YUBA COUNTY
GENEALOGICAL NUGGETS
Round Cape Horn :
voyage of the passenger-ship James W. Paige, from Maine to California in the year 1852;
BY J. LAMSON.
BANGOR:
PRESS OF O. F. & W. H. KNOWLES.
1878
CHAPTER III.
ONE o'clock P.M. We had just settled down into a sullen resignation to our fate,
and some of the passengers had been trying to amuse themselves by making
unsuccessful shots at the large sea birds that were flying around us, when a
discovery was made which caused great excitement among us, and raised our
spirits to a high degree. We had floated along several hours at a short distance
from the coast, when one of the passengers who had been in Rio saw that we were
now off the entrance to the harbor, and that the captain was wrong in the
morning. Captain J., who was in his berth, was called immediately and
acknowledged his mistake. He then engaged again to go in on the conditions
previously stipulated. So the ship is turned towards the harbor, where we shall
probably arrive in the evening. The money has been collected and paid over. I
cannot, however, but feel very anxious as to the event. My health has been
seriously declining for several weeks, and my fellow-passengers have more than
once discussed the probability of my becoming food for the fishes before the
ship arrives at the end of her long voyage. I feel that I must have a short
respite on shore or die. But I will not croak about it. We shall know the worst
to-morrow. Let me go out and enjoy the splendid scenery that lies before us.
And such scenery! I am gazing upon it with sensations as indescribable as the
scenery itself. Never before have I so felt the utter impotency of language. I
might say it is beautiful, grand, magnificent, rich beyond any thing I ever saw
or imagined. I might lavish upon it every epithet which my delighted senses
could suggest, but no words that I can command can, by any possibility, convey
the least idea of the strangely enchanting beauty of the harbor we are entering.
I have seated myself upon the bowsprit, and as we sail slowly in impelled by a
gentle breeze, I have ample opportunity to feast my eyes on the beautiful scene.
Let me give you a short prosaic account of it. If I fail to convey to the reader
the impression which the scene makes on me, I may at least fix it the more
indelibly on my own mind.
An ocean of hills and mountains presents itself on either side of the bay. Here
at the entrance on the left, rises an immense rock in the form of a sugar-loaf,
to the height, perhaps, of six hundred or eight hundred feet. Beyond, in close
proximity, are a hundred other hills, many of them conical, some running up into
sharp pinnacles, some nearly bare of vegetation, and others less steep covered
to their summits with a dense foliage. And there is one towering above the rest,
presenting to the view a black and perpendicular front, and a pinnacle scarcely
larger than the spire of a church. The opposite side of the harbor presents
nearly the same characteristic scenery, sharp, conical hills and rocks rising
abruptly from the bay, succeeded by other hills thickly planted behind and
beyond them. The shores of the bay are formed into many broad, circular
indentations fringed with beaches of fine white sand. A large fort mounting a
hundred guns and commanding the entrance to the harbor, stands on a projecting
rock overlooked by a mountain from the summit of which--though I know nothing of
the science of fortifications--I fancy that a small battery might be planted
that would quickly demolish it. A smaller fort or battery stands opposite on a
small island near the sugar-loaf. Other forts defend the inner portions of the
harbor. Many fine buildings stand upon the left shore at the foot of the hills,
and form almost a continuous street for several miles to the city. Far in the
distance, and but dimly descried, are the Brazilian Mountains. Though greatly
superior in height to the hills on the coast, the same peculiarities of cones
and pinnacles characterize them.
We passed the fort, and dropped anchor at a distance of two miles from the city.
Near us lay the North America, a large ship from New York bound for California
with nearly five hundred passengers. They gave us twice three hearty cheers,
which we answered in the usual manner.
Immediately on coming to anchor, we were visited by a health officer and a
custom-house officer, each of whom was dispatched with a very few words. Captain
Jackson then took a boat manned by two sailors, and went ashore, and we made
every preparation for an early visit in the morning.
Friday, May 21. About twenty boats were along-side this morning manned by whites
and blacks, masters and slaves, all clamorous for passengers. They were
unanimous in asking twenty-five cents for a passage, which, though not very
exorbitant, they soon reduced to ten cents, and we speedily filled their boats.
The first thing that attracted my attention as we neared the shore, was the
singular appearance of the roofs of many of the buildings, which I ascertained
were covered with tiles. As few of my readers have ever seen a roof covered in
this manner, I am induced to describe it. The tiles are pieces of pottery in the
form of half a tube seven or eight inches in diameter, half or three-quarters of
an inch thick, and about two feet long. They are unglazed, and burnt as hard as
our pottery. They are supported by a rough frame-work of poles, and laid in two
courses, the under course forming gutters to carry off the rain, which is turned
into them by the upper course, each upper tile being turned over the edges of
two of the under ones The roof projects sixteen or eighteen inches over the
street, and the under side of the projections or eaves is generally painted red.
These roofs, of course, answer a good purpose here, but in New England, where
boys throw stones they would not last a fortnight. Nor would they, in my
opinion, endure the frosts of our winters for a single month.
We landed and proceeded immediately to a restaurant where we refreshed ourselves
with a cup of coffee and a plate of toast, and then commenced our rambles over
the city. I soon found myself separated from my companions and proceeded alone.
I crossed a large square, in which stood a stone fountain built in the form of a
temple, from whose sides the water fell into basins beneath. These fountains,
though built in different styles, I found in great numbers throughout the city.
They are supplied by an aqueduct.
Passing through a street containing several handsome churches and other public
buildings, I found myself in the market. This, I believe, was square, surrounded
by high walls against which within were shops or stalls containing a great
variety of articles of food, vegetable and animal. The square was also crossed
by several streets or walks with stalls on each side of them. A fountain with a
very large basin occupied the center. My first search was for fruits. I found
oranges and bananas in abundance, and these with cocoa-nuts constitute all the
market affords at this season of the year. There were neither watermelons nor
musk-melons, no apples, nor pears, nor peaches, no plums of any description, nor
a berry of any sort. There were no dead meats to be found in this market. Beef
was sold in another part of the city. Live pigs had their appropriate stalls,
and chickens, turkeys, and several varieties of ducks and of doves, besides many
singing birds, were kept in coarse cages or chained by the leg. Parrots were
abundant, and there was a large and exceedingly beautiful bird, whose name I did
not know; but I was rather desirous of buying one for the purpose of preserving
the skin. I asked the price. It was thirty milreas--about sixteen or seventeen
dollars. I did not purchase. There was a great variety of fish, some very
beautiful, and others the most disgusting specimens I ever beheld. Among them
were several hammer-headed sharks, a curious fish from three to five feet long,
with a head twelve or fifteen inches long, attached to the body like a hammer to
the handle. An eye is placed at each extremity of the hammer, but the mouth is
below it in the body of the fish. There were monkeys enough to make up a
menagerie, the greater part of them being of one species with long, prehensile
tails. In the center of the square, surrounding the fountain, was a variety of
vegetables sold by slaves, male and female, who kept such continual talking,
laughing and singing as I never heard before. It seemed as though they were
enjoying a holiday, and were in their happiest humor.
I did not stop long in the market, but continuing my walk, I threaded several
narrow streets and passages to the summit of a hill, where I found a gate
opening into grounds belonging to a large hotel. I entered, and for the first
time found myself in the shade of tropical trees. I was delighted with the
scene. Every tree, shrub, vine, and flower, were new to me. I knew not the name
of a single plant. The sun was beating down intensely, and I was glad to seat
myself upon an embankment under the shade of a row of large trees. Several
little birds were singing in the branches, only one of which I knew, a wren,
though of a different species from any of ours, and smaller, but possessing the
same lively, restless, noisy characteristics. A long shaded walk led to the
hotel. I had not sat there long when I saw a company of my fellow-passengers
approaching. They had just left the hotel, but giving me a gentle hint to treat
them, they returned to the house, and I followed. We entered at the rear of the
house and we passed through to the front, which afforded a splendid view of the
harbor. A little garden on the very verge of the steep hill was filled with a
variety of strange flowers and plants, and an arbor with seats occupied one end
of it. Standing here, one could look upon the beach at the foot of the hill, and
listen to the roar of the waves as they rolled over the hard white sand. My
companions having become pretty mellow, sung two or three of their sentimental
songs, and departed, leaving me to enjoy a very pleasant interview with two
young English gentlemen, who gave me some information respecting the city, and
advised me to visit the Botanical Garden, situated at a distance of six or eight
miles in the country.
In the afternoon I walked to the Public Garden. This is a large garden,
surrounded by a high stone wall, and laid out in triangular plats, each filled
with beautiful trees; and shrubs, and protected by an iron fence. The ground was
perfectly level and the walks broad and smooth. At one extremity were two small
ponds bordered by rough stones, and surrounded with benches of hewn granite.
From the center of each pond arose a triangular column of hewn stone, consisting
of a pedestal about eighty feet broad and as many high, and a shaft about forty
feet high terminating in a sharp point; and from the sides of the pedestals
streams of water issued into the basins or ponds. A broad walk passes between
these fountains, at the extremity of which is an ornamented stone basin elevated
several feet above the ground. From the end of this basin rises a mound of rough
stones piled up against a very handsome wall, and covered with a variety of
cactuses and other plants. At the foot of the mound two enormous alligators lie
entwined, from whose gaping mouths, streams of water flow into the basin. A
flight of stone steps ascend from each side of the fountain to a terrace thirty
feet broad, and extending the width of the garden. This terrace is paved with
tessellated marble, and protected by parapet walls, whose sides are covered with
porcelain. Two octagonal buildings stand at the extremities of the terrace, each
angle of which is crowned with a porcelain vase containing plants, as is also
every post in the parapet walls. The waves of the bay dash against the base of
the terrace, and their roar is heard in the garden.
I found but few people here, and no one who could talk with me. There were
arbors shaded with vines and trees, and supplied with stone seats and tables,
where I sat and made my memoranda. I returned to the landing by different
streets from those through which I came, seeing many new things--every thing I
have seen here is new and strange--and am heartily gratified with my first day
in Rio. I found several of the passengers ready to return on board the bark,
where we passed the night.