We were now in the land of the bloodsucking
bats, the vampire bats that suck the blood of living
creatures, clinging to or hovering against the shoulder
of a horse or cow, or the hand or foot of a sleeping
man, and making a wound from which the blood continues
to flow long after the bat’s thirst has been
satiated. At Tapirapoan there were milch cattle;
and one of the calves turned up one morning weak from
loss of blood, which was still trickling from a wound,
forward of the shoulder, made by a bat. But the
bats do little damage in this neighborhood compared
to what they do in some other places, where not only
the mules and cattle but the chickens have to be housed
behind bat-proof protection at night or their lives
may pay the penalty. The chief and habitual offenders
are various species of rather small bats; but it is
said that other kinds of Brazilian bats seem to have
become, at least sporadically and locally, affected
by the evil example and occasionally vary their customary
diet by draughts of living blood. One of the
Brazilian members of our party, Hoehne, the botanist,
was a zoologist also. He informed me that he had
known even the big fruit-eating bats to take to bloodsucking.
They did not, according to his observations, themselves
make the original wound; but after it had been made
by one of the true vampires they would lap the flowing
blood and enlarge the wound. South America makes
up for its lack, relatively to Africa and India, of
large man-eating carnivores by the extraordinary
ferocity or bloodthirstiness of certain small creatures
of which the kinsfolk elsewhere are harmless.
It is only here that fish no bigger than trout kill
swimmers, and bats the size of the ordinary “flittermice”
of the northern hemisphere drain the life-blood of
big beasts and of man himself.
There was not much large mammalian
life in the neighborhood. Kermit hunted industriously
and brought in an occasional armadillo, coati, or
agouti for the naturalists. Miller trapped rats
and a queer opossum new to the collection. Cherrie
got many birds. Cherrie and Miller skinned their
specimens in a little open hut or shed. Moses,
the small pet owl, sat on a cross-bar overhead, an
interested spectator, and chuckled whenever he was
petted. Two wrens, who bred just outside the
hut, were much excited by the presence of Moses, and
paid him visits of noisy unfriendliness. The
little white-throated sparrows came familiarly about
the palm cabins and whitewashed houses and trilled
on the rooftrees. It was a simple song, with
just a hint of our northern white-throat’s sweet
and plaintive melody, and of the opening bars of our
song-sparrow’s pleasant, homely lay. It
brought back dear memories of glorious April mornings
on Long Island, when through the singing of robin
and song-sparrow comes the piercing cadence of the
meadowlark; and of the far northland woods in June,
fragrant with the breath of pine and balsam-fir, where
sweetheart sparrows sing from wet spruce thickets
and rapid brooks rush under the drenched and swaying
alder-boughs.
From Tapirapoan our course lay northward
up to and across the Plan Alto, the highland wilderness
of Brazil. From the edges of this highland country,
which is geologically very ancient, the affluents of
the Amazon to the north, and of the Plate to the south,
flow, with immense and devious loops and windings.
Two days before we ourselves started
with our mule-train, a train of pack-oxen left, loaded
with provisions, tools, and other things, which we
would not need until, after a month or six weeks, we
began our descent into the valley of the Amazon.
There were about seventy oxen. Most of them were
well broken, but there were about a score which were
either not broken at all or else very badly broken.
These were loaded with much difficulty, and bucked
like wild broncos. Again and again they scattered
their loads over the corral and over the first part
of the road. The pack-men, however copper-colored,
black, and dusky-white were not only masters
of their art, but possessed tempers that could not
be ruffled; when they showed severity it was because
severity was needed, and not because they were angry.
They finally got all their longhorned beasts loaded
and started on the trail with them.
On January 21 we ourselves started,
with the mule-train. Of course, as always in
such a journey, there was some confusion before the
men and the animals of the train settled down to the
routine performance of duty. In addition to the
pack-animals we all had riding-mules. The first
day we journeyed about twelve miles, then crossing
the Sepotuba and camping beside it, below a series
of falls, or rather rapids. The country was level.
It was a great natural pasture, covered with a very
open forest of low, twisted trees, bearing a superficial
likeness to the cross-timbers of Texas and Oklahoma.
It is as well fitted for stock-raising as Oklahoma;
and there is also much fine agricultural land, while
the river will ultimately yield electric power.
It is a fine country for settlement. The heat
is great at noon; but the nights are not uncomfortable.
We were supposed to be in the middle of the rainy
season, but hitherto most of the days had been fine,
varied with showers. The astonishing thing was
the absence of mosquitoes. Insect pests that
work by day can be stood, and especially by settlers,
because they are far less serious foes in the clearings
than in the woods. The mosquitoes and other night
foes offer the really serious and unpleasant problem,
because they break one’s rest. Hitherto,
during our travels up the Paraguay and its tributaries,
in this level, marshy tropical region of western Brazil,
we had practically not been bothered by mosquitoes
at all, in our home camps. Out in the woods they
were at times a serious nuisance, and Cherrie and Miller
had been subjected to real torment by them during
some of their special expeditions; but there were
practically none on the ranches and in our camps in
the open fields by the river, even when marshes were
close by. I was puzzled and delighted by
their absence. Settlers need not be deterred
from coming to this region by the fear of insect foes.
This does not mean that there are
not such foes. Outside of the clearings, and
of the beaten tracks of travel, they teem. There
are ticks, poisonous ants, wasps of which
some species are really serious menaces biting
flies and gnats. I merely mean that, unlike so
many other tropical regions, this particular region
is, from the standpoint of the settler and the ordinary
traveller, relatively free from insect pests, and
a pleasant place of residence. The original explorer,
and to an only less degree the hardworking field naturalist
or big-game hunter, have to face these pests, just
as they have to face countless risks, hardships, and
difficulties. This is inherent in their several
professions or avocations. Many regions in the
United States where life is now absolutely comfortable
and easygoing offered most formidable problems to
the first explorers a century or two ago. We
must not fall into the foolish error of thinking that
the first explorers need not suffer terrible hardships,
merely because the ordinary travellers, and even the
settlers who come after them, do not have to endure
such danger, privation, and wearing fatigue although
the first among the genuine settlers also have to undergo
exceedingly trying experiences. The early explorers
and adventurers make fairly well-beaten trails; but
it is incumbent on them neither to boast of their
own experiences nor to misjudge the efforts of the
pioneers because, thanks to these very efforts, their
own lines fall in pleasant places. The ordinary
traveller, who never goes off the beaten route and
who on this beaten route is carried by others, without
himself doing anything or risking anything, does not
need to show much more initiative and intelligence
than an express package. He does nothing; others
do all the work, show all the forethought, take all
the risk and are entitled to all the credit.
He and his valise are carried in practically the same
fashion; and for each the achievement stands about
on the same plane. If this kind of traveller is
a writer, he can of course do admirable work, work
of the highest value; but the value comes because
he is a writer and observer, not because of any particular
credit that attaches to him as a traveller. We
all recognize this truth as far as highly civilized
regions are concerned: when Bryce writes of the
American commonwealth, or Lowell of European legislative
assemblies, our admiration is for the insight and thought
of the observer, and we are not concerned with his
travels. When a man travels across Arizona in
a Pullman car, we do not think of him as having performed
a feat bearing even the most remote resemblance to
the feats of the first explorers of those waterless
wastes; whatever admiration we feel in connection
with his trip is reserved for the traffic-superintendent,
engineer, fireman, and brakeman. But as regards
the less-known continents, such as South America, we
sometimes fail to remember these obvious truths.
There yet remains plenty of exploring work to be done
in South America, as hard, as dangerous, and almost
as important as any that has already been done; work
such as has recently been done, or is now being done,
by men and women such as Haseman, Farrabee, and Miss
Snethlage. The collecting naturalists who go
into the wilds and do first-class work encounter every
kind of risk and undergo every kind of hardship and
exertion. Explorers and naturalists of the right
type have open to them in South America a field of
extraordinary attraction and difficulty. But to
excavate ruins that have already long been known,
to visit out-of-the-way towns that date from colonial
days, to traverse old, even if uncomfortable, routes
of travel, or to ascend or descend highway rivers like
the Amazon, the Paraguay, and the lower Orinoco all
of these exploits are well worth performing, but they
in no sense represent exploration or adventure, and
they do not entitle the performer, no matter how well
he writes and no matter how much of real value he contributes
to human knowledge, to compare himself in anyway with
the real wilderness wanderer, or to criticise the
latter. Such a performance entails no hardship
or difficulty worth heeding. Its value depends
purely on observation, not on action. The man
does little; he merely records what he sees.
He is only the man of the beaten routes. The true
wilderness wanderer, on the contrary, must be a man
of action as well as of observation. He must
have the heart and the body to do and to endure, no
less than the eye to see and the brain to note and
record.
Let me make it clear that I am not
depreciating the excellent work of so many of the
men who have not gone off the beaten trails. I
merely wish to make it plain that this excellent work
must not be put in the class with that of the wilderness
explorer. It is excellent work, nevertheless,
and has its place, just as the work of the true explorer
has its place. Both stand in sharpest contrast
with the actions of those alleged explorers, among
whom Mr. Savage Landor stands in unpleasant prominence.
From the Sepotuba rapids our course
at the outset lay westward. The first day’s
march away from the river lay through dense tropical
forest. Away from the broad, beaten route every
step of a man’s progress represented slashing
a trail with the machete through the tangle of bushes,
low trees, thorny scrub, and interlaced creepers.
There were palms of new kinds, very tall, slender,
straight, and graceful, with rather short and few
fronds. The wild plantains, or pacovas,
thronged the spaces among the trunks of the tall trees;
their boles were short, and their broad, erect leaves
gigantic; they bore brilliant red-and-orange flowers.
There were trees whose trunks bellied into huge swellings.
There were towering trees with buttressed trunks,
whose leaves made a fretwork against the sky far overhead.
Gorgeous red-and-green trogons, with long tails, perched
motionless on the lower branches and uttered a loud,
thrice-repeated whistle. We heard the calling
of the false bellbird, which is gray instead of white
like the true bellbirds; it keeps among the very topmost
branches. Heavy rain fell shortly after we reached
our camping-place.
Next morning at sunrise we climbed
a steep slope to the edge of the Parecis plateau,
at a level of about two thousand feet above the sea.
We were on the Plan Alto, the high central plain of
Brazil, the healthy land of dry air, of cool nights,
of clear, running brooks. The sun was directly
behind us when we topped the rise. Reining in,
we looked back over the vast Paraguayan marshes, shimmering
in the long morning lights. Then, turning again,
we rode forward, casting shadows far before us.
It was twenty miles to the next water, and in hot
weather the journey across this waterless, shadeless,
sandy stretch of country is hard on the mules and
oxen. But on this day the sky speedily grew overcast
and a cool wind blew in our faces as we travelled
at a quick, running walk over the immense rolling plain.
The ground was sandy; it was covered with grass and
with a sparse growth of stunted, twisted trees, never
more than a few feet high. There were rheas ostriches and
small pampas-deer on this plain; the coloration of
the rheas made it difficult to see them at a distance,
whereas the bright red coats of the little deer, and
their uplifted flags as they ran, advertised them
afar off. We also saw the footprints of cougars
and of the small-toothed, big, red wolf. Cougars
are the most inveterate enemies of these small South
American deer, both those of the open grassy plain
and those of the forest.
It is not nearly as easy to get lost
on these open plains as in the dense forest; and where
there is a long, reasonably straight road or river
to come back to, a man even without a compass is safe.
But in these thick South American forests, especially
on cloudy days, a compass is an absolute necessity.
We were struck by the fact that the native hunters
and ranchmen on such days continually lost themselves
and, if permitted, travelled for miles through the
forest either in circles or in exactly the wrong direction.
They had no such sense of direction as the forest-dwelling
’Ndorobo hunters in Africa had, or as the true
forest-dwelling Indians of South America are said to
have. On certainly half a dozen occasions our
guides went completely astray, and we had to take
command, to disregard their assertions, and to lead
the way aright by sole reliance on our compasses.
On this cool day we travelled well.
The air was wonderful; the vast open spaces gave a
sense of abounding vigor and freedom. Early in
the afternoon we reached a station made by Colonel
Rondon in the course of his first explorations.
There were several houses with whitewashed walls,
stone floors, and tiled or thatched roofs. They
stood in a wide, gently sloping valley. Through
it ran a rapid brook of cool water, in which we enjoyed
delightful baths. The heavy, intensely humid
atmosphere of the low, marshy plains had gone; the
air was clear and fresh; the sky was brilliant; far
and wide we looked over a landscape that seemed limitless;
the breeze that blew in our faces might have come
from our own northern plains. The midday sun was
very hot; but it was hard to realize that we were
in the torrid zone. There were no mosquitoes,
so that we never put up our nets when we went to bed;
but wrapped ourselves in our blankets and slept soundly
through the cool, pleasant nights. Surely in
the future this region will be the home of a healthy
highly civilized population. It is good for cattle-raising,
and the valleys are fitted for agriculture. From
June to September the nights are often really cold.
Any sound northern race could live here; and in such
a land, with such a climate, there would be much joy
of living.
On these plains the Telegraphic Commission
uses motor-trucks; and these now to relieve the mules
and oxen; for some of them, especially among the oxen,
already showed the effects of the strain. Travelling
in a wild country with a pack-train is not easy on
the pack-animals. It was strange to see these
big motor-vans out in the wilderness where there was
not a settler, not a civilized man except the employees
of the Telegraphic Commission. They were handled
by Lieutenant Lauriado, who, with Lieutenant Mello,
had taken special charge of our transport service;
both were exceptionally good and competent men.
The following day we again rode on
across the Plan Alto. In the early afternoon,
in the midst of a downpour of rain, we crossed the
divide between the basins of the Paraguay and the
Amazon. That evening we camped on a brook whose
waters ultimately ran into the Tapajos. The rain
fell throughout the afternoon, now lightly, now heavily,
and the mule-train did not get up until dark.
But enough tents and flies were pitched to shelter
all of us. Fires were lit, and after
a fourteen hours’ fast we feasted royally on
beans and rice and pork and beef, seated around ox-skins
spread upon the ground. The sky cleared; the
stars blazed down through the cool night; and wrapped
in our blankets we slept soundly, warm and comfortable.
Next morning the trail had turned,
and our course led northward and at times east of
north. We traversed the same high, rolling plains
of coarse grass and stunted trees. Kermit, riding
a big, iron-mouthed, bull-headed white mule, rode
off to one side on a hunt, and rejoined the line of
march carrying two bucks of the little pampas-deer,
or field deer, behind his saddle. These deer
are very pretty and graceful, with a tail like that
of the Colombian blacktail. Standing motionless
facing one, in the sparse scrub, they are hard to make
out; if seen sideways the reddish of their coats,
contrasted with the greens and grays of the landscape,
betrays them; and when they bound off the upraised
white tail is very conspicuous. They carefully
avoid the woods in which their cousins the little
bush deer are found, and go singly or in couples.
Their odor can be made out at quite a distance, but
it is not rank. They still carried their antlers.
Their venison was delicious.
We came across many queer insects.
One red grasshopper when it flew seemed as big as
a small sparrow; and we passed in some places such
multitudes of active little green grasshoppers that
they frightened the mules. At our camping-place
we saw an extraordinary colony of spiders. It
was among some dwarf trees, standing a few yards apart
from one another by the water. When we reached
the camping-place, early in the afternoon the
pack-train did not get in until nearly sunset, just
ahead of the rain no spiders were out.
They were under the leaves of the trees. Their
webs were tenantless, and indeed for the most part
were broken down. But at dusk they came out from
their hiding-places, two or three hundred of them
in all, and at once began to repair the old and spin
new webs. Each spun its own circular web, and
sat in the middle; and each web was connected on several
sides with other webs, while those nearest the trees
were hung to them by spun ropes, so to speak.
The result was a kind of sheet of web consisting of
scores of wheels, in each of which the owner and proprietor
sat; and there were half a dozen such sheets, each
extending between two trees. The webs could hardly
be seen; and the effect was of scores of big, formidable-looking
spiders poised in midair, equidistant from one another,
between each pair of trees. When darkness and
rain fell they were still out, fixing their webs, and
pouncing on the occasional insects that blundered into
the webs. I have no question that they are nocturnal;
they certainly hide in the daytime, and it seems impossible
that they can come out only for a few minutes at dusk.
In the evenings, after supper or dinner it
is hard to tell by what title the exceedingly movable
evening meal should be called the members
of the party sometimes told stories of incidents in
their past lives. Most of them were men of varied
experiences. Rondon and Lyra told of the hardship
and suffering of the first trips through the wilderness
across which we were going with such comfort.
On this very plateau they had once lived for weeks
on the fruits of the various fruit-bearing trees.
Naturally they became emaciated and feeble. In
the forests of the Amazonian basin they did better
because they often shot birds and plundered the hives
of the wild honey-bees. In cutting the trail
for the telegraph-line through the Juruena basin they
lost every single one of the hundred and sixty mules
with which they had started. Those men pay dear
who build the first foundations of empire! Fiala
told of the long polar nights and of white bears that
came round the snow huts of the explorers, greedy
to eat them, and themselves destined to be eaten by
them. Of all the party Cherrie’s experiences
had covered the widest range. This was partly
owing to the fact that the latter-day naturalist of
the most vigorous type who goes into the untrodden
wastes of the world must see and do many strange things;
and still more owing to the character of the man himself.
The things he had seen and done and undergone often
enabled him to cast the light of his own past experience
on unexpected subjects. Once we were talking
about the proper weapons for cavalry, and some one
mentioned the theory that the lance is especially
formidable because of the moral effect it produces
on the enemy. Cherrie nodded emphatically; and
a little cross-examination elicited the fact that
he was speaking from lively personal recollection
of his own feelings when charged by lancers.
It was while he was fighting with the Venezuelan insurgents
in an unsuccessful uprising against the tyranny of
Castro. He was on foot, with five Venezuelans,
all cool men and good shots. In an open plain
they were charged by twenty of Castro’s lancers,
who galloped out from behind cover two or three hundred
yards off. It was a war in which neither side
gave quarter and in which the wounded and the prisoners
were butchered just as President Madero
was butchered in Mexico. Cherrie knew that it
meant death for him and his companions if the charge
came home; and the sight of the horsemen running in
at full speed, with their long lances in rest and
the blades glittering, left an indelible impression
on his mind. But he and his companions shot deliberately
and accurately; ten of the lancers were killed, the
nearest falling within fifty yards; and the others
rode off in headlong haste. A cool man with a
rifle, if he has mastered his weapon, need fear no
foe.
At this camp the auto-vans again joined
us. They were to go direct to the first telegraph
station, at the great falls of the Utiarity, on the
Rio Papagaio. Of course they travelled faster
than the mule-train. Father Zahm, attended by
Sigg, started for the falls in them. Cherrie
and Miller also went in them, because they had found
that it was very difficult to collect birds, and especially
mammals, when we were moving every day, packing up
early each morning and the mule-train arriving late
in the afternoon or not until nightfall. Moreover,
there was much rain, which made it difficult to work
except under the tents. Accordingly, the two
naturalists desired to get to a place where they could
spend several days and collect steadily, thereby doing
more effective work. The rest of us continued
with the mule-train, as was necessary.
It was always a picturesque sight
when camp was broken, and again at nightfall when
the laden mules came stringing in and their burdens
were thrown down, while the tents were pitched and
the fires lit. We breakfasted before leaving
camp, the aluminum cups and plates being placed on
ox-hides, round which we sat, on the ground or on camp-stools.
We fared well, on rice, beans, and crackers, with canned
corned beef, and salmon or any game that had been shot,
and coffee, tea, and matte. I then usually sat
down somewhere to write, and when the mules were nearly
ready I popped my writing-materials into my duffel-bag/war-sack,
as we would have called it in the old days on the
plains. I found that the mules usually arrived
so late in the afternoon or evening that I could not
depend upon being able to write at that time.
Of course, if we made a very early start I could not
write at all. At night there were no mosquitoes.
In the daytime gnats and sand-flies and horse-flies
sometimes bothered us a little, but not much.
Small stingless bees lit on us in numbers and crawled
over the skin, making a slight tickling; but we did
not mind them until they became very numerous.
There was a good deal of rain, but not enough to cause
any serious annoyance.
Colonel Rondon and Lieutenant Lyra
held many discussions as to whither the Rio da
Duvida flowed, and where its mouth might be. Its
provisional name “River of Doubt” was
given it precisely because of this ignorance concerning
it; an ignorance which it was one of the purposes
of our trip to dispel. It might go into the Gy-Parana,
in which case its course must be very short; it might
flow into the Madeira low down, in which case its
course would be very long; or, which was unlikely,
it might flow into the Tapajos. There was another
river, of which Colonel Rondon had come across the
head-waters, whose course was equally doubtful, although
in its case there was rather more probability of its
flowing into the Juruena, by which name the Tapajos
is known for its upper half. To this unknown river
Colonel Rondon had given the name Ananas, because
when he came across it he found a deserted Indian
field with pineapples, which the hungry explorers
ate greedily. Among the things the colonel and
I hoped to accomplish on the trip was to do a little
work in clearing up one or the other of these two
doubtful geographical points, and thereby to push
a little forward the knowledge of this region.
Originally, as described in the first chapter, my
trip was undertaken primarily in the interest of the
American Museum of Natural History of New York, to
add to our knowledge of the birds and mammals of the
far interior of the western Brazilian wilderness;
and the labels of our baggage and scientific equipment,
printed by the museum, were entitled “Colonel
Roosevelt’s South American Expedition for the
American Museum of Natural History.” But,
as I have already mentioned, at Rio the Brazilian
Government, through the secretary of foreign affairs,
Doctor Lauro Muller, suggested that I should combine
the expedition with one by Colonel Rondon, which they
contemplated making, and thereby make both expeditions
of broader scientific interest. I accepted the
proposal with much pleasure; and we found, when we
joined Colonel Rondon and his associates, that their
baggage and equipment had been labelled by the Brazilian
Government “Expedicao Scientifica Roosevelt-Rondon.”
This thenceforth became the proper and official title
of the expedition. Cherrie and Miller did the
chief zoological work. The geological work was
done by a Brazilian member of the expedition, Euzebio
Oliveira. The astronomical work necessary for
obtaining the exact geographical location of the rivers
and points of note was to be done by Lieutenant Lyra,
under the supervision of Colonel Rondon; and at the
telegraph stations this astronomical work would be
checked by wire communications with one of Colonel
Rondon’s assistants at Cuyaba, Lieutenant Caetano,
thereby securing a minutely accurate comparison of
time. The sketch-maps and surveying and cartographical
work generally were to be made under the supervision
of Colonel Rondon by Lyra, with assistance from Fiala
and Kermit. Captain Amilcar handled the worst
problem transportation; the medical member
was Doctor Cajazeira.
At night around the camp-fire my Brazilian
companions often spoke of the first explorers of this
vast wilderness of western Brazil men whose
very names are now hardly known, but who did each his
part in opening the country which will some day see
such growth and development. Among the most notable
of them was a Portuguese, Ricardo Franco, who spent
forty years at the work, during the last quarter of
the eighteenth and the opening years of the nineteenth
centuries. He ascended for long distances the
Xingu and the Tapajos, and went up the Madeira and
Guapore, crossing to the head-waters of the Paraguay
and partially exploring there also. He worked
among and with the Indians, much as Mungo Park worked
with the natives of West Africa, having none of the
aids, instruments, and comforts with which even the
hardiest of modern explorers are provided. He
was one of the men who established the beginnings
of the province of Matto Grosso. For many years
the sole method of communication between this remote
interior province and civilization was by the long,
difficult, and perilous route which led up the Amazon
and Madeira; and its then capital, the town of Matto
Grosso, the seat of the captain-general, with its palace,
cathedral, and fortress, was accordingly placed far
to the west, near the Guapore. When less circuitous
lines of communication were established farther eastward
the old capital was abandoned, and the tropic wilderness
surged over the lonely little town. The tomb of
the old colonial explorer still stands in the ruined
cathedral, where the forest has once more come to
its own. But civilization is again advancing
to reclaim the lost town and to revive the memory of
the wilderness wanderer who helped to found it.
Colonel Rondon has named a river after Franco; a range
of mountains has also been named after him; and the
colonel, acting for the Brazilian Government, has
established a telegraph station in what was once the
palace of the captain-general.
Our northward trail led along the
high ground a league or two to the east of the northward-flowing
Rio Sacre. Each night we camped on one of the
small tributary brooks that fed it. Fiala, Kermit,
and I occupied one tent. In the daytime the “pium”
flies, vicious little sand-flies, became bad enough
to make us finally use gloves and head-nets.
There were many heavy rains, which made the travelling
hard for the mules. The soil was more often clay
than sand, and it was slippery when wet. The
weather was overcast, and there was usually no oppressive
heat even at noon. At intervals along the trail
we came on the staring skull and bleached skeleton
of a mule or ox. Day after day we rode forward
across endless flats of grass and of low open scrubby
forest, the trees standing far apart and in most places
being but little higher than the head of a horseman.
Some of them carried blossoms, white, orange, yellow,
pink; and there were many flowers, the most beautiful
being the morning-glories. Among the trees were
bastard rubber-trees, and dwarf palmetto; if the latter
grew more than a few feet high their tops were torn
and dishevelled by the wind. There was very little
bird or mammal life; there were few long vistas, for
in most places it was not possible to see far among
the gray, gnarled trunks of the wind-beaten little
trees. Yet the desolate landscape had a certain
charm of its own, although not a charm that would
be felt by any man who does not take pleasure in mere
space, and freedom and wildness, and in plains standing
empty to the sun, the wind, and the rain. The
country bore some resemblance to the country west
of Redjaf on the White Nile, the home of the giant
eland; only here there was no big game, no chance
of seeing the towering form of the giraffe, the black
bulk of elephant or buffalo, the herds of straw-colored
hartebeests, or the ghostly shimmer of the sun glinting
on the coats of roan and eland as they vanished silently
in the gray sea of withered scrub.
One feature in common with the African
landscape was the abundance of ant-hills, some as
high as a man. They were red in the clay country,
gray where it was sandy; and the dirt houses were also
in trees, while their raised tunnels traversed trees
and ground alike. At some of the camping-places
we had to be on our watch against the swarms of leaf-carrying
ants. These are so called in the books the
Brazilians call them “carregadores,” or
porters because they are always carrying
bits of leaves and blades of grass to their underground
homes. They are inveterate burden-bearers, and
they industriously cut into pieces and carry off any
garment they can get at; and we had to guard our shoes
and clothes from them, just as we had often had to
guard all our belongings against the termites.
These ants did not bite us; but we encountered huge
black ants, an inch and a quarter long, which were
very vicious, and their bite was not only painful but
quite poisonous. Praying-mantes were common,
and one evening at supper one had a comical encounter
with a young dog, a jovial near-puppy, of Colonel
Rondon’s, named Cartucho. He had been
christened the jolly-cum-pup, from a character in
one of Frank Stockton’s stories, which I suppose
are now remembered only by elderly people, and by them
only if they are natives of the United States.
Cartucho was lying with his head on the ox-hide
that served as table, waiting with poorly dissembled
impatience for his share of the banquet. The mantis
flew down on the ox-hide and proceeded to crawl over
it, taking little flights from one corner to another;
and whenever it thought itself menaced it assumed
an attitude of seeming devotion and real defiance.
Soon it lit in front of Cartucho’s nose.
Cartucho cocked his big ears forward, stretched
his neck, and cautiously sniffed at the new arrival,
not with any hostile design, but merely to find out
whether it would prove to be a playmate. The
mantis promptly assumed an attitude of prayer.
This struck Cartucho as both novel and interesting,
and he thrust his sniffing black nose still nearer.
The mantis dexterously thrust forward first one and
then the other armed fore leg, touching the intrusive
nose, which was instantly jerked back and again slowly
and inquiringly brought forward. Then the mantis
suddenly flew in Cartucho’s face, whereupon
Cartucho, with a smothered yelp of dismay, almost
turned a back somersault; and the triumphant mantis
flew back to the middle of the ox-hide, among the
plates, where it reared erect and defied the laughing
and applauding company.
On the morning of the 29th we were
rather late in starting, because the rain had continued
through the night into the morning, drenching everything.
After nightfall there had been some mosquitoes, and
the piums were a pest during daylight; where one bites
it leaves a tiny black spot on the skin which lasts
for several weeks. In the slippery mud one of
the pack-mules fell and injured itself so that it had
to be abandoned. Soon after starting we came
on the telegraph-line, which runs from Cuyaba.
This was the first time we had seen it. Two Parecis
Indians joined us, leading a pack-bullock. They
were dressed in hat, shirt, trousers, and sandals,
precisely like the ordinary Brazilian caboclos, as
the poor backwoods peasants, usually with little white
blood in them, are colloquially and half-derisively
styled caboclo being originally a Guarany
word meaning “naked savage.” These
two Indians were in the employ of the Telegraphic
Commission, and had been patrolling the telegraph-line.
The bullock carried their personal belongings and
the tools with which they could repair a break.
The commission pays the ordinary Indian worker 66
cents a day; a very good worker gets $1, and the chief
$1.66. No man gets anything unless he works.
Colonel Rondon, by just, kindly, and understanding
treatment of these Indians, who previously had often
been exploited and maltreated by rubber-gatherers,
has made them the loyal friends of the government.
He has gathered them at the telegraph stations, where
they cultivate fields of mandioc, beans, potatoes,
maize, and other vegetables, and where he is introducing
them to stock-raising; and the entire work of guarding
and patrolling the line is theirs.
After six hours’ march we came
to the crossing of the Rio Sacre at the beautiful
waterfall appropriately called the Salto Bello.
This is the end of the automobile road. Here
there is a small Parecis village. The men of
the village work the ferry by which everything is taken
across the deep and rapid river. The ferry-boat
is made of planking placed on three dugout canoes,
and runs on a trolley. Before crossing we enjoyed
a good swim in the swift, clear, cool water. The
Indian village, where we camped, is placed on a jutting
tongue of land round which the river sweeps just before
it leaps from the over-hanging precipice. The
falls themselves are very lovely. Just above
them is a wooded island, but the river joins again
before it races forward for the final plunge.
There is a sheer drop of forty or fifty yards, with
a breadth two or three times as great; and the volume
of water is large. On the left or hither bank
a cliff extends for several hundred yards below the
falls. Green vines have flung themselves down
over its face, and they are met by other vines thrusting
upward from the mass of vegetation at its foot, glistening
in the perpetual mist from the cataract, and clothing
even the rock surfaces in vivid green. The river,
after throwing itself over the rock wall, rushes off
in long curves at the bottom of a thickly wooded ravine,
the white water churning among the black boulders.
There is a perpetual rainbow at the foot of the falls.
The masses of green water that are hurling themselves
over the brink dissolve into shifting, foaming columns
of snowy lace.
On the edge of the cliff below the
falls Colonel Rondon had placed benches, giving a
curious touch of rather conventional tourist-civilization
to this cataract far out in the lonely wilderness.
It is well worth visiting for its beauty. It
is also of extreme interest because of the promise
it holds for the future. Lieutenant Lyra informed
me that they had calculated that this fall would furnish
thirty-six thousand horse-power. Eight miles off
we were to see another fall of much greater height
and power. There are many rivers in this region
which would furnish almost unlimited motive force to
populous manufacturing communities. The country
round about is healthy. It is an upland region
of good climate; we were visiting it in the rainy
season, the season when the nights are far less cool
than in the dry season, and yet we found it delightful.
There is much fertile soil in the neighborhood of
the streams, and the teeming lowlands of the Amazon
and the Paraguay could readily and with
immense advantage to both sides be made
tributary to an industrial civilization seated on
these highlands. A telegraph-line has been built
to and across them. A rail-road should follow.
Such a line could be easily built, for there are no
serious natural obstacles. In advance of its
construction a trolley-line could be run from Cuyaba
to the falls, using the power furnished by the latter.
Once this is done the land will offer extraordinary
opportunities to settlers of the right kind:
to home-makers and to enterprising business men of
foresight, coolness, and sagacity who are willing to
work with the settlers, the immigrants, the home-makers,
for an advantage which shall be mutual.
The Parecis Indians, whom we met here,
were exceedingly interesting. They were to all
appearance an unusually cheerful, good-humored, pleasant-natured
people. Their teeth were bad; otherwise they appeared
strong and vigorous, and there were plenty of children.
The colonel was received as a valued friend and as
a leader who was to be followed and obeyed. He
is raising them by degrees the only way
by which to make the rise permanent. In this
village he has got them to substitute for the flimsy
Indian cabins houses of the type usual among the poorer
field laborers and back-country dwellers in Brazil.
These houses have roofs of palm thatch, steeply pitched.
They are usually open at the sides, consisting merely
of a framework of timbers, with a wall at the back;
but some have the ordinary four walls, of erect palm-logs.
The hammocks are slung in the houses, and the cooking
is also done in them, with pots placed on small open
fires, or occasionally in a kind of clay oven.
The big gourds for water, and the wicker baskets, are
placed on the ground, or hung on the poles.
The men had adopted, and were wearing,
shirts and trousers, but the women had made little
change in their clothing. A few wore print dresses,
but obviously only for ornament. Most of them,
especially the girls and young married women, wore
nothing but a loin-cloth in addition to bead necklaces
and bracelets. The nursing mothers and
almost all the mothers were nursing sometimes
carried the child slung against their side of hip,
seated in a cloth belt, or sling, which went over
the opposite shoulder of the mother. The women
seemed to be well treated, although polygamy is practised.
The children were loved by every one; they were petted
by both men and women, and they behaved well to one
another, the boys not seeming to bully the girls or
the smaller boys. Most of the children were naked,
but the girls early wore the loin-cloth; and some,
both of the little boys and the little girls, wore
colored print garments, to the evident pride of themselves
and their parents. In each house there were several
families, and life went on with no privacy but with
good humor, consideration, and fundamentally good
manners. The man or woman who had nothing to do
lay in a hammock or squatted on the ground leaning
against a post or wall. The children played together,
or lay in little hammocks, or tagged round after their
mothers; and when called they came trustfully up to
us to be petted or given some small trinket; they were
friendly little souls, and accustomed to good treatment.
One woman was weaving a cloth, another was making
a hammock; others made ready melons and other vegetables
and cooked them over tiny fires. The men, who
had come in from work at the ferry or along the telegraph-lines,
did some work themselves, or played with the children;
one cut a small boy’s hair, and then had his
own hair cut by a friend. But the absorbing amusement
of the men was an extraordinary game of ball.
In our family we have always relished
Oliver Herford’s nonsense rhymes, including
the account of Willie’s displeasure with his
goat:
“I do not like my billy goat,
I wish that he was dead;
Because he kicked me, so he did,
He kicked me with his head.”
Well, these Parecis Indians enthusiastically
play football with their heads. The game is not
only native to them, but I have never heard or read
of its being played by any other tribe or people.
They use a light hollow rubber ball, of their own
manufacture. It is circular and about eight inches
in diameter. The players are divided into two
sides, and stationed much as in association football,
and the ball is placed on the ground to be put in
play as in football. Then a player runs forward,
throws himself flat on the ground, and butts the ball
toward the opposite side. This first butt, when
the ball is on the ground, never lifts it much and
it rolls and bounds toward the opponents. One
or two of the latter run toward it; one throws himself
flat on his face and butts the ball back. Usually
this butt lifts it, and it flies back in a curve well
up in the air; and an opposite player, rushing toward
it, catches it on his head with such a swing of his
brawny neck, and such precision and address that the
ball bounds back through the air as a football soars
after a drop-kick. If the ball flies off to one
side or the other it is brought back, and again put
in play. Often it will be sent to and fro a dozen
times, from head to head, until finally it rises with
such a sweep that it passes far over the heads of
the opposite players and descends behind them.
Then shrill, rolling cries of good-humored triumph
arise from the victors; and the game instantly begins
again with fresh zest. There are, of course,
no such rules as in a specialized ball-game of civilization;
and I saw no disputes. There may be eight or ten,
or many more, players on each side. The ball
is never touched with the hands or feet, or with anything
except the top of the head. It is hard to decide
whether to wonder most at the dexterity and strength
with which it is hit or butted with the head, as it
comes down through the air, or at the reckless speed
and skill with which the players throw themselves
headlong on the ground to return the ball if it comes
low down. Why they do not grind off their noses
I cannot imagine. Some of the players hardly
ever failed to catch and return the ball if it came
in their neighborhood, and with such a vigorous toss
of the head that it often flew in a great curve for
a really astonishing distance.
That night a pack-ox got into the
tent in which Kermit and I were sleeping, entering
first at one end and then at the other. It is
extraordinary that he did not waken us; but we slept
undisturbed while the ox deliberately ate our shirts,
socks, and underclothes! It chewed them into
rags. One of my socks escaped, and my undershirt,
although chewed full of holes, was still good for
some weeks’ wear; but the other things were
in fragments.
In the morning Colonel Rondon arranged
for us to have breakfast over on the benches under
the trees by the waterfall, whose roar, lulled to
a thunderous murmur, had been in our ears before we
slept and when we waked. There could have been
no more picturesque place for the breakfast of such
a party as ours. All travellers who really care
to see what is most beautiful and most characteristic
of the far interior of South America should in their
journey visit this region, and see the two great waterfalls.
They are even now easy of access; and as soon as the
traffic warrants it they will be made still more so;
then, from Sao Luis Caceres, they will be speedily
reached by light steamboat up the Sepotuba and by
a day or two’s automobile ride, with a couple
of days on horse-back in between.
The colonel held a very serious council
with the Parecis Indians over an incident which caused
him grave concern. One of the commission’s
employees, a negro, had killed a wild Nhambiquara Indian;
but it appeared that he had really been urged on and
aided by the Parecis, as the members of the tribe
to which the dead Indian belonged were much given
to carrying off the Parecis women and in other ways
making themselves bad neighbors. The colonel
tried hard to get at the truth of the matter; he went
to the biggest Indian house, where he sat in a hammock an
Indian child cuddling solemnly up to him, by the way
while the Indians sat in other hammocks, and stood
round about; but it was impossible to get an absolutely
frank statement.
It appeared, however, that the Nhambiquaras
had made a descent on the Parecis village in the momentary
absence of the men of the village; but the latter,
notified by the screaming of the women, had returned
in time to rescue them. The negro was with them
and, having a good rifle, he killed one of the aggressors.
The Parecis were, of course, in the right, but the
colonel could not afford to have his men take sides
in a tribal quarrel.
It was only a two hours’ march
across to the Papagaio at the Falls of Utiarity, so
named by their discoverer, Colonel Rondon, after the
sacred falcon of the Parecis. On the way we passed
our Indian friends, themselves bound thither; both
the men and the women bore burdens the
burdens of some of the women, poor things, were heavy and
even the small naked children carried the live hens.
At Utiarity there is a big Parecis settlement and
a telegraph station kept by one of the employees of
the commission. His pretty brown wife is acting
as schoolmistress to a group of little Parecis girls.
The Parecis chief has been made a major and wears
a uniform accordingly. The commission has erected
good buildings for its own employees and has superintended
the erection of good houses for the Indians. Most
of the latter still prefer the simplicity of the loin-cloth,
in their ordinary lives, but they proudly wore their
civilized clothes in our honor. When in the late
afternoon the men began to play a regular match game
of head-ball, with a scorer or umpire to keep count,
they soon discarded most of their clothes, coming
down to nothing but trousers or a loin-cloth.
Two or three of them had their faces stained with red
ochre. Among the women and children looking on
were a couple of little girls who paraded about on
stilts.
The great waterfall was half a mile
below us. Lovely though we had found Salto Bello,
these falls were far superior in beauty and majesty.
They are twice as high and twice as broad; and the
lay of the land is such that the various landscapes
in which the waterfall is a feature are more striking.
A few hundred yards above the falls the river turns
at an angle and widens. The broad, rapid shallows
are crested with whitecaps. Beyond this wide
expanse of flecked and hurrying water rise the mist
columns of the cataract; and as these columns are
swayed and broken by the wind the forest appears through
and between them. From below the view is one of
singular grandeur. The fall is over a shelving
ledge of rock which goes in a nearly straight line
across the river’s course. But at the left
there is a salient in the cliff-line, and here accordingly
a great cataract of foaming water comes down almost
as a separate body, in advance of the line of the
main fall. I doubt whether, excepting, of course,
Niagara, there is a waterfall in North America which
outranks this if both volume and beauty are considered.
Above the fall the river flows through a wide valley
with gently sloping sides. Below, it slips along,
a torrent of white-green water, at the bottom of a
deep gorge; and the sides of the gorge are clothed
with a towering growth of tropical forest.
Next morning the cacique of these
Indians, in his major’s uniform, came to breakfast,
and bore himself with entire propriety. It was
raining heavily it rained most of the time and
a few minutes previously I had noticed the cacique’s
two wives, with three or four other young women, going
out to the mandioc fields. It was a picturesque
group. The women were all mothers, and each carried
a nursing child. They wore loin-cloths or short
skirts. Each carried on her back a wickerwork
basket supported by a head-strap which went around
her forehead. Each carried a belt slung diagonally
across her body, over her right shoulder; in this
the child was carried, against and perhaps astride
of her left hip. They were comely women, who did
not look jaded or cowed; and they laughed cheerfully
and nodded to us as they passed through the rain,
on their way to the fields. But the contrast
between them and the chief in his soldier’s uniform
seated at breakfast was rather too striking; and incidentally
it etched in bold lines the folly of those who idealize
the life of even exceptionally good and pleasant-natured
savages.
Although it was the rainy season,
the trip up to this point had not been difficult,
and from May to October, when the climate is dry and
at its best, there would be practically no hardship
at all for travellers and visitors. This is a
healthy plateau. But, of course, the men who
do the first pioneering, even in country like this,
encounter dangers and run risks; and they make payment
with their bodies. At more than one halting-place
we had come across the forlorn grave of some soldier
or laborer of the commission. The grave-mound
lay within a rude stockade; and an uninscribed wooden
cross, gray and weather-beaten, marked the last resting-place
of the unknown and forgotten man beneath, the man
who had paid with his humble life the cost of pushing
the frontier of civilization into the wild savagery
of the wilderness. Farther west the conditions
become less healthy. At this station Colonel
Rondon received news of sickness and of some deaths
among the employees of the commission in the country
to the westward, which we were soon to enter.
Beriberi and malignant malarial fever were the diseases
which claimed the major number of the victims.
Surely these are “the men who
do the work for which they draw the wage.”
Kermit had with him the same copy of Kipling’s
poems which he had carried through Africa. At
these falls there was one sunset of angry splendor;
and we contrasted this going down of the sun, through
broken rain-clouds and over leagues of wet tropical
forest, with the desert sunsets we had seen in Arizona
and Sonora, and along the Guaso Nyiro north and
west of Mount Kenia, when the barren mountains were
changed into flaming “ramparts of slaughter and
peril” standing above “the wine-dark flats
below.”
It rained during most of the day after
our arrival at Utiarity. Whenever there was any
let-up the men promptly came forth from their houses
and played head-ball with the utmost vigor; and we
would listen to their shrill undulating cries of applause
and triumph until we also grew interested and strolled
over to look on. They are more infatuated with
the game than an American boy is with baseball or football.
It is an extraordinary thing that this strange and
exciting game should be played by, and only by, one
little tribe of Indians in what is almost the very
centre of South America. If any traveller or ethnologist
knows of a tribe elsewhere that plays a similar game,
I wish he would let me know. To play it demands
great activity, vigor, skill, and endurance.
Looking at the strong, supple bodies of the players,
and at the number of children roundabout, it seemed
as if the tribe must be in vigorous health; yet the
Parecis have decreased in numbers, for measles and
smallpox have been fatal to them.
By the evening the rain was coming
down more heavily than ever. It was not possible
to keep the moisture out of our belongings; everything
became mouldy except what became rusty. It rained
all that night; and day-light saw the downpour continuing
with no prospect of cessation. The pack-mules
could not have gone on with the march; they were already
rather done up by their previous ten days’ labor
through rain and mud, and it seemed advisable to wait
until the weather became better before attempting
to go forward. Moreover, there had been no chance
to take the desired astronomical observations.
There was very little grass for the mules; but there
was abundance of a small-leaved plant eight or ten
inches high unfortunately, not very nourishing on
which they fed greedily. In such weather and over
such muddy trails oxen travel better than mules.
In spite of the weather Cherrie and
Miller, whom, together with Father Zahm and Sigg,
we had found awaiting us, made good collections of
birds and mammals. Among the latter were opossums
and mice that were new to them. The birds included
various forms so unlike our home birds that the enumeration
of their names would mean nothing. One of the
most interesting was a large black-and-white woodpecker,
the white predominating in the plumage. Several
of these woodpeckers were usually found together.
They were showy, noisy, and restless, and perched
on twigs, in ordinary bird fashion, at least as often
as they clung to the trunks in orthodox woodpecker
style. The prettiest bird was a tiny manakin,
coal-black, with a red-and-orange head.
On February 2 the rain let up, although
the sky remained overcast and there were occasional
showers. I walked off with my rifle for a couple
of leagues; at that distance, from a slight hillock,
the mist columns of the falls were conspicuous in
the landscape. The only mammal I saw on the walk
was a rather hairy armadillo, with a flexible tail,
which I picked up and brought back to Miller it
showed none of the speed of the nine-banded armadillos
we met on our jaguar-hunt. Judging by its actions,
as it trotted about before it saw me, it must be diurnal
in habits. It was new to the collection.
I spent much of the afternoon by the
waterfall. Under the overcast sky the great cataract
lost the deep green and fleecy-white of the sunlit
falling waters. Instead it showed opaline hues
and tints of topaz and amethyst. At all times,
and under all lights, it was majestic and beautiful.
Colonel Rondon had given the Indians
various presents, those for the women including calico
prints, and, what they especially prized, bottles
of scented oil, from Paris, for their hair. The
men held a dance in the late afternoon. For this
occasion most, but not all, of them cast aside their
civilized clothing, and appeared as doubtless they
would all have appeared had none but themselves been
present. They were absolutely naked except for
a beaded string round the waist. Most of them
were spotted and dashed with red paint, and on one
leg wore anklets which rattled. A number carried
pipes through which they blew a kind of deep stifled
whistle in time to the dancing. One of them had
his pipe leading into a huge gourd, which gave out
a hollow, moaning boom. Many wore two red or
green or yellow macaw feathers in their hair, and
one had a macaw feather stuck transversely through
the septum of his nose. They circled slowly round
and round, chanting and stamping their feet, while
the anklet rattles clattered and the pipes droned.
They advanced to the wall of one of the houses, again
and again chanting and bowing before it; I was told
this was a demand for drink. They entered one
house and danced in a ring around the cooking-fire
in the middle of the earth floor; I was told that they
were then reciting the deeds of mighty hunters and
describing how they brought in the game. They
drank freely from gourds and pannikins of a fermented
drink made from mandioc which were brought out to them.
During the first part of the dance the women remained
in the houses, and all the doors and windows were
shut and blankets hung to prevent the possibility
of seeing out. But during the second part all
the women and girls came out and looked on. They
were themselves to have danced when the men had finished,
but were overcome with shyness at the thought of dancing
with so many strangers looking on. The children
played about with unconcern throughout the ceremony,
one of them throwing high in the air, and again catching
in his hands, a loaded feather, a kind of shuttlecock.
In the evening the growing moon shone
through the cloud-rack. Anything approaching
fair weather always put our men in good spirits; and
the muleteers squatted in a circle, by a fire near
a pile of packs, and listened to a long monotonously
and rather mournfully chanted song about a dance and
a love-affair. We ourselves worked busily with
our photographs and our writing. There was so
much humidity in the air that everything grew damp
and stayed damp, and mould gathered quickly.
At this season it is a country in which writing, taking
photographs, and preparing specimens are all works
of difficulty, at least so far as concerns preserving
and sending home the results of the labor; and a man’s
clothing is never really dry. From here Father
Zahm returned to Tapirapoan, accompanied by Sigg.