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<h2> CHAPTER I. MANAOS </h2>
<p>THE TOWN of Manaos is in 3� 8' 4" south latitude, and 67� 27' west
longitude, reckoning from the Paris meridian. It is some four hundred and
twenty leagues from Belem, and about ten miles from the <i>embouchure</i>
of the Rio Negro.</p>
<p>Manaos is not built on the Amazon. It is on the left bank of the Rio
Negro, the most important and remarkable of all the tributaries of the
great artery of Brazil, that the capital of the province, with its
picturesque group of private houses and public buildings, towers above the
surrounding plain.</p>
<p>The Rio Negro, which was discovered by the Spaniard Favella in 1645, rises
in the very heart of the province of Popayan, on the flanks of the
mountains which separate Brazil from New Grenada, and it communicates with
the Orinoco by two of its affluents, the Pimichin and the Cassiquary.</p>
<p>After a noble course of some seventeen hundred miles it mingles its cloudy
waters with those of the Amazon through a mouth eleven hundred feet wide,
but such is its vigorous influx that many a mile has to be completed
before those waters lose their distinctive character. Hereabouts the ends
of both its banks trend off and form a huge bay fifteen leagues across,
extending to the islands of Anavilhanas; and in one of its indentations
the port of Manaos is situated. Vessels of all kinds are there collected
in great numbers, some moored in the stream awaiting a favorable wind,
others under repair up the numerous <i>iguarapes,</i> or canals, which so
capriciously intersect the town, and give it its slightly Dutch
appearance.</p>
<p>With the introduction of steam vessels, which is now rapidly taking place,
the trade of Manaos is destined to increase enormously. Woods used in
building and furniture work, cocoa, caoutchouc, coffee, sarsaparilla,
sugar-canes, indigo, muscado nuts, salt fish, turtle butter, and other
commodities, are brought here from all parts, down the innumerable streams
into the Rio Negro from the west and north, into the Madeira from the west
and south, and then into the Amazon, and by it away eastward to the coast
of the Atlantic.</p>
<p>Manaos was formerly called Moura, or Barra de Rio Negro. From 1757 to 1804
it was only part of the captaincy which bears the name of the great river
at whose mouth it is placed; but since 1826 it has been the capital of the
large province of Amazones, borrowing its latest name from an Indian tribe
which formerly existed in these parts of equatorial America.</p>
<p>Careless travelers have frequently confounded it with the famous Manoa, a
city of romance, built, it was reported, near the legendary lake of Parima—which
would seem to be merely the Upper Branco, a tributary of the Rio Negro.
Here was the Empire of El Dorado, whose monarch, if we are to believe the
fables of the district, was every morning covered with powder of gold,
there being so much of the precious metal abounding in this privileged
locality that it was swept up with the very dust of the streets. This
assertion, however, when put to the test, was disproved, and with extreme
regret, for the auriferous deposits which had deceived the greedy scrutiny
of the gold-seekers turned out to be only worthless flakes of mica!</p>
<p>In short, Manaos has none of the fabulous splendors of the mythical
capital of El Dorado. It is an ordinary town of about five thousand
inhabitants, and of these at least three thousand are in government
employ. This fact is to be attributed to the number of its public
buildings, which consist of the legislative chamber, the government house,
the treasury, the post-office, and the custom-house, and, in addition, a
college founded in 1848, and a hospital erected in 1851. When with these
is also mentioned a cemetery on the south side of a hill, on which, in
1669, a fortress, which has since been demolished, was thrown up against
the pirates of the Amazon, some idea can be gained as to the importance of
the official establishments of the city. Of religious buildings it would
be difficult to find more than two, the small Church of the Conception and
the Chapel of Notre Dame des Remedes, built on a knoll which overlooks the
town. These are very few for a town of Spanish origin, though to them
should perhaps be added the Carmelite Convent, burned down in 1850, of
which only the ruins remain. The population of Manaos does not exceed the
number above given, and after reckoning the public officials and soldiers,
is principally made of up Portuguese and Indian merchants belonging to the
different tribes of the Rio Negro.</p>
<p>Three principal thoroughfares of considerable irregularity run through the
town, and they bear names highly characteristic of the tone of thought
prevalent in these parts—God-the-Father Street, God-the-Son Street,
and God-the-Holy Ghost Street!</p>
<p>In the west of the town is a magnificent avenue of centenarian orange
trees which were carefully respected by the architects who out of the old
city made the new. Round these principal thoroughfares is interwoven a
perfect network of unpaved alleys, intersected every now and then by four
canals, which are occasionally crossed by wooden bridges. In a few places
these iguarapes flow with their brownish waters through large vacant
spaces covered with straggling weeds and flowers of startling hues, and
here and there are natural squares shaded by magnificent trees, with an
occasional white-barked sumaumeira shooting up, and spreading out its
large dome-like parasol above its gnarled branches.</p>
<p>The private houses have to be sought for among some hundreds of dwellings,
of very rudimentary type, some roofed with tiles, others with interlaced
branches of the palm-tree, and with prominent miradors, and projecting
shops for the most part tenanted by Portuguese traders.</p>
<p>And what manner of people are they who stroll on to the fashionable
promenade from the public buildings and private residences? Men of good
appearance, with black cloth coats, chimney-pot hats, patent-leather
boots, highly-colored gloves, and diamond pins in their necktie bows; and
women in loud, imposing toilets, with flounced dressed and headgear of the
latest style; and Indians, also on the road to Europeanization in a way
which bids fair to destroy every bit of local color in this central
portion of the district of the Amazon!</p>
<p>Such is Manaos, which, for the benefit of the reader, it was necessary to
sketch. Here the voyage of the giant raft, so tragically interrupted, had
just come to a pause in the midst of its long journey, and here will be
unfolded the further vicissitudes of the mysterious history of the
fazender of Iquitos.</p>
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