On the morning of the 1st of November,
consequently in the spring of the Southern hemisphere,
we perceived Cape Frio, and in the evening plainly
distinguished, by its well-known conical mountain,
the entrance to the Bay of Rio Janeiro. A dead
calm deprived us of the pleasure of running into the
port that night, so that we were compelled to drop
our anchor before it; but we found some compensation
for our disappointment, in contemplating so much of
this charming country as was visible from our ship.
The magnificent scenery of Brazil has often been described,
but no expression can do justice to its ravishing
beauty. Imagination can scarcely picture the
exquisite variety of form and colouring of the luxuriant
and gigantic vegetation that thickly clothes the valleys
and mountains even to the sea-shore. A breeze
from the land wafted to us the most delicious perfumes;
and crowds of beautiful insects, butterflies, and
birds, such as only the tropics produce, hovered about
us. Nature seems to have destined these lovely
regions for the unmixed enjoyment of her creatures;
but, alas! hard labour and a tyrant’s whip have,
to the unhappy Negro, transformed this Paradise into
a place of torment.
The sight of two slave-ships formed
a revolting contrast to the enchantment of the prospect:
they had that day arrived from Africa, and lay near
us at anchor. The trade in human flesh, that foul
blot on civilized nations, of which most of them are
already ashamed, yet flourishes here in detestable
activity, and is carried on, with all the brutality
of avarice, under the sanction of the laws. The
ships employed in this abominable traffic are so over-crowded
that the slaves have scarcely room to move. They
are brought up by turns to inhale for a while the
refreshing breeze, but the deck being only capable
of accommodating a small portion at once, they are
soon returned to the confined and pestilential atmosphere
below. One third of the human cargo, as a necessary
consequence, generally perishes on the voyage, and
the remainder reach their place of destination in a
state of miserable suffering. The decks of the
ships I have just mentioned, were crowded with these
unfortunate creatures, naked, fettered, and diseased.
Even mothers with infants at their breasts had not
been spared by these speculators! What still
greater misery might not be concealed beneath the
decks!
The darkness, which at once closed
from our view all that had delighted and disgusted
us, rendered visible an almost incessant flight of
rockets, and we heard occasionally, throughout the
night, the discharge of guns and musketry from the
town. These demonstrations of rejoicing led to
the supposition that some important festival was celebrating,
or that a great victory had probably been gained;
we afterwards learnt, however, that they were occasioned
only by the arrest of three ministers, accused of
a conspiracy against the Emperor.
At daybreak the chief pilot came on
board. This little fat man, proud of his name
of Vasco de Gama, which he professed to have inherited
in a direct line from the celebrated navigator to
the East Indies, was in many respects a good specimen
of his countrymen. He was wholly uneducated,
as they mostly are; and, next to his ancestry, that
in which he took the greatest pride was the independence
of Brazil. This feeling, which is general among
all classes, enlists each individual personally in
support of the existing government, and is its surest
guarantee.
Although our pilot had not attained
to the renown of his great ancestor, I must do him
the justice to say that he understood his business,
and guided us very skilfully through the narrow mouth
of the Bay. This small entrance, commanded by
a fort on a height, is tolerably well secured from
the approach of an enemy; and might, by stronger batteries,
be made wholly inaccessible, as the channel is so
narrow, that a ship in working its way in must always
be within half-shot distance. We anchored near
the town, among numerous vessels of various nations,
and set foot once more on terra-firma, after
being fifty-two days at sea since leaving England.
Beautiful as this country always appears
to an European eye, it has perhaps no scene so strikingly
splendid and picturesque as that which presents itself
within this Bay. The rich and novel peculiarity
of the landscape is contrasted with the handsome buildings
of the town, rising amphitheatrically round the harbour;
and these again derive a curious effect from the tall
and slender palm-trees, which, thickly interspersed
among them, throw their strongly defined and waving
shadows upon the white surface of the contiguous houses;
and the whole is crowned by the numerous convents
which are seen above the town, in the distance, clinging
like swallows’-nests, to the precipitous sides
of the mountains.
We had hardly reefed our sails, when
the Russian Vice-Consul, Von Kielchen, and an officer
of the Brazilian government, came on board to congratulate
us on our arrival. The latter acquainted me with
the order of his Government, that every ship of war
coming in should salute the fortress with one-and-twenty
guns; and in order to remove all doubt that the compliment
was designed for the Brazilian flag, he had brought
one which, during the salute, he requested us to hoist
at the fore-mast.
New and unprecedented as this order
was, from a state not yet acknowledged by our government,
I determined, rather than risk any disagreement, to
comply with it; and having fired the one-and-twenty
guns, received from the fortress a similar number in
return. Being very anxious not to lose the favourable
season for doubling Cape Horn, I urged the Vice-Consul
to expedite as much as possible the delivery of provisions
and other necessaries to the ship; for this purpose,
however, a delay of four weeks was required, and this
time I determined to employ in astronomical observations.
M. Von Kielchen procured me for this purpose a convenient
country-house, situated on the romantic little bay
of Botafogo, of which I took possession on the following
day, accompanied by our astronomer, M. Preus; leaving
the care of the ship to my officers.
In the supposition that the history
of Brazil may not be familiar to every reader, male
and female, for I hope to have many of the
latter, I will preface the narration of
my residence here with the following notices.
This great empire in South America,
called Brazil, from a wood which grows there in great
abundance, resembling in colour a red-hot coal, (in
the Portuguese “Brasa,”) is one
of the richest and most fertile countries in the world.
It was accidentally discovered in the year 1500, by
a Portuguese named Cabral, who with a fleet bound for
the East Indies, was thrown on these shores.
The riches of the country being at
first unknown, it was used as a place of banishment
for criminals; but subsequently, when the convicts
began to cultivate the sugar-cane, and the gold and
diamond mines were discovered, Brazil acquired a higher
value in the eyes of the Portuguese government.
A Viceroy was therefore sent out,
with the strongest injunctions to close the Brazilian
ports against all foreign powers, in order to preserve
to Portugal the exclusive trade in the diamonds and
other precious stones with which it was now found
that the country abounded. For a long time, this
beautiful land, rich in all the gifts of nature, languished
under the rule of Portuguese Viceroys, with a thinly-scattered
population, poor, oppressed, and destitute of all
mental culture. At length, the year 1807 opened
to it a brighter prospect. Napoleon’s ambitious
views extending even to Portugal, forced the Royal
Family to take refuge in the colonies. They were
followed by fourteen thousand soldiers, and about
twelve thousand other adherents. The presence
of a court and government in the capital, Rio Janeiro,
had the most beneficial influence on all the interests
of the country. The ports were opened to all
European ships, and commerce, wealth, and civilization
advanced rapidly.
Napoleon’s victories having
found a final termination, in his banishment to St.
Helena, the King of Portugal returned, in 1821, to
his European dominions, leaving the Regency of Brazil
to his son, the Crown Prince, Pedro, already married
to an Austrian princess.
But the example of the newly-established
republics of America had a powerful effect on the
minds of the people; the King’s departure was
a signal for the breaking out of revolutionary disturbances,
which, though the Crown Prince could not appease,
he was, nevertheless, by means of a strong party he
had gained over, enabled to direct. In the year
1822, he declared Brazil independent of the mother-country, promised
the people a Constitution, and was at last
proclaimed Emperor, by the title of Pedro the First.
From the day when the nation tendered its allegiance,
the Emperor and all patriots have worn on the left
arm a green cockade inscribed with the words, “Independence
or Death.” At the coronation, the order
of the Southern Cross was founded, and the new national
flag hoisted: it is green, with a yellow square
in the middle, on which is represented the Earth,
surrounded by thirteen stars (the number of the provinces),
and leaves of coffee and tobacco, as the produce of
the country.
The government, at the time of our
residence in Brazil, was nothing less than constitutional.
This is sufficiently proved by the tumultuary arrest
of the above-mentioned three Ministers, by the arbitrary
dispersion of the Deputies from the provinces, called
together expressly to form a Constitutional Assembly,
and by the expression of the Emperor, that he required
unconditional submission, even if he should choose,
like Charles the Twelfth, to send his boot to them
as his representative. It is possible that the
Emperor has been in some measure forced to these violent
proceedings by the contentions of the various parties,
each of which seeks its own interest without concerning
itself about the general welfare. His personal
character is much praised.
A captain of one of the Russian-American
Company’s ships, who had been in Rio Janeiro,
related to me the following anecdote of his benevolence.
Two sailors belonging to his crew had been ashore,
and having got drunk, were found lying senseless on
the road to Corcovado. The Emperor and Empress
happening to ride that way, attended only by a few
servants, saw them, and supposed them to be sick.
The Emperor immediately dismounted, rubbed their temples
with his own hand, and endeavoured to restore them
to their senses, but in vain. He then sent for
his own surgeon, and dispatched them under his care
to the hospital, from whence on the following morning,
having slept off their intoxication, they were dismissed
as cured. Another, and a different anecdote,
I heard from a painter from Vienna, who was residing
in Rio Janeiro. The Emperor, wishing to have
a whole-length portrait of himself, sent for the painter
to place his easel in a room in the palace, and commenced
sitting. The first outline was scarcely made,
when an officer, whose business it was to report the
arrival of ships, entered with the list. The names
of the ships and captains, of various nations and
languages with which the officer was unacquainted,
puzzled him, and he read so stammeringly, and sometimes
almost unintelligibly, that the Emperor, enraged at
his ignorance, seized a stick, and the officer, only
by a rapid flight round the easel, in which he was
at first pursued by the monarch, escaped the intended
chastisement. We shall be less surprised at this
conduct, if we consider the point of civilization
to which the country had attained when this Prince
first seized the helm. May he succeed in elevating
it to what his government may make it, the
happiest, as well as the loveliest and most fruitful
empire in the world!
The Brazilian fleet, then commanded
by the celebrated Lord Cochrane, consisted of one
ship of the line, two frigates, three brigs, and some
smaller vessels. Inconsiderable as was this force,
it was in good order, and under the direction of its
skilful and heroic commander, had done wonders.
Lord Cochrane had recently, with his single ship of
the line and one frigate only, attacked and defeated
a Portuguese squadron of two ships of the line and
four frigates, pursued them to the port of Lisbon,
and made prize of forty merchant vessels they were
convoying. For this exploit, he received from
the Emperor the appointment of Grand Admiral, and
the title of Marquis of Marenham, after one of the
provinces. He had before served the republic
of Chili; and, it is said, in the midst of his warlike
ardour, he had not forgotten the care of his private
finances.
This was his first year in the Brazilian
service. I was curious to see so celebrated a
man, and soon found an opportunity of forming an acquaintance
with him, which led to a frequent intercourse.
His external deportment is repulsive rather than attractive;
he is somewhat taciturn; and it is difficult, in ordinary
conversation, to discover the intelligence and information
which he really possesses. He is turned of fifty
years of age, tall and thin: his attitude is stooping,
his hair red, his features strongly marked, and the
expression of his countenance serious: his sparkling,
lively eyes, concealed by overhanging eyebrows, are
generally fixed on the ground, and seldom even raised
to the person he is addressing. His lady forms
a striking contrast with him: she is young, handsome,
lively in conversation, extremely amiable, and so
devotedly attached to him, that she exposes her life
to the greatest danger rather than leave his side,
and has remained in his ship during all his battles
in the South American service.
Cochrane frequently expressed to me
a wish to enter the Russian service, in order to assist
the Greeks, and fight the Turks. This object he
has since attained by other means. War appears
to be an indispensable necessity to his nature; and
a dangerous struggle in a just cause is his highest
enjoyment. How this enthusiasm can be united to
the great love of money of which he is accused, it
is not easy to imagine.
My short residence in Brazil passed
rapidly and agreeably in my necessary occupations,
and the enjoyment of the charming environs of my country-house.
The effect which so total a change of climate and scenery
produces on European spirits, even when not experienced
for the first time, is really astonishing. The
eye can fix on no one object which is not directly
the reverse of any thing to which it has been accustomed.
The birds, insects, trees, flowers, all wear a foreign
aspect, even to the blades of grass. By its strange
forms and colourings, but especially by its overflowing
abundance, all nature here demands attention.
Throughout the day, myriads of the most beautiful butterflies,
beetles, and humming-birds, display their various
colours in the sun, which has scarcely set, before
innumerable swarms of fire-flies illuminate the scene.
I had seldom time for excursions; therefore, as it
usually happens to sailors, I can say little of the
interior.
Botafogo, where, on account of the
salubrity of the air, the richest and most distinguished
of the inhabitants of Rio Janeiro have fixed their
country-houses, is the most attractive spot in the
immediate environs of the capital. Among the
mountains which form the background of the view from
the Bay, is one solid rock, very remarkable from the
resemblance of its figure to an enormous church-steeple;
it rises, according to a geometrical admeasurement
of our scientific companion Lenz, to the height of
fifteen hundred and eighty feet above the level of
the sea. With infinite pains, a road has been
conducted to the summit, where the space is so confined
that a few persons only can be accommodated at the
same time, but from whence the prospect is indescribably
magnificent: it is called Corcovado, and is a
favourite ride with the Emperor.
From Botafogo the road to the capital
is studded on both sides with pretty villas.
The town derives its name, Rio Janeiro, or January
river, from an error on the first discovery of the
bay, which, owing to the narrowness of its mouth,
was mistaken for a river, and named after the current
month. Its interior by no means corresponds with
its handsome appearance from the bay, the streets
being narrow and dirty, and the buildings very tasteless.
Clumsy churches and convents are found in plenty,
but there is little worthy the attention of the traveller,
except the Museum, which has a rich collection of rare
natural curiosities, and valuable minerals. The
extent of the town is considerable, and it contains
about two hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants,
of which however two-thirds are negroes, and the rest
principally mulattoes and other people of colour.
A white face is seldom to be seen in the streets;
but the blacks are so numerous, that one might fancy
oneself in Africa.
Among these are a few free men; but
the greater part are slaves degraded to beasts of
burden. The immense weights they carry are usually
fastened on a plank, each end of which is borne by
a negro, keeping time to his steps by a monotonous
and melancholy song in his native language, and goaded
by the whip to renewed efforts, when the failing of
his voice indicates almost utter exhaustion.
They often carry heavily laden baskets on their heads;
and even women are not exempt from this labour.
On Sundays and holidays they also
sing in time to their steps, as they stroll about,
but the tune has a more lively character; and they
sometimes accompany their voices on a little instrument
composed of a few steel springs. They understand
no other language than that of their distant country,
and therefore, though the ceremony of baptism is never
omitted, they receive no instruction in the doctrines
of Christianity; thus, while an appearance of anxiety
concerning the salvation of their souls is maintained,
they continue sunk in the state of misery and darkness
which hopeless bodily suffering is so calculated to
produce. The few free blacks are either manumitted
slaves or their descendants: they are mostly
mechanics engaged in trade. The mulattoes are
generally of illegitimate birth, but are sometimes
the offspring of marriages between blacks and the
lowest class of whites. From their connexion with
blacks or whites spring all the various gradations
of colour met with among the inhabitants of Brazil.
The mulattoes and free negroes form the middle classes;
the few whites found among them being the worst of
characters, ignorant and vicious to the last degree;
their repulsive exterior is worthy of their abandoned
lives: they are usually retail slave dealers,
and keep shops where these miserable beings are exposed
to view, and may be examined and purchased like any
other ware. About twenty thousand negroes are
annually brought to Brazil; the average price of a
female is three hundred, and of a man six hundred piastres.
The principal food of the negroes
is a sort of thick paste called Manioc, which is prepared
from Tapioca by kneading in hot water; to an European
palate it has a disagreeable flavour, but may be nutritious,
as the slaves mostly look well-fed; I doubt, however,
its being wholesome without a mixture of other food,
and I even think it possible that it may be the original
cause of a terrible disease to which the negroes alone
are subject, and of which they know nothing in their
own country. Large tumours appear on their faces
and legs, which do not break, but increase in size
till in some of the sufferers the human form can scarcely
be recognised. A convent situated on a little
island, called Dos Fradres, in the bay of Rio
Janeiro, and not far from the town, contains a hospital,
under the superintendence of the government, for sick
negro slaves. I have not been able to learn whether
this disease has been successfully treated here.
The father of the Emperor, while he remained in Rio
Janeiro, often visited the convent; and a room is shown
where he used to take refuge when it thundered, as
he was excessively fearful in a storm, and, from some
unknown cause, esteemed this chamber peculiarly safe.
On the 19th of November, the celebration
of the anniversary of the coronation, and the establishment
of the Order of the Southern Cross, attracted me to
the capital.
It was scarcely daybreak when the
thunder of the cannon from all the batteries, and
from the ships in the roads, recalled the remembrance
of this happy event, which had taken place only the
preceding year. The streets were filled with
people; soldiers in their dress-regimentals hastened
to their various places of rendezvous; and the negroes,
released from labour, formed a part of the cheerful
throng. At eleven o’clock, the Emperor
and Empress, in a magnificent carriage drawn by eight
horses, and escorted by a troop of guards in handsome
uniforms, arrived at the principal church. A
number of carriages, containing the suite of the Imperial
pair, followed, all at a slow pace, that the people
might have more time to enjoy the spectacle.
At some distance from the door, the
Emperor and Empress alighted, and entered the church
in procession, surrounded by the Knights of the Southern
Cross; they were met by the Bishop and the whole body
of the clergy, and conducted with great pomp to a
throne erected at the right side of the altar, which
the Emperor ascended, while his consort took her place
in a pew on the left. After the service, performed
by a good choir to excellent music, the Bishop came
forward and delivered a very long discourse, descriptive
of the various virtues of the Emperor, comparing him
to Peter the Great of Russia, and pointing out how
he ought to administer the government for the good
of his subjects. The comparison he was pleased
to institute between the monarch and his illustrious
namesake is only so far just, as, in the uncultivated
state of the two nations, both have had similar materials
to work upon. Whether Don Pedro, with much greater
means, will effect as much as our immortal Peter,
time will show. One of the hopes of Brazil is
already extinguished by the death of the Empress,
who in a short time had done much for science and
the arts. When the sermon was over, their Majesties
returned to the Palace, amidst an uninterrupted firing
of cannon. They then received the congratulations
of the court, and at four o’clock the Emperor
reviewed in the great market-place, where a temple
was erected for the imperial family, a body of four
thousand five hundred troops, formed in a half circle
round the temple. In their venerable commander,
Don Jose de Currado, a field-marshal, of eighty years
of age, I joyfully recognised the former governor
of St. Katharine’s, who, on my first voyage
round the world, under the command of the present Admiral
Krusenstein, received me so hospitably. The observations
I had an opportunity of making upon the soldiers,
before the arrival of the Emperor, were not altogether
unfavourable; though, it must be confessed, the good
people seemed to have no very high notion of discipline;
smoking, and all kinds of irregularities, being permitted
even in the front ranks. Their uniform was handsome
and suitable; that of the musicians chiefly attracted
my attention. Every colonel of a regiment has
the right of dressing his band according to his fancy;
and as tastes are very various, so of course are these
costumes, though the Asiatic predominates; some being
attired as Turks, others as Indians. In one regiment,
indeed, a quantity of coloured feathers, worn on the
head and round the body, formed the only covering.
As soon as the Emperor and Empress,
both on horseback and surrounded by a splendid court,
were seen in the distance, the cannon sent forth its
loudest roar, the soldiers threw away their cigars,
the multitude waved their hats, the ladies in the
balconies their white pocket-handkerchiefs, and all
shouted “Viva l’Emperador.”
The cortege approached slowly; the Emperor, from the
superior richness of his uniform, glittering amidst
the splendid throng, like Syrius in the starry
sky. His colossal figure seemed literally covered
with gold lace; his breast sparkled with diamonds,
and his strong features were shaded by a hat richly
decorated with jewels. The Express was more tastefully
attired in a simple black riding-dress, embroidered
with gold. When she had taken her place in the
temple, his Majesty assumed the command of the troops
and paraded them before her. As soon as his powerful
voice was heard, the thunder of the cannon again burst
forth; the Turks, Indians, and above-mentioned Popinjays,
blew their trumpets, while the shout from the people
of “Viva l’Emperador” was loudest
amidst the uproar. The columns of the military
having several times defiled before the Empress, the
parade terminated, and the Imperial family and their
court repaired to the theatre. I had been seated
in my box a few minutes before they entered the building,
which was suffocatingly full, and I was surprised
to find it as good in its architecture and arrangements
as the generality of European theatres. The boxes
were occupied by whites only, and many female faces
were there to be seen as fair as those of Northern
Europe; the tender red of the youthful cheek, the bright,
black eye and jetty hair increased the attraction
of these brilliant complexions; but many of the
ladies have brown, and even very light hair.
Their dress was tastefully arranged in the Parisian
fashion: the art of the toilet appears indeed
to be the only one they study, as their education
does not always proceed so far as reading and writing,
although they are not deficient in natural capabilities;
their conversation is often as graceful and piquant
as that of European ladies. Nor is general information
much more extended among the gentlemen, as the following
anecdote will testify. When, in 1817, the Russian
frigate Kamschatka anchored in the Port of Rio Janeiro,
it was visited by many Brazilians of rank, and amongst
others by an officer who expressed much surprise at
finding a crucifix in the cabin. He knew, indeed,
that the Russians professed the Greek religion, but
was wholly ignorant that this church formed any part
of the Christian community.
It is the custom here to pay visits
in the theatre, which are indeed more highly prized
than those made at their houses, as the attention is
more publicly manifested. On these occasions the
animated intercourse between the young people of the
different sexes is frequently accompanied by glances
sufficiently expressive to betray its object.
The pit presented a very singular
appearance, from its assemblage of various complexions,
including every possible shade from black to white,
although the darker tints had greatly the preponderance.
Nor was the distinction of manners among the different
portions of the audience less striking. No theatre
in Europe can boast of more decorum and politeness
than prevails here in the boxes; but the noisy and
coarse vulgarity of the pit would not be tolerated
in a more refined nation. All eyes were eagerly
directed towards the Imperial box, when its curtain,
which before had been close drawn, was thrown open;
their Majesties then appeared standing in the front,
the back of the box being filled by Knights of the
Southern Cross. Hats and handkerchiefs were now
again waved, and on every side resounded “Viva
l’Emperador, l’Emperadriza, la Monarchia!”
This enthusiasm having been rewarded by gracious acknowledgments,
the drop curtain rose, and an actress came forward
to recite a prologue in praise of the Emperor.
Then followed a piece of which I understood very little;
and the whole was concluded by a ballet, greatly superior
to my expectations. During the performance, the
Emperor gave audience in his box to many of his subjects,
the interview always beginning with the homage of
kissing hands on the bended knee. As soon as
the curtain rose, the company in the pit became tolerably
quiet, and much more attentive than those in the boxes;
the latter appearing to take more interest in conversation
with their acquaintances than in the performance.
I paid my respects to Lord Cochrane and his amiable
wife in their box, and remained with them till the
conclusion of the piece.
He spoke much of Chili, and wore even
on this day of ceremony, a Chilian uniform and a blue
scarf, its honorary decoration. This surprised
me the more, as he seemed dissatisfied with the Chilian
government. His explanation was, that the Emperor
had not yet decided what his Brazilian uniform should
be, and consequently, that he was still obliged to
wear that of Chili. The lady preferred Chili
to Brazil, and believed that the heat of this climate
did not agree with her health.
On the 27th of November, all our stores
being laid in, bidding a cordial farewell to Brazil,
I returned to my ship, intending to continue our voyage
on the following day. Accordingly at five o’clock
on the morning of the 28th we spread our sails, and
the ebb-tide and a light breeze from the North, bore
us slowly from this lovely coast. The wind soon
slackened; and we should have been greatly embarrassed
but for a number of boats sent by the English squadron,
then lying in the roads, to tow us out to sea, by
which seasonable assistance we were enabled to clear
the bay before evening. The heat of Brazil had
not injured the health of our crew. Fresh provisions,
much fruit and vegetables, good lemonade instead of
the ordinary drink, and a sea bath every evening, were
the means I employed for the prevention of sickness.
The men were in the best spirits for encountering
the storms of the Southern ocean; and I destined the
port of Conception, on the coast of Chili, for a resting-place,
after having surmounted the difficulties of doubling
Cape Horn.
The result of our repeated observations
on land, are as follows:
Latitude of Botafogo 21 de’ 5” South.
Medium Longitude from various observations 43 de’ 32” West.
Every longitude which is given in
the course of this voyage is reckoned by the distance
from Greenwich, going from West to East. The variation
of the needle amounted to 3 deg. East, its
inclination to 9 de’. As the
longitude of Cape Frio has been variously laid
down, I took much pains to ascertain it exactly.
By a very good chronometer, I found the difference
between Cape Frio and Botafogo 1 de’
20”; so that the true longitude of Cape Frio
from Greenwich must be 42 de’ 12”.
Doubling of Cape horn,
and
residence in Chili.