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<h2> CHAPTER IX. THE EVENING OF THE FIFTH OF JUNE </h2>
<p>WHILE THE master's house was being constructed, Joam Garral was also
busied in the arrangement of the out-buildings, comprising the kitchen,
and offices in which provisions of all kinds were intended to be stored.</p>
<p>In the first place, there was an important stock of the roots of that
little tree, some six or ten feet in height, which yields the manioc, and
which form the principal food of the inhabitants of these inter-tropical
countries. The root, very much like a long black radish, grows in clumps
like potatoes. If it is not poisonous in Africa, it is certain that in
South America it contains a more noxious juice, which it is necessary to
previously get rid of by pressure. When this result is obtained, the root
is reduced to flour, and is then used in many ways, even in the form of
tapioca, according to the fancy of the natives.</p>
<p>On board the jangada there was a huge pile of this useful product destined
for general consumption.</p>
<p>As for preserved meats, not forgetting a whole flock of sheep, kept in a
special stable built in the front, they consisted principally of a
quantity of the <i>"presunto"</i> hams of the district, which are of
first-class quality; but the guns of the young fellows and of some of the
Indians were reckoned on for additional supplies, excellent hunters as
they were, to whom there was likely to be no lack of game on the islands
and in the forests bordering on the stream. The river was expected to
furnish its daily quota; prawns, which ought rather to be called crawfish;
<i>"tambagus,"</i> the finest fish in the district, of a flavor superior
to that of salmon, to which it is often compared; <i>"pirarucus"</i> with
red scales, as large as sturgeons, which when salted are used in great
quantities throughout Brazil; <i>"candirus,"</i> awkward to capture, but
good to eat; <i>"piranhas,"</i> or devil-fish, striped with red bands, and
thirty inches long; turtles large and small, which are counted by
millions, and form so large a part of the food of the natives; some of
every one of these things it was hoped would figure in turn on the tables
of the master and his men.</p>
<p>And so each day shooting and fishing were to be regularly indulged in.</p>
<p>For beverages they had a good store of the best that country produced; <i>"caysuma"</i>
or <i>"machachera,"</i> from the Upper and Lower Amazon, an agreeable
liquor of slightly acidulated taste, which is distilled from the boiled
root of the sweet manioc; <i>"beiju,"</i> from Brazil, a sort of national
brandy, the <i>"chica"</i> of Peru; the <i>"mazato"</i> of the Ucayali,
extracted from the boiled fruits of the banana-tree, pressed and
fermented; <i>"guarana,"</i> a kind of paste made from the double almond
of the <i>"paulliniasorbilis,"</i> a genuine tablet of chocolate so far as
its color goes, which is reduced to a fine powder, and with the addition
of water yields an excellent drink.</p>
<p>And this was not all. There is in these countries a species of dark violet
wine, which is got from the juice of the palm, and the aromatic flavor of
this <i>"assais"</i> is greatly appreciated by the Brazilans, and of it
there were on board a respectable number of frasques (each holding a
little more than half a gallon), which would probably be emptied before
they arrived at Para.</p>
<p>The special cellar of the jangada did honor to Benito, who had been
appointed its commander-in-chief. Several hundred bottles of sherry, port,
and letubal recalled names dear to the earlier conquerors of South
America. In addition, the young butler had stored away certain demijohns,
holding half a dozen gallons each, of excellent <i>"tafia,"</i> a sugared
brandy a trifle more pronounced in taste than the national <i>beiju</i>.</p>
<p>As far as tobacco was concerned, there was none of that coarse kind which
usually contents the natives of the Amazonian basin. It all came direct
from Villa Bella da Imperatriz—or, in other words, fro the district
in which is grown the best tobacco in Central America.</p>
<p>The principal habitation, with its annexes—kitchen, offices, and
cellars—was placed in the rear—or, let us say, stern of the
craft—and formed a part reserved for the Garral family and their
personal servants.</p>
<p>In the center the huts for the Indians and the blacks had been erected.
The staff were thus placed under the same conditions as at the fazenda of
Iquitos, and would always be able to work under the direction of the
pilot.</p>
<p>To house the crew a good many huts were required, and these gave to the
jangada the appearance of a small village got adrift, and, to tell the
truth, it was a better built and better peopled village than many of those
on the Upper Amazon.</p>
<p>For the Indians Joam Garral had designed regular cabins—huts without
walls, with only light poles supporting the roof of foliage. The air
circulated freely throughout these open constructions and swung the
hammock suspended in the interior, and the natives, among whom were three
or four complete families, with women and children, were lodged as if they
were on shore.</p>
<p>The blacks here found their customary sheds. They differed from the cabins
by being closed in on their four faces, of which only one gave access to
the interior. The Indians, accustomed to live in the open air, free and
untrammeled, were not able to accustom themselves to the imprisonment of
the <i>ajoupas,</i> which agreed better with the life of the blacks.</p>
<p>In the bow regular warehouses had arisen, containing the goods which Joam
Garral was carrying to Belem at the same time as the products of his
forests.</p>
<p>There, in vast storerooms, under the direction of Benito, the rich cargo
had been placed with as much order as if it had been carefully stowed away
in a ship's hold.</p>
<p>In the first place, seven thousand arrobas of caoutchouc, each of about
thirty pounds, composed the most precious part of the cargo, for every
pound of it was worth from three to four francs. The jangada also took
fifty hundredweight of sarsaparilla, a smilax which forms an important
branch of foreign trade throughout the Amazon districts, and is getting
rarer and rarer along the banks of the river, so that the natives are very
careful to spare the stems when they gather them. Tonquin bans, known in
Brazil under the name of <i>"cumarus,"</i> and used in the manufacture of
certain essential oils; sassafras, from which is extracted a precious
balsam for wounds; bales of dyeing plants, cases of several gums, and a
quantity of precious woods, completed a well-adapted cargo for lucrative
and easy sale in the provinces of Para.</p>
<p>Some may feel astonished that the number of Indians and negroes embarked
were only sufficient to work the raft, and that a larger number were not
taken in case of an attack by the riverside Indians.</p>
<p>Such would have been useless. The natives of Central America are not to be
feared in the least, and the times are quite changed since it was
necessary to provide against their aggressions. The Indians along the
river belong to peaceable tribes, and the fiercest of them have retired
before the advancing civilization, and drawn further and further away from
the river and its tributaries. Negro deserters, escaped from the penal
colonies of Brazil, England, Holland, or France, are alone to be feared.
But there are only a small number of these fugitives, they only move in
isolated groups across the savannahs or the woods, and the jangada was, in
a measure, secured from any attack on the parts of the backwoodsmen.</p>
<p>On the other hand, there were a number of settlements on the river—towns,
villages, and missions. The immense stream no longer traverses a desert,
but a basin which is being colonized day by day. Danger was not taken into
consideration. There were no precautions against attacks.</p>
<p>To conclude our description of the jangada, we have only to speak of one
or two erections of different kinds which gave it a very picturesque
aspect.</p>
<p>In the bow was the cabin of the pilot—we say in the bow, and not at
the stern, where the helmsman is generally found. In navigating under such
circumstances a rudder is of no use. Long oars have no effect on a raft of
such dimensions, even when worked with a hundred sturdy arms. It was from
the sides, by means of long boathooks or props thrust against the bed of
the stream, that the jangada was kept in the current, and had its
direction altered when going astray. By this means they could range
alongside either bank, if they wished for any reason to come to a halt.
Three or four ubas, and two pirogues, with the necessary rigging, were
carried on board, and afforded easy communications with the banks. The
pilot had to look after the channels of the river, the deviations of the
current, the eddies which it was necessary to avoid, the creeks or bays
which afforded favorable anchorage, and to do this he had to be in the
bow.</p>
<p>If the pilot was the material director of this immense machine—for
can we not justly call it so?—another personage was its spiritual
director; this was Padre Passanha, who had charge of the mission at
Iquitos.</p>
<p>A religious family, like that of Joam Garral's, had availed themselves
enthusiastically of this occasion of taking him with them.</p>
<p>Padre Passanha, then aged seventy, was a man of great worth, full of
evangelical fervor, charitable and good, and in countries where the
representatives of religion are not always examples of the virtues, he
stood out as the accomplished type of those great missionaries who have
done so much for civilization in the interior of the most savage regions
of the world.</p>
<p>For fifty years Padre Passanha had lived at Iquitos, in the mission of
which he was the chief. He was loved by all, and worthily so. The Garral
family held him in great esteem; it was he who had married the daughter of
Farmer Magalha�s to the clerk who had been received at the fazenda. He had
known the children from birth; he had baptized them, educated them, and
hoped to give each of them the nuptial blessing.</p>
<p>The age of the padre did not allow of his exercising his important
ministry any longer. The horn of retreat for him had sounded; he was about
to be replaced at Iquitos by a younger missionary, and he was preparing to
return to Para, to end his days in one of those convents which are
reserved for the old servants of God.</p>
<p>What better occasion could offer than that of descending the river with
the family which was as his own? They had proposed it to him, and he had
accepted, and when arrived at Belem he was to marry the young couple,
Minha and Manoel.</p>
<p>But if Padre Passanha during the course of the voyage was to take his
meals with the family, Joam Garral desired to build for him a dwelling
apart, and heaven knows what care Yaquita and her daughter took to make
him comfortable! Assuredly the good old priest had never been so lodged in
his modest parsonage!</p>
<p>The parsonage was not enough for Padre Passanha; he ought to have a
chapel.</p>
<p>The chapel then was built in the center of the jangada, and a little bell
surmounted it.</p>
<p>It was small enough, undoubtedly, and it could not hold the whole of the
crew, but it was richly decorated, and if Joam Garral found his own house
on the raft, Padre Passanha had no cause to regret the poverty-stricken
church of Iquitos.</p>
<p>Such was the wonderful structure which was going down the Amazon. It was
then on the bank waiting till the flood came to carry it away. From the
observation and calculation of the rising it would seem as though there
was not much longer to wait.</p>
<p>All was ready to date, the 5th of June.</p>
<p>The pilot arrived the evening before. He was a man about fifty, well up in
his profession, but rather fond of drink. Such as he was, Joam Garral in
large matters at different times had employed him to take his rafts to
Belem, and he had never had cause to repent it.</p>
<p>It is as well to add that Araujo—that was his name—never saw
better than when he had imbibed a few glasses of tafia; and he never did
any work at all without a certain demijohn of that liquor, to which he
paid frequent court.</p>
<p>The rise of the flood had clearly manifested itself for several days. From
minute to minute the level of the river rose, and during the twenty-four
hours which preceded the maximum the waters covered the bank on which the
raft rested, but did not lift the raft.</p>
<p>As soon as the movement was assured, and there could be no error as to the
height to which the flood would rise, all those interested in the
undertaking were seized with no little excitement. For if through some
inexplicable cause the waters of the Amazon did not rise sufficiently to
flood the jangada, it would all have to be built over again. But as the
fall of the river would be very rapid it would take long months before
similar conditions recurred.</p>
<p>On the 5th of June, toward the evening, the future passengers of the
jangada were collected on a plateau which was about a hundred feet above
the bank, and waited for the hour with an anxiety quite intelligible.</p>
<p>There were Yaquita, her daughter, Manoel Valdez, Padre Passanha, Benito,
Lina, Fragoso, Cybele, and some of the servants, Indian or negro, of the
fazenda.</p>
<p>Fragoso could not keep himself still; he went and he came, he ran down the
bank and ran up the plateau, he noted the points of the river gauge, and
shouted "Hurrah!" as the water crept up.</p>
<p>"It will swim, it will swim!" he shouted. "The raft which is to take us to
Belem! It will float if all the cataracts of the sky have to open to flood
the Amazon!"</p>
<p>Joam Garral was on the raft with the pilot and some of the crew. It was
for him to take all the necessary measures at the critical moment. The
jangada was moored to the bank with solid cables, so that it could not be
carried away by the current when it floated off.</p>
<p>Quite a tribe from one hundred and fifty to two hundred Indians, without
counting the population of the village, had come to assist at the
interesting spectacle.</p>
<p>They were all keenly on the watch, and silence reigned over the
impressionable crowd.</p>
<p>Toward five o'clock in the evening the water had reached a level higher
than that of the night before—by more than a foot—and the bank
had already entirely disappeared beneath the liquid covering.</p>
<p>A certain groaning arose among the planks of the enormous structure, but
there was still wanting a few inches before it was quite lifted and
detached from the ground.</p>
<p>For an hour the groanings increased. The joists grated on all sides. A
struggle was going on in which little by little the trunks were being
dragged from their sandy bed.</p>
<p>Toward half-past six cries of joy arose. The jangada floated at last, and
the current took it toward the middle of the river, but, in obedience to
the cables, it quietly took up its position near the bank at the moment
that Padre Passanha gave it his blessing, as if it were a vessel launched
into the sea whose destinies are in the hands of the Most High!</p>
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