Only after Diamante do you enter territory
inhabited by tigers, crocodiles and chiguires, a large
species of Linnaeus's genus Cavia
(capybara). We saw flocks of birds pressed against each
other flash across the sky like a black cloud changing shape
all the time. The river slowly grew wider. One of the banks is
usually arid and sandy due to flooding. The other is higher,
covered with full-grown trees. Sometimes the river is lined
with jungle on both sides and becomes a straight canal some
150 toises wide. The arrangement of the trees is remarkable.
First you see the sauso shrubs (Hermesia
castaneifolia), a hedge some 4 feet high as if cut by man.
Behind this hedge a brushwood of cedar, Brazil-wood and
gayac. Palms are rare; you see only scattered trunks of
corozo and thorny piritu. The large quadrupeds of these
regions, tigers, tapirs and peccaries, have opened passages in
the sauso hedge. They appear through these gaps to
drink water. They are not frightened of the canoes, so we see
them skirting the river until they disappear into the jungle
through a gap in the hedge. I confess that these often
repeated scenes greatly appeal to me. The pleasure comes not
solely from the curiosity a naturalist feels for the objects
of his studies, but also to a feeling common to all men
brought up in the customs of civilization. You find yourself
in a new world, in a wild, untamed nature. Sometimes it is a
jaguar, the beautiful American panther, on the banks;
sometimes it is the hocco (Crax alector) with
its black feathers and tufted head, slowly strolling along the
sauso hedge. All kinds of animals appear, one after the
other. 'Es como en el paradiso' ('It is like paradise')
our old Indian pilot said. Everything here reminds you of that
state of the ancient world revealed in venerable traditions
about the innocence and happiness of all people; but when
carefully observing the relationships between the animals you
see how they avoid and fear each other. The golden age has
ended. In this paradise of American jungles, as everywhere
else, a long, sad experience has taught all living beings that
gentleness is rarely linked to might. |