But as a
+wonderful city, the crowning glory of Brazil--yes of the world, I
+believe--is Rio de Janeiro."--C. W. Furlong, in "The World's Work."]
+
+Some years ago I knew a thousand people a day to die in Rio Janeiro of
+yellow fever. It is now one of the healthiest of cities, with a
+death-rate far less than that of New York.
+
+Rio Janeiro, as I first knew it, was far behind. Oil lamps shed fitful
+gleams here and there on half-naked people. Electric lights now dispel
+the darkness of the streets, and electric streetcars thread in and out
+of the "Ruas." There is progress everywhere and in everything.
+
+To-day the native of Rio truthfully boasts that his city has "the
+finest street-car system of any city of the world."
+
+A man is not permitted to ride in these cars unless he wears a tie,
+which seems to be the badge of respectability. To a visitor these
+exactions are amusing. A friend of mine visited the city, and we rode
+together on the cars until it was discovered that he wore no tie. The
+day was hot, and my friend (a gentleman of private means) had thought
+that a white silk shirt with turn-down collar was enough. We felt
+somewhat humiliated when he was ignominiously turned off the car, while
+the black ex-slaves on board smiled aristocratically. If you visit Rio
+Janeiro, by all means wear a tie. If you forget your shirt, or coat, or
+boots, it will matter little, but the absence of a tie will give the
+negro cause to insult you.
+
+Some large, box-like cars have the words "_Descalcos e Bagagem_"
+(literally, "For the Shoeless and Baggage") printed across them. In
+these the poorer classes and the tieless can ride for half-price. And
+to make room for the constantly inflowing people from Europe, two great
+hills are being removed and "cast into the sea."
+
+
+Rio Janeiro may be earth's coming city. It somewhat disturbs our
+self-complacency to learn that they have spent more for public
+improvements than has any city of the United States, with the exception
+of New York. Municipal works, involving an expenditure of $40,000,000,
+have contributed to this.
+
+Rio Janeiro, however, is not the only large and growing city Brazil can
+boast of. Sao Paulo, with its population of 300,000 and its
+two-million-dollar opera house, which fills the space of three New York
+blocks, is worthy of mention. Bahia, founded in 1549, has 270,000
+inhabitants, and is the centre of the diamond market of Brazil. Para,
+with its population of 200,000, who export one hundred million dollars'
+worth of rubber yearly and keep up a theatre better than anything of
+the kind in New York, is no mean city. Pernambuco, also, has 200,000
+inhabitants, large buildings, and as much as eight million dollars have
+recently been devoted to harbor improvements there.
+
+Outside of these cities there are estates, quite a few of which are
+worth more than a million dollars; one coffee plantation has five
+million trees and employs five thousand people.
+
+With its Amazon River, six hundred miles longer than the journey from
+New York to Liverpool, England, with its eight branches, each of which
+is navigable for more than a thousand miles, Brazil's future must be
+very great.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+_A JOURNEY FROM RIO JANEIRO TO THE INLAND TOWN OF CORUMBA_.
+
+
+Brazil has over 10,000 miles of railway, but as it is a country larger
+than the whole of Europe, the reader can easily understand that many
+parts must be still remote from the iron road and almost inaccessible.
+The town of Cuyaba, as the crow flies, is not one thousand miles from
+Rio, but, in the absence of any kind of roads, the traveller from Rio
+must sail down the one thousand miles of sea-coast, and, entering the
+River Plate, proceed up the Parana, Paraguay, and San Lorenzo rivers to
+reach it, making it a journey of 3,600 miles.
+
+"In the time demanded for a Brazilian to reach points in the interior,
+setting out from the national capital and going either by way of the
+Amazon or Rio de la Plata systems of waterways, he might journey to
+Europe and back two or three times over." [Footnote: Sylvester Baxter,
+in The Outlook, March, 1908.]
+
+The writer on one occasion was in Rio when a certain mission called him
+to the town of Corumba, distant perhaps 1,300 miles from the capital.
+Does the reader wish to journey to that inland town with him?
+
+Boarding an ocean steamer at Rio, we sail down the stormy sea-coast for
+one thousand miles to Montevideo. There we tranship into the Buenos
+Ayres boat, and proceed one hundred and fifty miles up the river to
+that city. Almost every day steamers leave that great centre for far
+interior points. The "Rapido" was ready to sail for Asuncion, so we
+breasted the stream one thousand miles more, when that city was
+reached. There another steamer waited to carry us to Corumba, another
+thousand miles further north.
+
+The climate and scenery of the upper reaches of the Paraguay are
+superb, but our spirits were damped one morning when we discovered that
+a man of our party had mysteriously disappeared during the night. We
+had all sat down to dinner the previous evening in health and spirits,
+and now one was missing. The All-seeing One only knows his fate. To us
+he disappeared forever.
+
+Higher up the country--or lower, I cannot tell which, for the river
+winds in all directions, and the compass, from pointing our course as
+due north, glides over to northwest, west, southwest, and on one or two
+occasions, I believe, pointed due south--we came to the first Brazilian
+town, Puerto Martinho, where we were obliged to stay a short time. A
+boat put off from the shore, in which were some well-dressed natives.
+Before she reached us and made fast, a loud report of a Winchester rang
+out from the midst of those assembled on the deck of our steamer, and a
+man in the boat threw up his arms and dropped; the spark of life had
+gone out. So quickly did this happen that before we had time to look
+around the unfortunate man was weltering in his own blood in the bottom
+of the boat! The assassin, an elderly Brazilian, who had eaten at our
+table and scarcely spoken to anyone, stepped forward quietly,
+confessing that he had shot one of his old enemies. He was then taken
+ashore in the ship's boat, there to await Brazilian justice, and later
+on, to appear before a higher tribunal, where the accounts of all men
+will be balanced.
+
+Such rottenness obtains in Brazilian law that not long since a judge
+sued in court a man who had bribed him and sought to evade paying the
+bribe. Knowing this laxity, we did not anticipate that our murderous
+fellow-traveller would have to suffer much for his crime. The _News_,
+of Rio Janeiro, recently said: "The punishment of a criminal who has
+any influence whatever is becoming one of the forgotten things."
+
+After leaving Puerto Martinho, the uniform flatness of the river banks
+changes to wild, mountainous country. On either hand rise high
+mountains, whose blue tops at times almost frowned over our heads, and
+the luxuriant tropical vegetation, with creeping lianas, threatened to
+bar our progress. Huge alligators sunned themselves on the banks, and
+birds of brilliant plumage flew from branch to branch. _Carpinchos_,
+with heavy, pig-like tread, walked among the rushes of the shore, and
+made more than one good dish for our table. This water-hog, the largest
+gnawing animal in the world, is here very common. Their length, from
+end of snout to tail, is between three and four feet, while they
+frequently weigh up to one hundred pounds. The girth of their body will
+often exceed the length by a foot. For food, they eat the many aquatic
+plants of the river banks, and the puma, in turn, finds them as
+delicious a morsel as we did. The head of this amphibious hog presents
+quite a ludicrous aspect, owing to the great depth of the jaw, and to
+see them sitting on their haunches, like huge rabbits, is an amusing
+sight. The young cling on to the mother's back when she swims.
+
+Farther on we stopped to take in wood at a large Brazilian cattle
+establishment, and a man there assured us that "there were no venomous
+insects except tigers," but these killed at least fifteen per cent. of
+his animals. Not long previously a tiger had, in one night, killed five
+men and a dog. The heat every day grew more oppressive. On the eighth
+day we passed the Brazilian fort and arsenal of Cuimbre, with its brass
+cannon shining in a sun of brass, and its sleepy inhabitants lolling in
+the shade.
+
+Five weeks after leaving Rio Janeiro we finally anchored in Corumba, an
+intensely sultry spot. Corumba is a town of 5,000 inhabitants, and
+often said to be one of the hottest in the world. It is an unhealthy
+place, as are most towns without drainage and water supply. In the
+hotter season of the year the ratio on a six months' average may be two
+deaths to one birth. It is a place where dogs at times seem more
+numerous than people, a town where justice is administered in ways new
+and strange. Does the reader wish an instance? An assassin of the
+deepest dye was given over by the judge to the tender mercies of the
+crowd. The man was thereupon attacked by the whole population in one
+mass. He was shot and stabbed, stoned and beaten until he became almost
+a shapeless heap, and was then hurried away in a mule cart, and,
+without coffin, priest or mourners, was buried like a dog.
+
+Perhaps the populace felt they had to take the law into their own
+hands, for I was told that the Governor had taken upon himself the
+responsibility of leaving the prison gates open to thirty-two men, who
+had quietly walked out. These men had been incarcerated for various
+reasons, murder, etc., for even in this state of Matto Grosso an
+assassin who cannot pay or escape suffers a little imprisonment. The
+excuse was, "We cannot afford to keep so many idle men--we are poor."
+What a confession for a Brazilian! I do not vouch for the story, for I
+was not an eye-witness to the act, but it is quite in the range of
+Brazilian possibilities. The only discrepancy may be the strange way of
+Portuguese counting. A man buys three horses, but his account is that
+he has bought twelve feet of horses. He embarks a hundred cows, but the
+manifest describes the transaction as four hundred feet. The Brazilian
+is in this respect almost a Yankee--little sums do not content him. Why
+should they, when he can truthfully boast that his territory is larger
+than that of the United States? His mile is longer than that of any
+other nation, and the _bocadinho_, or extra "mouthful," which generally
+accompanies it, is endless. Instead of having one hundred cents to the
+dollar, he has two thousand, and each cent is called a "king." The
+sound is big, but alas, the value of his money is insignificantly small!
+
+The child is not content with being called John Smith. "Jose Maria
+Jesus Joao dois Sanctos Sylva da Costa da Cunha" is his name; and he
+recites it, as I, in my boyhood's days, used to "say a piece" while
+standing on a chair. There is no school in the town. In Brazil, 84 per
+cent. of the entire population are illiterate.
+
+Corumba contains a few stores of all descriptions, but it would seem
+that the stock in trade of the chemist is very low, for I overheard a
+conversation between two women one day, who said they could not get
+this or that--in fact, "he only keeps cures for stabs and such like
+things." In the _armazems_ liquors are sold, and rice, salt and beans
+despatched to the customer by the pint. Why wine and milk are not sold
+by the pound I did not enquire.
+
+One is not to ask too much in Brazil, or offence is given. When seated
+at table one day with a comrade, who had the misfortune to swallow a
+bone, I quietly "swallowed" the remedy a Brazilian told us of. He said
+their custom was for all to turn away their heads, while the
+unfortunate one revolved his plate around three times to the left, and
+presto! the bone disappeared. My friend did not believe in the cure;
+consequently, he suffered for several days.
+
+I have said that dogs are numerous. These animals roam the streets by
+day and night in packs and fight and tear at anyone or anything. Some
+days before we arrived there were even more, but a few pounds of poison
+had been scattered about the streets--which, by the way, are the worst
+of any town I have ever entered--and the dog population of the world
+decreased nine hundred. This is the Corumba version. Perhaps the truth
+is, nine hundred feet, or, as we count, two hundred and twenty-five
+dogs. In the interests of humanity, I hope the number was nine hundred
+heads. Five carts then patrolled the streets and carried away to the
+outskirts those dead dogs, which were there burnt. I, the writer, find
+the latter part of the story hardest to believe. Why should a freeborn
+Brazilian lift dogs out of the street? In what better place could they
+be? They would fill up the holes and ruts, and, in such intense heat,
+why do needless work?
+
+Corumba is a typical Brazilian town. Little carts, drawn by a string of
+goats or rams, thread their way through the streets. Any animal but the
+human must do the work. As the majority of the people go barefooted,
+the patriarchal custom prevails of having water offered on entering a
+house to wash the feet. At all hours of the day men, women and children
+seek to cool themselves in the river, which is here a mile wide, and
+with a depth of 20 feet in the channel. While on the subject of
+bathing, I might mention that a wooden image of the patron saint of the
+town is, with great pomp, brought down at the head of a long
+procession, once every year, to receive his annual "duck" in the water.
+This is supposed to benefit him much. After his immersion, all the
+inhabitants, men, women and children, make a rush to be the first to
+dip in the "blessed water," for, by doing this, all their sins are
+forgiven them for a year to come. The sick are careful to see that they
+are not left in the position of the unfortunate one mentioned in the
+Gospel by John, who "had no one to put him into the pool."
+
+I have also known the Virgin solemnly carried down to the water's edge,
+that she might command it to rise or fall, as suited the convenience of
+the people. While she exercised her power the natives knelt around her
+on the shingly beach in rapturous devotion. At such times the "Mother
+of Heaven" is clothed in her best, and the jewels in her costume
+sparkle in the tropical sun.
+
+What the Nile is to Egypt, the Paraguay River is to these interior
+lands, and what Isis was to the Egyptians, so is the Virgin to these
+people. Once, when the waters were low, it is related the Virgin came
+down from heaven and stood upon some rocks in the river bed. To this
+day the pilot tells you how her footprints are to be clearly seen,
+impressed in the stone, when the water is shallow. Strange that Mahomet
+does not rise from his tomb and protest, for that miracle we must
+concede to him, because his footprints have been on the sacred rocks at
+Mecca for a thousand years. Does he pass it over, believing, with many,
+that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery?
+
+Whatever Roman Catholicism is in other parts of the world, in South
+America it is pure Mariolatry. The creed, as we have seen, reads: "Mary
+must be our first object of worship, Saint Joseph the second." Along
+with these, saints, living and dead, are numberless.
+
+A traveller in South Brazil thus writes of a famous monk: "There, in a
+shed at the back of a small farm, half sitting, half reclining on a mat
+and a skin of some wild animal, was a man of about seventy years of
+age, in a state of nudity. A small piece of red blanket was thrown over
+his shoulders, barely covering them. His whole body was encrusted with
+filth, and his nails had grown like claws. His vacant look showed him
+to be a poor, helpless idiot. Beside him a large wood fire was kept
+burning. The ashes of this fire, strewn around him for the sake of
+cleanliness, are carried away for medicinal purposes by the thousands
+of pilgrims who visit him. Men and women come from long distances to
+see him, in the full persuasion that he is a holy man and has
+miraculous powers." [Footnote: "The Neglected Continent"] Romanism is
+thus seen to be in a double sense "a moral pestilence."
+
+The church is, of course, very much in evidence in Corumba, for it is a
+very religious place. A _missa cantata_ is often held there, when a
+noisy brass band will render dance music, often at the moat solemn
+parts. The drums frequently beat until the worshippers are almost
+deafened.
+
+In the town of Bom Fim, a little further north, the priest runs a
+"show" opposite his church, and over it are printed the words, "Theatre
+of the Holy Ghost."
+
+Think, O intelligent reader, how dense must be the darkness of Papal
+America when a church notice, which anyone may see affixed to the door,
+reads:
+
+RAFFLE FOB SOULS.
+
+A raffle for souls will be held at this Church on January 1st, at which
+four bleeding and tortured souls will be released from purgatory to
+heaven, according to the four highest tickets in this most holy
+lottery. Tickets, $1.00. To be had of the father in charge. Will you,
+for the poor sum of one dollar, leave your loved ones to burn in
+purgatory for ages?
+
+At the last raffle for souls, the following numbers obtained the prize,
+and the lucky holders may be assured that their loved ones are forever
+released from the flames of purgatory: Ticket 4l.--The soul of Madame
+Coldern is made happy for ever. Ticket 762.--The soul of the aged
+widow, Francesca de Parson, is forever released from the flames of
+purgatory. Ticket 84l.--The soul of Lawyer Vasquez is released from
+purgatory and ushered into heavenly joys. [Footnote: "Gospel Message."]
+
+But, my reader asks, "Do the people implicitly believe all the priest
+says?" No, sometimes they say, "Show us a sign." This was especially
+true of the people living on the Chili-Bolivian border. The wily, yet
+progressive, priest there made a number of little balloons, which on a
+certain day of the year were sent up into the sky, bearing away the
+sins of the people. Of course, when the villagers saw their sins float
+away before their own eyes, enclosed in little crystal spheres, such as
+_could not be earthly_, they believed and rejoiced. Yes, reader, the
+South American priest is alive to his position after all, and even
+"patents" are requisitioned. In some of the larger churches there is
+the "slot" machine, which, when a coin is inserted, gives out _"The
+Pope's blessing."_ This is simply a picture representing his Holiness
+with uplifted hands.
+
+The following is a literal translation, from the Portuguese, of a
+"notice" in a Rio Janeiro newspaper:
+
+FESTIVAL IN HONOR OF THE LADY OF NAZARETH.
+
+"The day will be ushered in with majestic and deafening fireworks, and
+the 'Hail Mary' rendered by the beautiful band of the----Infantry
+regiment. There will be an intentional mass, grand vocal and
+instrumental music, solemn vespers, the Gospel preached, and ribbons,
+which have been placed round the neck of the image of St. Broz,
+distributed.
+
+"The square, tastefully decorated and pompously illuminated, will
+afford the devotees, after their supplications to the Lord of the
+Universe, the following means of amusement,-----the Chinese Pavilion,
+etc.,-----. Evening service concluded, there will be danced in the
+Flora Pavilion the _fandango a pandereta_. In the same pavilion a comic
+company will act several pieces. On Sunday, upon the conclusion of the
+Te Deum, the comic company will perform," etc.
+
+The spiritual darkness is appalling. If the following can be written of
+Pernambuco, a large city of 180,000 inhabitants, on the sea coast, the
+reader can, in a measure, understand the priestly thraldom of these
+isolated towns. A Pernambuco newspaper, in its issue of March 1st,
+1903, contains an article headed, "Burning of Bibles," which says:
+
+"As has been announced, there was realized in the square of the Church
+of Penha, on the 22nd ult., at nine o'clock in the morning, in the
+presence of more than two thousand people, the burning of two hundred
+and fourteen volumes of the Protestant Bible, amidst enthusiastic
+cheers for the Catholic religion, the immaculate Virgin Mary, and the
+High Priest Leo XIII.--cheers raised spontaneously by the Catholic
+people." [Footnote: Literal translation from the Portuguese.]
+
+A colporteur, known to me, when engaged selling Bibles in a Brazilian
+town, reports that the fanatical populace got his books and carried
+them, fastened and burning, at the end of blazing torches, while they
+tramped the streets, yelling: "Away with all false books!" "Away with
+the religion of the devils!" A recent Papal bull reads: "Bible burnings
+are most Catholic demonstrations."
+
+Is it cause for wonder that the Spanish-American Republics have been so
+backward?
+
+I have seen a notice headed "SAVIOUR OF SOULS," making known the fact
+that at a certain address a _Most Holy Reverend Father_ would be in
+attendance during certain hours, willing to save the soul of any and
+every applicant on payment of so much. That revelation which tells of a
+Saviour without money or price is denied them.
+
+Corumba is a strange, lawless place, where the ragged, barefooted night
+policeman inspires more terror in the law-abiding than the professional
+prowler. The former has a sharp sword, which glitters as he threatens,
+and the latter has often a kind heart, and only asks "mil reis" (about
+thirty cents).
+
+How can a town be governed properly when its capital is three thousand
+miles distant, and the only open route thither is, by river and sea, a
+month's journey? Perhaps the day is not far distant when Cuyaba, the
+most central city of South America, and larger than Corumba, lying
+hundreds of miles further up the river, will set up a head of its own
+to rule, or misrule, the province. Brazil is too big, much too big, or
+the Government is too little, much too little.
+
+The large states are subdivided into districts, or parishes, each under
+an ecclesiastical head, as may be inferred from the peculiar names many
+of them bear. There are the parishes of:
+
+"Our Lady, Mother of God of Porridge."
+
+"The Three Hearts of Jesus."
+
+"Our Lady of the Rosary of the Pepper Tree."
+
+"The Souls of the Sand Bank of the River of Old Women."
+
+"The Holy Ghost of the Cocoanut Tree."
+
+"Our Lady Mother of the Men of Mud."
+
+"The Sand Bank of the Holy Ghost."
+
+"The Holy Spirit of the Pitchfork."
+
+The Brazilian army, very materially aided by the saints, is able to
+keep this great country, with its many districts, in tolerable
+quietness. Saint Anthony, who, when young, was _privileged to carry the
+toys of the child Jesus_, is, in this respect, of great service to the
+Brazilians. The military standing of Saint Anthony in the Brazilian
+army is one of considerable importance and diversified service.
+According to a statement of Deputy Spinola, made on the 13th of June,
+the eminent saint's feast day, his career in the military service of
+Brazil has been the following: By a royal letter of the 7th of April,
+1707, the commission of captain was conferred upon the image of Saint
+Anthony, of Bahia. This image was promoted to be a major of infantry by
+a decree of September 13th, 1819. In July, 1859, his pay was placed
+upon the regular pay-roll of the Department of War.
+
+The image of St. Anthony in Rio de Janeiro, however, outranks his
+counterpart of Bahia, and seems to have had a more brilliant military
+record. His commission as captain dates from a royal letter of March
+21st, 1711. He was promoted to be major of infantry in July, 1810, and
+to be lieutenant-colonel in 1814. He was decorated with the Grand Cross
+of the Order of Christ also, in 1814, and his pay as lieutenant-colonel
+was made a permanent charge on the military list in 1833.
+
+The image of St. Anthony of Ouro Preto attained the rank and pay of
+captain in 1799. His career has been an uneventful one, and has been
+confined principally to the not unpleasant task of drawing $480 a month
+from the public treasury. The salaries of all these soldiery images are
+drawn by duly constituted attorneys. [Footnote: Rio News]
+
+Owing to bubonic plague, my stay in Corumba was prolonged. I have been
+in the city of Bahia when an average of 200 died every day from this
+terrible disease, so Brazil is beginning to be more careful.
+
+Though steamers were not running, perspiration was. Oh, the heat! In my
+excursions in and around the town I found that even the mule I had
+hired, acclimatized as it was to heat and thirst and hunger, began to
+show signs of fatigue. Can man or beast be expected to work when the
+temperature stands at 130 degrees Fahrenheit in the shade?
+
+As the natives find bullocks bear the heat better than mules, I
+procured one of these saddle animals, but it could only travel at a
+snail's pace. I was indeed thankful to quit the oven of a town when at
+last quarantine was raised and a Brazilian steamboat called.
+
+Rats were so exceedingly numerous on this packet that they would
+scamper over our bodies at night. So bold were they that we were
+compelled to take a cudgel into our berths! A Brazilian passenger
+declared one morning that he had counted three hundred rats on the
+cabin floor at one time! I have already referred to Brazilian
+numbering; perhaps he meant three hundred feet, or seventy-five rats.
+
+With the heat and the rats, supplemented by millions of mosquitos, my
+Corumba journey was not exactly a picnic.
+
+In due time we arrived again at Puerto Martinio, only to hear that our
+former fellow-passenger, the assassin, had regained his freedom and
+could be seen walking about the town. But then--well, he was rich, and
+money does all in Brazil--yea, the priest will even tell you it
+purchases an entrance into heaven! In worldly matters the people _see_
+its power, and in spiritual matters they _believe_ it. If the priest
+has heard of Peter's answer to Simon--"Thy money perish with thee,
+because thou hast thought that the gift of God may be purchased with
+money"--he keeps it to himself. How can he live if he deceives not?
+Strange indeed is the thought that, three hundred years before the
+caravels of Portuguese conquerors ever sailed these waters, the law of
+the Indian ruler of that very part of the country read: "Judges who
+receive bribes from their clients are to be considered as thieves
+meriting death." And a clause in the Sacred Book read: "He who kills
+another condemns his own self." Has the interior of South America gone
+forward or backward since then? Was the adoration of the Sun more
+civilizing than the worship of the Virgin?
+
+When we got down into Argentine waters I began to feel cold, and donned
+an overcoat. Thinking it strange that I should feel thus in the
+latitude which had in former times been so agreeable, I investigated,
+and found the thermometer 85 degrees Fah. in the shade. After Corumba
+that was _cold_.
+
+
+
+
+PART V.
+
+URUGUAY
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE LONE TRAIL.
+
+
+ And sometimes it leads to the desert and the tongue swells
+ out of the mouth,
+ And you stagger blind to the mirage, to die in the mocking
+ drouth.
+ And sometimes it leads to the mountain, to the light of the
+ lone camp-fire,
+ And you gnaw your belt in the anguish of the hunger-goaded
+ desire.
+
+ --_Robert W. Service._
+
+
+
+The Republic of Uruguay has 72,210 square miles of territory, and is
+the smallest of the ten countries of South America. Its population is
+only 1,103,000, but the Liebig Company, "which manufactures beef tea
+for the world, owns nearly a million acres of land in Uruguay. On its
+enormous ranches over 6,000,000 head of cattle have passed through its
+hands in the fifty years of its existence." [Footnote: Clark.
+"Continent of Opportunity."]
+
+The republic seems well governed, but, as in all Spanish-American
+countries, the ideas of right and wrong are strange. While taking part
+in a religious procession, President Borda was assassinated in 1897. A
+man was seen to deliberately walk up and shoot him. The Chief Executive
+fell mortally wounded. This cool murderer was condemned to two years'
+imprisonment for _insulting_ the President.
+
+In 1900, President Arredondo was assassinated, but the murderer was
+acquitted on the ground that "he was interpreting the feelings of the
+people."
+
+Uruguay is a progressive republic, with more than a thousand miles of
+railway. On these lines the coaches are very palatial. The larger part
+of the coach, made to seat fifty-two passengers, is for smokers, the
+smaller compartment, accommodating sixteen, is for non-smokers, thus
+reversing our own practice. Outside the harbor of the capital a great
+sea-wall is being erected, at tremendous cost, to facilitate shipping,
+and Uruguay is certainly a country with a great future.
+
+The capital city occupies a commanding position at the mouth of the
+great estuary of the Rio de la Plata; its docks are large and modern,
+and palatial steamers of the very finest types bring it in daily
+communication with Buenos Ayres. The Legislative Palace is one of the
+finest government buildings in the world. The great Solis Theatre,
+where Patti and Bernhardt have both appeared, covers nearly two acres
+of ground, seats three thousand people and cost three million dollars
+to build. The sanitary conditions and water supply are so perfect that
+fewer people die in this city, in proportion to its size, than in any
+other large city of the world.
+
+The Parliament of Uruguay has recently voted that all privileges
+hitherto granted to particular religious bodies shall be abrogated,
+that the army shall not take part in religious ceremonies, that army
+chaplains shall be dismissed, that the national flag shall not be
+lowered before any priest or religious symbol. So another state cuts
+loose from Rome!
+
+The climate of the country is such that grapes, apricots, peaches, and
+many other fruits grow to perfection. Its currency is on a more stable
+basis than that of any other Spanish republic, and its dollar is
+actually worth 102 cents. The immigrants pouring into Uruguay have run
+up to over 20,000 a year; the population has increased more than 100
+per cent in 12 years; so we shall hear from Uruguay in coming years
+more than we have done in the past.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+SKETCHES OF A HORSEBACK RIDE THROUGH THE REPUBLIC.
+
+
+I CROSS THE SILVER RIVER.
+
+I left Buenos Ayres for Uruguay in an Italian _polacca_. We weighed
+anchor one Sunday afternoon, and as the breeze was favorable, the white
+sails, held up by strong ropes of rawhide, soon wafted us away from the
+land. We sailed through a fleet of ships from all parts of the world,
+anchored in the stream, discharging and loading cargoes. There, just
+arrived, was an Italian emigrant ship with a thousand people on board,
+who had come to start life afresh. There was the large British steamer,
+with her clattering windlass, hoisting on board live bullocks from
+barges moored alongside. The animals are raised up by means of a strong
+rope tied around their horns, and as the ship rocks on the swell they
+dangle in mid-air. When a favorable moment arrives they are quickly
+dropped on to the deck, completely stupefied by their aerial flight.
+
+As darkness fell, the wind dropped, and we lay rocking on the bosom of
+the river, with only the twinkling lights of the Argentine coast to
+remind us of the solid world. The shoreless river was, however,
+populous with craft of all rigs, for this is the highway to the great
+interior, and some of them were bound to Cuyaba, 2,600 miles in the
+heart of the continent. During the night a ship on fire in the offing
+lit up with great vividness the silent waste of waters, and as the
+flames leaped up the rigging, the sight was very grand. Owing to calms
+and light winds, our passage was a slow one, and I was not sorry when
+at last I could say good-bye to the Italians and their oily food. Three
+nights and two days is a long time to spend in crossing a river.
+
+MONTEVIDEO.
+
+Montevideo, the capital of Uruguay, is "one of the handsomest cities in
+all America, north or south." Its population is over 350,000. It is one
+of the cleanest and best laid-out cities on the continent; it has
+broad, airy streets and a general look of prosperity. What impresses
+the newcomer most is the military display everywhere seen. Sentry
+boxes, in front of which dark-skinned soldiers strut, seem to be at
+almost every corner. Although Uruguay has a standing army of under
+3,500 men, yet gold-braided officers are to be met with on every
+street. There are twenty-one generals on active service, and many more
+living on pension. More important personages than these men assume to
+be could not be met with in any part of the world.
+
+The armies of most of these republics are divided into sections bearing
+such blasphemous titles as "Division of the Son of God," "Division of
+the Good Shepherd," "Division of the Holy Lancers of Death" and
+"Soldiers of the Blessed Heart of Mary." These are often placed under
+the sceptre of the Sacred Heart of Jesus as the national emblem.
+
+Boys of seven and old men of seventy stand on the sidewalks selling
+lottery tickets; and the priest, with black beaver hat, the brim of
+which has a diameter of two feet, is always to be seen. One of these
+priests met a late devotee, but now a follower of Christ through
+missionary effort, and said: "Good morning, _Daughter of the Evil
+One_!" "Good morning, _Father_," she replied.
+
+The cemetery is one of the finest on the continent, and is well worth a
+visit. Very few of Montevideo's dead are _buried_. The coffins of the
+rich are zinc-lined, and provided with a glass in the lid. All caskets
+are placed in niches in the high wall which surrounds the cemetery.
+These mural niches are six or eight feet deep in the wall, and each one
+has a marble tablet for the name of the deposited one. By means of a
+large portable ladder and elevator combined, the coffins are raised
+from the ground. At anniversaries of the death the tomb is filled with
+flowers, and candles are lit inside, while a wreath is hung on the
+door. A favorite custom is to attend mass on Sunday morning, then visit
+the cemetery, and spend the afternoon at the bull-fights.
+
+NATIVE HOUSES AND HABITS.
+
+Uruguay is essentially a pastoral country, and the finest animals of
+South America are there raised. It is said that "Uruguay's pasture
+lands could feed all the cattle of the world, and sheep grow fat at 50
+to the acre." In 1889, when I first went there, there were thirty-two
+millions of horned cattle grazing on a thousand hills. Liebig's famous
+establishments at Fray Bentos, two hundred miles north of Montevideo,
+employs six hundred men, and kills one thousand bullocks a day.
+
+Uruguay has some good roads, and the land is wire-fenced in all
+directions. The rivers are crossed on large flat-bottomed boats called
+_balsas_. These are warped across by a chain, and carry as many as ten
+men and horses in one trip. The roads are in many places thickly strewn
+with bones of dead animals, dropped by the way, and these are picked
+clean by the vultures. No sooner does an animal lie down to die than,
+streaming out of the infinite space, which a moment before has been a
+lifeless world of blue ether, there come lines of vultures, and soon
+white bones are all that are left.
+
+On the fence-posts one sees many nests of the _casera_ (housebuilder)
+bird, made of mud. These have a dome-shaped roof, and are divided by a
+partition inside into chamber and ante-chamber. By the roadside are
+hovels of the natives not a twentieth part so well-built or rain-tight.
+Fleas are so numerous in these huts that sometimes, after spending a
+night in one, it would have been impossible to place a five-cent piece
+on any part of my body that had not been bitten by them. Scorpions come
+out of the wood they burn on the earthen floor, and monster cockroaches
+nibble your toes at night. The thick, hot grass roofs of the ranches
+harbor centipedes, which drop on your face as you sleep, and bite
+alarmingly. These many-legged creatures grow to the length of eight or
+nine inches, and run to and fro with great speed. Well might the little
+girl, on seeing a centipede for the first time, ask: "What is that
+queer-looking thing, with about a million legs?" Johnny wisely replied:
+"That's a millennium. It's something like a centennial, only its has
+more legs."
+
+After vain attempts to sleep, you rise, and may see the good wife
+cleaning her only plate for you by rubbing it on her greasy hair and
+wiping it with the bottom of her chemise. Ugh! Proceeding on the
+journey, it is a common sight to see three or four little birds sitting
+on the backs of the horned cattle getting their breakfast, which I hope
+they relish better than I often did.
+
+A WAKE, AND HOW TO GET TO HEAVEN.
+
+During my journey I was asked: Would I like to go to the wake held that
+night at the next house, three miles away? After supper, horses were
+saddled up and away we galloped. Quite a number had already gathered
+there. We found the dead man lying on a couple of sheepskins, in the
+centre of a mud-walled and mud-floored room. "No useless coffin
+enclosed his breast," nor was he wound in either sheet or shroud. There
+he lay, fully attired, even to his shoes. Four tallow candles lighted
+up the gloom, and these were placed at his head and feet. His clammy
+hands were reverently folded over his breast, whilst entwined in his
+fingers was a bronze cross and rosary, that St. Peter, seeing his
+devotion, might, without questioning, admit him to a better world. The
+scene was weird beyond description. Outside, the wind moaned a sad
+dirge; great bats and black moths, the size of birds, flitted about in
+the midnight darkness. These, ever and anon, made their way inside and
+extinguished the candles, which flickered and dripped as they fitfully
+shone on the shrunken features of the corpse. He had been a reprobate
+and an assassin, but, luckily for him, a pious woman, not wishing to
+see him die "in his sins," had sprinkled _Holy Water_ on him. The said
+"Elixir of Life" had been brought eighty miles, and was kept in her
+house to use only in extreme cases. The poor woman had paid the price
+of a cow for the bottle of water, but the priest had declared that it
+was an effectual soul-saver, and they never doubted its efficacy.
+Around the corpse was a throng of women, and they all chattered as
+women are apt to do. The men, standing around the door, talked of their
+horse-races, fights or anything else. For some hours I heard no
+allusion to the dead, but as the night wore on the prophetess of the
+people came forth.
+
+If my advent among them had caused a stir, the entrance of this old
+woman caused a bustle; even the dead man seemed to salute her, or was
+it only my imagination--for I was in a strangely sensitive mood--that
+pictured it? As she slowly approached, leaning heavily on a rough,
+thick staff, all the females present bent their knees. Now prayers were
+going to be offered up for the dead, and the visible woman was to act
+as interceder with the invisible one in heaven. After being assisted to
+her knees, the old woman, in a cracked, yet loud, voice, began. "_Santa
+Maria, ruega por nosotros, ahora, y en la hora de nuestra muerte!_"
+(Holy Mary pray for us now, and in the hour of our death!) This was
+responded to with many gesticulations and making of crosses by the
+numerous females around her. The prayers were many and long, and must
+have lasted perhaps an hour; then all arose, and mate and cigars were
+served. Men and women, even boys and girls, smoked the whole night
+through, until around the Departed was nothing but bluish clouds.
+
+The natives are so fond of wakes that when deaths do not occur with
+great frequency, the bones of "grandma" are dug up, and she is prayed
+and smoked over once more. The digging up of the dead is often a simple
+matter, for the corpse is frequently just carried into the bush, and
+there covered with prickly branches.
+
+THE SNAKE'S HISTORY.
+
+I met with a snake, of a whitish color, that appeared to have two
+heads. Never being able to closely examine this strange reptile, I
+cannot positively affirm that it possesses the two heads, but the
+natives repeatedly affirmed to me that it does, and certainly both ends
+are, or seem to be, exactly alike. In the Book of Genesis the serpent
+is described as "a beast," but for its temptation of Eve it was
+condemned to crawl on its belly and become a reptile. A strange belief
+obtains among the people that all serpents must not only be killed, but
+_put into a fire_. If there is none lit, they will kindle one on
+purpose, for it must be burned. As the outer skin comes off, it is
+declared, the four legs, now under it, can be distinctly seen.
+
+A GIRL'S NEW BIRTH AND TRANSLATION.
+
+At Rincon I held a series of meetings in a mud hut. Men and women, with
+numerous children, used to gather on horseback an hour before the time
+for opening. A little girl always brought her three-legged stool and
+squatted in front of me. The rest appropriated tree-trunks and
+bullocks' skulls. The girl referred to listened to the Gospel story as
+though her life depended upon it, as indeed it did! When at Rincon only
+a short time, the child desired me to teach her how to pray, and she
+clasped her hands reverently. "Would Jesus save _me_?" she asked. "Did
+He die for me--_me_? Will He save me now?" The girl _believed_, and
+entered at once into the family of God.
+
+One day a man on horseback, tears streaming down his cheeks, galloped
+up to my hut. It was her father. His girl was dead. She had gone into
+the forest, and, feeling hungry, had eaten some berries; they were
+poisonous, and she had come home to die. Would I bury her? Shortly
+afterwards I rode over to the hovel where she had lived. Awaiting me
+were the broken-hearted parents. A grocery box had been secured, and
+this rude coffin was covered with pink cotton. Four horses were yoked
+in a two-wheeled cart, the parents sat on the casket, and I followed on
+horseback to the nearest cemetery, sixteen miles away. There, in a
+little enclosure, we lowered the girl into her last earthly
+resting-place, in the sure and certain hope of a glorious resurrection.
+She had lived in a house where a cow's hide served for a door, but she
+had now entered the "pearly gates." The floor of her late home was
+mother earth; what a change to be walking the "streets of gold!" Some
+day, "after life's fitful fever," I shall meet her again, not a poor,
+ragged half-breed girl, but glorified, and clothed in His righteousness.
+
+HOW I DID NOT LOSE MY EYES.
+
+One day I was crossing a river, kneeling on my horse's back, when he
+gave a lurch and threw me into the water. Gaining the bank, and being
+quite alone, I stripped off my wet clothes and waited for the sun to
+dry them. The day was hot and sultry, and, feeling tired, I covered
+myself up with the long grass and went to sleep. How long I lay I
+cannot tell, but suddenly waking up, I found to my alarm that several
+large vultures, having thought me dead, were contemplating me as their
+next meal! Had my sleep continued a few moments longer, the rapacious
+birds would have picked my eyes out, as they invariably do before
+tearing up their victim. All over the country these birds abound, and I
+have counted thirty and forty tearing up a living, quivering animal.
+Sometimes, for mercy's sake, I have alighted and put the suffering
+beast out of further pain. Before I got away they have been fighting
+over it again in their haste to suck the heart's blood.
+
+A BACHELOR RABBIT.
+
+The pest of Australia is the rabbit, but, strange to say, I never found
+one in South America. In their place is the equally destructive
+_viscacha_ or prairie dog--a much larger animal, probably three or four
+times the size, having very low, broad head, little ears, and thick,
+bristling whiskers. His coat is gray and white, with a mixture of
+black. To all appearance this is a ferocious beast, with his two front
+tusk-like teeth, about four inches long, but he is perfectly harmless.
+The viscacha makes his home, like the rabbit, by burrowing in the
+ground, where he remains during daylight. The faculty of acquisition in
+these animals must be large, for in their nightly trips they gather and
+bring to the mouth of their burrow anything and everything they can
+possibly move. Bones, manure, stones and feathers are here collected,
+and if the traveller accidentally dropped his watch, knife or
+handkerchief, it would be found and carried to adorn the viscacha's
+doorway, if those animals were anywhere near.
+
+The lady reader will be shocked to learn that the head of the viscacha
+family, probably copying a bad example from the ostrich, his neighbor,
+is also very unamiable with his "better half," and inhabits bachelor's
+quarters, which he keeps all to himself, away from his family. The food
+of this strange dog-rabbit is roots, and his powerful teeth are well
+fitted to root them up. At the mouth of their burrows may often be seen
+little owls, which have ejected the original owners and themselves
+taken possession. They have a strikingly saucy look, and possess the
+advantage of being able to turn their heads right around while the body
+remains immovable. Being of an inquisitive nature, they stare at every
+passer-by, and if the traveller quietly walks around them he will smile
+at the grotesque power they have of turning their head. When a young
+horse is especially slow in learning the use of the reins, I have known
+the cowboy smear the bridle with the brains of this clever bird, that
+the owl's facility in turning might thus be imparted to it.
+
+Another peculiar animal is the _comadreka_, which resembles the
+kangaroo in that it is provided with a bag or pouch in which to carry
+its young ones. I have surprised these little animals (for they are
+only of rabbit size) with their young playing around them, and have
+seen the mother gather them into her pouch and scamper away.
+
+DRINKING WATER, SAINTS AND THE VIRGIN.
+
+In Uruguay it is the custom for all, on approaching a house, to call
+out, "Holy Mary the Pure!" and until the inmate answers: "Conceived
+without sin!" not a step farther must be made by the visitor. At a hut
+where I called there was a baby hanging from the wattle roof in a cow's
+hide, and flies covered the little one's eyes. On going to the well for
+a drink I saw that there was a cat and a rat in the water, but the
+people were drinking it! When smallpox breaks out because of such
+unsanitary conditions, I have known them to carry around the image of
+St. Sebastian, that its divine presence might chase away the sickness.
+The dress of the Virgin is often borrowed from the church, and worn by
+the women, that they may profit by its healing virtues. A crucifix hung
+in the house keeps away evil spirits.
+
+The people were very _religious_, and no rain having fallen for five
+months, had concluded to carry around a large image of the Virgin they
+had, and show her the dry crops. I rode on, but did not get wet!
+
+NO NEED OF THE DOCTOR OR VET.
+
+"A poor girl got very severely burnt, and the remedy applied was a
+poultice of mashed ears of _viscacha_. The burn did not heal, and so a
+poultice of pig's dung was put on. When we went to visit the girl, the
+people said it was because they had come to our meetings that the girl
+did not get better. A liberal cleansing, followed by the use of boracic
+acid, has healed the wound. Another case came under our notice of a
+woman who suffered from a gathering in the ear, and the remedy applied
+was a negro's curl fried in fat."
+
+To cure animals of disease there are many ways. Mrs. Nieve boasted
+that, by just saying a few cabalistic words over a sick cow, she could
+heal it. A charm put on the top of the enclosure where the animals are
+herded will keep away sickness. To cure a bucking horse all that is
+necessary is to pull out its eyebrows and spit in its face. Let a lame
+horse step on a sheepskin, cut out the piece, and carry it in your
+pocket; if this can't be done, make a cross with tufts of grass, and
+the leg will heal. For ordinary sickness tie a dog's head around the
+horse's neck. If a horse has pains in the stomach, let him smell your
+shirt.
+
+A RACE FOR INFORMATION.
+
+Uruguay is said to have averaged a revolution every two years for
+nearly a century, so in times of revolutionary disturbance the younger
+children are often set to watch the roads and give timely warning, that
+the father or elder brother may effect an escape. The said persons may
+then mount their fleetest horse and be out of sight ere the recruiting
+sergeant arrives. Being one day perplexed, and in doubt whether I was
+on my right road, I made towards a boy I had descried some distance
+away, to ask him. No sooner did the youth catch sight of me than he set
+off at a long gallop away from me; why, I could not tell, as they are
+generally so interested at the sight of a stranger. Determined not to
+be outdone, and feeling sure that without directions I could not safely
+continue the journey, I put spurs to my horse and tried to overtake
+him. As I quickened my pace he looked back, and, seeing me gain upon
+him, urged his horse to its utmost speed. Down hill and up hill,
+through grass and mud and water, the race continued. A sheepskin fell
+from his saddle, but he heeded it not as he went plunging forward.
+Human beings in those latitudes were very few, and if I did not catch
+him I might be totally lost for days; so I went clattering on over his
+sheepskin, and then over his wooden saddle, the fall of which only made
+his horse give a fresh plunge forward as he lay on its neck. Thus we
+raced for at least three miles, until, tired out and breathless, I gave
+up in despair.
+
+Concluding that my fleet-footed but unamiable young friend had
+undoubtedly some place in view, I continued in the same direction, but
+at a more respectable pace. Shortly afterwards I arrived at a very
+small hut, built of woven grass and reeds, which I presumed was his
+home. Making for the open door, I clapped my hands, but received no
+answer. The hut was certainly inhabited--of that I saw abundant
+signs--but where were the people? I dare not get down from my horse;
+that is an insult no native would forgive; so I slowly walked around
+the house, clapping my hands and shouting at the top of my voice. Just
+as I was making the circuit for the third time, I descried another and
+a larger house, hidden in the trees some distance away, and thither I
+forthwith bent my steps. There I learned that I had been taken for a
+recruiting sergeant, and the inhabitants had hidden themselves when the
+boy galloped up with the message of my approach.
+
+I FIND DIAMONDS.
+
+ "For one shall grasp and one resign.
+ One drink life's rue, and one its wine;
+ And God shall make the balance good."
+
+Encamped on the banks of the Black River, idly turning up the soil with
+the stock of my riding-whip, I was startled to find what I believed to
+be real diamonds! Beautifully white, transparent stones they were, and,
+rising to examine them closely in the sunlight, I was more than ever
+convinced of the richness of my find. Was it possible that I had
+unwittingly discovered a diamond field? Could it be true that, after
+years of hardship, I had found a fortune? I was a rich man--oh, the
+enchanting thought! No need now to toil through scorching suns. I could
+live at ease. As I sat with the stones glistening in the light before
+my eyes, my brain grew fevered. Leaving my hat and coat on the ground,
+I ran towards my horse, and, vaulting on his bare back, wildly galloped
+to and fro, that the breezes might cool my fevered head. Rich? Oh, how
+I had worked and striven! Life had hitherto been a hard fight. When I
+had gathered together a few dollars, I had been prostrated with
+malarial or some other fever, and they had flown. After two or three
+months of enforced idleness I had had to start the battle of life
+afresh with diminished funds. Now the past was dead; I could rest from
+strife. Rest! How sweet it sounded as I repeated aloud the precious
+word, and the distant echoes brought back the word, Rest!
+
+I was awakened from my day dreams by being thrown from my horse! Hope
+for the future had so taken possession of me that the present was
+forgotten. I had not seen the caves of the prairie dog, but my horse
+had given a sudden start aside to avoid them, and I found myself
+licking the dust. Bather a humiliating position for a man to be in who
+had just found unlimited wealth; Somewhat subdued, I made my way back
+to my solitary encampment.
+
+Well, how shall I conclude this short but pregnant chapter of my life?
+Suffice it to say that my idol was shattered! The stones were found to
+be of little worth.
+
+ "The flower that smiles to-day,
+ To-morrow dies;
+ All that we wish to stay
+ Tempts, and then flies."
+
+A MAN WITH TWO NOSES AND TWO MOUTHS.
+
+I was lost one day, and had been sitting in the grass for an hour or
+more wondering what I should do, when the sound of galloping hoofs
+broke the silence. On looking around, to my horror, I saw a _something_
+seated on a fiery horse tearing towards me! What could it be? Was it
+human? Could the strange-looking being who suddenly reined up his horse
+before me be a man? A man surely, but possessing two noses, two mouths,
+and two hare-lips. A hideous sight! I shuddered as I looked at him. His
+left eye was in the temple, and he turned it full upon me, while with
+the other he seemed to glance toward the knife in his belt. When he
+rode up I had saluted him, but he did not return the recognition.
+Feeling sure that the country must be well known to him, I offered to
+reward him if he would act as my guide. The man kept his gleaming eye
+fixed upon me, but answered not a word. Beginning to look at the matter
+in rather a serious light, I mounted my horse, when he grunted at me in
+an unintelligible way, which showed me plainly that he was without the
+power of speech. He turned in the direction I had asked him to take,
+and we started off at a breakneck speed, which his fiery horse kept up.
+I cannot say he followed his nose, or the reader might ask me which
+nose, but he led me in a straight line to an eminence, from whence he
+pointed out the estancia I was seeking. The house was still distant,
+yet I was not sorry to part with my strange guide, who seemed
+disinclined to conduct me further. I gave him his fee, and he grunted
+his thanks and left me to pursue my journey more leisurely. A hut I
+came to had been struck by lightning, and a woman and her child had
+been buried in the debris. Inquiring the particulars, I was informed
+that the woman was herself to blame for the disaster. The saints, they
+told me, have a particular aversion to the _ombu_ tree, and this daring
+Eve had built her house near one. The saints had taken _spite_ at this
+act of bravado, and destroyed both mother and daughter. Moral: Heed the
+saints.
+
+A FLEET-FOOTED DEER.
+
+One day an old man seriously informed me that in those parts there was
+a deer which neither he nor any other one had been able to catch. Like
+the Siamese twins, it was two live specimens in one. When I asked why
+it was impossible to catch the animal, he informed me that it had eight
+legs with which to run. Four of the legs came out of the back, and,
+when tired with using the four lower ones, it just turned over and ran
+with the upper set. I did not see this freak, so add the salt to your
+taste, O reader.
+
+I SLEEP WITH THE RATS.
+
+Hospitality is a marked and beautiful feature of the Uruguayan people.
+At whatever time I arrived at a house, although a stranger and a
+foreigner, I was most heartily received by the inmates. On only one
+occasion, which I will here relate, was I grudgingly accommodated, and
+that was by a Brazilian living on the frontier. The hot sun had
+ruthlessly shone on me all day as I waded through the long arrow grass
+that reached up to my saddle. The scorching rays, pitiless in their
+intensity, seemed to take the energy from everything living. All
+animate creation was paralyzed. The relentless ball of fire in the
+heavens, pouring down like molten brass, appeared to be trying to set
+the world on fire; and I lay utterly exhausted on my horse's neck, half
+expecting to see all kindled in one mighty blaze! I had drunk the hot,
+putrid water of the hollows, which did not seem to quench my thirst
+any, but perhaps did help to keep me from drying up and blowing away.
+My tongue was parched and my lips dried together. Fortunately, I had a
+very quiet horse, and when I could no longer bear the sun's burning
+rays I got down for a few moments and crept under him.
+
+Shelter there was none. The copious draughts of evil-smelling water I
+had drunk in my raging thirst brought on nausea, and it was only by
+force of will that I kept myself from falling, when on an eminence I
+joyfully sighted the Brazilian estancia. Hope then revived in me. My
+knowing horse had seen the house before me, and without any guidance
+made straight towards it at a quicker pace. Well he knew that houses in
+those desolate wastes were too far apart to be passed unheeded by, and
+I thoroughly concurred in his wisdom. As I drew up before the lonely
+place my tongue refused to shout "Ave Maria," but I clapped my
+perspiring hands, and soon had the satisfaction of hearing footsteps
+within. Visions of shade and of meat and drink and rest floated before
+my eyes when I saw the door opened. A coal-black face peeped out,
+which, in a cracked, broken voice, I addressed, asking the privilege to
+dismount. Horror of horrors, I had not even been answered ere the door
+was shut again in my face! Get down without permission I dare not. The
+house was a large edifice, built of rough, undressed stones, and had a
+thick, high wall of the same material all around.
+
+Were the inmates fiends that they let me sit there, knowing well that
+there was no other habitation within miles? As the minutes slowly
+lengthened out, and the door remained closed, my spirits sank lower and
+lower. After a silence of thirty-five minutes, the man again made his
+appearance, and, coming right out this time, stared me through and
+through. After this close scrutiny, which seemed to satisfy him, but
+elicited no response to a further appeal from me, he went to an
+outlying building, and, bringing a strong hide lasso, tied it around my
+horse's neck. Not until that was securely fastened did he invite me to
+dismount. Presuming the lasso was lent me to tie out my horse, I led
+him to the back of the house. When I returned, my strange, unwilling
+host was again gone, so I lay down on a pile of hides in the shade of
+the wall, and, utterly tired out, with visions of banquets floating
+before my eyes, I dropped off to sleep.
+
+Perhaps an hour afterwards, I awoke to find a woman, black as night,
+bending over me. Not seeing a visitor once in three months, her
+feminine curiosity had impelled her to come and examine me. Seemingly
+more amiable than her husband, she spoke to me, but in a strange,
+unmusical language, which I could not understand; and then she, too,
+left me. As evening approached, another inmate of the house made his
+appearance. He was, I could see, of a different race, and, to my joy, I
+found that he spoke fluently in Spanish. Conducting me to the
+aforementioned outhouse, a place built of canes and mud, he told me
+that later on a piece of meat would be given me, and that I could sleep
+on the sheepskins. I got the meat, and I slept on the skins. Fatigued
+as I was, I passed a wretched night, for dozens of huge rats ran over
+my body, bit my hands, and scratched my face, the whole night long.
+Morning at last dawned, and, with the first streaks of coming day, I
+saddled my horse, and, shaking the dust of the Brazilian estancia off
+my feet, resumed my journey.
+
+THE BURSTING OF A MAN.
+
+A friend of mine came upon an ostrich's nest. The bird was not near,
+so, dismounting, he picked up an egg and placed it in an inside pocket
+of his coat. Continuing the journey, the egg was forgotten, and the
+horse, galloping along, suddenly tripped and fell. The rider was thrown
+to the ground, where he lay stunned. Three hours afterwards
+consciousness returned. As his weary eyes wandered, he noticed, with
+horror, that his chest and side were thickly besmeared. With a cry of
+despair, he lay back, groaning, "I have burst!" The presence of the egg
+he had put in his pocket had quite passed from his mind!
+
+I FIND A LONE SCOTSMAN.
+
+One evening after a long day's journey, I reached a house, away near
+the Brazilian frontier, and was surprised indeed to see that the owner
+was a real live Scotsman. Great was my astonishment and pleasure at
+receiving such a warm Scotch welcome. He was eighty miles away from any
+village--alone in the mountains--and at the sight of me he wept like a
+child. Never can I forget his anguish as he told me that his beloved
+wife had died just a few days before, and that he had buried
+her--"there in the glen." At the sight of a British face he had
+completely broken down; but, pulling himself together, he conducted me
+through into the courtyard, and the difficulty of my journey was
+forgotten as we sat down to the evening meal.
+ Being anxious to hear the story of her who had presided at his
+board, I bade him recount to me the sad circumstances.
+
+She was a "bonnie lassie," and he had "lo'ed her muckle." There they
+had lived for twelve years, shut out from the rest of the world, yet
+content. Hand in hand they had toiled in joy and sorrow, when no rain
+fell for eight long months, and their cattle died; or when increase was
+good, and flocks and herds fat. Side by side they had stood alone in
+the wild tangle of the wilderness. And now, when riches had been
+gathered and comfort could be had, his "lassie" had left him, and "Oh!
+he grudged her sair to the land o' the leal!" Being so far removed from
+his fellows, he had been compelled to perform the sacred offices of
+burial himself. Surrounded by kind hearts and loving sympathizers, it
+is sad indeed to lose our loved ones. But how inexpressibly more sad it
+is when, away in loneliness, a man digs the cold clay tomb for all that
+is left of his only joy! When our dear ones sleep in "God's acre"
+surrounded by others it is sad. But how much more heartbreaking is it
+to bury the darling wife in the depths of the mountains alone, where a
+strong stone wall must be built around the grave to keey the wild
+beasts from tearing out the remains! Only those who have been so
+situated can picture the solemnity of such a scene.
+
+At his urgent request, I promised I would accompany him to the
+spot--sanctified by his sorrow and watered by his tears--where he had
+laid his dear one. Early the following morning a native servant saddled
+two horses, and we rode in silence towards the hallowed ground. In
+about thirty minutes we came in view of the quiet tomb. Encircling the
+grave he had built a high stone wall. When he silently opened the gate,
+I saw that, although all the pasture outside was dry and withered, that
+on the mound was beautifully green and fresh. Had he brought water from
+his house, for there was none nearer, or was it watered by his tears?
+His greatest longing was, as he had explained to me the previous night,
+that she should have a Christian burial, and if I would read some
+chapter over her grave he would feel more content, he said. As with
+bared heads we reverently knelt on the mound, I now complied with his
+request. Then, for the first time in the world's history, the trees
+that surrounded us listened to the Christian doctrine of a resurrection
+from the dead. "It is sown in corruption, it is raised in
+incorruption." And the leaves whispered to the mountains beyond, which
+gave back the words: "It is sown a natural body, it is raised a
+spiritual body."
+
+Never have I seen a man so broken with grief as was that lone Scotsman.
+There were no paid mourners or idle sightseers. There was no show of
+sorrow while the heart remained indifferent and untouched. It was the
+spectacle of a lone man who had buried his all and was left--
+
+ "To linger when the sun of life,
+ The beam that gilds its path, is gone--
+ To feel the aching bosom's strife,
+ When Hope is dead and Love lives on."
+
+As we knelt there, I spoke to the man about salvation from sin, and
+unfolded God's plan of inheritance and reunions in the future life. The
+Lord gave His blessing, and I left him next day rejoicing in the Christ
+who said: "I am the resurrection and the life; he that believeth in Me,
+though he were dead, yet shall he live."
+
+As the world moves forward, and man pushes his way into the waste
+places of the earth, that lonely grave will be forgotten. Populous
+cities will be built; but the doctrine the mountains then heard shall
+live when the gloomy youth of Uruguay is forgotten.
+
+THE WORD OF GOD CONTRASTED WITH THAT OF THE R. C. CHURCH.
+
+"Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou
+serve."--The Christ.
+
+"Mary must be the first object of our worship, St. Joseph the
+second."--Roman Catholic Catechism.
+
+"Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image or any likeness of
+anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or
+that is in the water under the earth. Thou shalt not bow down thyself
+to them, nor serve them, for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God."
+
+"I most firmly assert that the images of Christ and of the mother of
+God, ever virgin, and also of the other saints, are to be had and
+retained, and that due honor and veneration are to be given to
+them."--Creed of Pope Pius IV.
+
+"My glory will I not give to another, neither my praise to graven
+images."--Jehovah.
+
+"The saints reigning together with Christ are to be honored and
+invocated; ... they offer prayers to God for us... their relics are to
+be venerated."--Creed of Pope Pius IV.
+
+"For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men--the man
+Christ Jesus."--Paul.
+
+"Mary is everything in heaven and earth, and we should adore her."--The
+South American Priest.
+
+"Who changed the truth of God into a lie and worshipped and served the
+creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever."--Paul
+
+"All power was given to her."--Peter Damian, Cardinal of Rome.
+
+"Search the Scriptures."--The Christ.
+
+"All who read the Bible should be stoned to death."--Pope Innocent III.
+
+
+
+
+PART VI.
+
+MARIOLATRY AND IMAGE WORSHIP.
+
+
+[Illustration: OUR LADY OF GUADALOUPE. Many legacies are left to this
+image.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+MARIOLATRY AND IMAGE WORSHIP.
+
+
+Before the light of Christianity dawned on ancient Rome, the Pantheon
+contained goddesses many and gods many. Chief of these deities to
+receive the worship of the people seems to have been Diana of the
+Ephesians, a goddess whose image fell down from Jupiter; the celestial
+Venus of Corinth, and Isis, sister to Osiris, the god of Egypt. These
+popular images, so universally worshipped, were naturally the aversion
+of the early followers of Christ. "The primitive Christians were
+possessed with an unconquerable repugnance to the use and abuse of
+images. The Jewish disciples were especially bitter against any but the
+triune God receiving homage, but, by a slow, though inevitable,
+progression, the honors of the original were transferred to the copy,
+the devout Christian prayed before the image of a saint, and the pagan
+rites of genuflexion, luminaries, and incense stole into the Christian
+Church." [Footnote: Gibbons' "Rome."]
+
+Having Paul's masterly epistle to the Romans, in the first chapter of
+which he so distinctly portrays man's tendency to change "the glory of
+the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man," and
+worship and serve the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed
+forever, they were careful to remember that "God is a spirit," and to
+be worshipped only in spirit. Peter, in his epistle to them, also wrote
+of the One "whom having not seen ye love." As time wore on, however,
+the original inclination of man to worship a god he could see and feel
+(a trait seen all down the pages of history) asserted itself, and Mary,
+the mother of Christ, took the place in the eye and the heart
+previously occupied by her predecessors. [Footnote: Just as this work
+goes to press, the dally papers of the world announce that the oldest
+idol ever discovered has just been unearthed. The idol is a goddess,
+who is holding an infant in her arms.] Being in possession of the Acts
+of the Apostles, which plainly declares that Mary herself met with the
+rest of the disciples "for prayer and supplication," and, knowing from
+the four Gospels that no worship had been at first given to her, the
+innovation was slow to find favor; but, in the year 431, the Council of
+Ephesus decided that Mary was equal with God.
+
+"After the ruin of paganism they were no longer restrained by the
+apprehension of an odious parallel" in the idol worship. Symptoms of
+degeneracy may be observed even in the first generations which adopted
+and cherished this pernicious innovation. "The worship of images had
+stolen into the Church by insensible degrees, and each petty step was
+pleasing to the superstitious mind, as productive of comfort and
+innocent of sin. But, in the beginning of the eighth century, in the
+full magnitude of the abuse, the more timorous Greeks were awakened by
+an apprehension that, under the mask of Christianity, they had restored
+the religion of their fathers. They heard with grief and impatience the
+name of 'idolaters,' the incessant charge of the Jews and Mahometans,
+who derived from the Law and the Koran an immortal hatred to graven
+images and all the relative worship." [Footnote: Gibbons' "Rome."]
+
+It should be a most humiliating fact to the Romanists to have it
+recorded as authentic history that "the great miracle-working Madonna
+of Rome, worshipped in the Church of St. Augustina, is only a pagan
+statue of the wicked Agrippina with her infant Nero in her arms.
+Covered with jewels and votive offerings, her foot encased in gold,
+because the constant kissing has worn away the stone, this haughty and
+evil-minded Roman matron bears no possible resemblance to the pure
+Virgin Mary; yet crowds are always at her feet, worshipping her. The
+celebrated bronze statue of St. Peter, which is adored in the great
+Church, and whose feet are entirely kissed away by the lips of
+devotees, is but an antique statue of Jupiter, an idol of paganism. All
+that was necessary to make the pagan god a Christian saint was to turn
+the thunderbolt in his uplifted right hand to two keys, and put a
+gilded halo around his head. Yet, on any Church holiday, you will see
+thousands passing solemnly before this image (arrayed in gorgeous
+robes, with the Pope's mitre on its head), and after bowing before it,
+rise on their toes and repeatedly kiss its feet." [Footnote: Vickers'
+"Rome"]
+
+This method of receiving heathen deities as saints has been common all
+over South America, and many Indian idols may be seen in the churches,
+now adored as Roman Catholic saints, while the worship of Mary has
+grown to an alarming extent. In Lima's largest church, printed right
+over the chancel, is the motto, "Glory to Mary."
+
+In Cordoba, the Argentine seat of learning--a city so old that
+university degrees were being given there when the Pilgrim Fathers
+landed on the shores of New England--charms, amulets and miniature
+images of the Virgin are manufactured in large numbers. These are worn
+around the neck, and are supposed to work great wonders. As may be
+understood, the workers in these crafts stand up for Romanism, and are
+willing to cry themselves hoarse for Mary, just as the people of old
+cried for Diana of the Ephesians.
+
+It is often told of the Protestant worker that he keeps behind his door
+an image of the Blessed Virgin, and, when entering or leaving the
+house, he spits in her face. No pains are spared to stamp out any
+dissenting work, and the missionary is made a by-word of opprobrium. I
+have repeatedly had the doors and windows of my preaching places broken
+and wrecked. The priests have incited the vulgar crowd to hoot and yell
+at me, and on these occasions I have been both shot at and stoned.
+
+In Cordoba, there is a very costly image of Mary. Once every year it is
+brought out into the public square, while all the criminals from the
+state prison stand in line. By a move of her head she is supposed to
+point out the one whom she thinks should be given his liberty.
+
+From Goldsmith's "Rome" we learn that the _vestal virgins_ possessed
+the power to pardon any criminal whom they met on the road to
+execution. Thus does Romanism follow paganism. With the Virgin is often
+the image of St. Peter. The followers of this saint affirm that they
+are always warned, three days before they die, to prepare for death.
+St. Peter comes in person and knocks on the wall beside their bed.
+
+As the virgin, Diana, was the guardian of Ephesus, so the Virgin Mary
+protects Argentina.
+
+The Bishop of Tucuman, in a recent speech, said: "Argentina is now safe
+against possible invasion. The newly-crowned _Lady of the Miracles_
+defends the north, and the _Lady of Lujan_ guards the south."
+
+A writer in _The Times of Argentina_ naively asks: "If these can safely
+defy and defeat all comers, is there any further necessity for public
+expenditure in military matters?"
+
+South America groans under the weight of a mediaeval religion which has
+little to do with spiritual life. In Spain and Portugal, perhaps the
+two most deluded of European lands, I have seen great darkness, but
+even there the priest is often good, and at least puts on a veneer of
+piety. In South America this is not generally considered necessary.
+Frequently he is found to be the worst man in the village. If you speak
+to him of his dissolute life, he may tell you that he, being a priest,
+may do things you, a layman, must not. In Spain, Portugal and Italy,
+next door to highly enlightened countries, the priest cannot, for very
+shame, act as he is free to do in South America. That great continent
+has been ruled and governed only by Roman Catholics, without outside
+interference, and Romanists in other lands do not, and would not,
+believe the practices there sanctioned.
+
+_"You ask about this nation and the Roman Catholic Church," said the
+American Minister in one South American capital. "Well, the nation is
+rotten, thanks to the Church and to Spain. The Church has taught lies
+and uncleanness, and been the bulwark of injustice and wrong for 300
+years. How could you expect anything else?" "Lies," said a priest to a
+friend, who told the remark to us, "what do lies have to do with
+religion." [Footnote: "Missions In South America," Robt. E. Speer.]
+
+A missionary writes: "Recently the Roman bishop and several other
+priests visited the various towns. It was a business trip, for they
+charged a good price for baptisms, confirmations, etc., and carried
+away thousands of dollars. In Santa Cruz a disgraceful scene was
+publicly enacted in the church by the resident priest and one of the
+visitors. Both saw a woman drop a twenty-five cent piece into the pan;
+each grabbed for it, and then they fought before the people! The
+village priest wanted me to take his photo, but he was so drunk I had
+to help him put on his official robes. He was taken standing in the
+doorway of the church beside an image of the Virgin."
+
+"There wan a feast in honor of the image of the Holy Spirit in the
+church. This is a figure of a man with a beard; beside it sits a figure
+of Christ, and between them a dove. Great crowds of people attend these
+feasts to buy, sell and drink. On a common in the town a large altar
+was erected, and another image of the Holy Spirit placed, and before it
+danced Indians fantastically dressed to represent monkeys, tigers,
+lions and deer. Saturday, Sunday and Monday were days of debauchery.
+Men, women and children were intoxicated; the jails were full, and
+extravagances of all kinds were practised by masked Indians. The
+vessels in the church are of gold and silver, and the images each have
+a man to care for them. The patron saint is a large image of the
+Virgin, dressed in clothing that cost $2,500."
+
+Since returning to more civilized lands, I have been asked: But do they
+really worship the Virgin, or God, through her? I answer that in
+enlightened countries where Roman Catholicism prevails, the latter may
+be true, but that in South America, discovered and governed by
+Romanists from the earliest times, millions of people worship the
+Virgin without any reference to God. She is the great goddess of the
+people, and while one may see her image in every church, it is seldom
+indeed that God is honored with a place--then He may be seen as an old
+man with a long white beard. What kind of God they think He is may be
+seen from the words of Missionary F. Glass: "I found a 'festa' in full
+swing, called the 'Feast of the Divine Eternal Father,' and a drunken
+crowd were marching round, with trumpets, drums and a sacred banner,
+collecting alms professedly on His behalf." [Footnote: "Through the
+Heart of Brazil"]
+
+Mary is the one to whom the vast majority of people pray. They have
+been taught to address supplications to her, and, being a woman, her
+heart is considered more tender than a man's could be. During a drought
+their earnest prayer for rain was answered in an unexpected way, for
+not only did she send it, but with such accompanying violence that it
+washed away the church!
+
+In some churches the mail-box stands in a corner, and _"Letters to the
+Virgin"_ is printed over it. There are always many young women to be
+seen before the image of St. Anthony, for he is the patron of
+marriages, and many a timid confession of love is dropped into the
+letter-box, and it often happens that a marriage is arranged as a
+result. The superstitious maiden believes that her letter goes directly
+to the Virgin or to the saint in his heavenly mansion, and she has no
+suspicion that it is read by the parish priest.
+
+Saints are innumerable and their powers extraordinary. When travelling
+in Entre Rios, I learned that St. Ramon was an adept in guiding the
+path of the thunderbolt. A terrific storm swept across the country, and
+a woman, afraid for her house, placed his image leaning against the
+outside wall, that he might be able to see and direct the elements. The
+tempest raged, and as though to show the saint's utter helplessness,
+the end of the house was struck by lightning and set on fire. Little
+damage was done, but I smiled when the indignant woman, after the storm
+ceased, soundly thrashed the image for not attending to its duty.
+
+While preaching in the town of Quilmes, a poor deluded worshipper of
+Rome "turned from idols to serve the living and true God." He had been
+a sincere believer in St. Nicolas, and implicitly believed the absurd
+account of that saint having raised to life three children who had been
+brutally murdered by their father and secreted in a barrel. He brought
+me a picture of this wonder-worker tapping the barrel, and the little
+ones in the act of coming out alive and well.
+
+One familiar with Romanism in South America has said: "It is amazing to
+hear men who have access to the Word of God and the facts of history
+and of the actual state of the Romish world attempt to apologize for or
+even defend Romanism. Romanism is not Christianity."
+
+_The Church deliberately lies about the Ten Commandments, entirely
+omitting the second and dividing the tenth in order to make the
+requisite number. Can a Church which deceives the people teach them
+true religion? Is the preaching of Mary the preaching of Christ?_
+[Footnote: "Mission In South America," Robert B. Speer.]
+
+_"There is not an essential truth which is not distorted, covered up,
+neutralized, poisoned,_ and completely nullified by the doctrines of
+the Romish system." [Footnote: Bishop Neely's "South America."]
+
+A missionary in Cartago writes: "I must tell you about the annual
+procession of the wonderful miracle-working image called 'Our Lady
+Queen of the Angels,' through the principal streets of the town.
+Picture to yourselves, if you can, hundreds of people praying,
+worshipping, and doing homage to this little stone idol, for which a
+special church has been built. To this image many people come with
+their diseases, for she is supposed to have power to cure all. On a
+special day of the procession, people receive pardon for particular
+sins if they only carry out the bidding of 'Our Lady,' She seems to
+order some extraordinary things, such as crawling in the streets with
+big rocks on the head after the procession, or painting one's self all
+the colors of the rainbow. One man was painted black, while others wore
+wigs and beards of a long parasitic grass which grows from the trees.
+Some were dressed in sackcloth, and all were doing penance for some sin
+or crime. This little image was carried by priests, incense was burned
+before her, and at intervals in the journey she was put on lovely
+altars, on which sat little girls dressed in blue and green, with wings
+of white, representing angels. Some weeks ago 'Our Lady' was carried
+through the streets to collect money for the bull-fights got up in her
+honor. She is said to be very fond of these fights, which are immoral
+and full of bloody cruelty. This year the bulls were to kill the men,
+or the men the bulls, and the awful drunkenness I cannot describe.
+After this collection the bishop came over here, and is said to have
+taken away some of the money. Soon after he died, and the people here
+say that 'Our Lady' was angry with him."
+
+From a recent list of prayers used in the Church of Rome I select the
+following expressions:
+
+ "Queen of heaven and earth, Mother of God,
+ my Sovereign Mistress, I present myself before
+ you as a poor mendicant before a mighty Queen.
+
+ "All is subject to Mary's empire, even God
+ Himself. Jesus has rendered Mary omnipotent:
+ the one is omnipotent by nature, the other
+ omnipotent by grace.
+
+ "You, O Holy Virgin, have over God the authority
+ of a mother.
+
+ "It is impossible that a true servant of Mary
+ should be damned.
+
+ "My soul is in the hands of Mary, so that if
+ the Judge wishes to condemn me the sentence
+ must pass through this clement Queen, and she
+ knows how to prevent its execution.
+
+ "We, Holy Virgin, hope for grace and salvation
+ from you.
+
+ "Dispensatrix of Divine Grace."
+
+How history repeats itself! How hard paganism is to kill! The ancient
+Egyptians worshipped the "Queen of Heaven." Jeremiah, as far back as
+587 B.C., prophesied desolation to Judah for having "burned incense to
+the Queen of Heaven," and poured out "drink offerings" unto her, and
+"made cakes to worship her."--Jer. xliv. 17-19.
+
+Of the _wise_ men (Matthew ii.) we read: "And when they were come into
+the house, they saw the young child with Mary, His mother, and fell
+down and worshipped _Him_."
+
+The South American version of Matthew 11:28, as may be seen carved on a
+stone of the Jesuit Church in Cuzco, is: "Come to MARY, all you who are
+laden with works, and weary beneath the weight of your sins, and _she_
+will alleviate you," A literal translation of one of the prayers
+offered to her reads: "Yes, beloved Mother! of thee I supplicate all
+that is necessary for the salvation of my soul. Of whom should I ask
+this grace but of Thee? To whom should a loving son go but to his
+beloved Mother? To whom the weak sheep cry but to its divine
+shepherdess? Whom seek the sick, but the celestial doctor? Whom invoke
+those in affliction but the mother of consolation? Hear me then, Holy
+Queen!"
+
+The statues of the "Queen of Heaven" are often of great magnificence,
+the dress of one which I know having cost $2,000. In the poor Indian
+churches a bag of maize leaves, tied near the top to make a neck, and
+above that an Indian physiognomy, painted with some vegetable dye,
+serves the same purpose. The Bishop of La Serena, in Chili, has
+received as much as $40,000 a year for keeping up the revered image in
+that church, and these images _are worshipped_. Bequests are often left
+to them, and a popular one will receive many legacies annually.
+
+To be just, I must mention that in the arms of this "Mother of God"
+there is, almost invariably, the child Jesus, but I must also state
+that to tens of thousands this baby never grew to manhood, but went up
+to heaven in His mother's arms. What a caricature of Christianity! Paul
+said: "If Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your
+faith is also vain." "Make Jesus a perpetual child, and Mariolatry
+becomes lower than Chinese ancestral worship." If He, as a child, was
+translated to heaven, then He never died and rose again. Mary is, to
+them, the Saviour. The child Jesus happened to be her son, and, as she
+was the great divine one, He, through her, partook of divinity. _La
+Cruz_, a weekly paper, published in Tucuman, Argentina, in its issue of
+September 3rd, 1899, had the following article:
+
+THE BIRTH OF MARY.
+
+"Chroniclers say that such was the fury that possessed the devils in
+hell, at the moment of the birth of the Most Blessed Virgin, that they
+nearly broke loose.
+
+"There was sounded in heaven the first cannon shot in salutation of
+such a happy event. Lucifer gave such a jump that he got his horns
+caught in the moon, and there, it is said, he remained hanging all the
+day, like the insignificant fellow he is, to the great amusement of the
+blessed ones above, who laughed to see such an uncommon sight.
+
+"The other devils, who could not jump so high, remained below screaming
+and kicking!, and tearing their apology for beards, when not otherwise
+occupied in scratching and biting and burning the unfortunate condemned
+ones.
+
+"And all this because... it had been foretold that... a woman, yes, a
+woman, should one day bruise their heads... and, according to all
+appearances, this was the woman... and that she was that bright and
+morning star that announces the appearance of the Sun.
+
+"Why should we not therefore rejoice, as the angels in heaven rejoiced,
+over that moat happy event--the birth of Mary."
+
+From this it is clear that in Tucuman, at any rate--and this, by the
+way, is an important city, of at least 75,000 inhabitants--they believe
+that Mary, not Christ, came to bruise the serpent's head. The Roman
+Catholic translation of Gen. 3:15 is: "_She_ shall bruise the serpent's
+head." Thus, the reader sees, at the very commencement of God's Word,
+and in the very first promise of a Saviour for fallen men, the eyes of
+seeking souls are turned by Romanists from the Creator to the creature.
+
+How these words are understood by Romanists is plainly seen by the
+pictures of Mary trampling on the serpent, which are found everywhere
+in Romish lands.
+
+Under pictures of the Virgin, circulated everywhere, are the words: "We
+have seen the star and are come to adore her." The prayers of adoration
+run, "To the holiest birth of Mary, that in death it may bring about
+our birth to eternal glory. Ave Maria!" "To the anguish of Mary, that
+we may be made predestined children of her sorrows. Ave Maria!"
+
+The veneration with which the Virgin Mary is regarded, and the power
+with which she is invested, are thus told by many a priest: "Once God
+was so angry with the world that He determined to destroy it, and was
+about to execute His design when Mary said to Him: 'Give me back first
+the milk with which I fed you, and then you can do so!' In this way she
+averted the impending destruction."
+
+"Millions in Brazil look upon the Virgin Mary as their Saviour. A book
+widely circulated throughout northern Brazil says that Mary, when still
+a mere child, went bodily to heaven and begged God to send Christ,
+through her, into the world. Further on it says that Mary went again to
+heaven to plead for sinners; and at the close Mary's will is given,
+disposing of the whole world, and God the Father, Son, and Holy
+Spirit--the Trinity--act as the three witnesses to the will. How many
+good Christians at home think Brazil is a Christian country?"
+[Footnote: W. C. Porter.]
+
+If the Bible were in circulation throughout South America, the populace
+would be enabled to see that Christ is not the remorseless Judge but
+the loving Saviour, and that it was He who purchased redemption for us.
+Mary, according to Luke 1:47, was herself in need of a Saviour, and her
+only recorded command was to do as He, the Christ, enjoined (See John
+2:5). Not only Protestants, but not even Roman Catholics born in
+Protestant countries, can understand what Romanism is in South America.
+
+Christ said: "Search the Scriptures." Rome has done her best to destroy
+the sacred volume. Papal bulls, said to have been _dictated by the Holy
+Ghost_, have been issued by several Popes. Rome sometimes burned the
+martyrs with a Bible hanging around their necks. Romanists showed their
+hatred against Wycliffe, the first translator of the New Testament into
+English, by unearthing his crumbling remains and burning them to ashes.
+I have often seen the same spirit shown in South America.
+
+A colporteur, writing of Scripture circulation in the Argentine, says:
+"Many of the people are trying to get us ejected from the city. One, to
+whom a Bible was offered, became so infuriated that he said: 'If it
+were not such a public place? I would drown you in the river.'" A
+missionary writes: "A young fellow called out after me, 'I renounce
+you, Satan,' but as that is not my name, I did not turn back. During
+the meeting on Sunday evening, the priest came riding up to the window,
+and shouted that he would soon put a stop to us. Today he has had a
+number of bills printed, warning his parishioners to have nothing to do
+with us. To-night one of the bills was pasted on the door. Br. Arena
+took it off, and no sooner had he the door shut than two shots were
+fired, but they did no more harm than to pierce the door--thank God! I
+have been informed that a number of young men will either beat or shoot
+me, and that as I am the only one left they are going to make me leave,
+too, by foul or by fair means. The following is a translation of the
+priest's warning:
+
+ "To the faithful of Candelaria. Beware.
+ This parish has been invaded by one of the
+ wicked sects of Protestantism, and, having the
+ sacred duty of warning my parishioners, I give
+ them to understand that should any one of
+ them attend, even from mere curiosity, to hear
+ the false and pernicious propaganda, or accept
+ tracts or books that come from the propagators
+ of Protestantism, he will be excommunicated
+ from the true and only Church of Jesus Christ,
+ Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman, wherein resides
+ the infallible authority. Beware, then, oh, ye
+ faithful, and listen to your parish priest, who
+ advises you of the danger of your souls."
+
+Yet with all this darkness and error, the majority are well contented,
+and quite willing to obey "warnings" like this and the following,
+published in _Los Principios_, of Cordoba:
+
+ "It has come to our knowledge that there are
+ amongst us various Protestant ministers, that
+ distribute with profusion leaflets containing their
+ erroneous doctrines and calumnies against the
+ Catholic Church. Some of these leaflets and booklets
+ have fallen into our hands, and in them we
+ have found confirmation of what we say above.
+ In one of these leaflets, for example, they treat
+ as idolatry the worship that we Catholics tribute
+ to the Mother of God. They treat as superstition
+ the veneration they have in Rome for the holy
+ staircase by which our Lord Jesus Christ went
+ up to the judgment hall of Pilate. They combat
+ the worship of images, relics, and things of that
+ description.
+
+ "Catholics ought to know that it is not lawful
+ for them to read these leaflets, nor the Sacred
+ Bible distributed by the Protestants, because it
+ has been falsified by them, accommodating its
+ texts to their errors. The Church has prohibited
+ its children many times these pernicious readings.
+ Let us reject, according to the counsel
+ of St. Paul, these ravenous wolves that come in
+ sheep's clothing, for they come to kill and to
+ destroy souls, thrusting them into the ways of
+ error, being separated from the true Church of
+ Jesus Christ, from which Luther, Calvin,
+ Zuinglio, Henry VIII, and others separated
+ themselves, of whom Cobbell, the Protestant
+ historian, himself has said: 'Never has the
+ world seem gathered into one century so many
+ perverse men as Luther, Zuiniglio, Calvin,' etc."
+
+
+One acquainted with Spanish-American Romanism will smile at the
+reference in the above article to the Bible having been falsified by
+us. If the text of any version extant is compared with those which are
+painted on the walls of the church in Celaya, there surely will be
+found a great discrepancy. The following are translations:
+
+"MARY, my mother, in thee I hope; save me from those that persecute
+me."--Psalm vii. 1.
+
+"Be thou exalted, O MARY, above the heavens, and thy glory above all
+the earth."--Psalm lvii. 5.
+
+'I will sing to MARY while I live."--Psalm civ. 33.
+
+"Serve MARY with love, and rejoice in her with trembling."--Psalm ii.
+11.
+
+"Offer sacrifices of righteousness and trust in MARY."--Psalm iv. 5.
+
+"Let everything that hath breath praise OUR LADY," etc., etc.
+
+Protestant Christians pay almost all the entire cost of circulating
+Roman Catholic translations of the Scriptures over the world. In the
+versions of De Saci (French), Martini (Italian), Scio (Spanish),
+Pereira (Portuguese), and Wuyka (Polish), we find in Matthew 3: 2, and
+thirty-four other places, instead of "repent ye" the words, "do
+penance," while in Matthew 3: 8, and some twenty other places, the word
+that should be translated "repentance," is rendered _penance._ In the
+following light way "penance" can be done, while "repentance" is not
+thought of.
+
+For sins against the Church the priest will often condemn the culprit
+to wear a hideous garment for hours, or days, according to the gravity
+of the offence, but this punishment can be worn by proxy. There are
+always those who, for a consideration, will don the badge of disgrace.
+
+What is called "Holy Week" gives proofs of the shallowness of Rome's
+piety. Priests and people alike can weep, fast and faint, because their
+God is suffering and dying; all traffic can stop because, they say,
+"God has died"; but as soon as the death of Judas is announced, at noon
+on Saturday, the noise of guns, pistols, squibs, etc., takes the place
+of the death-like quiet that had reigned. After an hour or two silence
+again prevails till Sunday morning, when all restraint is removed, and
+people seem to make up for lost time. Drinking and kindred evils run
+riot, and it is no uncommon thing on the Sunday night to see the people
+drinking and dancing by the light of the candles they were burning to
+their favorite virgin or saint.
+
+In the large city of Lima, for centuries a very stronghold of image
+worship, the interest in the Church has of late years been waning.
+Perhaps one reason for this is the changing nature of the native
+population of the city, for the deaths there exceed the births. Seeing
+this falling away from the Church, the priests announced that they had
+decided to send for the _Sacred Heart of the Virgin_, and trusted that
+the presence of this holy relic would promote the more faithful
+attendance of the flock. The _heart_ arrived and was with great
+solemnity hung from the roof of the cathedral as the incentive to
+piety. Thousands flocked into the sacred building with reverent awe.
+The women gazed upon the heart with tearful eyes, and as they thought
+of Mary's sufferings and goodness they were emulated to deeper acts of
+love and piety. One day the wind blew very strongly through the open
+doorway, and the _Sacred Heart_ began to sway to and fro. Getting more
+and more momentum with every oscillation, the heart finally struck
+against a sharp cornice, when lo--_all the sawdust fell out_ of the
+canvas bag they had worshipped as the heart of flesh of their goddess.
+How they reconciled the existence of the heart of the Virgin with their
+belief that she ascended to heaven in a bodily form I do not pretend to
+imagine. It may be remarked that this is surely Romanism corrupted.
+Nay, it is rather Romanism developed.
+
+"Andacilli is a hamlet, at which there is an image of the Virgin. Every
+year pilgrims resort thither, and a great feast to the Virgin is
+celebrated, the most important day being December 26th. During the last
+few years there has been a falling off in the number of pilgrims,
+especially those of the better class, but this last year the clerical
+authorities have left no stone unturned in order to get together more
+people than ever. Six bishops were advertised to come, and they were to
+crown the Virgin with a crown which cost thousands of dollars. These
+proceedings rouse an incredible enthusiasm in the people." [Footnote:
+"Regions Beyond."]
+
+Sometimes Mary's image is baptized in the river, while men and women
+line the bank, ready to leap into the _holy water_ when she is lifted
+out. Afterwards the water in which she was immersed is sold as a cure
+for bodily ills. Sometimes the earth from under the building where she
+is kept is also sold for the same purpose.
+
+Imagine a church like that in Tucuru! "It consists of a palm-leaf hut,
+with a bare floor and no furniture whatever. Round the sides stand
+twelve life-size figures, made of canvas and stuffed with husks of
+corn, which some one of the Indian worshippers has painted with the
+features and dress of his own race. When I went in two women lay
+prostrate on the floor, and one of them screamed in agonizing tones,
+'My Lords, send the rod of your power to heal him!'--evidently praying
+to these apostles on behalf of some sick relative. Here, once a year, a
+priest celebrates mass, and when he last came he stuck a paper over the
+entrance, which read: _Hoec est Domus Del et Porta Coeli_ (' This is
+the House of God and the Gate of Heaven.') In San Jose we have the four
+walls of a new church, consecrated to the 'Virgin,' where, recently, a
+raffle was held on behalf of the projected edifice. As we enter, the
+first thing seen is an inscription, professing to be a message to each
+visitor from the Virgin, which says, 'My son, behold me without a
+temple. Come, help in building it, and I shall reward thee with Eternal
+Life." [Footnote: Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society.]
+
+Christ said: "I give unto My sheep eternal life"; but the record of
+that saying is jealously kept from them.
+
+When the early colonists left Spain for the New World, they took with
+them the Creed of Pius IV. That creed expressly states that the Bible
+is not for the people. "Whoever will be saved must _renounce_ it. It is
+a forbidden book."
+
+"In 1850, when the Christian world was first being roused to the
+darkness of South America, and philanthropic men were desirous of
+sending Bibles there, Pope Pius IX. wrote an Encyclical letter in which
+he spoke of Bible study as 'poisonous reading,' and urged all his
+venerable brethren with vigilance and solicitude to put a stop to it.
+Thus has South America been denied the revelation of God. The priest
+has, because of this ignorance, been able to 'lord it over God's
+heritage.'" [Footnote: Guiness's "Romanism and the Reformation."]
+
+With an open Bible, Spanish America would have progressed as North
+America has done. Without the enlightening influences of that Word,
+behold the darkness! Could anything be more eloquent than the
+prosperity of the land of the Pilgrim Fathers in proclaiming the value
+of the open Bible?
+
+Mr. Hudson Taylor, of the China Inland Mission, speaking on a recent
+occasion, said: "I always pray for South America. It is a most needy
+part of the world, and wants your prayers as well as mine. The workers
+there have great difficulties to contend with, and of the same sort as
+we have in China, from Roman Catholicism--the most God-dishonoring
+system in the world. The heathen need your prayers, but the Roman
+Catholic needs them ten times more. He is ten times as much in the dark
+as the heathen themselves are."
+
+The _Missionary Review of the World_ describes South America as
+"Earth's darkest land." Do you not think, O reader, the words are most
+truly applied?
+
+"There are in South America eight hundred missionaries, men and women,
+from Great Britain, the Continent of Europe, Canada and the United
+States. In Canada and the United States there is on an average one
+Protestant minister for every 514 persons. In South America each
+missionary has a constituency of about fifty thousand, indicating a
+need in proportion of population one hundred times as great as in the
+Protestant countries of North America." [Footnote: Bishop Neely's
+"South America."]
+
+Yet, One called Jesus, whom we say we love, said: "Go ye into all the
+world and preach the Gospel to every creature."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Through Five Republics on Horseback, by
+G. Whitfield Ray
+
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