<h2> CHAPTER II </h2>
<p>It is fortunate that casserie is manufactured by an extremely slow,
laborious process, since the women, who are the drink-makers, in the first
place have to reduce the material (cassava bread) to a pulp by means of
their own molars, after which it is watered down and put away in troughs
to ferment. Great is the diligence of these willing slaves; but, work how
they will, they can only satisfy their lords' love of a big drink at long
intervals. Such a function as that at which I had assisted is therefore
the result of much patient mastication and silent fermentation—the
delicate flower of a plant that has been a long time growing.</p>
<p>Having now established myself as one of the family, at the cost of some
disagreeable sensations and a pang or two of self-disgust, I resolved to
let nothing further trouble me at Parahuari, but to live the easy,
careless life of the idle man, joining in hunting and fishing expeditions
when in the mood; at other times enjoying existence in my own way, apart
from my fellows, conversing with wild nature in that solitary place.
Besides Runi, there were, in our little community, two oldish men, his
cousins I believe, who had wives and grown-up children. Another family
consisted of Piake, Runi's nephew, his brother Kua-ko—about whom
there will be much to say—and a sister Oalava. Piake had a wife and
two children; Kua-ko was unmarried and about nineteen or twenty years old;
Oalava was the youngest of the three. Last of all, who should perhaps have
been first, was Runi's mother, called Cla-cla, probably in imitation of
the cry of some bird, for in these latitudes a person is rarely, perhaps
never, called by his or her real name, which is a secret jealously
preserved, even from near relations. I believe that Cla-cla herself was
the only living being who knew the name her parents had bestowed on her at
birth. She was a very old woman, spare in figure, brown as old sun-baked
leather, her face written over with innumerable wrinkles, and her long
coarse hair perfectly white; yet she was exceedingly active, and seemed to
do more work than any other woman in the community; more than that, when
the day's toil was over and nothing remained for the others to do, then
Cla-cla's night work would begin; and this was to talk all the others, or
at all events all the men, to sleep. She was like a self-regulating
machine, and punctually every evening, when the door was closed, and the
night fire made up, and every man in his hammock, she would set herself
going, telling the most interminable stories, until the last listener was
fast asleep; later in the night, if any man woke with a snort or grunt,
off she would go again, taking up the thread of the tale where she had
dropped it.</p>
<p>Old Cla-cla amused me very much, by night and day, and I seldom tired of
watching her owlish countenance as she sat by the fire, never allowing it
to sink low for want of fuel; always studying the pot when it was on to
simmer, and at the same time attending to the movements of the others
about her, ready at a moment's notice to give assistance or to dart out on
a stray chicken or refractory child.</p>
<p>So much did she amuse me, although without intending it, that I thought it
would be only fair, in my turn, to do something for her entertainment. I
was engaged one day in shaping a wooden foil with my knife, whistling and
singing snatches of old melodies at my work, when all at once I caught
sight of the ancient dame looking greatly delighted, chuckling internally,
nodding her head, and keeping time with her hands. Evidently she was able
to appreciate a style of music superior to that of the aboriginals, and
forthwith I abandoned my foils for the time and set about the manufacture
of a guitar, which cost me much labour and brought out more ingenuity than
I had ever thought myself capable of. To reduce the wood to the right
thinness, then to bend and fasten it with wooden pegs and with gums, to
add the arm, frets, keys, and finally the catgut strings—those of
another kind being out of the question—kept me busy for some days.
When completed it was a rude instrument, scarcely tunable; nevertheless
when I smote the strings, playing lively music, or accompanied myself in
singing, I found that it was a great success, and so was as much pleased
with my own performance as if I had had the most perfect guitar ever made
in old Spain. I also skipped about the floor, strum-strumming at the same
time, instructing them in the most lively dances of the whites, in which
the feet must be as nimble as the player's fingers. It is true that these
exhibitions were always witnessed by the adults with a profound gravity,
which would have disheartened a stranger to their ways. They were a set of
hollow bronze statues that looked at me, but I knew that the living
animals inside of them were tickled at my singing, strumming, and
pirouetting. Cla-cla was, however, an exception, and encouraged me not
infrequently by emitting a sound, half cackle and half screech, by way of
laughter; for she had come to her second childhood, or, at all events, had
dropped the stolid mask which the young Guayana savage, in imitation of
his elders, adjusts to his face at about the age of twelve, to wear it
thereafter all his life long, or only to drop it occasionally when very
drunk. The youngsters also openly manifested their pleasure, although, as
a rule, they try to restrain their feelings in the presence of grown-up
people, and with them I became a greet favourite.</p>
<p>By and by I returned to my foil-making, and gave them fencing lessons, and
sometimes invited two or three of the biggest boys to attack me
simultaneously, just to show how easily I could disarm and kill them. This
practice excited some interest in Kua-ko, who had a little more of
curiosity and geniality and less of the put-on dignity of the others, and
with him I became most intimate. Fencing with Kua-ko was highly amusing:
no sooner was he in position, foil in hand, than all my instructions were
thrown to the winds, and he would charge and attack me in his own
barbarous manner, with the result that I would send his foil spinning a
dozen yards away, while he, struck motionless, would gaze after it in
open-mouthed astonishment.</p>
<p>Three weeks had passed by not unpleasantly when, one morning, I took it
into my head to walk by myself across that somewhat sterile savannah west
of the village and stream, which ended, as I have said, in a long, low,
stony ridge. From the village there was nothing to attract the eye in that
direction; but I wished to get a better view of that great solitary hill
or mountain of Ytaioa, and of the cloud-like summits beyond it in the
distance. From the stream the ground rose in a gradual slope, and the
highest part of the ridge for which I made was about two miles from the
starting-point—a parched brown plain, with nothing growing on it but
scattered tussocks of sere hair-like grass.</p>
<p>When I reached the top and could see the country beyond, I was agreeably
disappointed at the discovery that the sterile ground extended only about
a mile and a quarter on the further side, and was succeeded by a forest—a
very inviting patch of woodland covering five or six square miles,
occupying a kind of oblong basin, extending from the foot of Ytaioa on the
north to a low range of rocky hills on the south. From the wooded basin
long narrow strips of forest ran out in various directions like the arms
of an octopus, one pair embracing the slopes of Ytaioa, another much
broader belt extending along a valley which cut through the ridge of hills
on the south side at right angles and was lost to sight beyond; far away
in the west and south and north distant mountains appeared, not in regular
ranges, but in groups or singly, or looking like blue banked-up clouds on
the horizon.</p>
<p>Glad at having discovered the existence of this forest so near home, and
wondering why my Indian friends had never taken me to it nor ever went out
on that side, I set forth with a light heart to explore it for myself,
regretting only that I was without a proper weapon for procuring game. The
walk from the ridge over the savannah was easy, as the barren, stony
ground sloped downwards the whole way. The outer part of the wood on my
side was very open, composed in most part of dwarf trees that grow on
stony soil, and scattered thorny bushes bearing a yellow pea-shaped
blossom. Presently I came to thicker wood, where the trees were much
taller and in greater variety; and after this came another sterile strip,
like that on the edge of the wood where stone cropped out from the ground
and nothing grew except the yellow-flowered thorn bushes. Passing this
sterile ribbon, which seemed to extend to a considerable distance north
and south, and was fifty to a hundred yards wide, the forest again became
dense and the trees large, with much undergrowth in places obstructing the
view and making progress difficult.</p>
<p>I spent several hours in this wild paradise, which was so much more
delightful than the extensive gloomier forests I had so often penetrated
in Guayana; for here, if the trees did not attain to such majestic
proportions, the variety of vegetable forms was even greater; as far as I
went it was nowhere dark under the trees, and the number of lovely
parasites everywhere illustrated the kindly influence of light and air.
Even where the trees were largest the sunshine penetrated, subdued by the
foliage to exquisite greenish-golden tints, filling the wide lower spaces
with tender half-lights, and faint blue-and-gray shadows. Lying on my back
and gazing up, I felt reluctant to rise and renew my ramble. For what a
roof was that above my head! Roof I call it, just as the poets in their
poverty sometimes describe the infinite ethereal sky by that word; but it
was no more roof-like and hindering to the soaring spirit than the higher
clouds that float in changing forms and tints, and like the foliage
chasten the intolerable noonday beams. How far above me seemed that leafy
cloudland into which I gazed! Nature, we know, first taught the architect
to produce by long colonnades the illusion of distance; but the
light-excluding roof prevents him from getting the same effect above. Here
Nature is unapproachable with her green, airy canopy, a sun-impregnated
cloud—cloud above cloud; and though the highest may be unreached by
the eye, the beams yet filter through, illuming the wide spaces beneath—chamber
succeeded by chamber, each with its own special lights and shadows. Far
above me, but not nearly so far as it seemed, the tender gloom of one such
chamber or space is traversed now by a golden shaft of light falling
through some break in the upper foliage, giving a strange glory to
everything it touches—projecting leaves, and beard-like tuft of
moss, and snaky bush-rope. And in the most open part of that most open
space, suspended on nothing to the eye, the shaft reveals a tangle of
shining silver threads—the web of some large tree-spider. These
seemingly distant yet distinctly visible threads serve to remind me that
the human artist is only able to get his horizontal distance by a
monotonous reduplication of pillar and arch, placed at regular intervals,
and that the least departure from this order would destroy the effect. But
Nature produces her effects at random, and seems only to increase the
beautiful illusion by that infinite variety of decoration in which she
revels, binding tree to tree in a tangle of anaconda-like lianas, and
dwindling down from these huge cables to airy webs and hair-like fibres
that vibrate to the wind of the passing insect's wing.</p>
<p>Thus in idleness, with such thoughts for company, I spent my time, glad
that no human being, savage or civilized, was with me. It was better to be
alone to listen to the monkeys that chattered without offending; to watch
them occupied with the unserious business of their lives. With that
luxuriant tropical nature, its green clouds and illusive aerial spaces,
full of mystery, they harmonized well in language, appearance, and motions—mountebank
angels, living their fantastic lives far above earth in a half-way heaven
of their own.</p>
<p>I saw more monkeys on that morning than I usually saw in the course of a
week's rambling. And other animals were seen; I particularly remember two
accouries I startled, that after rushing away a few yards stopped and
stood peering back at me as if not knowing whether to regard me as friend
or enemy. Birds, too, were strangely abundant; and altogether this struck
me as being the richest hunting-ground I had seen, and it astonished me to
think that the Indians of the village did not appear to visit it.</p>
<p>On my return in the afternoon I gave an enthusiastic account of my day's
ramble, speaking not of the things that had moved my soul, but only of
those which move the Guayana Indian's soul—the animal food he
craves, and which, one would imagine, Nature would prefer him to do
without, so hard he finds it to wrest a sufficiency from her. To my
surprise they shook their heads and looked troubled at what I said; and
finally my host informed me that the wood I had been in was a dangerous
place; that if they went there to hunt, a great injury would be done to
them; and he finished by advising me not to visit it again.</p>
<p>I began to understand from their looks and the old man's vague words that
their fear of the wood was superstitious. If dangerous creatures had
existed there tigers, or camoodis, or solitary murderous savages—they
would have said so; but when I pressed them with questions they could only
repeat that "something bad" existed in the place, that animals were
abundant there because no Indian who valued his life dared venture into
it. I replied that unless they gave me some more definite information I
should certainly go again and put myself in the way of the danger they
feared.</p>
<p>My reckless courage, as they considered it, surprised them; but they had
already begun to find out that their superstitions had no effect on me,
that I listened to them as to stories invented to amuse a child, and for
the moment they made no further attempt to dissuade me.</p>
<p>Next day I returned to the forest of evil report, which had now a new and
even greater charm—the fascination of the unknown and the
mysterious; still, the warning I had received made me distrustful and
cautious at first, for I could not help thinking about it. When we
consider how much of their life is passed in the woods, which become as
familiar to them as the streets of our native town to us, it seems almost
incredible that these savages have a superstitious fear of all forests,
fearing them as much, even in the bright light of day, as a nervous child
with memory filled with ghost-stories fears a dark room. But, like the
child in the dark room, they fear the forest only when alone in it, and
for this reason always hunt in couples or parties. What, then, prevented
them from visiting this particular wood, which offered so tempting a
harvest? The question troubled me not a little; at the same time I was
ashamed of the feeling, and fought against it; and in the end I made my
way to the same sequestered spot where I had rested so long on my previous
visit.</p>
<p>In this place I witnessed a new thing and had a strange experience.
Sitting on the ground in the shade of a large tree, I began to hear a
confused noise as of a coming tempest of wind mixed with shrill calls and
cries. Nearer and nearer it came, and at last a multitude of birds of many
kinds, but mostly small, appeared in sight swarming through the trees,
some running on the trunks and larger branches, others flitting through
the foliage, and many keeping on the wing, now hovering and now darting
this way or that. They were all busily searching for and pursuing the
insects, moving on at the same time, and in a very few minutes they had
finished examining the trees near me and were gone; but not satisfied with
what I had witnessed, I jumped up and rushed after the flock to keep it in
sight. All my caution and all recollection of what the Indians had said
was now forgot, so great was my interest in this bird-army; but as they
moved on without pause, they quickly left me behind, and presently my
career was stopped by an impenetrable tangle of bushes, vines, and roots
of large trees extending like huge cables along the ground. In the midst
of this leafy labyrinth I sat down on a projecting root to cool my blood
before attempting to make my way back to my former position. After that
tempest of motion and confused noises the silence of the forest seemed
very profound; but before I had been resting many moments it was broken by
a low strain of exquisite bird-melody, wonderfully pure and expressive,
unlike any musical sound I had ever heard before. It seemed to issue from
a thick cluster of broad leaves of a creeper only a few yards from where I
sat. With my eyes fixed on this green hiding-place I waited with suspended
breath for its repetition, wondering whether any civilized being had ever
listened to such a strain before. Surely not, I thought, else the fame of
so divine a melody would long ago have been noised abroad. I thought of
the rialejo, the celebrated organbird or flute-bird, and of the various
ways in which hearers are affected by it. To some its warbling is like the
sound of a beautiful mysterious instrument, while to others it seems like
the singing of a blithe-hearted child with a highly melodious voice. I had
often heard and listened with delight to the singing of the rialejo in the
Guayana forests, but this song, or musical phrase, was utterly unlike it
in character. It was pure, more expressive, softer—so low that at a
distance of forty yards I could hardly have heard it. But its greatest
charm was its resemblance to the human voice—a voice purified and
brightened to something almost angelic. Imagine, then, my impatience as I
sat there straining my sense, my deep disappointment when it was not
repeated! I rose at length very reluctantly and slowly began making my way
back; but when I had progressed about thirty yards, again the sweet voice
sounded just behind me, and turning quickly, I stood still and waited. The
same voice, but not the same song—not the same phrase; the notes
were different, more varied and rapidly enunciated, as if the singer had
been more excited. The blood rushed to my heart as I listened; my nerves
tingled with a strange new delight, the rapture produced by such music
heightened by a sense of mystery. Before many moments I heard it again,
not rapid now, but a soft warbling, lower than at first, infinitely sweet
and tender, sinking to lisping sounds that soon ceased to be audible; the
whole having lasted as long as it would take me to repeat a sentence of a
dozen words. This seemed the singer's farewell to me, for I waited and
listened in vain to hear it repeated; and after getting back to the
starting-point I sat for upwards of an hour, still hoping to hear it once
more!</p>
<p>The weltering sun at length compelled me to quit the wood, but not before
I had resolved to return the next morning and seek for the spot where I
had met with so enchanting an experience. After crossing the sterile belt
I have mentioned within the wood, and just before I came to the open outer
edge where the stunted trees and bushes die away on the border of the
savannah, what was my delight and astonishment at hearing the mysterious
melody once more! It seemed to issue from a clump of bushes close by; but
by this time I had come to the conclusion that there was a ventriloquism
in this woodland voice which made it impossible for me to determine its
exact direction. Of one thing I was, however, now quite convinced, and
that was that the singer had been following me all the time. Again and
again as I stood there listening it sounded, now so faint and apparently
far off as to be scarcely audible; then all at once it would ring out
bright and clear within a few yards of me, as if the shy little thing had
suddenly grown bold; but, far or near, the vocalist remained invisible,
and at length the tantalizing melody ceased altogether.</p>
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