Next day, like the ‘Young Muleteers
of Grenada,’ a good song which often haunted
me in those days,
’With morning’s earliest twinkle
Again we are up and gone,’
with two horses, two mules, and a
Negro and a Coolie carrying our scanty luggage in
Arima baskets: but not without an expression
of pity from the Negro who cleaned my boots.
‘Where were we going?’ To the east
coast. Cuffy turned up what little nose he had.
He plainly considered the east coast, and indeed
Trinidad itself, as not worth looking at. ’Ah!
you should go Barbadoes, sa. Dat de country
to see. I Barbadian, sa.’ No
doubt. It is very quaint, this self-satisfaction
of the Barbadian Negro. Whether or not he belonged
originally to some higher race for there
are as great differences of race among Negroes as
among any white men he looks down on the
Negroes, and indeed on the white men, of other islands,
as beings of an inferior grade; and takes care to
inform you in the first five minutes that he is ’neider
C’rab nor Creole, but true Barbadian barn.’
This self-conceit of his, meanwhile, is apt to make
him unruly, and the cause of unruliness in others when
he emigrates. The Barbadian Negroes are, I
believe, the only ones who give, or ever have given,
any trouble in Trinidad; and in Barbadoes itself,
though the agricultural Negroes work hard and well,
who that knows the West Indies knows not the insubordination
of the Bridgetown boatmen, among whose hands a traveller
and his luggage are, it is said, likely enough to
be pulled in pieces? However, they are rather
more quiet just now; for not a thousand years ago a
certain steamer’s captain, utterly unable to
clear his quarter of the fleet of fighting, jabbering
brown people, turned the steam pipe on them.
At which quite unexpected artillery they fled precipitately;
and have had some rational respect for a steamer’s
quarter ever since. After all, I do not deny
that this man’s being a Barbadian opened my
heart to him at once, for old sakes’ sake.
Another specimen of Negro character
I was to have analysed, or tried to analyse, at the
estate where I had slept. M. F –
had lately caught a black servant at the brook-side
busily washing something in a calabash, and asked
him what was he doing there? The conversation
would have been held, of course, in French-Spanish-African Creole
patois, a language which is becoming fixed, with
its own grammar and declensions, etc.
A curious book on it has lately been published in
Trinidad by Mr. Thomas, a coloured gentleman, who seems
to be at once no mean philologer and no mean humorist.
The substance of the Negro’s answer was, ’Why,
sir, you sent me to the town to buy a packet of sugar
and a packet of salt; and coming back it rained so
hard, the packets burst, and the salt was all washed
into the sugar. And so I am washing
it out again.’ . . .
This worthy was to have been brought
to me, that I might discover, if possible, by what
processes of ’that which he was pleased to call
his mind’ he had arrived at the conclusion
that such a thing could be done. Clearly, he
could not plead unavoidable ignorance of the subject-matter,
as might the old cook at San Josef, who, the first
time her master brought home Wenham Lake ice from
Port of Spain, was scandalised at the dirtiness of
the ‘American water,’ washed off the
sawdust, and dried the ice in the sun. His was
a case of Handy-Andyism, as that intellectual disease
may be named, after Mr. Lover’s hero; like
that of the Obeah-woman, when she tried to bribe
the white gentleman with half a dozen of bottled beer;
a case of muddle-headed craft and elaborate silliness,
which keeps no proportion between the means and the
end; so common in insane persons; frequent, too,
among the lower Irish, such as Handy Andy; and very
frequent, I am afraid, among the Negroes. But as
might have been expected the poor boy’s
moral sense had proved as shaky as his intellectual
powers. He had just taken a fancy to some goods
of his master’s; and had retreated, to enjoy
them the more securely, into the southern forests,
with a couple of brown policemen on his track.
So he was likely to undergo a more simple investigation
than that which was submitted to my analysis, viz.
how he proposed to wash the salt out of the sugar.
We arrived after a while at Valencia,
a scattered hamlet in the woods, with a good shop
or ‘store’ upon a village green, under
the verandah whereof lay, side by side with bottled
ale and biscuit tins, bags of Carapo nuts;
trapezoidal brown nuts enclosed originally
in a round fruit which ought some day to
form a valuable article of export. Their bitter
anthelminthic oil is said to have medicinal uses;
but it will be still more useful for machinery, as
it has like that curious flat gourd the
Sequa the property of keeping iron
from rust. The tree itself, common here and in
Guiana, is one of the true Forest Giants; we saw
many a noble specimen of it in our rides. Its
timber is tough, not over heavy, and extensively
used already in the island; while its bark is a febrifuge
and tonic. In fact it possesses all those qualities
which make its brethren, the Meliaceae, valuable
throughout the Tropics. But it is not the only
tree of South America whose bark may be used as a
substitute for quinine. They may be counted possibly
by dozens. A glance at the excellent enumerations
of the uses of vegetable products to be found in
Lindley’s Vegetable Kingdom (a monument of
learning) will show how God provides, how man neglects
and wastes. As a single instance, the Laurels
alone are known already to contain several valuable
fébrifuges, among which the Demerara Greenheart,
or Bibiri, claims perhaps the highest rank.
‘Dr. Maclagan has shown,’ says Dr. Lindley,
’that sulphate of Bibiri acts with rapid and
complete success in arresting ague.’
This tree spreads from Jamaica to the Spanish Main.
It is plentiful in Trinidad; still more plentiful
in Guiana; and yet all of it which reaches Europe
is a little of its hard beautiful wood for the use
of cabinetmakers; while in Demerara, I am assured
by an eye-witness, many tons of this precious Greenheart
bark are thrown away year by year. So goes
the world; and man meanwhile at once boasts of his
civilisation, and complains of the niggardliness
of Nature.
But if I once begin on this subject
I shall not know where to end.
Our way lay now for miles along a
path which justified all that I had fancied about
the magnificent possibilities of landscape gardening
in the Tropics. A grass drive, as we should call
it in England a ‘trace,’ as
it is called in the West Indies some sixty
feet in width, and generally carpeted with short
turf, led up hill and down dale; for the land, though
low, is much ridged and gullied, and there has been
as yet no time to cut down the hills, or to metal
the centre of the road. It led, as the land became
richer, through a natural avenue even grander than
those which I had already seen. The light and
air, entering the trace, had called into life the
undergrowth and lower boughs, till from the very turf
to a hundred and fifty feet in height rose one solid
green wall, spangled here and there with flowers.
Below was Mamure, Roseau, Timit, Aroumas, and Tulumas,
mixed with Myrtles and Melastomas; then the
copper Bois Mulâtres among the Cocorite
and Jagua palms; above them the heads of enormous
broad-leaved trees of I know not how many species;
and the lianes festooning all from cope to base.
The crimson masses of Norantea on the highest tree-tops
were here most gorgeous; but we had to beware of
staring aloft too long, for fear of riding into mud-holes for
the wet season would not end as yet, though dry weather
was due or, even worse, into the great Parasol-ant
warrens, which threatened, besides a heavy fall, stings
innumerable. At one point, I recollect, a gold-green
Jacamar sat on a log and looked at me till I was
within five yards of her. At another we heard
the screams of Parrots; at another, the double note
of the Toucan; at another, the metallic clank of
the Bell-bird, or what was said to be the Bell-bird.
But this note was not that solemn and sonorous toll
of the Campanese of the mainland which is described
by Waterton and others. It resembled rather the
less poetical sound of a woman beating a saucepan
to make a swarm of bees settle.
At one point we met a gang of Negroes
felling timber to widen the road. Fresh fallen
trees, tied together with lianes, lay everywhere.
What a harvest for the botanist was among them!
I longed to stay there a week to examine and collect.
But time pressed; and, indeed, collecting plants
in the wet season is a difficult and disappointing
work. In an air saturated with moisture specimens
turn black and mouldy, and drop to pieces; and unless
turned over and exposed to every chance burst of
sunshine, the labour of weeks is lost, if indeed
meanwhile the ants, and other creeping things, have
not eaten the whole into rags.
Among these Negroes was one who excited
my astonishment; not merely for his size, though
he was perhaps the tallest man whom I saw among the
usually tall Negroes of Trinidad; but for his features,
which were altogether European of the highest type;
the forehead high and broad, the cheek-bones flat,
the masque long and oval, and the nose aquiline and
thin enough for any prince. Conscious of his
own beauty and strength, he stood up among the rest
as an old Macedonian might have stood up among the
Egyptians he had conquered. We tried to find
out his parentage. My companions presumed he
was an ‘African,’ i.e. imported
during the times of slavery. He said No:
that he was a Creole, island born; but his father,
it appeared, had been in one of our Negro regiments,
and had been settled afterwards on a Government grant
of land. Whether his beauty was the result of
’atavism’ of the reappearance,
under the black skin and woolly hair, of some old
stain of white blood; or whether, which is more probable,
he came of some higher African race; one could not
look at him without hopeful surmises as to the possible
rise of the Negro, and as to the way in which it
will come about the only way in which
any race has permanently risen, as far as I can ascertain;
namely, by the appearance among them of sudden sports
of nature; individuals of an altogether higher type;
such a man as that terrible Daaga, whose story has
been told. If I am any judge of physiognomy,
such a man as that, having what the Negro
has not yet had ’la carrière
ouverte aux talents,’ might raise, not
himself merely, but a whole tribe, to an altogether
new level in culture and ability.
Just after passing this gang we found,
lying by the road, two large snakes, just killed,
which I would gladly have preserved had it been possible.
They were, the Negroes told us, ‘Dormillons,’
or ‘Mangrove Cascabel,’ a species as
yet, I believe, undescribed; and, of course, here
considered as very poisonous, owing to their likeness
to the true Cascabel, whose deadly fangs are
justly dreaded by the Lapo hunter. For
the Cascabel has a fancy for living in the Lapo’s
burrow, as does the rattlesnake in that of the prairie
dog in the Western United States, and in the same
friendly and harmless fashion; and is apt, when dug
out, to avenge himself and his host by a bite which
is fatal in a few hours. But these did not
seem to me to have the heads of poisonous snakes; and,
in spite of the entreaties of the terrified Negroes,
I opened their mouths to judge for myself, and found
them, as I expected, utterly fangless and harmless.
I was not aware then that Dr. De Verteuil had stated
the same fact in print; but I am glad to corroborate
it, for the benefit of at least the rational people
in Trinidad: for snakes, even poisonous ones,
should be killed as seldom as possible. They
feed on rats and vermin, and are the farmer’s
good friend, whether in the Tropics or in England;
and to kill a snake, or even an adder--who never
bites any one if he is allowed to run away is,
in nineteen cases out of twenty, mere wanton mischief.
The way was beguiled, if I recollect
rightly, for some miles on, by stories about Cuba
and Cuban slavery from one of our party. He
described the political morality of Cuba as utterly
dissolute; told stories of great sums of money voted
for roads which are not made to this day, while the
money had found its way into the pockets of Government
officials; and, on the whole, said enough to explain
the determination of the Cubans to shake off Spanish
misrule, and try what they could do for themselves
on this earth. He described Cuban slavery as,
on the whole, mild; corporal punishment being restricted
by law to a few blows, and very seldom employed:
but the mildness seemed dictated rather by self-interest
than by humanity. ’Ill-use our slaves?’
said a Cuban to him. ’We cannot afford
it. You take good care of your four-legged
mules: we of our two-legged ones.’
The children, it seems, are taken away from the
mothers, not merely because the mothers are needed
for work, but because they neglect their offspring
so much that the children have more chance of living and
therefore of paying if brought up by hand.
So each estate has, or had, its creche, as the French
would call it a great nursery, in which
the little black things are reared, kindly enough,
by the elder ladies of the estate. To one old
lady, who wearied herself all day long in washing,
doctoring, and cramming the babies, my friend expressed
pity for all the trouble she took about her human
brood. ‘Oh dear no,’ answered she;
’they are a great deal easier to rear than
chickens.’ The system, however, is nearly
at an end. Already the Cuban Revolution has
produced measures of half-emancipation; and in seven
years’ time probably there will not be a slave
in Cuba.
We waded stream after stream under
the bamboo clumps, and in one of them we saw swimming
a green rigoise, or whip-snake, which must have been
nearly ten feet long. It swam with its head and
the first two feet of its body curved aloft like
a swan, while the rest of the body lay along the
surface of the water in many curves a most
graceful object as it glided away into dark shadow
along an oily pool. At last we reached an outlying
camp, belonging to one of our party who was superintending
the making of new roads in that quarter, and there
rested our weary limbs, some in hammock, some on
the tables, some, again, on the clay floor. Here
I saw, as I saw every ten minutes, something new that
quaint vegetable plaything described by Humboldt
and others; namely, the spathe of the Timit palm.
It encloses, as in most palms, a branched spadix covered
with innumerable round buds, most like a head of
millet, two feet and a half long: but the spathe,
instead of splitting and forming a hood over the
flowers, as in the Cocorite and most palms, remains
entire, and slips off like the finger of a glove.
When slipped off, it is found to be made of two
transverse layers of fibre a bit of veritable
natural lace, similar to, though far less delicate
than, the famous lace-bark of the Lagetta-tree, peculiar,
I believe, to one district in the Jamaica mountains.
And as it is elastic and easily stretched, what
hinders the brown child from pulling it out till
it makes an admirable fool’s cap, some two feet
high, and exactly the colour of his own skin, and
dancing about therein, the fat oily little Cupidon,
without a particle of clothing beside? And
what wonder if we grown-up whites made fools’
caps too, for children on the other side of the Atlantic?
During which process we found what all
said they had never seen before that one
of the spadices carried two caps, one inside the
other, and one exactly like the other; a wanton superfluity
of Nature, which I should like to hear explained
by some morphologist.
We rode away from that hospitable
group of huts, whither we were to return in two or
three days; and along the green trace once more.
As we rode, M – the civiliser of
Montserrat and I side by side, talking of Cuba, and
staring at the Noranteas overhead, a dull sound was
heard, as if the earth had opened; as indeed it had,
engulfing in the mud the whole forehand of M –’s
mule; and there he knelt, his beard outspread upon
the clay, while the mule’s visage looked patiently
out from under his left arm. However, it was
soft falling there. The mule was hauled out
by main force. As for cleaning either her or
the rider, that was not thought of in a country where
they were sure to be as dirty as ever in an hour;
and so we rode on, after taking a note of the spot,
and, as it happened, forgetting it again one
of us at least.
On again, along the green trace, which
rose now to a ridge, with charming glimpses of wooded
hills and glens to right and left; past comfortable
squatters’ cottages, with cacao drying on sheets
at the doors or under sheds; with hedges of dwarf
Erythrina, dotted with red jumby beads, and here
and there that pretty climbing vetch, the Overlook.
I forgot, by the by, to ask whether it is planted
here, as in Jamaica, to keep off the evil eye, or
‘overlook’; whence its name. Nor
can I guess what peculiarity about the plant can have
first made the Negro fix on it as a fetish.
The genesis of folly is as difficult to analyse
as the genesis of most other things.
All this while the dull thunder of
the surf was growing louder and louder; till, not
as in England over a bare down, but through thickest
foliage down to the high tide mark, we rode out upon
the shore, and saw before us a right noble sight;
a flat, sandy, surf beaten shore, along which stretched,
in one grand curve, lost at last in the haze of spray,
fourteen miles of Coco palms.
This was the Cocal; and it was worth
coming all the way from England to see it alone.
I at once felt the truth of my host’s saying,
that if I went to the Cocal I should find myself
transported suddenly from the West Indies to the
East. Just such must be the shore of a Coral
island in the Pacific.
These Cocos, be it understood, are
probably not indigenous. They spread, it is
said, from an East Indian vessel which was wrecked
here. Be that as it may, they have thoroughly
naturalised themselves. Every nut which falls
and lies, throws out, during the wet season, its
roots into the sand; and is ready to take the place
of its parent when the old tree dies down.
About thirty to fifty feet is the
average height of these Coco palms, which have all,
without exception, a peculiarity which I have noticed
to a less degree in another sand- and shore-growing
tree, the Pinaster of the French Landes. They
never spring-upright from the ground. The butt
curves, indeed lies almost horizontal in some cases,
for the lowest two or three yards; and the whole stem,
up to the top, is inclined to lean; it matters not
toward which quarter, for they lean as often toward
the wind as from it, crossing each other very gracefully.
I am not mechanician enough to say how this curve
of the stem increases their security amid loose sands
and furious winds. But that it does so I can
hardly doubt, when I see a similar habit in the Pinaster.
Another peculiarity was noteworthy: their
innumerable roots, long, fleshy, about the thickness
of a large string, piercing the sand in every direction,
and running down to high-tide mark, apparently enjoying
the salt water, and often piercing through bivalve
shells, which remained strung upon the roots.
Have they a fondness for carbonate of lime, as well
as for salt?
The most remarkable, and to me unexpected,
peculiarity of a Cocal is one which I am not aware
whether any writer has mentioned; namely, the prevalence
of that amber hue which we remarked in the very first
specimens seen at St. Thomas’s. But this
is, certainly, the mark which distinguishes the Coco
palm, not merely from the cold dark green of the
Palmiste, or the silvery gray of the Jagua, but
from any other tree which I have ever seen.
When inside the Cocal, the air is
full of this amber light. Gradually the eye
analyses the cause of it, and finds it to be the
resultant of many other hues, from bright vermilion
to bright green. Above, the latticed light
which breaks between and over the innumerable leaflets
of the fruit fronds comes down in warmest green.
It passes not over merely, but through, the semi-transparent
straw and amber of the older leaves. It falls
on yellow spadices and flowers, and rich brown spathes,
and on great bunches of green nuts, to acquire from
them more yellow yet; for each fruit-stalk and each
flower-scale at the base of the nut is veined and tipped
with bright orange. It pours down the stems,
semi-gray on one side, then yellow, and then, on
the opposite side, covered with a powdery lichen
varying in colour from orange up to clear vermilion,
and spreads itself over a floor of yellow sand and
brown fallen nuts, and the only vegetation of which,
in general, is a long crawling Echites, with pairs
of large cream-white flowers. Thus the transparent
shade is flooded with gold. One looks out through
it at the chequer-work of blue sky, all the more
intense from its contrast; or at a long whirl of
white surf and gray spray; or, turning the eyes inland
toward the lagoon, at dark masses of mangrove, above
which rise, black and awful, the dying balatas,
stag-headed, blasted, tottering to their fall; and
all as through an atmosphere of Rhine wine, or from
the inside of a topaz.
We rode along, mile after mile, wondering
at many things. First, the innumerable dry
fruits of Timit palm, which lay everywhere; mostly
single, some double, a few treble, from coalition,
I suppose, of the three carpels which every female
palm flower ought to have, but of which it usually
develops only one. They may have been brought
down the lagoon from inland by floods; but the common
belief is, that most of them come from the Orinoco
itself, as do also the mighty logs which lie about
the beach in every stage of wear and tear; and which,
as fast as they are cut up and carried away, are
replaced by fresh ones. Some of these trees may
actually come from the mainland, and, drifting into
this curving bay, be driven on shore by the incessant
trade wind. But I suspect that many of them
are the produce of the island itself; and more, that
they have grown, some of them, on the very spot where
they now lie. For there are, I think, evidences
of subsidence going on along this coast. Inside
the Cocal, two hundred yards to the westward, stretches
inland a labyrinth of lagoons and mangrove swamps,
impassable to most creatures save alligators and
boa-constrictors. But amid this labyrinth grow
everywhere mighty trees balatas in
plenty among them, in every stage of decay; dying,
seemingly, by gradual submergence of their roots,
and giving a ghastly and ragged appearance to the
forest. At the mouth of the little river Nariva,
a few miles down, is proof positive, unless I am
much mistaken, of similar subsidence. For there
I found trees of all sizes roseau
scrub among them standing rooted below high-tide
mark; and killed where they grew.
So we rode on, stopping now and then
to pick up shells; chip-chips, which are said
to be excellent eating; a beautiful purple bivalve,
to which, in almost every case, a coralline
had attached itself, of a form quite new to
me. A lash some eighteen inches long, single
or forked; purplish as long as its coat of lime holding
the polypes still remained, but when
that was rubbed off a mere round strip of dark horn;
and in both cases flexible and elastic, so that it
can be coiled up and tied in knots; a very curious
and graceful piece of Nature’s workmanship.
Among them were curious flat cake-urchins, with
oval holes punched in them, so brittle that, in spite
of all our care, they resolved themselves into the
loose sand of which they had been originally compact;
and I could therefore verify neither their genus nor
their species.
These were all, if I recollect, that
we found that day. The next day we came on
hundreds of a most beautiful bivalve, their
purple colour quite fresh, their long spines often
quite uninjured. Some change of the sandy bottom
had unearthed a whole warren of the lovely things;
and mixed with chip-chips innumerable, and with a
great bivalve with a thin wing along the anterior
line of the shell, they strewed the shore for a quarter
of a mile and more.
We came at last to a little river,
or rather tideway, leading from the lagoon to the
sea, which goes by the name of Doubloon River.
Some adventurous Spaniard, the story goes, contracted
to make a cutting which would let off the lagoon
water in time of flood for the sum of one doubloon some
three pound five; spent six times the money on it;
and found his cutting, when once the sea had entered,
enlarge into a roaring tideway, dangerous, often
impassable, and eating away the Cocal rapidly toward
the south; Mother Earth, in this case at least, having
known her own business better than the Spaniard.
How we took off our saddles, sat down
on the sand, hallooed, waited; how a black policeman whose
house was just being carried away by the sea appeared
at last with a canoe; how we and our baggage got
over one by one in the hollow log without by
seeming miracle being swept out to sea
or upset: how some horses would swim, and others
would not; how the Negroes held on by the horses
till they all went head over ears under the surf;
and how, at last, breathless with laughter and anxiety
for our scanty wardrobes, we scrambled ashore one
by one into prickly roseau, re-saddled our
horses in an atmosphere of long thorns, and then
cut our way and theirs out through scrub into the
Cocal; all this should not be written in
these pages, but drawn for the benefit of Punch,
by him who drew the egg-stealing frog whose
pencil I longed for again and again amid the delightful
mishaps of those forest rambles, in all of which I
never heard a single grumble, or saw temper lost
for a moment. We should have been rather more
serious, though, than we were, had we been aware
that the river-god, or presiding Jumby, of the Doubloon
was probably watching us the whole time, with the
intention of eating any one whom he could catch,
and only kept in wholesome awe by our noise and splashing.
At last, after the sun had gone down,
and it was ill picking our way among logs and ground-creepers,
we were aware of lights; and soon found ourselves
again in civilisation, and that of no mean kind.
A large and comfortable house, only just rebuilt
after a fire, stood among the palm-trees, between
the sea and the lagoon; and behind it the barns,
sheds, and engine-houses of the coco-works; and inside
it a hearty welcome from a most agreeable German
gentleman and his German engineer. A lady’s
hand I am sorry to say the lady was not
at home was evident enough in the arrangements
of the central room. Pretty things, a piano,
and good books, especially Longfellow and Tennyson,
told of cultivation and taste in that remotest wilderness.
The material hospitality was what it always is in
the West Indies; and we sat up long into the night
around the open door, while the surf roared, and
the palm trees sighed, and the fireflies twinkled,
talking of dear old Germany, and German unity, and
the possibility of many things which have since proved
themselves unexpectedly most possible. I went
to bed, and to somewhat intermittent sleep.
First, my comrades, going to bed romping, like English
schoolboys, and not in the least like the effeminate
and luxurious Créoles who figure in the English
imagination, broke a four-post bedstead down among
them with hideous roar and ruin; and had to be picked
up and called to order by their elders. Next,
the wind, which ranged freely through the open roof,
blew my bedclothes off. Then the dogs exploded
outside, probably at some henroost-robbing opossum,
and had a chevy through the cocos till they tree’d
their game, and bayed it to their hearts’ content.
Then something else exploded and I do
not deny it set me more aghast than I had been for
many a day exploded, I say, under the
window, with a shriek of Hut-hut-tut-tut, hut-tut,
such as I hope never to hear again. After which,
dead silence; save of the surf to the east and the
toads to the west. I fell asleep, wondering
what animal could own so detestable a voice; and
in half an hour was awoke again by another explosion;
after which, happily, the thing, I suppose, went
its wicked way, for I heard it no more.
I found out the next morning that
the obnoxious bird was not an owl, but a large goat-sucker,
a Nycteribius, I believe, who goes by the name of
jumby-bird among the English Negroes: and no
wonder; for most ghostly and horrible is his cry.
But worse: he has but one eye, and a glance
from that glaring eye, as from the basilisk of old,
is certain death: and worse still, he can turn
off its light as a policeman does his lantern, and
become instantly invisible: opinions which,
if verified by experiment, are not always found to
be in accordance with facts. But that is no
reason why they should not be believed.
In St. Vincent, for instance, the
Negroes one evening rushed shrieking out of a boiling-house,
’Oh! Massa Robert, we all killed.
Dar one great jumby-bird come in a hole a-top a
roof. Oh! Massa Robert, you no go in;
you killed, we killed,’ etc. etc.
Massa Robert went in, and could see no bird.
’Ah, Massa Robert, him darky him eye, but
him see you all da same. You killed, we
killed,’ etc. Da capo.
Massa Robert was not killed:
but lives still, to the great benefit of his fellow-creatures,
Negroes especially. Nevertheless, the Negroes
held to their opinion. He might, could, would,
or should have been killed; and was not that clear
proof that they were right?
After this, who can deny that the
Negro is a man and a brother, possessing the same
reasoning faculties, and exercising them in exactly
the same way, as three out of four white persons?
But if the night was disturbed, pleasant
was the waking next morning; pleasant the surprise
at finding that the whistling and howling air-bath
of the night had not given one a severe cold, or
any cold at all; pleasant to slip on flannel shut and
trousers shoes and stockings were needless and
hurry down through a stampede of kicking, squealing
mules, who were being watered ere their day’s
work began, under the palms to the sea; pleasant
to bathe in warm surf, into which the four-eyes squattered
in shoals as one ran down, and the moment they saw
one safe in the water, ran up with the next wave
to lie staring at the sky; pleasant to sit and read
one’s book upon a log, and listen to the soft
rush of the breeze in the palm-leaves, and look at
a sunrise of green and gold, pink and orange, and
away over the great ocean, and to recollect, with a
feeling of mingled nearness and loneliness, that
there was nothing save that watery void between oneself
and England, and all that England held; and then,
when driven in to breakfast by the morning shower,
to begin a new day of seeing, and seeing, and seeing,
certain that one would learn more in it than in a
whole week of book-reading at home.
We spent the next morning in inspecting
the works. We watched the Negroes splitting
the coconuts with a single blow of that all-useful
cutlass, which they handle with surprising dexterity
and force, throwing the thick husk on one side, the
fruit on the other. We saw the husk carded
out by machinery into its component fibres, for coco-rope
matting, coir-rope, saddle-stuffing, brushes, and a
dozen other uses; while the fruit was crushed down
for the sake of its oil; and could but wish all success
to an industry which would be most profitable, both
to the projectors and to the island itself, were
it not for the uncertainty, rather than the scarcity,
of labour. Almost everything is done, of course,
by piecework. The Negro has the price of his
labour almost at his own command; and when, by working
really hard and well for a while, he has earned a
little money, he throws up his job and goes off, careless
whether the whole works stand still or not.
However, all prosperity to the coco-works of Messrs.
Uhrich and Gerold; and may the day soon come when
the English of Trinidad, like the Ceylonese and the
Dutch of Java, shall count by millions the coco-palms
which they have planted along their shores, and by
thousands of pounds the profit which accrues from
them.
After breakfast call it
luncheon rather we started for the lagoon.
We had set our hearts on seeing Manatis (’sea
cows’), which are still not uncommon on the
east coast of this island, though they have been
exterminated through the rest of the West Indies since
the days of Pere Labat. That good missionary
speaks of them in his delightful journal as already
rare in the year 1695; and now, as far as I am aware,
none are to be found north of Trinidad and the Spanish
Main, save a few round Cuba and Jamaica. We were
anxious, too, to see, if not to get, a boa-constrictor
of one kind or other. For there are two kinds
in the island, which may be seen alive at the Zoological
Gardens in the same cage. The true Boa,
which is here called Mahajuel, is striped as well
as spotted with two patterns, one over the other.
The Huillia, Anaconda, or Water-boa, bears
only a few large round spots. Both are fond of
the water, the Huillia living almost entirely in
it; both grow to a very large size; and both are
dangerous, at least to children and small animals.
That there were Huillias about the place, possibly
within fifty yards of the house, there was no doubt.
One of our party had seen with his own eyes one
of seven-and-twenty feet long killed, with a whole
kid inside it, only a few miles off. The brown
policeman, crossing an arm of the Guanapo only a
month or two before, had been frightened by meeting
one in the ford, which his excited imagination magnified
so much that its head was on the one bank while its
tail was on the other a measurement which
must, I think, be divided at least by three.
But in the very spot in which we stood, some four
years since, happened what might have been a painful
tragedy. Four young ladies, whose names were
mentioned to me, preferred, not wisely, a bathe in
the still lagoon to one in the surf outside; and
as they disported themselves, one of them felt herself
seized from behind. Fancying that one of her
sisters was playing tricks, she called out to her
to let her alone; and looking up, saw, to her astonishment,
her three sisters sitting on the bank, and herself
alone. She looked back, and shrieked for help:
and only just in time; for the Huillia had her.
The other three girls, to their honour, dashed in
to her assistance. The brute had luckily got
hold, not of her poor little body, but of her bathing-dress,
and held on stupidly. The girls pulled; the
bathing-dress, which was, luckily, of thin cotton,
was torn off; the Huillia slid back again with it
in his mouth into the dark labyrinth of the mangrove-roots;
and the girl was saved. Two minutes’
delay, and his coils would have been round her; and
all would have been over.
The sudden daring of these lazy and
stupid animals is very great. Their brain seems
to act like that of the alligator or the pike, paroxysmally,
and by rare fits and starts, after lying for hours
motionless as if asleep. But when excited,
they will attempt great deeds. Dr. De Verteuil
tells a story and if he tells it, it must
be believed of some hunters who wounded
a deer. The deer ran for the stream down a
bank; but the hunters had no sooner heard it splash
into the water than they heard it scream. They
leapt down to the place, and found it in the coils
of a Huillia, which they killed with the deer.
And yet this snake, which had dared to seize a full-grown
deer, could have had no hope of eating her; for it
was only seven feet long.
We set out down a foul porter-coloured
creek, which soon opened out into a river, reminding
us, in spite of all differences, of certain alder
and willow-fringed reaches of the Thames. But
here the wood which hid the margin was altogether
of mangrove; the common Rhizophoras, or black
mangroves, being, of course, the most abundant.
Over them, however, rose the statelier Avicennias,
or white mangroves, to a height of fifty or
sixty feet, and poured down from their upper branches
whole streams of air-roots, which waved and creaked
dolefully in the breeze overhead. But on the
water was no breeze at all. The lagoon was
still as glass; the sun was sickening; and we were
glad to put up our umbrellas and look out from under
them for Manatis and Boas. But the Manatis usually
only come in at night, to put their heads out of
water and browse on the lowest mangrove leaves; and
the Boas hide themselves so cunningly, either altogether
under water, or with only the head above, that we
might have passed half a dozen without seeing them.
The only chance, indeed, of coming across them,
is when they are travelling from lagoon to lagoon,
or basking on the mud at low tide.
So all the game which we saw was a
lovely white Egret, its back covered with those
stiff pinnated plumes which young ladies
when they can obtain them are only too happy
to wear in their hats. He, after being civil
enough to wait on a bough till one of us got a sitting
shot at him, heard the cap snap, thought it as well
not to wait till a fresh one was put on, and flapped
away. He need not have troubled himself.
The Negroes but too apt to forget something
or other had forgotten to bring a spare
supply; and the gun was useless.
As we descended, the left bank of
the river was entirely occupied with cocos; and the
contrast between them and the mangroves on the
right was made all the more striking by the afternoon
sun, which, as it sank behind the forest, left the
mangrove wall in black shadow, while it bathed the
palm-groves opposite with yellow light. In one
of these palm-groves we landed, for we were right
thirsty; and to drink lagoon water would be to drink
cholera or fever. But there was plenty of pure
water in the coco-trees, and we soon had our fill.
A Negro walked not climbed up
a stem like a four-footed animal, his legs and arms
straight, his feet pressed flat against it, his hands
clinging round it a feat impossible, as
far as I have seen, to an European tossed
us down plenty of green nuts; and our feast began.
Two or three blows with the cutlass,
at the small end of the nut, cut off not only the
pith-coat, but the point of the shell; and disclose the
nut being held carefully upright meanwhile a
cavity full of perfectly clear water, slightly sweet,
and so cold (the pith-coat being a good non-conductor
of heat) that you are advised, for fear of cholera,
to flavour it with a little brandy. After draining
this natural cup, you are presented with a natural
spoon of rind, green outside and white within, and
told to scoop out and eat the cream which lines the
inside of the shell, a very delicious food in the
opinion of Créoles. After which, if you
are as curious as some of us were, you will sit down
under the amber shade, and examine at leisure the
construction and germination of these famous and
royal nuts. Let me explain it, even at the risk
of prolixity. The coat of white pith outside,
with its green skin, will gradually develop and harden
into that brown fibre of which matting is made.
The clear water inside will gradually harden into
that sweetmeat which little boys eat off stalls and
barrows in the street; the first delicate deposit
of which is the cream in the green nut. This
is albumen, intended to nourish the young palm till
it has grown leaves enough to feed on the air, and
roots enough to feed on the soil; and the birth of
that young palm is in itself a mystery and a miracle,
well worth considering. Much has been written
on it, of which I, unfortunately, have read very
little; but I can at least tell what I have seen
with my own eyes.
If you search among the cream-layer
at the larger end of the nut, you will find, gradually
separating itself from the mass, a little white lump,
like the stalk of a very young mushroom. That
is the ovule. In that lies the life, the ‘forma
formativa,’ of the future tree. How that
life works, according to its kind, who can tell?
What it does, is this: it is locked up inside
a hard woody shell, and outside that shell are several
inches of tough tangled fibre. How can it get
out, as soft and seemingly helpless as a baby’s
finger?
All know that there are three eyes
in the monkey’s face, as the children call
it, at the butt of the nut. Two of these eyes
are blind, and filled up with hard wood. They
are rudiments hints that the
nut ought to have, perhaps had uncounted ages since,
not one ovule, but three, the type-number in palms.
One ovule alone is left; and that is opposite the
one eye which is less blind than the rest; the eye
which a schoolboy feels for with his knife, when he
wants to get out the milk.
As the nut lies upon the sand, in
shade, and rain, and heat, that baby’s finger
begins boring its way, with unerring aim, out of the
weakest eye. Soft itself, yet with immense
wedging power, from the gradual accretion of tiny
cells, it pierces the wood, and then rends right
and left the tough fibrous coat. Just so may
be seen I have seen a large
flagstone lifted in a night by a crop of tiny soft
toadstools which have suddenly blossomed up beneath
it. The baby’s finger protrudes at last,
and curves upward toward the light, to commence the
campaign of life: but it has meanwhile established,
like a good strategist, a safe base of operations
in its rear, from which it intends to draw supplies.
Into the albuminous cream which lines the shell,
and into the cavity where the milk once was, it throws
out white fibrous vessels, which eat up the albumen
for it, and at last line the whole inside of the
shell with a white pith. The albumen gives
it food wherewith to grow, upward and downward.
Upward, the white plumule hardens into what will
be a stem; the one white cotyledon which sheaths
it develops into a flat, ribbed, forked, green leaf,
sheathing it still; and above it fresh leaves, sheathing
always at their bases, begin to form a tiny crown;
and assume each, more and more, the pinnate form
of the usual coco-leaf. But long ere this,
from the butt of the white plumule, just outside
the nut, white threads of root have struck down into
the sand; and so the nut lies, chained to the ground
by a bridge-like chord, which drains its albumen,
through the monkey’s eye, into the young plant.
After a while a few months, I believe the
draining of the nut is complete; the chord dries
up I know not how, for I had neither microscope
nor time wherewith to examine and parts;
and the little plant, having got all it can out of
its poor wet-nurse, casts her ungratefully off to
wither on the sand; while it grows up into a stately
tree, which will begin to bear fruit in six or seven
years, and thenceforth continue, flowering and fruiting
the whole year round without a pause, for sixty years
and more.
I think I have described this to
me ’miraculum’ simply enough
to be understood by the non-scientific reader, if
only he or she have first learned the undoubted fact known,
I find, to very few ‘educated’ English
people that the coco-palm which produces
coir-rope, and coconuts, and a hundred other useful
things, is not the same plant as the cacao-bush which
produces chocolate, nor anything like it. I
am sorry to have to insist upon this fact: but
till Professor Huxley’s dream and
mine is fulfilled, and our schools deign
to teach, in the intervals of Latin and Greek, some
slight knowledge of this planet, and of those of
its productions which are most commonly in use, even
this fact may need to be re-stated more than once.
We re-embarked again, and rowed down
to the river-mouth to pick up shells, and drink in
the rich roaring trade breeze, after the choking
atmosphere of the lagoon; and then rowed up home, tired,
and infinitely amused, though neither Manati nor
Boa-constrictor had been seen; and then we fell to
siesta; during which with Mr. Tennyson’s
forgiveness I read myself to sleep with
one of his best poems; and then went to dinner, not
without a little anxiety.
For M – (the civiliser
of Montserrat) had gone off early, with mule, cutlass,
and haversack, back over the Doubloon and into the
wilds of Manzanilla, to settle certain disputed squatter
claims, and otherwise enforce the law; and now the
night had fallen, and he was not yet home.
However, he rode up at last, dead beat, with a strong
touch of his old swamp-fever, and having had an adventure,
which had like to have proved his last. For
as he rode through the Doubloon at low tide in the
morning, he espied in the surf that river-god, or
Jumby, of which I spoke just now; namely, the gray
back-fin of a shark; and his mule espied it too,
and laid back her ears, knowing well what it was.
M – rode close up to the brute.
He seemed full seven feet long, and eyed him surlily,
disinclined to move off; so they parted, and M –
went on his way. But his business detained
him longer than he expected; when he got back to the
river-mouth it was quite dark, and the tide was full
high. He must either sleep on the sands, which
with fever upon him would not have been over-safe,
or try the passage. So he stripped, swam the
mule over, tied her up, and then went back, up to
his shoulders in surf; and cutlass in hand too, for
that same shark might be within two yards of him.
But on his second journey he had to pile on his
head, first his saddle, and then his clothes and
other goods; few indeed, but enough to require both
hands to steady them: and so walked helpless
through the surf, expecting every moment to be accosted
by a set of teeth, from which he would hardly have
escaped with life. To have faced such a danger,
alone and in the dark, and thoroughly well aware, as
an experienced man, of its extremity, was good proof
(if any had been needed) of the indomitable Scots
courage of the man. Nevertheless, he said,
he never felt so cold down his back as he did during
that last wade. By God’s blessing the shark
was not there, or did not see him; and he got safe
home, thankful for dinner and quinine.
Going back the next morning at low
tide, we kept a good look-out for M –’s
shark, spreading out, walkers and riders, in hopes
of surrounding him and cutting him up. There
were half a dozen weapons among us, of which my heavy
bowie-knife was not the worst; and we should have
given good account of him had we met him, and got
between him and the deep water. But our valour
was superfluous. The enemy was nowhere to be
seen; and we rode on, looking back wistfully, but
in vain, for a gray fin among the ripples.
So we rode back, along the Cocal and
along that wonderful green glade, where I, staring
at Noranteas in tree-tops, instead of at the ground
beneath my horse’s feet, had the pleasure of
being swallowed up my horse’s hindquarters
at least in the very same slough which
had engulfed M –’s mule three
days before, and got a roll in much soft mud.
Then up to –’s camp, where
we expected breakfast, not with greediness, though
we had been nigh six hours in the saddle, but with
curiosity. For he had promised to send out the
hunters for all game that could be found, and give
us a true forest meal; and we were curious to taste
what lapo, quenco, guazupita-deer, and other
strange meats might be like. Nay, some of us
agreed, that if the hunters had but brought in a
tender young red monkey, we would surely eat
him too, if it were but to say that we had done it.
But the hunters had had no luck. They had
brought in only a Pajui, an excellent game
bird; an Ant-eater, and a great Cachicame,
or nine-banded Armadillo. The ant-eater the foolish
fellows had eaten themselves I would have
given them what they asked for his skeleton; but
the Armadillo was cut up and hashed for us, and was
eaten, to the last scrap, being about the best game
I ever tasted. I fear he is a foul feeder at
times, who by no means confines himself to roots,
or even worms. If what I was told be true,
there is but too much probability for Captain Mayne
Reid’s statement, that he will eat his way
into the soft parts of a dead horse, and stay there
until he has eaten his way out again. But, to
do him justice, I never heard him accused, like the
giant Armadillo of the Main, of digging dead
bodies out of their graves, as he is doing in a very
clever drawing in Mr. Wood’s Homes without
Hands. Be that as it may, the Armadillo, whatever
he feeds on, has the power of transmuting it into
most delicate and wholesome flesh.
Meanwhile and hereby hangs
a tale I was interested, not merely in
the Armadillo, but in the excellent taste with which
it, and everything else, was cooked in a little open
shed over a few stones and firesticks. And
complimenting my host thereon, I found that he had,
there in the primeval forest, an admirable French cook,
to whom I begged to be introduced at once.
Poor fellow! A little lithe Parisian, not thirty
years old, he had got thither by a wild road.
Cook to some good bourgeois family in Paris, he
had fallen in love with his master’s daughter,
and she with him. And when their love was hopeless,
and discovered, the two young foolish things, not
having as is too common in France the
fear of God before their eyes, could think of no
better resource than to shut themselves up with a
pan of lighted charcoal, and so go they knew not-whither.
The poor girl went and was found dead.
But the boy recovered; and was punished with twenty
years of Cayenne; and here he was now, on a sort
of ticket-of-leave, cooking for his livelihood.
I talked a while with him, cheered him with some
compliments about the Parisians, and so forth, dear
to the Frenchman’s heart what else
was there to say? and so left him, not
without the fancy that, if he had had but such an
education as the middle classes in Paris have not,
there were the makings of a man in that keen eye, large
jaw, sharp chin. ‘The very fellow,’
said some one, ’to have been a first-rate Zouave.’
Well: perhaps he was a better man, even as he
was, than as a Zouave.
And so we rode away again, and through
Valencia, and through San Josef, weary and happy,
back to Port of Spain.
I would gladly, had I been able, have
gone farther due westward into the forests which
hide the river Oropuche, that I might have visited
the scene of a certain two years’ Idyll, which
was enacted in them some forty years and more ago.
In 1827 cacao fell to so low a price
(two dollars per cwt.) that it was no longer worth
cultivating; and the head of the F –
family, leaving his slaves to live at ease on his
estates, retreated, with a household of twelve persons,
to a small property of his own, which was buried
in the primeval forests of Oropuche. With them
went his second son, Monsignor F –,
then and afterwards cure of San Josef, who died shortly
before my visit to the island. I always heard
him spoken of as a gentleman and a scholar, a saintly
and cultivated priest of the old French School, respected
and beloved by men of all denominations. His
church of San Josef, though still unfinished, had
been taxed, as well as all the Roman Catholic churches
of the island, to build the Roman Catholic Cathedral
at Port of Spain; and he, refusing to obey an order
which he considered unjust, threw up his cure, and
retreated with the rest of the family to the palm-leaf
ajoupas in the forest.
M. F – chose three
of his finest Negroes as companions. Melchior
was to go out every day to shoot wild pigeons, coming
every morning to ask how many were needed, so as
not to squander powder and shot. The number
ordered were always punctually brought in, besides
sometimes a wild turkey Pajui or
other fine birds. Alejos, who is now a cacao
proprietor, and owner of a house in Arima, was chosen
to go out every day, except Sundays, with the dogs;
and scarcely ever failed to bring in a lapp or quenco.
Aristobal was chosen for the fishing, and brought
in good loads of river fish, some sixteen pounds
weight: and thus the little party of cultivated
gentlemen and ladies were able to live, though in
poverty, yet sumptuously.
The Bishop had given Monsignor F –
permission to perform service on any of his father’s
estates. So a little chapel was built; the
family and servants attended every Sunday, and many
days in the week; and the country folk from great
distances found their way through the woods to hear
Mass in the palm-thatched sanctuary of ’El
Riposo.’
So did that happy family live ‘the
gentle life’ for some two years; till cacao
rose again in price, the tax on the churches was taken
off, and the F –s returned again
to the world: but not to civilisation and Christianity.
Those they had carried with them into the wilderness;
and those they brought back with them unstained.