town of Zaraza. My friend, an officer in the army, was a leader
in the
conspiracy; and as I was the only son of a man who had
been greatly hated by the Minister of War, it became necessary
for us both to fly for our lives. In the circumstances we could
not look to be pardoned, even on the score of youth.
Our first decision was to escape to the sea-coast; but as the
risk of a journey to La Guayra, or any other port of embarkation
on the north side of the country, seemed too great, we made our
way in a
contrary direction to the Orinoco, and
downstream to
Angostura. Now, when we had reached this
comparatively safe
breathing-place--safe, at all events, for the moment--I changed
my mind about leaving or attempting to leave the country. Since
boyhood I had taken a very
peculiar interest in that vast and
almost unexplored territory we possess south of the Orinoco, with
its
countless unmapped rivers and trackless forests; and in its
savage inhabitants, with their ancient customs and character,
unadulterated by
contact with Europeans. To visit this primitive
wilderness had been a cherished dream; and I had to some extent
even prepared myself for such an adventure by mastering more than
one of the Indian dialects of the northern states of Venezuela.
And now,
finding myself on the south side of our great river,
with
unlimited time at my
disposal, I determined to
gratify this
wish. My
companion took his
departure towards the coast, while I
set about making preparations and
hunting up information from
those who had travelled in the
interior to trade with the
savages. I
decidedeventually to go back upstream and penetrate
to the
interior in the
western part of Guayana, and the Amazonian
territory bordering on Colombia and Brazil, and to return to
Angostura in about six months' time. I had no fear of being
arrested in the semi-independent and in most part
savage region,
as the Guayana authorities
concerned themselves little enough
about the political upheavals at Caracas.
The first five or six months I spent in Guayana, after leaving
the city of
refuge, were eventful enough to satisfy a moderately
adventurous spirit. A complaisant government employee at
Angostura had provided me with a
passport, in which it was set
down (for few to read) that my object in visiting the
interiorwas to collect information
concerning the native tribes, the
vegetable products of the country, and other knowledge which
would be of
advantage to the Republic; and the authorities were
requested to afford me
protection and
assist me in my pursuits.
I ascended the Orinoco, making
occasional expeditions to the
small Christian settlements in the neighbourhood of the right
bank, also to the Indian villages; and travelling in this way,
seeing and
learning much, in about three months I reached the
River Metal During this period I amused myself by keeping a
journal, a record of personal adventures, impressions of the
country and people, both semi-civilized and
savage; and as my
journal grew, I began to think that on my return at some future
time to Caracas, it might prove useful and interesting to the
public, and also
procure me fame; which thought proved
pleasurable and a great
incentive, so that I began to observe
things more
narrowly and to study expression. But the book was
not to be.
From the mouth of the Meta I journeyed on, intending to visit the
settlement of Atahapo, where the great River Guaviare, with other
rivers, empties itself into the Orinoco. But I was not destined
to reach it, for at the small settlement of Manapuri I fell ill
of a low fever; and here ended the first half-year of my
wanderings, about which no more need be told.
A more
miserable place than Manapuri for a man to be ill of a low
fever in could not well be imagined. The settlement,
composed of
mean hovels, with a few large structures of mud, or plastered
wattle, thatched with palm leaves, was surrounded by water,
marsh, and forest, the breeding-place of myriads of croaking
frogs and of clouds of mosquitoes; even to one in perfect health
existence in such a place would have been a burden. The
inhabitants mustered about eighty or ninety,
mostly Indians of
that
degenerate class frequently to be met with in small trading
outposts. The
savages of Guayana are great drinkers, but not
drunkards in our sense, since their fermented liquors
contain so
little
alcohol that inordinate quantities must be swallowed to
produce intoxication; in the settlements they prefer the white
man's more
potent poisons, with the result that in a small place
like Manapuri one can see enacted, as on a stage, the last act in
the great American
tragedy. To be succeeded,
doubtless, by other
and possibly greater tragedies. My thoughts at that period of
suffering were pessimistic in the
extreme. Sometimes, when the
almost
continuous rain held up for half a day, I would manage to
creep out a short distance; but I was almost past making any
exertion, scarcely caring to live, and
takingabsolutely no
interest in the news from Caracas, which reached me at long
intervals. At the end of two months, feeling a slight
improvement in my health, and with it a returning interest in
life and its affairs, it occurred to me to get out my diary and
write a brief
account of my
sojourn at Manapuri. I had placed it
for safety in a small deal box, lent to me for the purpose by a
Venezuelan
trader, an old
resident at the settlement, by name
Pantaleon--called by all Don Panta--one who
openly kept half a
dozen Indian wives in his house, and was noted for his dishonesty
and greed, but who had proved himself a good friend to me. The
box was in a corner of the
wretched palm-thatched hovel I
inhabited; but on
taking it out I discovered that for several
weeks the rain had been dripping on it, and that the manuscript
was reduced to a sodden pulp. I flung it upon the floor with a
curse and threw myself back on my bed with a groan.
In that desponding state I was found by my friend Panta, who was
constant in his visits at all hours; and when in answer to his
anxious inquiries I
pointed to the pulpy mass on the mud floor,
he turned it over with his foot, and then, bursting into a loud
laugh, kicked it out, remarking that he had
mistaken the object
for some unknown
reptile that had crawled in out of the rain. He
affected to be astonished that I should regret its loss. It was
all a true
narrative, he exclaimed; if I wished to write a book
for the stay-at-homes to read, I could easily
invent a thousand
lies far more entertaining than any real experiences. He had
come to me, he said, to propose something. He had lived twenty
years at that place, and had got accustomed to the
climate, but
it would not do for me to remain any longer if I wished to live.
I must go away at once to a different country--to the mountains,
where it was open and dry. "And if you want quinine when you are
there," he concluded, "smell the wind when it blows from the
south-west, and you will inhale it into your
system, fresh from
the forest." When I remarked despondingly that in my condition
it would be impossible to quit Manapuri, he went on to say that a
small party of Indians was now in the settlement; that they had
come, not only to trade, but to visit one of their own tribe, who
was his wife, purchased some years ago from her father. "And the
money she cost me I have never regretted to this day," said he,
"for she is a good wife not jealous," he added, with a curse on
all the others. These Indians came all the way from the
Queneveta mountains, and were of the Maquiritari tribe. He,
Panta, and, better still, his good wife would interest them on my
behalf, and for a
suitablereward they would take me by slow,
easy stages to their own country, where I would be treated well
and recover my health.
This proposal, after I had considered it well, produced so good
an effect on me that I not only gave a glad consent, but, on the
following day, I was able to get about and begin the preparations
for my journey with some spirit.
In about eight days I bade good-bye to my
generous friend Panta,
whom I regarded, after having seen much of him, as a kind of
savage beast that had
sprung on me, not to rend, but to rescue
from death; for we know that even cruel
savage brutes and evil
men have at times sweet, beneficent impulses, during which they
act in a way
contrary to their natures, like
passive agents of
some higher power. It was a
continual pain to travel in my weak