We were, of course, desirous to visit
that famous Lake of Pitch, which our old nursery
literature described as one of the ’Wonders of
the World.’ It is not that; it is merely
a very odd, quaint, unexpected, and only half-explained
phenomenon: but no wonder. That epithet
should be kept for such matters as the growth of a
crystal, the formation of a cell, the germination
of a seed, the coming true of a plant, whether from
a fruit or from a cutting: in a word, for any
and all those hourly and momentary miracles which
were attributed of old to some Vis Formatrix of nature;
and are now attributed to some other abstract formula,
as they will be to some fresh one, and to a dozen
more, before the century is out; because the more
accurately and deeply they are investigated, the more
inexplicable they will be found.
So it is; but the ‘public’
are not inclined to believe that so it is, and will
not see, till their minds get somewhat of a truly
scientific training.
If any average educated person were
asked Which seemed to him more wonderful,
that a hen’s egg should always produce a chicken,
or that it should now and then produce a sparrow
or a duckling? can it be doubted what
answer he would give? or that it would be the wrong
answer? What answer, again, would he make to
the question Which is more wonderful,
that dwarfs and giants (i.e. people under four feet
six or over six feet six) should be exceedingly rare,
or that the human race is not of all possible heights
from three inches to thirty feet? Can it be
doubted that in this case, as in the last, the wrong
answer would be given? He would defend himself,
probably, if he had a smattering of science, by saying
that experience teaches us that Nature works by ‘invariable
laws’; by which he would mean, usually unbroken
customs; and that he has, therefore, a right to be
astonished if they are broken. But he would
be wrong. The just cause of astonishment is,
that the laws are, on the whole, invariable; that
the customs are so seldom broken; that sun and moon,
plants and animals, grains of dust and vesicles of
vapour, are not perpetually committing some vagary
or other, and making as great fools of themselves
as human beings are wont to do. Happily for the
existence of the universe, they do not. But
how, and still more why, things in general behave
so respectably and loyally, is a wonder which is
either utterly inexplicable, or explicable, I hold,
only on the old theory that they obey Some One whom
we obey to a very limited extent indeed. Not
that this latter theory gets rid of the perpetual
and omnipresent element of wondrousness. If matter
alone exists, it is a wonder and a mystery how it
obeys itself. If A Spirit exists, it is a wonder
and a mystery how He makes matter obey Him.
All that the scientific man can do is, to confess
the presence of mystery all day long; and to live
in that wholesome and calm attitude of wonder which
we call awe and reverence; that so he may be delivered
from the unwholesome and passionate fits of wonder
which we call astonishment, the child of ignorance
and fear, and the parent of rashness and superstition.
So will he keep his mind in the attitude most fit
for seizing new facts, whenever they are presented
to him. So he will be able, when he doubts of
a new fact, to examine himself whether he doubts
it on just grounds; whether his doubt may not proceed
from mere self-conceit, because the fact does not
suit his preconceived theories; whether it may not
proceed from an even lower passion, which he shares
(being human) with the most uneducated; namely, from
dread of the two great bogies, Novelty and Size novelty,
which makes it hard to convince the country fellow
that in the Tropics great flowers grow on tall trees,
as they do here on herbs; size, which makes it hard
to convince him that in far lands trees are often
two and three hundred feet high, simply because he
has never seen one here a hundred feet high.
It is not surprising, but saddening, to watch what
power these two phantoms have over the minds of those
who would be angry if they were supposed to be uneducated.
How often has one heard the existence of the sea-serpent
declared impossible and absurd, on these very grounds,
by people who thought they were arguing scientifically:
the sea-serpent could not exist, firstly because because
it was so odd, strange, new, in a word, and unlike
anything that they had ever seen or fancied; and,
secondly, because it was so big. The first
argument would apply to a thousand new facts, which
physical science is daily proving to be true; and
the second, when the reputed size of the sea-serpent
is compared with the known size of the ocean, rather
more silly than the assertion that a ten-pound pike
could not live in a half-acre pond, because it was
too small to hold him. The true arguments against
the existence of a sea-serpent, namely, that no Ophidian
could live long under water, and that therefore the
sea-serpent, if he existed, would be seen continually
at the surface; and again, that the appearance taken
for a sea-serpent has been proved, again and again,
to be merely a long line of rolling porpoises these
really sound arguments would be nothing to such people,
or only be accepted as supplementing and corroborating
their dislike to believe in anything new, or anything
a little bigger than usual.
But so works the average, i.e.
the uneducated and barbaric intellect, afraid of
the New and the Big, whether in space or in time.
How the fear of those two phantoms has hindered our
knowledge of this planet, the geologist knows only
too well.
It was excusable, therefore, that
this Pitch Lake should be counted among the wonders
of the world; for it is, certainly, tolerably big.
It covers ninety-nine acres, and contains millions
of tons of so-called pitch.
Its first discoverers, of course,
were not bound to see that a pitch lake of ninety-nine
acres was no more wonderful than any of the little
pitch wells ’spues’ or ‘galls,’
as we should call them in Hampshire a
yard across; or any one of the tiny veins and lumps
of pitch which abound in the surrounding forests;
and no less wonderful than if it had covered ninety-nine
thousand acres instead of ninety-nine. Moreover,
it was a novelty. People were not aware of the
vast quantity of similar deposits which exist up
and down the hotter regions of the globe. And
being new and big too, its genesis demanded, for
the comfort of the barbaric intellect, a cataclysm,
and a convulsion, and some sort of prodigious birth,
which was till lately referred, like many another
strange object, to volcanic action. The explanation
savoured somewhat of a ‘bull’; for what
a volcano could do to pitch, save to burn it up into
coke and gases, it is difficult to see.
It now turns out that the Pitch Lake,
like most other things, owes its appearance on the
surface to no convulsion or vagary at all, but to
a most slow, orderly, and respectable process of nature,
by which buried vegetable matter, which would have
become peat, and finally brown coal, in a temperate
climate, becomes, under the hot tropic soil, asphalt
and oil, continually oozing up beneath the pressure
of the strata above it. Such, at least, is
the opinion of Messrs. Wall and Sawkins, the geological
surveyors of Trinidad, and of several chemists whom
they quote; and I am bound to say, that all I saw at
the lake and elsewhere, during two separate visits,
can be easily explained on their hypothesis, and
that no other possible cause suggests itself as yet.
The same cause, it may be, has produced the submarine
spring of petroleum, off the shore near Point Rouge,
where men can at times skim the floating oil off
the surface of the sea; the petroleum and asphalt
of the Windward Islands and of Cuba, especially the
well-known Barbadoes tar; and the petroleum springs
of the mainland, described by Humboldt, at Truxillo,
in the Gulf of Cumana; and ’the inexhaustible
deposits of mineral pitch in the provinces of Merida
and Coro, and, above all, in that of Maracaybo.
In the latter it is employed for caulking the ships
which navigate the lake.’ But the reader
shall hear what the famous lake is like, and judge
for himself. Why not? He may not be ‘scientific,’
but, as Professor Huxley well says, what is scientific
thought but common sense well regulated?
Running down, then, by steamer, some
thirty-six miles south from Port of Spain, along
a flat mangrove shore, broken only at one spot by
the conical hill of San Fernando, we arrived off a
peninsula, whose flat top is somewhat higher than
the lowland right and left. The uplands are
rich with primeval forest, and perhaps always have
been. The lower land, right and left, was,
I believe, cultivated for sugar, till the disastrous
epoch of 1846: but it is now furred over with
rastrajo woods.
We ran, on our first visit, past the
pitch point of La Brea, south-westward to Trois,
where an industrial farm for convicts had been established
by my host the Governor. We were lifted on shore
through a tumbling surf; and welcomed by an intelligent
and courteous German gentleman, who showed us all
that was to be seen; and what we saw was satisfactory
enough. The estate was paying, though this
was only its third year. An average number of
77 convicts had already cleared 195 acres, of which
182 were under cultivation. Part of this had
just been reclaimed from pestilential swamp:
a permanent benefit to the health of the island.
In spite of the exceptional drought of the year
before, and the subsequent plague of caterpillars,
83,000 pounds of rice had been grown; and the success
of the rice crop, it must be remembered, will become
more and more important to the island, as the increase
of Coolie labourers increases the demand for the
grain. More than half the plantains put
in (22,000) were growing, and other vegetables in
abundance. But, above all, there were more than
7000 young coco-palms doing well, and promising a
perpetual source of wealth for the future.
For as the trees grow, and the crops raised between
them diminish, the coco-palms will require little
or no care, but yield fruit the whole year round
without further expense; and the establishment can
then be removed elsewhere, to reclaim a fresh sheet
of land.
Altogether, the place was a satisfactory
specimen of what can be effected in a tropical country
by a Government which will govern. Since then,
another source of profitable employment for West Indian
convicts has been suggested to me. Bamboo,
it is now found, will supply an admirable material
for paper; and I have been assured by paper-makers
that those who will plant the West Indian wet lands
with bamboo for their use, may realise enormous profits.
We scrambled back into the boat had,
of course, a heap of fruit, bananas, oranges, pine-apples,
tossed in after us and ran back again
in the steamer to the famous La Brea.
As we neared the shore, we perceived
that the beach was black as pitch; and the breeze
being off the land, the asphalt smell (not unpleasant)
came off to welcome us. We rowed in, and saw
in front of a little row of wooden houses a tall
mulatto, in blue policeman’s dress, gesticulating
and shouting to us. He was the ward-policeman,
and I found him (as I did all the coloured police)
able and courteous, shrewd and trusty. These
police are excellent specimens of what can be made
of the Negro, or half-Negro, if he be but first drilled,
and then given a responsibility which calls out his
self-respect. He was warning our crew not to
run aground on one or other of the pitch reefs, which
here take the place of rocks. A large one,
a hundred yards off on the left, has been almost all
dug away, and carried to New York or to Paris to
make asphalt pavement. The boat was run ashore,
under his directions, on a spit of sand between the
pitch; and when she ceased bumping up and down in the
muddy surf, we scrambled out into a world exactly
the hue of its inhabitants of every shade,
from jet-black to copper-brown. The pebbles
on the shore were pitch. A tide-pool close by
was enclosed in pitch: a four-eyes was swimming
about in it, staring up at us; and when we hunted
him, tried to escape, not by diving, but by jumping
on shore on the pitch, and scrambling off between our
legs. While the policeman, after profoundest
courtesies, was gone to get a mule cart to take us
up to the lake, and planks to bridge its water-channels,
we took a look round at this oddest of corners of the
earth.
In front of us was the unit of civilisation the
police-station, wooden, on wooden stilts (as all
well-built houses are here), to ensure a draught
of air beneath them. We were, of course, asked
to come in and sit down, but preferred looking about,
under our umbrellas; for the heat was intense.
The soil is half pitch, half brown earth, among
which the pitch sweals in and out, as tallow sweals
from a candle. It is always in slow motion under
the heat of the tropic sun: and no wonder if
some of the cottages have sunk right and left in
such a treacherous foundation. A stone or brick
house could not stand here: but wood and palm-thatch
are both light and tough enough to be safe, let the
ground give way as it will.
The soil, however, is very rich.
The pitch certainly does not injure vegetation,
though plants will not grow actually in it. The
first plants which caught our eyes were pine-apples;
for which La Brea is famous. The heat of the
soil, as well as of the air, brings them to special
perfection. They grow about anywhere, unprotected
by hedge or fence; for the Negroes here seem honest
enough, at least towards each other. And at
the corner of the house was a bush worth looking
at, for we had heard of it for many a year. It
bore prickly, heart-shaped pods an inch long, filled
with seeds coated with a red waxy pulp.
This was a famous plant Bixa
Orellana, Roucou; and that pulp was the well-known
Arnotta dye of commerce. In England and Holland
it is used merely, I believe, to colour cheeses;
but in the Spanish Main, to colour human beings.
The Indian of the Orinoco prefers paint to clothes;
and when he has ‘roucoued’ himself from
head to foot, considers himself in full dress, whether
for war or dancing. Doubtless he knows his
own business best from long experience. Indeed,
as we stood broiling on the shore, we began somewhat
to regret that European manners and customs prevented
our adopting the Guaraon and Arawak fashion.
The mule-cart arrived; the lady of
the party was put into it on a chair, and slowly
bumped and rattled past the corner of Dundonald Street so
named after the old sea-hero, who was, in his lifetime,
full of projects for utilising this same pitch and
up a pitch road, with a pitch gutter on each side.
The pitch in the road has been, most
of it, laid down by hand, and is slowly working down
the slight incline, leaving pools and ruts full of
water, often invisible, because covered with a film
of brown pitch-dust, and so letting in the unwary
walker over his shoes. The pitch in the gutter-bank
is in its native place, and as it spues slowly out
of the soil into the ditch in odd wreaths and lumps,
we could watch, in little, the process which has
produced the whole deposit probably the
whole lake itself.
A bullock-cart, laden with pitch,
came jolting down past us; and we observed that the
lumps, when the fracture is fresh, have all a drawn-out
look; that the very air-bubbles in them, which are
often very numerous, are all drawn out likewise,
long and oval, like the air-bubbles in some ductile
lavas.
On our left, as we went on, the bush
was low, all of yellow Cassia and white Hibiscus,
and tangled with lovely convolvulus-like creepers,
Ipomoea and Echites, with white, purple, or yellow
flowers. On the right were negro huts and gardens,
fewer and fewer as we went on all rich
with fruit-trees, especially with oranges, hung with
fruit of every hue; and beneath them, of course, the
pine-apples of La Brea. Everywhere along the
road grew, seemingly wild here, that pretty low tree,
the Cashew, with rounded yellow-veined leaves and
little green flowers, followed by a quaint pink and
red-striped pear, from which hangs, at the larger
and lower end, a kidney-shaped bean, which bold folk
eat when roasted: but woe to those who try
it when raw, for the acrid oil blisters the lips; and
even while the beans are roasting, the fumes of the
oil will blister the cook’s face if she holds
it too near the fire.
As we went onward up the gentle slope
(the rise is one hundred and thirty-eight feet in
rather more than a mile), the ground became more
and more full of pitch, and the vegetation poorer and
more rushy, till it resembled, on the whole, that
of an English fen. An Ipomoea or two, and a
scarlet-flowered dwarf Heliconia, kept up the tropic
type, as does a stiff brittle fern about two feet high.
We picked the weeds, which looked like English
mint or basil, and found that most of them had three
longitudinal nerves in each leaf, and were really
Melastomas, though dwarfed into a far meaner habit
than that of the noble forms we saw at Chaguanas, and
again on the other side of the lake. On the
right, too, in a hollow, was a whole wood of Groo-groo
palms, gray stemmed, gray leaved; and here and there
a patch of white or black Roseau rose gracefully
eight or ten feet high among the reeds.
The plateau of pitch now widened out,
and the whole ground looked like an asphalt pavement,
half overgrown with marsh-loving weeds, whose roots
feed in the sloppy water which overlies the pitch.
But, as yet, there was no sign of the lake.
The incline, though gentle, shuts off the view of
what is beyond. This last lip of the lake has
surely overflowed, and is overflowing still, though
very slowly. Its furrows all curve downward;
and it is, in fact, as one of our party said, ‘a
black glacier.’ The pitch, expanding under
the burning sun of day, must needs expand most towards
the line of least resistance, that is, downhill;
and when it contracts again under the coolness of
night, it contracts, surely from the same cause, more
downhill than it does uphill; and so each particle
never returns to the spot whence it started, but
rather drags the particles above it downward toward
itself. At least, so it seemed to us. Thus
may be explained the common mistake which is noticed
by Messrs. Wall and Sawkins in their admirable
description of the lake.
’All previous descriptions refer
the bituminous matter scattered over the La Brea
district, and especially that between the village
and the lake, to streams which have issued at some
former epoch from the lake, and extended into the
sea. This supposition is totally incorrect,
as solidification would have probably ensued before
it had proceeded one-tenth of the distance; and such
of the asphalt as has undoubtedly escaped from the
lake has not advanced more than a few yards, and
always presents the curved surfaces already described,
and never appears as an extended sheet.’
Agreeing with this statement as a
whole, I nevertheless cannot but think it probable
that a great deal of the asphalt, whether it be in
large masses or in scattered veins, may be moving
very slowly downhill, from the lake to the sea, by
the process of expansion by day, and contraction
by night; and may be likened to a caterpillar, or
rather caterpillars innumerable, progressing by expanding
and contracting their rings, having strength enough
to crawl downhill, but not strength enough to back
uphill again.
At last we surmounted the last rise,
and before us lay the famous lake not
at the bottom of a depression, as we expected, but
at the top of a rise, whence the ground slopes away
from it on two sides, and rises from it very slightly
on the two others. The black pool glared and
glittered in the sun. A group of islands, some
twenty yards wide, were scattered about the middle
of it. Beyond it rose a noble forest of Moriche
fan-palms; and to the right of them high wood
with giant Mombins and undergrowth of Cocorite a
paradise on the other side of the Stygian pool.
We walked, with some misgivings, on
to the asphalt, and found it perfectly hard.
In a few yards we were stopped by a channel of clear
water, with tiny fish and water-beetles in it; and,
looking round, saw that the whole lake was intersected
with channels, so unlike anything which can be seen
elsewhere, that it is not easy to describe them.
Conceive a crowd of mushrooms, of
all shapes, from ten to fifty feet across, close
together side by side, their tops being kept at exactly
the same level, their rounded rims squeezed tight against
each other; then conceive water poured on them so
as to fill the parting seams, and in the wet season,
during which we visited it, to overflow the tops
somewhat. Thus would each mushroom represent,
tolerably well, one of the innumerable flat asphalt
bosses, which seem to have sprung up each from a
separate centre, while the parting seams would be
of much the same shape as those in the asphalt, broad
and shallow atop, and rolling downward in a smooth
curve, till they are at bottom mere cracks, from
two to ten feet deep. Whether these cracks
actually close up below, and the two contiguous masses
of pitch become one, cannot be seen. As far as
the eye goes down, they are two, though pressed close
to each other. Messrs. Wall and Sawkins explain
the odd fact clearly and simply. The oil, they
say, which the asphalt contains when it rises first,
evaporates in the sun, of course most on the outside
of the heap, leaving a tough coat of asphalt, which
has, generally, no power to unite with the corresponding
coat of the next mass. Meanwhile, Mr. Manross,
an American gentleman, who has written a very clever
and interesting account of the lake, seems
to have been so far deceived by the curved and squeezed
edges of these masses, that he attributes to each
of them a revolving motion, and supposes that the
material is continually passing from the centre to
the edges, when it ‘rolls under,’ and
rises again in the middle. Certainly the strange
stuff looks, at the first glance, as if it were behaving
in this way; and certainly, also, his theory would
explain the appearance of sticks and logs in the
pitch. But Messrs. Wall and Sawkins say that
they observed no such motion; nor did we: and
I agree with them, that it is not very obvious to
what force, or what influence, it could be attributable.
We must, therefore, seek for some other way of accounting
for the sticks which utterly puzzled us,
and which Mr. Manross well describes as ’numerous
pieces of wood which, being involved in the pitch,
are constantly coming to the surface. They
are often several feet in length, and five or six
inches in diameter. On caching the surface they
generally assume an upright position, one end being
detained in the pitch, while the other is elevated
by the lifting of the middle. They may be seen
at frequent intervals over the lake, standing up
to the height of two or even three feet. They
look like stumps of trees protruding through the
pitch; but their parvenu character is curiously betrayed
by a ragged cap of pitch which invariably covers
the top, and hangs down like hounds’ ears on
either side.’
Whence do they come? Have they
been blown on to the lake, or left behind by man?
or are they fossil trees, integral parts of the vegetable
stratum below which is continually rolling upward?
or are they of both kinds? I do not know.
Only this is certain, as Messrs. Wall and Sawkins
have pointed out, that not only ’the purer
varieties of asphalt, such as approach or are identical
with asphalt glance, have been observed’ (though
not, I think, in the lake itself) ’in isolated
masses, where there was little doubt of their proceeding
from ligneous substances of larger dimensions, such
as roots and pieces of trunks and branches;’
but moreover, that ’it is also necessary to
admit a species of conversion by contact; since pieces
of wood included accidentally in the asphalt, for example,
by dropping from overhanging vegetation, are often
found partially transformed into the material.’
This is a statement which we verified again and
again; as we did the one which follows, namely, that
the hollow bubbles which abound on the surface of the
pitch ‘generally contain traces of the lighter
portions of vegetation,’ and ’are manifestly
derived from leaves, etc., which are blown about
the lake by the wind, and are covered with asphalt,
and as they become asphalt themselves, give off gases,
which form bubbles round them.’
But how is it that those logs stand
up out of the asphalt, with asphalt caps and hounds’
ears (as Mr. Manross well phrases it) on the tops
of them?
We pushed on across the lake, over
the planks which the Negroes laid down from island
to island. Some, meanwhile, preferred a steeple-chase
with water-jumps, after the fashion of the midshipmen
on a certain second visit to the lake. How
the Negroes grinned delight and surprise at the vagaries
of English lads a species of animal altogether
new to them. And how they grinned still more
when certain staid and portly dignitaries caught
the infection, and proved, by more than one good
leap, that they too had been English schoolboys alas!
long, long ago.
So, whether by bridging, leaping,
or wading, we arrived at last at the little islands,
and found them covered with a thick, low scrub; deep
sedge, and among them Pinguins, like huge pine-apples
without the apple; gray wild Pines parasites
on Matapalos, which of course have established
themselves, like robbers and vagrants as they are,
everywhere; a true Holly, with box-like leaves; and
a rare Cocoa-plum, very like the holly in habit,
which seems to be all but confined to these little
patches of red earth, afloat on the pitch.
Out of the scrub, when we were there, flew off two
or three night-jars, very like our English species,
save that they had white in the wings; and on the
second visit, one of the midshipmen, true to the
English boy’s birds’-nesting instinct,
found one of their eggs, white-spotted, in a grass
nest.
Passing these little islands, which
are said (I know not how truly) to change their places
and number, we came to the very fountains of Styx,
to that part of the lake where the asphalt is still
oozing up.
As the wind set toward us, we soon
became aware of an evil smell petroleum
and sulphuretted hydrogen at once which
gave some of us a headache. The pitch here
is yellow and white with sulphur foam; so are the
water-channels; and out of both water and pitch innumerable
bubbles of gas arise, loathsome to the smell.
We became aware also that the pitch was soft under
our feet. We left the impression of our boots;
and if we had stood still awhile, we should soon have
been ankle-deep. No doubt there are spots where,
if a man stayed long enough, he would be slowly and
horribly engulfed. ‘But,’ as Mr.
Manross says truly, ’in no place is it possible
to form those bowl-like depressions round the observer
described by former travellers.’ What
we did see is, that the fresh pitch oozes out at
the lines of least resistance, namely, in the channels
between the older and more hardened masses, usually
at the upper ends of them; so that one may stand
on pitch comparatively hard, and put one’s
hand into pitch quite liquid, which is flowing softly
out, like some ugly fungoid growth, such as may be
seen in old wine-cellars, into the water. One
such pitch-fungus had grown several yards in length
in the three weeks between our first and second visit;
and on another, some of our party performed exactly
the same feat as Mr. Manross
’In one of the star-shaped pools
of water, some five feet deep, a column of pitch
had been forced perpendicularly up from the bottom.
On reaching the surface of the water it had formed
a sort of centre table, about four feet in diameter,
but without touching the sides of the pool.
The stem was about a foot in diameter. I leaped
out on this table, and found that it not only sustained
my weight, but that the elasticity of the stem enabled
me to rock it from side to side. Pieces torn
from the edges of this table sank readily, showing
that it had been raised by pressure, and not by its
buoyancy.’
True, though strange: but stranger
still did it seem to us, when we did at last what
the Negroes asked us, and dipped our hands into the
liquid pitch, to find that it did not soil the fingers.
The old proverb, that one cannot touch pitch without
being defiled, happily does not stand true here,
or the place would be intolerably loathsome.
It can be scraped up, moulded into any shape you will;
wound in a string (as was done by one of the midshipmen)
round a stick, and carried off: but nothing
is left on the hand save clean gray mud and water.
It may be kneaded for an hour before the mud be
sufficiently driven out of it to make it sticky.
This very abundance of earthy matter it is which,
while it keeps the pitch from soiling, makes it far
less valuable than it would be were it pure.
It is easy to understand whence this
earthy matter (twenty or thirty per cent) comes.
Throughout the neighbourhood the ground is full,
to the depth of hundreds of feet, of coaly and asphaltic
matter. Layers of sandstone or of shale containing
this decayed vegetable, alternate with layers which
contain none. And if, as seems probable, the
coaly matter is continually changing into asphalt and
oil, and then working its way upward through every
crack and pore, to escape from the enormous pressure
of the superincumbent soil, it must needs carry up
with it innumerable particles of the soils through
which it passes.
In five minutes we had seen, handled,
and smelt enough to satisfy us with this very odd
and very nasty vagary of tropic nature; and as we
did not wish to become faint and ill, between the sulphuretted
hydrogen and the blaze of the sun reflected off the
hot black pitch, we hurried on over the water-furrows,
and through the sedge-beds to the farther shore to
find ourselves in a single step out of an Inferno
into a Paradiso.
We looked back at the foul place,
and agreed that it is well for the human mind that
the Pitch Lake was still unknown when Dante wrote
that hideous poem of his the opprobrium
(as I hold) of the Middle Age. For if such
were the dreams of its noblest and purest genius,
what must have been the dreams of the ignoble and impure
multitude? But had he seen this lake, how easy,
how tempting too, it would have been to him to embody
in imagery the surmise of a certain ‘Father,’
and heighten the torments of the lost beings, sinking
slowly into that black Bolge beneath the baking rays
of the tropic sun, by the sight of the saved, walking
where we walked, beneath cool fragrant shade, among
the pillars of a temple to which the Parthenon is mean
and small.
Sixty feet and more aloft, the short
smooth columns of the Moriches towered around
us, till, as we looked through the ’pillared
shade,’ the eye was lost in the green abysses
of the forest. Overhead, their great fan leaves
form a groined roof, compared with which that of
St. Mary Redcliff, or even of King’s College,
is as clumsy as all man’s works are beside
the works of God; and beyond the Moriche wood,
ostrich plumes packed close round madder-brown stems,
formed a wall to our temple, which bore such tracery,
carving, painting, as would have stricken dumb with
awe and delight him who ornamented the Loggie of
the Vatican. True, all is ’still-life’
here: no human forms, hardly even that of a bird,
is mixed with the vegetable arabesques.
A higher state of civilisation, ages after we are
dead, may introduce them, and complete the scene by
peopling it with a race worthy of it. But the
Creator, at least, has done His part toward producing
perfect beauty, all the more beautiful from its contrast
with the ugliness outside. For the want of
human beings fit for all that beauty, man is alone
to blame; and when we saw approach us, as the only
priest of such a temple, a wild brown man, who feeds
his hogs on Moriche fruit and Mombin plums, and
whose only object was to sell us an ant-eater’s
skin, we thought to ourselves knowing
the sad history of the West Indies what
might this place have become, during the three hundred
and fifty years which have elapsed since Columbus
first sailed round it, had men calling
themselves Christian, calling themselves civilised
possessed any tincture of real Christianity, of real
civilisation? What a race, of mingled Spaniard
and Indian, might have grown up throughout the West
Indies. What a life, what a society, what an
art, what a science it might have developed ere now,
equalling, even surpassing, that of Ionia, Athens,
and Sicily, till the famed isles and coasts of Greece
should have been almost forgotten in the new fame
of the isles and coasts of the Caribbean Sea.
What might not have happened, had
men but tried to copy their Father in heaven?
What has happened is but too well known, since, in
July 1498, Columbus, coming hither, fancied (and
not so wrongly) that he had come to the ‘base
of the Earthly Paradise.’
What might not have been made, with
something of justice and mercy, common sense and
humanity, of these gentle Arawaks and Guaraons.
What was made of them, almost ere Columbus was dead,
may be judged from this one story, taken from Las
Casas:
’There was a certain man named
Juan Bono, who was employed by the members of the
Audiencia of St. Domingo to go and obtain Indians.
He and his men, to the number of fifty or sixty,
landed on the Island of Trinidad. Now the Indians
of Trinidad were a mild, loving, credulous race,
the enemies of the Caribs, who ate human flesh.
On Juan Bono’s landing, the Indians, armed with
bows and arrows, went to meet the Spaniards, and
to ask them who they were, and what they wanted.
Juan Bono replied, that his crew were good and peaceful
people, who had come to live with the Indians; upon
which, as the commencement of good fellowship, the
natives offered to build houses for the Spaniards.
The Spanish captain expressed a wish to have one
large house built. The accommodating Indians
set about building it. It was to be in the
form of a bell, and to be large enough for a hundred
persons to live in. On any great occasion it
would hold many more. Every day, while this house
was being built, the Spaniards were fed with fish,
bread, and fruit by their good-natured hosts.
Juan Bono was very anxious to see the roof on, and
the Indians continued to work at the building with
alacrity. At last it was completed, being two
storeys high, and so constructed that those within
could not see those without. Upon a certain
day, Juan Bono collected the Indians together men,
women, and children in the building, “to
see,” as he told them, “what was to be
done.”
’Whether they thought they were
coming to some festival, or that they were to do
something more for the great house, does not appear.
However, there they all were, four hundred of them,
looking with much delight at their own handiwork.
Meanwhile, Juan Bono brought his men round the building,
with drawn swords in their hands; then, having thoroughly
entrapped his Indian friends, he entered with a party
of armed men and bade the Indians keep still, or he
would kill them. They did not listen to him,
but rushed to the door. A horrible massacre
ensued. Some of the Indians forced their way
out; but many of them, stupefied at what they saw,
and losing heart, were captured and bound.
A hundred, however, escaped, and snatching up their
arms, assembled in one of their own houses, and prepared
to defend themselves. Juan Bono summoned them
to surrender: they would not hear of it; and
then, as Las Casas says, “he resolved to pay
them completely for the hospitality and kind treatment
he had received,” and so, setting fire to the
house, the whole hundred men, together with some
women and children, were burnt alive. The Spanish
captain and his men retired to the ships with their
captives; and his vessel happening to touch at Porto
Rico, when the Jeronimite Fathers were there, gave
occasion to Las Casas to complain of this proceeding
to the Fathers, who, however, did nothing in the
way of remedy or punishment. The reader will
be surprised to hear the Clerigo’s authority
for this deplorable narrative. It is Juan Bono
himself. “From his own mouth I heard
that which I write.” Juan Bono acknowledged
that never in his life had he met with the kindness
of father or mother but in the island of Trinidad.
“Well, then, man of perdition, why did you reward
them with such ungrateful wickedness and cruelty?” “On
my faith, padre, because they (he meant the Auditors)
gave me for destruction (he meant instruction) to
take them in peace, if I could not by war."’
Such was the fate of the poor gentle
folk who for unknown ages had swung their hammocks
to the stems of these Moriches, spinning the skin
of the young leaves into twine, and making sago from
the pith, and thin wine from the sap and fruit, while
they warned their children not to touch the nests
of the humming-birds, which even till lately swarmed
around the lake. For so the Indian
story ran once on a time a tribe of Chaymas
built their palm-leaf ajoupas upon the very spot
where the lake now lies, and lived a merry life.
The sea swarmed with shellfish and turtle, and the
land with pine-apples; the springs were haunted by
countless flocks of flamingoes and horned screamers,
pajuis and blue ramiers; and, above all, by
humming-birds. But the foolish Chaymas were blind
to the mystery and the beauty of the humming-birds,
and would not understand how they were no other than
the souls of dead Indians, translated into living
jewels; and so they killed them in wantonness, and
angered ‘The Good Spirit.’ But
one morning, when the Guaraons came by, the Chayma
village had sunk deep into the earth, and in its place
had risen this lake of pitch. So runs the tale,
told some forty years since to M. Joseph, author
of a clever little history of Trinidad, by an old
half-caste Indian, Senor Trinidada by name, who was
said then to be nigh one hundred years of age.
Surely the people among whom such
a myth could spring up, were worthy of a nobler fate.
Surely there were in them elements of ‘sweetness
and light,’ which might have been cultivated
to some fine fruit, had there been anything like
sweetness and light in their first conquerors the
offscourings, not of Spain and Portugal only, but
of Germany, Italy, and, indeed, almost every country
in Europe. The present Spanish landowners of
Trinidad, be it remembered always, do not derive
from those old ruffians, but from noble and ancient
families, who settled in the island during the seventeenth
century, bringing with them a Spanish grace, Spanish
simplicity, and Spanish hospitality, which their
descendants have certainly not lost. Were it
my habit to ‘put people into books,’ I
would gladly tell in these pages of charming days
spent in the company of Spanish ladies and gentlemen.
But I shall only hint here at the special affection
and respect with which they and, indeed,
the French Créoles likewise are regarded
by Negro and by Indian.
For there are a few Indians remaining
in the northern mountains, and specially at Arima simple
hamlet-folk, whom you can distinguish, at a glance,
from mulattoes or quadroons, by the tawny complexion,
and by a shape of eye, and length between the eye
and the mouth, difficult to draw, impossible to describe,
but discerned instantly by any one accustomed to
observe human features. Many of them, doubtless,
have some touch of Negro blood, and are the offspring
of ‘Cimarons’ ’Maroons,’
as they are still called in Jamaica. These
Cimarons were Negroes who, even in the latter half
of the sixteenth century (as may be read in the tragical
tale of John Oxenham, given in Hakluyt’s Voyages),
had begun to flee from their cruel masters into the
forests, both in the Islands and in the Main.
There they took to themselves Indian wives, who
preferred them, it is said, to men of their own race,
and lived a jolly hunter’s life, slaying with
tortures every Spaniard who fell into their hands.
Such, doubtless, haunted the northern Cerros of
Tocuche, Aripo, and Oropuche, and left some trace
of themselves among the Guaraons. Spanish blood,
too, runs notoriously in the veins of some of the
Indians of the island; and the pure race here is
all but vanished. But out of these three elements
has arisen a race of cacao-growing mountaineers as
simple and gentle, as loyal and peaceable, as any in
Her Majesty’s dominions. Dignified, courteous,
hospitable, according to their little means, they
salute the white Senor without defiance and without
servility, and are delighted if he will sit in their
clay and palm ajoupas, and eat oranges and Malacca
apples from their own trees, on their own freehold
land.
They preserve, too, the old Guaraon
arts of weaving baskets and other utensils, pretty
enough, from the strips of the Aruma leaves.
From them the Negro, who will not, or cannot, equal
them in handicraft, buys the pack in which wares
are carried on the back, and the curious strainer
in which the Cassava is deprived of its poisonous
juice. So cleverly are the fibres twisted, that
when the strainer is hung up, with a stone weight
at the lower end, the diameter of the strainer decreases
as its length increases, and the juice is squeezed
out through the pores to drip into a calabash, and,
nowadays, to be thrown carefully away, lest children
or goats should drink it. Of old, it was kept
with care and dried down to a gum, and used to poison
arrows, as it is still used, I believe, on the Orinoco;
now, its poisonous properties are expelled by boiling
it down into Cassaripe, which has a singular power
of preserving meat, and is the foundation of the
‘pepperpot’ of the colonists.
And this is all that remains of the
once beautiful, deft, and happy Indians of Trinidad,
unless, indeed, some of them, warned by the fate
of the Indians of San Josef and the Northern Mountains,
fled from such tyrants as Juan Bono and Berreo across
the Gulf of Paria, and, rejoining their kinsmen on
the mainland, gladly forgot the sight of that Cross
which was to them the emblem, not of salvation, but
of destruction.
For once a year till of late I
know not whether the thing may be seen still a
strange phantom used to appear at San Fernando, twenty
miles to the north. Canoes of Indians came
mysteriously across the Gulf of Paria from the vast
swamps of the Orinoco; and the naked folk landed,
and went up through the town, after the Naparima ladies
(so runs the tale) had sent down to the shore garments
for the women, which were worn only through the streets,
and laid by again as soon as they entered the forest.
Silent, modest, dejected, the gentle savages used
to vanish into the woods by paths known to their
kinsfolk centuries ago paths which run,
wherever possible, along the vantage-ground of the
topmost chines and ridges of the hills. The
smoke of their fires rose out of lonely glens, as they
collected the fruit of trees known only to themselves.
In a few weeks their wild harvest was over; they
came back through San Fernando; made, almost in silence,
their little purchases in the town, and paddled away
across the gulf towards the unknown wildernesses from
whence they came.
And now as if sent to drive
away sad thoughts and vain regrets before
our feet lay a jest of Nature’s, almost as absurd
as a ’four-eyed fish,’ or ‘calling-crab.’
A rough stick, of the size of your little finger,
lay on the pitch. We watched it a moment, and
saw that it was crawling that it was a
huge Caddis, like those in English ponds and streams,
though of a very different family. They are
the larvae of Phryganeas this of a true
moth. The male of this moth will come out,
as a moth should, and fly about on four handsome
wings. The female will never develop her wings,
but remain to her life’s end a crawling grub,
like the female of our own Vapourer moth, and that
of our English Glow-worm. But more, she will
never (at least, in some species of this family) leave
her silk and bark case, but live and die, an anchoritess
in narrow cell, leaving behind her more than one
puzzle for physiologists. The case is fitted
close to the body of the caterpillar, save at the mouth,
where it hangs loose in two ragged silken curtains.
We all looked at the creature, and it looked at
us, with its last two or three joints and its head
thrust out of its house. Suddenly, disgusted
at our importunity, it laid hold of its curtains
with two hands, right and left, like a human being,
folded them modestly over its head, held them tight
together, and so retired to bed, amid the inextinguishable
laughter of the whole party.
The noble Moriche palm delights
in wet, at least in Trinidad and on the lower Orinoco:
but Schomburgk describes forests of them if,
indeed, it be the same species as growing
in the mountains of Guiana up to an altitude of four
thousand feet. The soil in which they grow
here is half pitch pavement, half loose brown earth,
and over both, shallow pools of water, which will
become much deeper in the wet season; and all about
float or lie their pretty fruit, the size of an apple,
and scaled like a fir-cone. They are last year’s,
empty and decayed. The ripe fruit contains
first a rich pulpy nut, and at last a hard cone,
something like that of the vegetable ivory palm,
which grows in the mainland, but not here.
Delicious they are, and precious, to monkeys and
parrots, as well as to the Orinoco Indians, among
whom the Tamanacs, according to Humboldt, say, that
when a man and woman survived that great deluge, which
the Mexicans call the age of water, they cast behind
them, over their heads, the fruits of the Moriche
palm, as Deucalion and Pyrrha cast stones, and saw
the seeds in them produce men and women, who repeopled
the earth. No wonder, indeed, that certain tribes
look on this tree as sacred, or that the missionaries
should have named it the tree of life.
’In the season of inundations
these clumps of Mauritia, with their leaves in the
form of a fan, have the appearance of a forest rising
from the bosom of the waters. The navigator
in proceeding along the channels of the delta of
the Oroonoco at night, sees with surprise the summit
of the palm-trees illumined by large fires. These
are the habitations of the Guaraons (Tivitivas and
Waraweties of Raleigh), which are suspended from
the trunks of the trees. These tribes hang
up mats in the air, which they fill with earth, and
kindle on a layer of moist clay the fire necessary
for their household wants. They have owed their
liberty and their political independence for ages
to the quaking and swampy soil, which they pass over
in the time of drought, and on which they alone know
how to walk in security to their solitude in the
delta of the Oroonoco, to their abode on the trees,
where religious enthusiasm will probably never lead
any American Stylites. . . . The Mauritia palm-tree,
the tree of life of the missionaries, not only
affords the Guaraons a safe dwelling during the risings
of the Oroonoco, but its shelly fruit, its farinaceous
pith, its juice, abounding in saccharine matter,
and the fibres of its pétioles, furnish them with
food, wine, and thread proper for making cords and
weaving hammocks. These customs of the Indians
of the delta of the Oroonoco were found formerly
in the Gulf of Darien (Uraba), and in the greater part
of the inundated lands between the Guerapiche and
the mouths of the Amazon. It is curious to
observe in the lowest degree of human civilisation
the existence of a whole tribe depending on one single
species of palm-tree, similar to those insects which
feed on one and the same flower, or on one and the
same part of a plant.’
In a hundred yards more we were on
dry ground, and the vegetation changed at once.
The Mauritias stopped short at the edge of the swamp;
and around us towered the smooth stems of giant Mombins,
which the English West Indians call hog-plums, according
to the unfortunate habit of the early settlers of
discarding the sonorous and graceful Indian and Spanish
names of plants, and replacing them by names English,
or corruptions of the original, always ugly, and
often silly and vulgar. So the English call
yon noble tree a hog-plum; the botanist (who must,
of course, use his world-wide Latin designation),
Spondias lutea; I shall, with the reader’s
leave, call it a Mombin, by which name it is, happily,
known here, as it was in the French West Indies in
the days of good Pere Labat. Under the Mombins
the undergrowth is, for the most part, huge fans of
Cocorite palm, thirty or forty feet high, their short
rugged trunks, as usual, loaded with creepers, orchids,
birds’-nests, and huge round black lumps, which
are the nests of ants; all lodged among the butts
of old leaves and the spathes of old flowers.
Here, as at Chaguanas, grand Cerimans and Seguines
scrambled twenty feet up the Cocorite trunks, delighting
us by the luscious life in the fat stem and fat leaves,
and the brilliant, yet tender green, which literally
shone in the darkness of the Cocorite bower; and
all, it may be, the growth of the last six months;
for, as was plain from the charred stems of many
Cocorites and Moriches, the fire had swept through
the wood last summer, destroying all that would burn.
And at the foot of the Cocorites, weltering up among
and over their roots, was pitch again; and here and
there along the side of the path were pitch springs,
round bosses a yard or two across and a foot or two
high, each with a crater atop a few inches across,
filled either with water or with liquid and oozing
pitch; and yet not interfering, as far as could be
seen, with the health of the vegetation which springs
out of it.
We followed the trace which led downhill,
to the shore of the peninsula farthest from the village.
As we proceeded we entered forest still unburnt,
and a tangle of beauty such as we saw at Chaguanas.
There rose, once more, the tall cane-like Manacque
palms, which we christened the forest nymphs.
The path was lined, as there, with the great leaves
of the Melastomas, throwing russet and golden light
down from their undersides. Here, as there, Mimosa
leaflets, as fine as fern or sea-weed, shiver in
the breeze. A species of Balisier, which
we did not see there, carried crimson and black parrot
beaks with blue seed-vessels; a Canne de
Riviere, with a stem eight feet high,
wreathed round with pale green leaves in spiral twists,
unfolded hooded flowers of thinnest transparent white
wax, with each a blush of pink inside. Bunches
of bright yellow Cassia blossoms dangled close to
our heads; white Ipomoeas scrambled over them again;
and broad-leaved sedges, five feet high, carrying
on bright brown flower-heads, like those of our Wood-rush,
blue, black, and white shot for seeds. Overhead,
sprawled and dangled the common Vine-bamboo,
ugly and unsatisfactory in form, because it has not
yet, seemingly, made up its mind whether it will
become an arborescent or a climbing grass; and, meanwhile,
tries to stand upright on stems quite unable to support
it, and tumbles helplessly into the neighbouring copsewood,
taking every one’s arm without asking leave.
A few ages hence, its ablest descendants will probably
have made their choice, if they have constitution
enough to survive in the battle of life which,
from the commonness of the plant, they seem likely
to have. And what their choice will be, there
is little doubt. There are trees here of a
truly noble nature, whose ancestors have conquered
ages since; it may be by selfish and questionable
means. But their descendants, secure in their
own power, can afford to be generous, and allow a
whole world of lesser plants to nestle in their branches,
another world to fatten round their feet. There
are humble and modest plants, too, here and
those some of the loveliest which have
long since cast away all ambition, and are content
to crouch or perch anywhere, if only they may be allowed
a chance ray of light, and a chance drop of water
wherewith to perfect their flowers and seed.
But, throughout the great republic of the forest,
the motto of the majority is as it is, and
always has been, with human beings ’Every
one for himself, and the devil take the hindmost.’
Selfish competition, overreaching tyranny, the temper
which fawns and clings as long as it is down, and
when it has risen, kicks over the stool by which
it climbed these and the other ’works
of the flesh’ are the works of the average
plant, as far as it can practise them. So by
the time the Bamboo-vine makes up its mind, it will
have discovered, by the experience of many generations,
the value of the proverb, ’Never do for yourself
what you can get another to do for you,’ and
will have developed into a true high climber, selfish
and insolent, choking and strangling, like yonder
beautiful green pest, of which beware; namely, a tangle
of Razor-grass. The brother, in old times,
of that broad-leaved sedge which carries the shot-seeds,
it has long since found it more profitable to lean
on others than to stand on its own legs, and has
developed itself accordingly. It has climbed
up the shrubs some fifteen feet, and is now tumbling
down again in masses of the purest deep green, which
are always softly rounded, because each slender leaf
is sabre-shaped, and always curves inward and downward
into the mass, presenting to the paper thousands
of minute saw-edges, hard enough and sharp enough
to cut clothes, skin, and flesh to ribands, if it
is brushed in the direction of the leaves. For
shape and colour, few plants would look more lovely
in a hothouse; but it would soon need to be confined
in a den by itself, like a jaguar or an alligator.
Here, too, we saw a beautiful object,
which was seen again more than once about the high
woods; a large flower, spreading its five
flat orange-scarlet lobes round yellow bells.
It grows in little bunches, in the axils of pairs
of fleshy leaves, on a climbing vine. When
plucked, a milky sap exudes from it. It is a
cousin of our periwinkles, and cousin, too, of the
Thevetia, which we saw at St. Thomas’s, and
of the yellow Allamandas which ornament hothouses at
home, as this, and others of its family, especially
the yellow Odontadenia, surely ought to do.
There are many species of the family about, and
all beautiful.
We passed too, in the path, an object
curious enough, if not beautiful. Up a smooth
stem ran a little rib, seemingly of earth and dead
wood, almost straight, and about half an inch across,
leading to a great brown lump among the branches,
as big as a bushel basket. We broke it open,
and found it a covered gallery, swarming with life.
Brown ant-like creatures, white maggot-like creatures,
of several shapes and sizes, were hurrying up and
down, as busy as human beings in Cheapside.
They were Termites, ’white ants’ of
which of the many species I know not and
the lump above was their nest. But why they
should find it wisest to perch their nest aloft is
as difficult to guess, as to guess why they take the
trouble to build this gallery up to it, instead of
walking up the stem in the open air. It may
be that they are afraid of birds. It may be,
too, that they actually dislike the light.
At all events, the majority of them the
workers and soldiers, I believe, without exception are
blind, and do all their work by an intensely developed
sense of touch, and it may be of smell and hearing
also. Be that as it may, we should have seen
them, had we had time to wait, repair the breach
in their gallery, with as much discipline and division
of labour as average human workers in a manufactory,
before the business of food-getting was resumed.
We hurried on along the trace, which
now sloped rapidly downhill. Suddenly, a loathsome
smell defiled the air. Was there a gas-house
in the wilderness? Or had the pales of Paradise
been just smeared with bad coal-tar? Not exactly:
but across the path crept, festering in the sun,
a black runnel of petroleum and water; and twenty
yards to our left stood, under a fast-crumbling trunk,
what was a year or two ago a little engine-house.
Now roof, beams, machinery, were all tumbled and
tangled in hideous and somewhat dangerous ruin, over
a shaft, in the midst of which a rusty pump-cylinder
gurgled, and clicked, and bubbled, and spued, with
black oil and nasty gas; a foul ulcer in Dame Nature’s
side, which happily was healing fast beneath the
tropic rain and sun. The creepers were climbing
over it, the earth crumbling into it, and in a few
years more the whole would be engulfed in forest,
and the oil-spring, it is to be hoped, choked up
with mud.
This is the remnant of one of the
many rash speculations connected with the Pitch Lake.
At a depth of some two hundred and fifty feet ‘oil
was struck,’ as the American saying is.
But (so we were told) it would not rise in the boring,
and had to be pumped up. It could not, therefore,
compete in price with the Pennsylvanian oil, which,
when tapped, springs out of the ground of itself,
to a height sometimes of many feet, under the pressure
of the superincumbent rocks, yielding enormous profits,
and turning needy adventurers into millionaires,
though full half of the oil is sometimes wasted for
the want of means to secure it.
We passed the doleful spot with a
double regret for the nook of Paradise
which had been defiled, and for the good money which
had been wasted: but with a hearty hope, too,
that, whatever natural beauty may be spoilt thereby,
the wealth of these asphalt deposits may at last
be utilised. Whether it be good that a few dozen
men should ‘make their fortunes’ thereby,
depends on what use the said men make of the said
‘fortunes’; and certainly it will not be
good for them if they believe, as too many do, that
their dollars, and not their characters, constitute
their fortunes. But it is good, and must be,
that these treasures of heat and light should not
remain for ever locked up and idle in the wilderness;
and we wished all success to the enterprising American
who had just completed a bargain with the Government
for a large supply of asphalt, which he hoped by
his chemical knowledge to turn to some profitable use.
Another turn brought us into a fresh
nook of Paradise; and this time to one still undefiled.
We hurried down a narrow grass path, the Cannes
de Riviere and the Balisiers brushing our
heads as we passed; while round us danced brilliant
butterflies, bright orange, sulphur-yellow, black
and crimson, black and lilac, and half a dozen hues
more, till we stopped, surprised and delighted.
For beneath us lay the sea, seen through a narrow
gap of richest verdure.
On the left, low palms feathered over
the path, and over the cliff. On the right when
shall we see it again? rose a young ‘Bois
flot,’ of which boys make their
fishing floats, with long, straight, upright shoots,
and huge crumpled, rounded leaves, pale rusty underneath a
noble rastrajo plant, already, in its six months’
growth, some twenty feet high. Its broad pale
sulphur flowers were yet unopened; but, instead,
an ivy-leaved Ipomoea had climbed up it, and shrouded
it from head to foot with hundreds of white convolvulus-flowers;
while underneath it grew a tuft of that delicate
silver-backed fern, which is admired so much in hothouses
at home. Between it and the palms we saw the
still, shining sea; muddy inshore, and a few hundred
yards out changing suddenly to bright green; and
the point of the cove, which seemed built up of bright
red brick, fast crumbling into the sea, with all its
palms and cactuses, lianes and trees.
Red stacks and skerries stood isolated and ready
to fall at the end of the point, showing that the
land has, even lately, extended far out to sea; and
that Point Rouge, like Point Courbaril and Point
Galba so named, one from some great Locust-tree,
the other from some great Galba must have
once stood there as landmarks. Indeed all the
points of the peninsula are but remnants of a far
larger sheet of land, which has been slowly eaten
up by the surges of the gulf; which has perhaps actually
sunk bodily beneath them, even as the remnant, I suspect,
is sinking now. We scrambled twenty feet down
to the beach, and lay down, tired, under a low cliff,
feathered with richest vegetation. The pebbles
on which we sat were some of pitch, some of hard
sandstone, but most of them of brick; pale, dark, yellow,
lavender, spotted, clouded, and half a dozen more
delicate hues; some coarse, some fine as Samian ware;
the rocks themselves were composed of an almost glassy
substance, strangely jumbled, even intercalated now
and then with soft sand. This, we were told,
is a bit of the porcellanite formation of Trinidad,
curious to geologists, which reappears at several
points in Erin, Trois, and Cedros, in the extreme
south-western horn of the island.
How was it formed, and when?
That it was formed by the action of fire, any child
would agree who had ever seen a brick-kiln. It
is simply clay and sand baked, and often almost vitrified
into porcelain-jasper. The stratification is
gone; the porcellanite has run together into irregular
masses, or fallen into them by the burning away of
strata beneath; and the cracks in it are often lined
with bubbled slag.
But whence carne the fire? We
must be wary about calling in the Deus e machina
of a volcano. There is no volcanic rock in the
neighbourhood, nor anywhere in the island; and the
porcellanite, says Mr. Wall, ’is identically
the same with the substances produced immediately
above or below seams of coal, which have taken fire,
and burnt for a length of time.’ There
is lignite and other coaly matter enough in the rocks
to have burnt like coal, if it had once been ignited;
and the cause of ignition may be, as Mr. Wall suggests,
the decomposition of pyrites, of which also there is
enough around. That the heat did not come from
below, as volcanic heat would have done, is proved
by the fact that the lignite beds underneath the
porcellanite are unburnt. We found asphalt under
the porcellanite. We found even one bit of
red porcellanite with unburnt asphalt included in
it.
May not this strange formation of
natural brick and china-ware be of immense age humanly,
not geologically, speaking? May it not be far
older than the Pitch Lake above older,
possibly, than the formation of any asphalt at all?
And may not the asphalt mingled with it have been
squeezed into it and round it, as it is being squeezed
into and through the unburnt strata at so many points
in Guapo, La Brea, Oropuche, and San
Fernando? At least, so it seemed to us, as we
sat on the shore, waiting for the boat to take us
round to La Brea, and drank in dreamily with our
eyes the beauty of that strange lonely place.
The only living things, save ourselves, which were
visible were a few pelicans sleeping on a skerry,
and a shoal of dolphins rolling silently in threes husband,
wife, and little child as they fished
their way along the tide mark between the yellow water
and the green. The sky blazed overhead, the
sea below; the red rocks and green forests blazed
around; and we sat enjoying the genial silence, not
of darkness, but of light, not of death, but of life,
as the noble heat permeated every nerve, and made
us feel young, and strong, and blithe once more.