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Lost World, The
CHAPTER VIII - "The Outlying Pickets of the New World"
Arthur Conan Doyle
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       _ Our friends at home may well rejoice with us, for we are at our
       goal, and up to a point, at least, we have shown that the
       statement of Professor Challenger can be verified. We have not,
       it is true, ascended the plateau, but it lies before us, and even
       Professor Summerlee is in a more chastened mood. Not that he
       will for an instant admit that his rival could be right, but he
       is less persistent in his incessant objections, and has sunk for
       the most part into an observant silence. I must hark back,
       however, and continue my narrative from where I dropped it.
       We are sending home one of our local Indians who is injured,
       and I am committing this letter to his charge, with considerable
       doubts in my mind as to whether it will ever come to hand.
       When I wrote last we were about to leave the Indian village where
       we had been deposited by the Esmeralda. I have to begin my
       report by bad news, for the first serious personal trouble
       (I pass over the incessant bickerings between the Professors)
       occurred this evening, and might have had a tragic ending.
       I have spoken of our English-speaking half-breed, Gomez--a fine
       worker and a willing fellow, but afflicted, I fancy, with the
       vice of curiosity, which is common enough among such men. On the
       last evening he seems to have hid himself near the hut in which
       we were discussing our plans, and, being observed by our huge
       negro Zambo, who is as faithful as a dog and has the hatred which
       all his race bear to the half-breeds, he was dragged out and
       carried into our presence. Gomez whipped out his knife, however,
       and but for the huge strength of his captor, which enabled him to
       disarm him with one hand, he would certainly have stabbed him.
       The matter has ended in reprimands, the opponents have been
       compelled to shake hands, and there is every hope that all will
       be well. As to the feuds of the two learned men, they are
       continuous and bitter. It must be admitted that Challenger is
       provocative in the last degree, but Summerlee has an acid tongue,
       which makes matters worse. Last night Challenger said that he
       never cared to walk on the Thames Embankment and look up the river,
       as it was always sad to see one's own eventual goal. He is
       convinced, of course, that he is destined for Westminster Abbey.
       Summerlee rejoined, however, with a sour smile, by saying
       that he understood that Millbank Prison had been pulled down.
       Challenger's conceit is too colossal to allow him to be
       really annoyed. He only smiled in his beard and repeated
       "Really! Really!" in the pitying tone one would use to a child.
       Indeed, they are children both--the one wizened and cantankerous,
       the other formidable and overbearing, yet each with a brain which
       has put him in the front rank of his scientific age. Brain, character,
       soul--only as one sees more of life does one understand how distinct
       is each.
       The very next day we did actually make our start upon this
       remarkable expedition. We found that all our possessions fitted
       very easily into the two canoes, and we divided our personnel,
       six in each, taking the obvious precaution in the interests of
       peace of putting one Professor into each canoe. Personally, I
       was with Challenger, who was in a beatific humor, moving about as
       one in a silent ecstasy and beaming benevolence from every feature.
       I have had some experience of him in other moods, however, and
       shall be the less surprised when the thunderstorms suddenly
       come up amidst the sunshine. If it is impossible to be at your
       ease, it is equally impossible to be dull in his company, for one
       is always in a state of half-tremulous doubt as to what sudden
       turn his formidable temper may take.
       For two days we made our way up a good-sized river some hundreds
       of yards broad, and dark in color, but transparent, so that one
       could usually see the bottom. The affluents of the Amazon are,
       half of them, of this nature, while the other half are whitish
       and opaque, the difference depending upon the class of country
       through which they have flowed. The dark indicate vegetable
       decay, while the others point to clayey soil. Twice we came
       across rapids, and in each case made a portage of half a mile or
       so to avoid them. The woods on either side were primeval, which
       are more easily penetrated than woods of the second growth, and
       we had no great difficulty in carrying our canoes through them.
       How shall I ever forget the solemn mystery of it? The height of
       the trees and the thickness of the boles exceeded anything which
       I in my town-bred life could have imagined, shooting upwards in
       magnificent columns until, at an enormous distance above our
       heads, we could dimly discern the spot where they threw out their
       side-branches into Gothic upward curves which coalesced to form
       one great matted roof of verdure, through which only an
       occasional golden ray of sunshine shot downwards to trace a thin
       dazzling line of light amidst the majestic obscurity. As we
       walked noiselessly amid the thick, soft carpet of decaying
       vegetation the hush fell upon our souls which comes upon us in
       the twilight of the Abbey, and even Professor Challenger's
       full-chested notes sank into a whisper. Alone, I should have
       been ignorant of the names of these giant growths, but our men of
       science pointed out the cedars, the great silk cotton trees, and
       the redwood trees, with all that profusion of various plants
       which has made this continent the chief supplier to the human
       race of those gifts of Nature which depend upon the vegetable
       world, while it is the most backward in those products which come
       from animal life. Vivid orchids and wonderful colored lichens
       smoldered upon the swarthy tree-trunks and where a wandering
       shaft of light fell full upon the golden allamanda, the scarlet
       star-clusters of the tacsonia, or the rich deep blue of ipomaea,
       the effect was as a dream of fairyland. In these great wastes of
       forest, life, which abhors darkness, struggles ever upwards to
       the light. Every plant, even the smaller ones, curls and writhes
       to the green surface, twining itself round its stronger and
       taller brethren in the effort. Climbing plants are monstrous and
       luxuriant, but others which have never been known to climb
       elsewhere learn the art as an escape from that somber shadow, so
       that the common nettle, the jasmine, and even the jacitara palm
       tree can be seen circling the stems of the cedars and striving to
       reach their crowns. Of animal life there was no movement amid
       the majestic vaulted aisles which stretched from us as we walked,
       but a constant movement far above our heads told of that
       multitudinous world of snake and monkey, bird and sloth, which
       lived in the sunshine, and looked down in wonder at our tiny, dark,
       stumbling figures in the obscure depths immeasurably below them.
       At dawn and at sunset the howler monkeys screamed together and
       the parrakeets broke into shrill chatter, but during the hot
       hours of the day only the full drone of insects, like the beat of
       a distant surf, filled the ear, while nothing moved amid the
       solemn vistas of stupendous trunks, fading away into the darkness
       which held us in. Once some bandy-legged, lurching creature, an
       ant-eater or a bear, scuttled clumsily amid the shadows. It was the
       only sign of earth life which I saw in this great Amazonian forest.
       And yet there were indications that even human life itself was
       not far from us in those mysterious recesses. On the third day
       out we were aware of a singular deep throbbing in the air,
       rhythmic and solemn, coming and going fitfully throughout
       the morning. The two boats were paddling within a few yards
       of each other when first we heard it, and our Indians remained
       motionless, as if they had been turned to bronze, listening
       intently with expressions of terror upon their faces.
       "What is it, then?" I asked.
       "Drums," said Lord John, carelessly; "war drums. I have heard
       them before."
       "Yes, sir, war drums," said Gomez, the half-breed. "Wild Indians,
       bravos, not mansos; they watch us every mile of the way; kill us
       if they can."
       "How can they watch us?" I asked, gazing into the dark,
       motionless void.
       The half-breed shrugged his broad shoulders.
       "The Indians know. They have their own way. They watch us.
       They talk the drum talk to each other. Kill us if they can."
       By the afternoon of that day--my pocket diary shows me that it
       was Tuesday, August 18th--at least six or seven drums were
       throbbing from various points. Sometimes they beat quickly,
       sometimes slowly, sometimes in obvious question and answer, one
       far to the east breaking out in a high staccato rattle, and being
       followed after a pause by a deep roll from the north. There was
       something indescribably nerve-shaking and menacing in that
       constant mutter, which seemed to shape itself into the very
       syllables of the half-breed, endlessly repeated, "We will kill
       you if we can. We will kill you if we can." No one ever moved in
       the silent woods. All the peace and soothing of quiet Nature lay
       in that dark curtain of vegetation, but away from behind there
       came ever the one message from our fellow-man. "We will kill you
       if we can," said the men in the east. "We will kill you if we
       can," said the men in the north.
       All day the drums rumbled and whispered, while their menace
       reflected itself in the faces of our colored companions. Even the
       hardy, swaggering half-breed seemed cowed. I learned, however,
       that day once for all that both Summerlee and Challenger
       possessed that highest type of bravery, the bravery of the
       scientific mind. Theirs was the spirit which upheld Darwin among
       the gauchos of the Argentine or Wallace among the head-hunters
       of Malaya. It is decreed by a merciful Nature that the human brain
       cannot think of two things simultaneously, so that if it be
       steeped in curiosity as to science it has no room for merely
       personal considerations. All day amid that incessant and
       mysterious menace our two Professors watched every bird upon the
       wing, and every shrub upon the bank, with many a sharp wordy
       contention, when the snarl of Summerlee came quick upon the deep
       growl of Challenger, but with no more sense of danger and no more
       reference to drum-beating Indians than if they were seated
       together in the smoking-room of the Royal Society's Club in St.
       James's Street. Once only did they condescend to discuss them.
       "Miranha or Amajuaca cannibals," said Challenger, jerking his
       thumb towards the reverberating wood.
       "No doubt, sir," Summerlee answered. "Like all such tribes, I
       shall expect to find them of poly-synthetic speech and of
       Mongolian type."
       "Polysynthetic certainly," said Challenger, indulgently. "I am
       not aware that any other type of language exists in this continent,
       and I have notes of more than a hundred. The Mongolian theory
       I regard with deep suspicion."
       "I should have thought that even a limited knowledge of
       comparative anatomy would have helped to verify it," said
       Summerlee, bitterly.
       Challenger thrust out his aggressive chin until he was all beard
       and hat-rim. "No doubt, sir, a limited knowledge would have
       that effect. When one's knowledge is exhaustive, one comes to
       other conclusions." They glared at each other in mutual defiance,
       while all round rose the distant whisper, "We will kill you--we
       will kill you if we can."
       That night we moored our canoes with heavy stones for anchors in
       the center of the stream, and made every preparation for a
       possible attack. Nothing came, however, and with the dawn we
       pushed upon our way, the drum-beating dying out behind us.
       About three o'clock in the afternoon we came to a very steep rapid,
       more than a mile long--the very one in which Professor Challenger
       had suffered disaster upon his first journey. I confess that the
       sight of it consoled me, for it was really the first direct
       corroboration, slight as it was, of the truth of his story.
       The Indians carried first our canoes and then our stores through
       the brushwood, which is very thick at this point, while we four
       whites, our rifles on our shoulders, walked between them and any
       danger coming from the woods. Before evening we had successfully
       passed the rapids, and made our way some ten miles above them,
       where we anchored for the night. At this point I reckoned that
       we had come not less than a hundred miles up the tributary from
       the main stream.
       It was in the early forenoon of the next day that we made the
       great departure. Since dawn Professor Challenger had been
       acutely uneasy, continually scanning each bank of the river.
       Suddenly he gave an exclamation of satisfaction and pointed to a
       single tree, which projected at a peculiar angle over the side of
       the stream.
       "What do you make of that?" he asked.
       "It is surely an Assai palm," said Summerlee.
       "Exactly. It was an Assai palm which I took for my landmark.
       The secret opening is half a mile onwards upon the other side of
       the river. There is no break in the trees. That is the wonder
       and the mystery of it. There where you see light-green rushes
       instead of dark-green undergrowth, there between the great cotton
       woods, that is my private gate into the unknown. Push through,
       and you will understand."
       It was indeed a wonderful place. Having reached the spot marked
       by a line of light-green rushes, we poled out two canoes through
       them for some hundreds of yards, and eventually emerged into a
       placid and shallow stream, running clear and transparent over a
       sandy bottom. It may have been twenty yards across, and was
       banked in on each side by most luxuriant vegetation. No one who
       had not observed that for a short distance reeds had taken the
       place of shrubs, could possibly have guessed the existence of
       such a stream or dreamed of the fairyland beyond.
       For a fairyland it was--the most wonderful that the imagination
       of man could conceive. The thick vegetation met overhead,
       interlacing into a natural pergola, and through this tunnel of
       verdure in a golden twilight flowed the green, pellucid river,
       beautiful in itself, but marvelous from the strange tints thrown
       by the vivid light from above filtered and tempered in its fall.
       Clear as crystal, motionless as a sheet of glass, green as the
       edge of an iceberg, it stretched in front of us under its leafy
       archway, every stroke of our paddles sending a thousand ripples
       across its shining surface. It was a fitting avenue to a land
       of wonders. All sign of the Indians had passed away, but animal
       life was more frequent, and the tameness of the creatures showed
       that they knew nothing of the hunter. Fuzzy little black-velvet
       monkeys, with snow-white teeth and gleaming, mocking eyes,
       chattered at us as we passed. With a dull, heavy splash an
       occasional cayman plunged in from the bank. Once a dark, clumsy
       tapir stared at us from a gap in the bushes, and then lumbered
       away through the forest; once, too, the yellow, sinuous form of a
       great puma whisked amid the brushwood, and its green, baleful
       eyes glared hatred at us over its tawny shoulder. Bird life was
       abundant, especially the wading birds, stork, heron, and ibis
       gathering in little groups, blue, scarlet, and white, upon every
       log which jutted from the bank, while beneath us the crystal
       water was alive with fish of every shape and color.
       For three days we made our way up this tunnel of hazy
       green sunshine. On the longer stretches one could hardly
       tell as one looked ahead where the distant green water ended
       and the distant green archway began. The deep peace of this
       strange waterway was unbroken by any sign of man.
       "No Indian here. Too much afraid. Curupuri," said Gomez.
       "Curupuri is the spirit of the woods," Lord John explained.
       "It's a name for any kind of devil. The poor beggars think that
       there is something fearsome in this direction, and therefore they
       avoid it."
       On the third day it became evident that our journey in the canoes
       could not last much longer, for the stream was rapidly growing
       more shallow. Twice in as many hours we stuck upon the bottom.
       Finally we pulled the boats up among the brushwood and spent the
       night on the bank of the river. In the morning Lord John and I
       made our way for a couple of miles through the forest, keeping
       parallel with the stream; but as it grew ever shallower we
       returned and reported, what Professor Challenger had already
       suspected, that we had reached the highest point to which the
       canoes could be brought. We drew them up, therefore, and
       concealed them among the bushes, blazing a tree with our axes, so
       that we should find them again. Then we distributed the various
       burdens among us--guns, ammunition, food, a tent, blankets, and
       the rest--and, shouldering our packages, we set forth upon the
       more laborious stage of our journey.
       An unfortunate quarrel between our pepper-pots marked the outset
       of our new stage. Challenger had from the moment of joining us
       issued directions to the whole party, much to the evident
       discontent of Summerlee. Now, upon his assigning some duty to
       his fellow-Professor (it was only the carrying of an aneroid
       barometer), the matter suddenly came to a head.
       "May I ask, sir," said Summerlee, with vicious calm, "in what
       capacity you take it upon yourself to issue these orders?"
       Challenger glared and bristled.
       "I do it, Professor Summerlee, as leader of this expedition."
       "I am compelled to tell you, sir, that I do not recognize you in
       that capacity."
       "Indeed!" Challenger bowed with unwieldy sarcasm. "Perhaps you
       would define my exact position."
       "Yes, sir. You are a man whose veracity is upon trial, and this
       committee is here to try it. You walk, sir, with your judges."
       "Dear me!" said Challenger, seating himself on the side of one of
       the canoes. "In that case you will, of course, go on your way,
       and I will follow at my leisure. If I am not the leader you
       cannot expect me to lead."
       Thank heaven that there were two sane men--Lord John Roxton
       and myself--to prevent the petulance and folly of our learned
       Professors from sending us back empty-handed to London.
       Such arguing and pleading and explaining before we could get
       them mollified! Then at last Summerlee, with his sneer and his
       pipe, would move forwards, and Challenger would come rolling and
       grumbling after. By some good fortune we discovered about this
       time that both our savants had the very poorest opinion of Dr.
       Illingworth of Edinburgh. Thenceforward that was our one safety,
       and every strained situation was relieved by our introducing the
       name of the Scotch zoologist, when both our Professors would form
       a temporary alliance and friendship in their detestation and
       abuse of this common rival.
       Advancing in single file along the bank of the stream, we soon
       found that it narrowed down to a mere brook, and finally that it
       lost itself in a great green morass of sponge-like mosses, into
       which we sank up to our knees. The place was horribly haunted
       by clouds of mosquitoes and every form of flying pest, so we were
       glad to find solid ground again and to make a circuit among the
       trees, which enabled us to outflank this pestilent morass, which
       droned like an organ in the distance, so loud was it with insect life.
       On the second day after leaving our canoes we found that the
       whole character of the country changed. Our road was
       persistently upwards, and as we ascended the woods became
       thinner and lost their tropical luxuriance. The huge trees of
       the alluvial Amazonian plain gave place to the Phoenix and coco
       palms, growing in scattered clumps, with thick brushwood between.
       In the damper hollows the Mauritia palms threw out their graceful
       drooping fronds. We traveled entirely by compass, and once or
       twice there were differences of opinion between Challenger and
       the two Indians, when, to quote the Professor's indignant words,
       the whole party agreed to "trust the fallacious instincts of
       undeveloped savages rather than the highest product of modern
       European culture." That we were justified in doing so was shown
       upon the third day, when Challenger admitted that he recognized
       several landmarks of his former journey, and in one spot we
       actually came upon four fire-blackened stones, which must have
       marked a camping-place.
       The road still ascended, and we crossed a rock-studded slope
       which took two days to traverse. The vegetation had again
       changed, and only the vegetable ivory tree remained, with a
       great profusion of wonderful orchids, among which I learned to
       recognize the rare Nuttonia Vexillaria and the glorious pink and
       scarlet blossoms of Cattleya and odontoglossum. Occasional brooks
       with pebbly bottoms and fern-draped banks gurgled down the shallow
       gorges in the hill, and offered good camping-grounds every evening
       on the banks of some rock-studded pool, where swarms of little
       blue-backed fish, about the size and shape of English trout,
       gave us a delicious supper.
       On the ninth day after leaving the canoes, having done, as I
       reckon, about a hundred and twenty miles, we began to emerge from
       the trees, which had grown smaller until they were mere shrubs.
       Their place was taken by an immense wilderness of bamboo, which
       grew so thickly that we could only penetrate it by cutting a
       pathway with the machetes and billhooks of the Indians. It took
       us a long day, traveling from seven in the morning till eight at
       night, with only two breaks of one hour each, to get through
       this obstacle. Anything more monotonous and wearying could not be
       imagined, for, even at the most open places, I could not see more
       than ten or twelve yards, while usually my vision was limited to
       the back of Lord John's cotton jacket in front of me, and to the
       yellow wall within a foot of me on either side. From above came
       one thin knife-edge of sunshine, and fifteen feet over our heads
       one saw the tops of the reeds swaying against the deep blue sky.
       I do not know what kind of creatures inhabit such a thicket, but
       several times we heard the plunging of large, heavy animals quite
       close to us. From their sounds Lord John judged them to be some
       form of wild cattle. Just as night fell we cleared the belt of
       bamboos, and at once formed our camp, exhausted by the
       interminable day.
       Early next morning we were again afoot, and found that the
       character of the country had changed once again. Behind us was
       the wall of bamboo, as definite as if it marked the course of
       a river. In front was an open plain, sloping slightly upwards
       and dotted with clumps of tree-ferns, the whole curving before
       us until it ended in a long, whale-backed ridge. This we reached
       about midday, only to find a shallow valley beyond, rising once
       again into a gentle incline which led to a low, rounded sky-line.
       It was here, while we crossed the first of these hills, that an
       incident occurred which may or may not have been important.
       Professor Challenger, who with the two local Indians was in the van
       of the party, stopped suddenly and pointed excitedly to the right.
       As he did so we saw, at the distance of a mile or so, something
       which appeared to be a huge gray bird flap slowly up from the
       ground and skim smoothly off, flying very low and straight, until
       it was lost among the tree-ferns.
       "Did you see it?" cried Challenger, in exultation. "Summerlee, did
       you see it?"
       His colleague was staring at the spot where the creature had disappeared.
       "What do you claim that it was?" he asked.
       "To the best of my belief, a pterodactyl."
       Summerlee burst into derisive laughter "A pter-fiddlestick!" said he.
       "It was a stork, if ever I saw one."
       Challenger was too furious to speak. He simply swung his pack
       upon his back and continued upon his march. Lord John came abreast
       of me, however, and his face was more grave than was his wont.
       He had his Zeiss glasses in his hand.
       "I focused it before it got over the trees," said he. "I won't
       undertake to say what it was, but I'll risk my reputation as a
       sportsman that it wasn't any bird that ever I clapped eyes on in
       my life."
       So there the matter stands. Are we really just at the edge of
       the unknown, encountering the outlying pickets of this lost world
       of which our leader speaks? I give you the incident as it
       occurred and you will know as much as I do. It stands alone, for
       we saw nothing more which could be called remarkable.
       And now, my readers, if ever I have any, I have brought you up
       the broad river, and through the screen of rushes, and down the
       green tunnel, and up the long slope of palm trees, and through
       the bamboo brake, and across the plain of tree-ferns. At last
       our destination lay in full sight of us. When we had crossed
       the second ridge we saw before us an irregular, palm-studded
       plain, and then the line of high red cliffs which I have seen
       in the picture. There it lies, even as I write, and there can
       be no question that it is the same. At the nearest point it is
       about seven miles from our present camp, and it curves away,
       stretching as far as I can see. Challenger struts about like
       a prize peacock, and Summerlee is silent, but still sceptical.
       Another day should bring some of our doubts to an end.
       Meanwhile, as Jose, whose arm was pierced by a broken bamboo,
       insists upon returning, I send this letter back in his charge,
       and only hope that it may eventually come to hand. I will write
       again as the occasion serves. I have enclosed with this a rough
       chart of our journey, which may have the effect of making the
       account rather easier to understand. _