As the great chain of the Andes stretches
southward its altitude grows less, and the mountain
wall is here and there broken by passes. When
the time came for me to leave Chile I determined to
cross the Andes by the easiest and most accessible
and one of the most beautiful of these comparatively
low passes. At the other end of the pass, on the
Argentine or Patagonian side, we were to be met by
motor-cars, sent thither by my considerate hosts,
the governmental authorities of Argentina.
From Santiago we went south by rail
to Puerto Varas. The railway passed through the
wide, rolling agricultural country of central Chile,
a country of farms and prosperous towns. As we
went southward we found ourselves in a land which
was new in the sense that our own West is new.
Middle and southern Chile were in the hands of the
Indians but a short while since. We were met
by fine-looking representatives of these Araucanian
Indians, all of them now peaceable farmers and stock-growers,
at a town of twenty or thirty thousand people where
there was not a single white man to be found a quarter
of a century ago. Our party included, among others,
Major Shipton, U.S.A., the military aide to our legation
at Buenos Ayres, my son Kermit, and several kind Chilean
friends.
We reached our destination, Puerto
Varas, early in the morning. It stands on the
shore of a lovely lake. There has been a considerable
German settlement in middle and southern Chile, and,
as everywhere, the Germans have made capital colonists.
At Puerto Varas there are two villages, mainly of
Germans, one Protestant and the other Catholic.
We were made welcome and given breakfast in an inn
which, with its signs and pictures, might have come
from the Fatherland. Among the guests at the
breakfast, in addition to the native Chilean Intendente,
were three or four normal-school teachers, all of
them Germans and evidently uncommonly good
teachers, too. There were school-children, there
were citizens of every kind. Many of the Germans
born abroad could speak nothing but German. The
children, however, spoke Spanish, and in some cases
nothing but Spanish. Here, as so often in the
addresses made to me, special stress was laid upon
the fact that my country represented the cause of
civil and religious liberty, of the absolute equality
of treatment of all men without regard to creed, and
of social and industrial justice; in short, the cause
of orderly liberty in body, soul, and mind, in things
intellectual and spiritual no less than in things
industrial and political; the liberty that guarantees
to each free, bold spirit the right to search for
truth without any check from political or ecclesiastical
tyranny, and that also guarantees to the weak their
bodily rights as against any man who would exploit
or oppress them.
We left Puerto Varas by steamer on
the lake to begin our four days’ trip across
the Andes and through northern Patagonia, which was
to end when we struck the Argentine Railway at Neuquen.
This break in the Andes makes an easy road, for the
pass at its summit is but three thousand feet high.
The route followed leads between high mountains and
across lake after lake, and the scenery is as beautiful
as any in the world.
The first lake was surrounded by a
rugged, forest-clad mountain wilderness, broken here
and there by settlers’ clearings. Wonderful
mountains rose near by; one was a snow-clad volcano
with a broken cone which not many years ago was in
violent eruption. Another, even more beautiful,
was a lofty peak of virginal snow. At the farther
end of the lake we lunched at a clean little hotel.
Then we took horses and rode for a dozen miles to
another lake, called Esmeralda or Los Santos.
Surely there can be no more beautiful lake anywhere
than this! All around it are high mountains,
many of them volcanoes. One of these mountains
to the north, Punti Agudo, rises in sheer cliffs
to its soaring summit, so steep that snow will hardly
lie on its sides. Another to the southwest, called
Tronador, the Thunderer, is capped with vast
fields of perpetual snow, from which the glaciers creep
down to the valleys. It gains its name of thunderer
from the tremendous roaring of the shattered ice masses
when they fall. Out of a huge cave in one of
its glaciers a river rushes, full grown at birth.
At the eastern end of this lake stands a thoroughly
comfortable hotel, which we reached at sunset.
Behind us in the evening lights, against the sunset,
under the still air, the lake was very beautiful.
The peaks were golden in the dying sunlight, and over
them hung the crescent moon.
Next morning, before sunrise, we were
riding eastward through the valley. For two or
three miles the ride suggested that through the Yosemite,
because of the abruptness with which the high mountain
walls rose on either hand, while the valley was flat,
with glades and woods alternating on its surface.
Then we got into thick forest. The trees were
for the most part giant beeches, but with some conifers,
including a rather small species of sequoia.
Here and there, in the glades and open spaces, there
were masses of many-hued wild flowers; conspicuous
among them were the fuchsias.
A dozen miles on we stopped at another
little inn. Here we said good-by to the kind
Chilean friends who had accompanied us thus far, and
were greeted by no less kind Argentine friends, including
Colonel Reybaud of the Argentine army, and Doctor
Moreno, the noted Argentine scientist, explorer, and
educator. Then we climbed through a wooded pass
between two mountains. Its summit, near which
lies the boundary-line between Chile and Argentina,
is somewhere in the neighborhood of three thousand
feet high; and this is the extreme height over which
at this point it is necessary to go in traversing
what is elsewhere the mighty mountain wall of the
Andes. Here we met a tame guanaco (a kind of llama)
in the road; it strolled up to us, smelled the noses
of the horses, which were rather afraid of it, and
then walked on by us. From the summit of the pass
the ground fell rapidly to a wonderfully beautiful
little lake of lovely green water. This little
gem is hemmed in by sheer-sided mountains, densely
timbered save where the cliffs rise too boldly for
even the hardiest trees to take root. As with
all these lakes, there are many beautiful waterfalls.
The rapid mountain brooks fling themselves over precipices
which are sometimes so high that the water reaches
the foot in sheets of wavering mist. Everywhere
in the background rise the snow peaks.
We crossed this little lake in a steam-launch,
and on the other side found the quaintest wooden railway,
with a couple of rough handcars, each dragged by an
ox. In going down-hill the ox is put behind the
car, which he holds back with a rope tied to his horns.
We piled our baggage on one car, three or four members
of the party got on the other, and the rest of us
walked for the two miles or so before we reached the
last lake we were to traverse Nahuel Huapi.
Here there happened one of those incidents which show
how the world is shrinking. Three travellers,
evidently Englishmen, were at the landing. One
of them came up to me and introduced himself, saying:
“You won’t remember me; when I last saw
you, you were romping with little Prince Sigurd, in
Buckingham Palace at the time of the King’s
funeral; I was in attendance on (naming an august
lady); my name is Herschel, Lord Herschel.”
I recalled the incident at once. On returning
from my African trip I had passed through western
Europe, and had been most courteously received.
In one palace the son and heir whom I have
called Sigurd, which was not his name was
a dear little fellow, very manly and also very friendly;
and he reminded me so of my own children when they
were small that I was unable to resist the temptation
of romping with him, just as I had romped with them.
A month later, when as special ambassador I was attending
King Edward’s funeral, I called at Buckingham
Palace to pay my respects, and was taken in to see
the august lady above alluded to. The visit lasted
nearly an hour, and toward the end I heard little
squeaks and sounds in the hall outside, for which
I could not account. Finally I was dismissed,
and, on opening the door, there was little Sigurd,
with his nurse, waiting for me. He had heard
that I was in the palace, and had refused to go down
to dinner until he had had a play with me; and he was
patiently and expectantly waiting outside the door
for me to appear. I seized him, tossed him up,
while he shouted gleefully, caught him, and rolled
him on the floor, quite forgetting that any one was
looking on; and then, in the midst of the romp, happening
to look up, I saw the lady on whom I had been calling,
watching the play with much interest, with her equally
interested two brothers, both of them sovereigns, and
her lords-in-waiting; she had come out to see what
the little boy’s laughter meant. I straightened
up, whereupon the little boy’s face fell, and
he anxiously inquired: “But you’re
not going to stop the play, are you?” Of all
this my newfound friend reminded me. It was a
far cry in space and in surroundings, from where he
and I had first met to the Andes that border Patagonia.
He was a man of knowledge and experience, and the
half-hour I spent with him was most pleasant.
At Nahuel Huapi we were met by a little
lake steamer, on which we spent the next four hours.
The lake is of bold and irregular outline, with many
deep bays, and with mountain walls standing as promontories
between the bays. For a couple of hours the scenery
was as beautiful as it had been during any part of
the two days, especially when we looked back at the
mass of snow-shrouded peaks. Then the lake opened,
the shores became clear of woods, the mountains lower,
and near the eastern end, where there were only low
rolling hills, we came to the little village of Bariloche.
Bariloche is a real frontier village.
Forty years previously Doctor Moreno had been captured
by Indians at this very spot, had escaped from them,
and after days of extraordinary hardship had reached
safety. He showed us a strange, giant pine-tree,
of a kind different from any of our northern cone-bearers,
near which the Indians had camped while he was prisoner
with them. He had persuaded the settlers to have
this tree preserved, and it is still protected, though
slowly dying of old age. The town is nearly four
hundred miles from a railway, and the people are of
the vigorous, enterprising frontier type. It was
like one of our frontier towns in the old-time West
as regards the diversity in ethnic type and nationality
among the citizens. The little houses stood well
away from one another on the broad, rough, faintly
marked streets. In one we might see a Spanish
family, in another blond Germans or Swiss, in yet
another a family of gaucho stock looking
more Indian than white. All worked and lived
on a footing of equality, and all showed the effect
of the wide-spread educational effort of the Argentine
Government; an effort as marked as in our own country,
although in the Argentine it is made by the nation
instead of by the several states. We visited the
little public school. The two women teachers were,
one of Argentine descent, the other the daughter of
an English father and an Argentine mother the
girl herself spoke English only with difficulty.
They told us that the Germans had a school of their
own, but that the Swiss and the other immigrants sent
their children to the government school with the children
of the native Argentines. Afterward I visited
the German school, where I was welcomed by a dozen
of the German immigrants men of the same
stamp as those whom I had so often seen, and whom I
so much admired and liked, in our own Western country.
I was rather amused to see in this school, together
with a picture of the Kaiser, a very large picture
of Martin Luther, although about a third of the Germans
were Catholics; their feelings as Germans seemed in
this instance to have overcome any religious differences,
and Martin Luther was simply accepted as one of the
great Germans whose memory they wished to impress
on the minds of their children. In this school
there was a good little library, all the books being,
of course, German; it was the only library in the
town.
That night we had a very pleasant
dinner. Our host was a German. Of the two
ladies who did the honors of the table, one was a Belgian,
the wife of the only doctor in Bariloche, and the
other a Russian. In our own party, aside from
the four of us from the United States, there were
Colonel Reybaud, of the Argentine army, my aide, and
a first-class soldier; Doctor Moreno, who was as devoted
a friend as if he had been my aide; and three other
Argentine gentlemen the head of the Interior
Department, the governor of Neuquen, and the head of
the Indian Service. Among the other guests was
a man originally from County Meath, and a tall, blond,
red-bearded Venetian, a carpenter by trade. After
a while we got talking of books, and it was fairly
startling to see the way that polyglot assemblage
brightened when the subject was introduced, and the
extraordinary variety of its taste in good literature.
The men began eagerly to speak about and quote from
their favorite authors Cervantes, Lope
de Vega, Camoens, Moliere, Shakespeare, Virgil, and
the Greek dramatists. Our host quoted from the
“Nibelungenlied” and from Homer, and at
least two-thirds of the men at the table seemed to
have dozens of authors at their tongues’ ends.
But it was the Italian carpenter who capped the climax,
for when we touched on Dante he became almost inspired
and repeated passage after passage, the majesty and
sonorous cadence of the lines thrilling him so that
his listeners were almost as much moved as he was.
We sat thus for an hour an unexpected type
of Kaffee Klatsch for such an outpost of civilization.
Next morning at five we were off for
our four-hundred-mile drive across the Patagonian
wastes to the railway at Neuquen. We had been
through a stretch of scenery as lovely as can be found
anywhere in the world a stretch that in
parts suggested the Swiss lakes and mountains, and
in other parts Yellowstone Park or the Yosemite or
the mountains near Puget Sound. In a couple of
years the Argentines will have pushed their railway
system to Bariloche, and then all tourists who come
to South America should make a point of visiting this
wonderfully beautiful region. Doubtless in the
end it will be developed for travellers much as other
regions of great scenic attraction are developed.
Thanks to Doctor Moreno, the Argentine end of it is
already a national park; I trust the Chilean end soon
will be.
We left Bariloche in three motor-cars,
knowing that we had a couple of hard days ahead of
us. After skirting the lake for a mile or two
we struck inland over flats and through valleys.
We had to cross a rapid river at a riffle where the
motor-cars were just able to make it. The road
consisted only of the ruts made by the passage of the
great bullock carts, and often we had to go alongside
it, or leave it entirely where at some crossing of
a small stream the ground looked too boggy for us to
venture in with the motor-cars. Three times in
making such a crossing one of the cars bogged down,
and we had hard work in getting out. In one case
it caused us two hours’ labor in building a stone
causeway under and in front of the wheels repeating
what I had helped do not many months before in Arizona,
when we struck a place where a cloudburst had taken
away the bridge across a stream and a good part of
the road that led up to it on either side.
In another place the leading car got
into heavy sand and was unable to move. A party
of gauchos came loping up, and two of them
tied their ropes to the car and pulled it backward
onto firm ground. These gauchos were
a most picturesque set. They were riding good
horses, strong and hardy and wild, and the men were
consummate horsemen, utterly indifferent to the sudden
leaps and twists of the nervous beasts they rode.
Each wore a broad, silver-studded belt, with a long
knife thrust into it. Some had their trousers
in boots, others wore baggy breeches gathered in at
the ankle. The saddles, unlike our cow saddles,
had no horns, and the rope when in use was attached
to the girth ring. The stirrups were the queerest
of all. Often they were heavy flat disks, the
terminal part of the stirrup-leather being represented
by a narrow metal, or stiff leather, bar a foot in
length. A slit was cut in the heavy flat disk
big enough to admit the toe of the foot, and with this
type of stirrup, which to me would have been almost
as unsatisfactory as no stirrup at all, they sat their
bucking or jumping horses with complete indifference.
It was gaucho land through which
we were travelling. Every man in it was born
to the saddle. We saw tiny boys not only riding
but performing all the duties of full-grown men in
guiding loose herds or pack-animals. No less
characteristic than these daredevil horsemen were the
lines of great two-wheeled carts, each dragged by
five mules, three in the lead, with two wheelers,
or else perhaps drawn by four or six oxen. For
the most part these carts were carrying wool or hides.
Occasionally we came on great pastures surrounded
by wire fences. Elsewhere the stony, desolate
land lay as it had lain from time immemorial.
We saw many flocks of sheep, and many herds of horses,
among which piebald horses were unusually plentiful.
There were a good many cattle, too, and on two or
three occasions we saw flocks of goats. It was
a wild, rough country, and in such a country life
is hard for both man and beast. Everywhere along
the trail were the skeletons and dried carcasses of
cattle, and occasionally horses. Yet there were
almost no carrion birds, no ravens or crows, no small
vultures, although once very high up in the air we
saw a great condor. Indeed, wild life was not
plentiful, although we saw ostriches the
South American rhea and there was an occasional
guanaco, or wild llama. Foxes were certainly
abundant, because at the squalid little country stores
there were hundreds of their skins and also many skunk
skins.
Now and then we passed ranch-houses.
There might be two or three fairly close together,
then again we might travel for twenty miles without
a sign of a habitation or a human being. In one
place there was a cluster of buildings and a little
schoolhouse. We stopped to shake hands with the
teacher. Some of the ranch-houses were cleanly
built and neatly kept, shade-trees being planted round
about the only trees we saw during the
entire motor journey. Other houses were slovenly
huts of mud and thatch, with a brush corral near by.
Around the houses of this type the bare dirt surface
was filthy and unkempt, and covered with a litter
of the skulls and bones of sheep and oxen, fragments
of skin and hide, and odds and ends of all kinds,
foul to every sense.
Every now and then along the road
we came to a solitary little store. If it was
very poor and squalid, it was called a pulpería;
if it was large, it was called an almacén.
Inside there was a rough floor of dirt or boards,
and a counter ran round it. At one end of the
counter was the bar, at which drinks were sold.
Over the rest of the counter the business of the store
proper was done. Hats, blankets, horse-gear, rude
articles of clothing, and the like were on the shelves
or hung from rings in the ceiling. Sometimes
we saw gauchos drinking at these bars rough,
wild-looking men, some of them more than three parts
Indian, others blond, hairy creatures with the northern
blood showing obviously. Although they are dangerous
men when angered, they are generally polite, and we,
of course, had no trouble with them. Hides, fox
skins, and the like are brought by them for sale or
for barter.
Order is kept by the mounted territorial
police, an excellent body, much like the Canadian
mounted police and the Pennsylvania constabulary.
These men are alert and soldierly, with fine horses,
well-kept arms, and smart uniforms. Many of them
were obviously mainly, and most of them were partly,
of Indian blood. I think that Indian blood is
on the whole a distinct addition to the race stock
when the ancestral Indian tribe is of the right kind.
The acting president of the Argentine during my visit,
the vice-president, a very able and forceful man, wealthy,
well educated, a thorough statesman and man of the
world, and a delightful companion, had a strong strain
of Indian blood in him.
The ordinary people we met used “Indian”
and “Christian” as opposite terms, having
cultural rather than theological or racial significance,
this being customary in the border regions of temperate
South America. In one place where we stopped
four Indians came in to see us. The chief or
head man looked like a thorough Indian. He might
have been a Sioux or a Comanche. One of his companions
was apparently a half-breed, showing strong Indian
features, however. A third had a full beard, and,
though he certainly did not look quite like a white
man, no less certainly he did not look like an Indian.
The fourth was considerably more white than Indian.
He had a long beard, being dressed, as were the others,
in shabby white man’s garb. He looked much
more like one of the poorer class of Boers than like
any Indian I have ever seen. I noticed this man
talking to two of the mounted police. They were
smart, well-set-up men, thoroughly identified with
the rest of the population, and regarding themselves
and being regarded by others as on the same level with
their fellow citizens. Yet they were obviously
far more Indian in blood than was the unkempt, bearded
white man to whom they were talking, and whom they
and their fellows spoke of as an Indian, while they
spoke of themselves, and were spoken of by others,
as “Christians.” “Indian”
was the term reserved for the Indians who were still
pagans and who still kept up a certain tribal relation.
Whenever an Indian adopted Christianity in the excessively
primitive form known to the gauchos, came out
to live with the whites, and followed the ordinary
occupations, he seemed to be promptly accepted as
a white man, no different from any one else.
The Indians, by the way, now have property, and are
well treated. Nevertheless, the pure stock is
dying out, and those that survive are being absorbed
in the rest of the population.
The various accidents we met with
during the forenoon delayed us, and we did not take
breakfast or, as we at home would call it,
lunch until about three o’clock in
the afternoon. We had then halted at a big group
of buildings which included a store and a government
telegraph office. The store was a long, whitewashed,
one-story house, the bedrooms in the rear, and all
kinds of outbuildings round about. In some corrals
near by a thousand sheep were being sheared.
Breakfast had been long deferred, and we were hungry.
But it was a feast when it did come, for two young
sheep or big lambs were roasted whole before a fire
in the open, and were then set before us; the open-air
cook was evidently of almost pure Indian blood.
On we went with the cars, with no
further accidents and no trouble except once in crossing
a sand belt. The landscape was parched and barren.
Yet its look of almost inconceivable desolation was
not entirely warranted, for in the flats and valleys
water could evidently be obtained a few feet below
the surface, and where it was pumped up anything could
be grown on the soil.
But, unless thus artificially supplied,
water was too scarce to permit any luxuriance of growth.
Here and there were stretches of fairly good grass,
but on the whole the country was covered with dry scrub
a foot or two high, rising in clumps out of the earth
or gravel or sand. The hills were stony and bare,
sometimes with flat, sheer-sided tops, and the herds
of half-wild horses and of cattle and sheep, and the
even wilder riders we met, and the squalid little
ranch-houses, all combined to give the landscape a
peculiar touch.
As evening drew on, the harsh, raw
sunlight softened. The hills assumed a myriad
tints as the sun sank. The long gleaming followed.
The young moon hung overhead, well toward the west,
and just on the edge of the horizon the Southern Cross
stood upside down. Then clouds gathered, boding
a storm. The night grew black, and on we went
through the darkness, the motormen clutching the steering-wheels
and peering anxiously forward as they strove to make
out the ruts and faint road-marks in the shifting
glare of the headlights. The play of the lightning
and the rolling of the thunder came near and nearer.
We were evidently in for a storm, which would probably
have brought us to a complete halt, and we looked
out for a house to stop at. At 10.15 we caught
a glimpse of a long white building on one side of the
road. It was one of the stores of which I have
spoken. With some effort we roused the people,
and after arranging the motor-cars we went inside.
They were good people. They got us eggs and coffee,
and, as we had a cold pig, we fared well. Then
we lay down on the floor of the store and on the counters
and slept for four hours.
At three I waked the sleepers with
the cry that in bygone days on the Western cattle
plains had so often roused me from the heavy slumber
of the men of the round-up. It was the short
November night of high southern latitudes. Dawn
came early. We started as soon as the faint gray
enabled us to see the road. The stars paled and
vanished. The sunrise was glorious. We came
out from among the hills on to vast barren plains.
Hour after hour, all day long, we drove at speed over
them. The sun set in red and angry splendor amid
gathering clouds. When we reached the Rio Negro
the light was dying from the sky, and a heavy storm
was rolling toward us. The guardians of the rope
ferry feared to try the river, with the storm rising
through the black night; but we forced them to put
off, and we reached the other shore just before the
wind smote us, and the rushing rain drove in our faces.