In the fall of 1913 I enjoyed a glimpse
of the ranch country of southern Brazil and of Argentina.
It was only a glimpse; for I was bent on going northward
into the vast wilderness of tropical South America.
I had no time to halt in the grazing country of temperate
South America, which is no longer a wilderness, but
a land already feeling the sweep of the modern movement.
It is a civilized land, already fairly well settled,
which by leaps and bounds is becoming thickly settled;
a region which at the present day is in essentials
far more closely kin to the plains country, which
in temperate North America stretches from Hudson Bay
to the Gulf, than either land is kin to what each
was even half a century ago. The main difference
is that the great cow country, the plains country,
of North America was peopled only by savages when the
white pioneers entered it in the nineteenth century;
whereas throughout temperate South America there were
here and there oases of thin settlement, including
even small, stagnant cities, already two or three
centuries old. In these oases people wholly or
partly of European blood had gradually developed a
peculiar and backward, but real, semicivilization
of their own. This quaint, distinctive social
culture has been, or is now being, engulfed by the
rising tide of intensely modern internationalized
material development.
Among the many pleasant memories of
my visit to Argentina, one of the most pleasant is
that of a dinner at the house of the governor of the
old provincial capital of Mendoza. Our distinguished
host came of an old country family which for many
centuries led the life of the great cattle-breeding
ranch-owners, although his people were more and more
turning their attention to agriculture, he himself
being a successful farmer, as well as an invaluable
public servant of advanced views. His father
was at the dinner. He had retired as a general
after forty-nine years’ service in the Argentine
army. The fine old fellow represented what was
best in the Argentine type before the days of modern
industrialism. A very vigorous and manly best
it was, too. He wore the old Argentine uniform,
which for his rank was the same as the uniform once
worn by Napoleon’s officers. He had served
in the bloody Paraguayan War, when Argentina, Brazil,
and Uruguay joined to overthrow the inconceivably
murderous dictatorship of Lopez, and when the Paraguayans
rallied with savage valor under the banner of the dictator,
who tyrannized over them, but who nevertheless represented
in their eyes the nation. This old general had
served in many Indian wars, both in Patagonia and
in the Grand Chaco, and had seen desperate fighting
in the civil wars. He wore medals commemorating
his services in the Paraguayan and Indian campaigns,
but he would not wear any medals commemorating his
services in the civil wars. Yet the only time
he was wounded was in one of the battles in one of
these civil wars. He was then shot twice and
received a bayonet thrust, and was also stabbed with
a lance. If he had not possessed a constitution
of iron he would never have survived. Our people
in the United States often speak of these South American
wars with the same ignorant lack of appreciation that
used to be shown by European military men in speaking
of our own Civil War and other contests. This
attitude is as foolish on our part in the one case
as it was foolish on the part of the Europeans in
question in the other case. The South American
Indian fighting was of the same hazardous character,
and the Indian campaigns were fraught with the same
wearing fatigue, and marked by the same risk and wild
adventure, as in the case of our own Indian campaigns.
In the Argentine civil wars, and in the Paraguayan
War, as in the wars which the Chileans have waged,
the fighting was, on the whole, rather more desperate
than in any contest between the civilized nations
of Europe from the close of the Napoleonic struggles
to the opening of the present gigantic contest.
There is no more formidable fighting material in the
world than is afforded by certain elements in the
populations of some of these Latin-American countries.
The general of whom I am speaking was himself a most
interesting example of a vanishing type. Lovers
of good literature should read the sketches of old-time
Argentine life in Hudson’s “El Ombú.”
When they have done so, they will understand the strength
and the ruthlessness which produced leaders of the
stamp of the scarred and war-hardened veteran who
in full general’s uniform met us at dinner at
the house of his son, the governor of Mendoza.
The old-time conditions of gaucho
civilization that produced these wild and formidable
fighting men, who fought as they lived, on the backs
of their horses, have vanished as utterly as our own
Far West of the days of Kit Carson. The Argentine
country life has changed as completely as the Argentine
city life. They are gone, those long years during
which the gaucho rode over unfenced plains
after gaunt cattle, and warred against the scarcely
wilder Indians with whom he vied in horsemanship and
plainscraft and hardihood and from whom he borrowed
that strange weapon, the bolas. Even the southern
Andes of what was once Patagonia are unexplored only
in the sense that the Rockies of Alberta are not yet
completely explored. Much of the former ranch
country is now wheatland, where the workmen of foreign,
especially Italian, origin far outnumber the men of
old Hispano-Indian stock. Great cattle-ranches
remain; but they are handled substantially like great
modern ranches in our own Southwest, and the blooded
horses and high-grade cattle are kept in large, fenced
pastures. In most places the gaucho has changed
as our own cowboy has changed. He is as bold
and good a horseman as ever; but it is only in out-of-the-way
places that he retains all his old-time wild and individual
picturesqueness. Elsewhere he is now merely an
unusually capable ranch-hand. His employer has
changed even more. The big handsome ranch-houses
are fitted with every modern comfort and luxury, and
the owners belong in all ways to the internationalized
upper class of the world of to-day. The interest
attaching to a visit to one of these civilized ranches
is that which attaches to a visit to a fine modern
stock-farm anywhere, whether in Hungary or Kentucky
or Victoria.
But there is one vital point the
vital point in which the men and women
of these ranch-houses, like those of the South America
that I visited generally, are striking examples to
us of the English-speaking countries both of North
America and Australia. The families are large.
The women, charming and attractive, are good and fertile
mothers in all classes of society. There are
no symptoms of that artificially self-produced dwindling
of population which is by far the most threatening
symptom in the social life of the United States, Canada,
and the Australian commonwealths. The nineteenth
century saw a prodigious growth of the English-speaking,
relative to the Spanish-speaking, population of the
new worlds west of the Atlantic and in the Southern
Pacific. The end of the twentieth century will
see this completely reversed unless the present ominous
tendencies as regards the birth-rate are reversed.
A race is worthless and contemptible if its men cease
to be willing and able to work hard and, at need, to
fight hard, and if its women cease to breed freely.
I am not speaking of pauper families with excessive
numbers of ill-nourished and badly brought up children;
I am well aware that, like most wise and good principles,
this which I advocate can be carried to a mischievous
excess; but it nevertheless remains true that voluntary
sterility among married men and women of good life
is, even more than military or physical cowardice in
the ordinary man, the capital sin of civilization,
whether in France or Scandinavia, New England or New
Zealand. If the best classes do not reproduce
themselves the nation will of course go down; for the
real question is encouraging the fit, and discouraging
the unfit, to survive. When the ordinary decent
man does not understand that to marry the woman he
loves, as early as he can, is the most desirable of
all goals, the most successful of all forms of life
entitled to be called really successful; when the
ordinary woman does not understand that all other
forms of life are but makeshift and starveling substitutes
for the life of the happy wife, the mother of a fair-sized
family of healthy children; then the state is rotten
at heart. The loss of a healthy, vigorous, natural
sexual instinct is fatal; and just as much so if the
loss is by disuse and atrophy as if it is by abuse
and perversion. Whether the man, in the exercise
of one form of selfishness, leads a life of easy self-indulgence
and celibate profligacy; or whether in the exercise
of a colder but no less repulsive selfishness, he sacrifices
what is highest to some form of mere material achievement
in accord with the base proverb that “he travels
farthest who travels alone”; or whether the
sacrifice is made in the name of the warped and diseased
conscience of asceticism; the result is equally evil.
So, likewise, with the woman. In many modern
novels there is portrayed a type of cold, selfish,
sexless woman who plumes herself on being “respectable,”
but who is really a rather less desirable member of
society than a prostitute. Unfortunately the
portrayal is true to life. The woman who shrinks
from motherhood is as low a creature as a man of the
professional pacificist, or poltroon, type, who shirks
his duty as a soldier. The only full life for
man or woman is led by those men and women who together,
with hearts both gentle and valiant, face lives of
love and duty, who see their children rise up to call
them blessed and who leave behind them their seed
to inherit the earth. Dealing with averages,
it is the bare truth to say that no celibate life approaches
such a life in point of usefulness, no matter what
the motive for the celibacy religious,
philanthropic, political, or professional. The
mother comes ahead of the nun and also of
the settlement or hospital worker; and if either man
or woman must treat a profession as a substitute for,
instead of as an addition to or basis for, marriage,
then by all means the profession or other “career”
should be abandoned. It is of course not possible
to lay down universal rules. There must be exceptions.
But the rule must be as above given. In a community
which is at peace there may be a few women or a few
men who for good reasons do not marry, and who do
excellent work nevertheless; just as in a community
which is at war, there may be a few men who for good
reasons do not go out as soldiers. But if the
average woman does not marry and become the mother
of enough healthy children to permit the increase of
the race; and if the average man does not, above all
other things, wish to marry in time of peace, and
to do his full duty in war if the need arises, then
the race is decadent, and should be swept aside to
make room for one that is better. Only that nation
has a future whose sons and daughters recognize and
obey the primary laws of their racial being.
In these essentials Argentina, Chile,
Uruguay, and Brazil have far more to teach than to
learn from the English-speaking countries which are
so proud of their abounding material prosperity and
of their wide-spread, but superficial, popular education
and intelligence. In this same material prosperity,
and in many other matters, Argentina much resembles
our own country. Brazil is travelling a similar
path, although much more slowly; and although its
climate is not so good, its natural resources are
vaster and will in the present century undergo an extraordinary
development. Very much of the Brazilian country
from Sao Paulo to the Uruguayan frontier is essentially
like Argentina. The city life and the ranch life
are advancing in much the same fashion; although of
course there are sharp differences in culture and
habits of thought and life between the great Spanish-speaking
and great Portuguese-speaking republics which are
such close, and not wholly friendly, neighbors.
One point of similarity is the number
of immigrants in each country. In our journey
southward from Sao Paulo we found both towns and stretches
of ranchland in which Germans, Italians, and Catholic,
Orthodox, or Uniate Slavs, were important, and
sometimes preponderant, elements of the population.
There were German Lutheran churches and also congregations
of native Protestants started by American missionaries;
for Brazil, like Argentina and the United States, enjoys
genuine religious liberty.
This rich and beautiful country of
southern Brazil is part of the last great stretch
of country south-temperate America which
remains in either temperate zone open to white settlement
on a large scale; the last great stretch of scantily
peopled land with a good climate and fertile soil
to which white immigration can go in mass.
Of part of tropical Brazil I have
written elsewhere, and I allude to it elsewhere in
this book. Here I am speaking not of the tropical
but of the temperate country.
Portions of temperate Brazil are open
prairie, portions are forest. The climate is
never very hot, nor is there ever severe cold.
The colonists with whom I conversed had not found
the insects specially troublesome; not much more,
and in places rather less, troublesome than in Louisiana
and Texas. There was no more sickness than in
the early days in the West. The general effect
in the forest country, while of course the species
of plants are entirely different, reminds the observer
of the Louisiana and Mississippi cane-brake lands
and the country along the Nueces. The activities
of the settlers in the open country are substantially
those with which I was familiar thirty years ago in
the cattle country of the West. In the forests
one is reminded more of early days on the Ohio, the
Yazoo, and the Red River of the South.
Certainly this is a country with a
wonderful future. It offers fine opportunities
for settlers who desire with the labor of their own
hands to make homes for themselves and their children.
This does not mean that all people who go there will
prosper, or that success will come save at the price
of labor and effort, of risk and hardship. If
any Americans have forgotten how our own West in the
pioneer days appealed to an observer who was friendly,
but who had not the faintest glimmering of the pioneer
spirit, let them read “Martin Chuzzlewit.”
Dickens represented the numerous men who foolishly
hope to enjoy pioneer triumphs and yet escape pioneer
risks and hardships and the unlovely and wearing toil
which is the essential prerequisite to the triumph;
and every one should remember that in a new country,
which opens a chance of success to the settler, there
always goes with this the chance of heart-breaking
failure. Brazil offers remarkable openings for
settlers who have the toughness of the born pioneer,
and for certain business men and engineers who have
the mixture of daring enterprise and sound common
sense needed by those who push the industrial development
of new countries. Both classes have great opportunities,
and both need to be perpetually on their guard against
the swindlers and the crack-brained enthusiasts who
are always sure to turn up in connection with any
country of large developmental possibilities.
On the frontier, more than anywhere else, a man needs
to be able to rely on himself and to remember that
on every frontier there are innumerable failures.
No man can be guaranteed success.
Men who are not prepared for labor and effort and
rough living, for persistence and self-denial, are
out of place in a new country; and foolish people
who will probably fail anywhere are more certain to
fail badly in a new country than anywhere else.
During the whole period of the marvellous growth of
the United States there has been a constant and uninterrupted
stream of failure going side by side with the larger
stream of success. Unless there is revolutionary
disorder and anarchy, the future holds for southern
Brazil much what half a century ago the future held
for large portions of our country lying west of the
Mississippi.
In southern Brazil the forest landscape
through which we passed was very beautiful. The
most conspicuous tree in the forest was the flat-topped
pine, the shaft of which rose like that of a royal
palm. The branches spread out at the top just
where the palm-leaves spread out on the palm, only
instead of drooping they curved upward like the branches
of a candelabra. There were many other trees
in the forests which I could not recognize or place.
Some of them looked like our Southern live-oaks.
Then there were palms, and multitudes of big tree-ferns.
In places where these tree-ferns grew thickly among
the tall, strange candelabra pines, with palms scattered
here and there, and other queer ancient tropical plants,
the landscape looked as if it had come out of the carboniferous
period at least as the carboniferous period
was represented in the attractive popular géologies
of my youth. There were flowers in the woods,
of brilliant and varied hue, although we saw but few
orchids; and in the glades or spots of open prairie
there were immense patches of lilac and blue blossoms.
The flowering trees were wonderful. On some the
blooms were blue, on others yellow. The most beautiful
of all flamed brilliant scarlet. The trees that
bore them, when scattered over hillsides that sloped
steeply to the brink of some rushing river, made splashes
of burning red against the wet and vivid green of the
subtropical foliage. As we got farther south I
was told that there were occasional sharp frosts,
but that the low temperature never lasted for more
than an hour or so. In answer to a question as
to how these rare, short frosts affected such plants
as palms and tree-ferns, it was explained to me that
the frosts prevented coffee being grown, but that
they had no effect on the palms, and, rather curiously,
no effect on the tree-ferns if they were under big
forest trees, but that if they were in the open the
fronds were killed, the trees themselves not being
injured, and new fronds taking the place of the old
ones.
In the open prairie country of the
state of Parana we stopped at Morungava to visit the
ranch of the Brazil Land, Cattle, and Packing Company.
Our host, the head of this company, Murdo Mackenzie,
for many years one of the best-known cattlemen in
our own Western cow country, was an old friend of
mine. During my term as President he was, on the
whole, the most influential of the Western cattle-growers.
He was a leader of the far-seeing and enlightened
element. He was a most powerful supporter of
the government in the fight for the conservation of
our natural resources, for the utilization without
waste of our forests and pastures, for honest treatment
of everybody, and for the shaping of governmental
policy primarily in the interest of the small settler,
the home-maker.
We rode first to Mackenzie’s
home ranch, about a mile from the railway, and then
to an outlying set of ranch buildings ten miles off.
At the home ranch were the American foreman and his
American wife and their children. The buildings
and the food and the whole life were typical of all
that was best in the old-time “Far West,”
in the days when I knew it as a cattle country.
We were given a most delicious and purely American
lunch, including all the fresh milk we could drink;
and the foreman himself piloted us over the immense
stretches of rolling country, and in every action
showed himself the born cattleman, the born and trained
stockman. Half of the employees were men from
the Western ranches, from Montana, Colorado, Texas,
or elsewhere; and they and the stock and the vast,
pleasant, open-air country were enough to make any
man feel at home who had ever lived in the West.
The children round the ranch-house were already speaking
fluent Portuguese!
There were Indians in the neighborhood;
but we saw none, for they are very shy and dwell in
the timber. Although nominally Christian, and
somewhat under the influence of the priests, they are
otherwise entirely outside of governmental control.
At first Mackenzie’s cattle were sometimes killed
by the wild, furtive creatures; but he stopped this
by a mixture of firmness and fair treatment.
It was a beautiful country, well watered,
with good grass and much timber. I was assured
by both the men on the ranch and their wives that
the climate was better than that of our own Western
cattle country, for the heat is not as extreme as
during summer in the southern part of our country,
and the winters are mild, with only occasional touches
of frost. Much care has to be shown in dealing
with the ticks and certain other insect plagues, but
not materially more than in some of our own Southern
regions. While we were at the outlying ranch we
saw the cattle being dipped in familiar ranch fashion.
Cattle, horses, and hogs all thrive.
All the native stock offers material on which to improve.
The company is carefully breeding upward, following
precisely the same course which in Texas, for instance,
has effected a complete substitution of graded beef
and dairy cattle for the old longhorns. The native
cattle are very distinctly better than the old Texan
cattle the native Mexican cattle. The
Durham and Hereford bulls introduced from the States
will in a very few years completely change the character
of the herds. Good cows are kept in sufficient
numbers to insure a constant supply of the breeding
bulls. In the same way Berkshire boars are being
crossed with the native pigs, and blooded stallions
with the native mares. In short, everything is
being done exactly as on our advanced and successful
ranches at home. The country is still largely
vacant, and opportunities for development will be
almost limitless for at least another generation.
Aside from the extreme interest of
seeing the ranch itself, the twenty-mile ride was
most enjoyable. The country was like our own plains
near the foothills of the Rockies, except that there
was more water and a greater variety of timber.
The most striking trees were the occasional peculiar
flat-top pines, and there were also other and very
beautiful pines through which the wind sang mournfully;
and there were many flowers. In one place we
saw a small prairie deer, and in galloping we had
to keep a lookout for armadillo burrows, just as we
keep a lookout for prairie-dog holes in the West.
The birds were strange and interesting, some of them
with beautiful voices. Out on the plains were
screamers, noisy birds, as big as African bustards.
One sparrow sang loudly, at midday, round the corrals
where we dismounted for lunch. He was a confiding,
pretty little fellow, with head markings somewhat like
those of our white-crowned and white-throated sparrows.
He sang better than the former, and not as well as
the latter.
The horses were good, and we thoroughly
enjoyed our afternoon canter back to the home ranch,
when the shadows had begun to lengthen. We loped
across the rolling grass-land and by the groves of
strange trees, through the brilliant weather.
Under us the horses thrilled with life; it was a country
of vast horizons; we felt the promise of the future
of the land across which we rode.