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 THE LIBRARY 
 
 OF 
 
 THE UNIVERSITY 
 
 OF CALIFORNIA 
 
 LOS ANGELES
 
 LOST IN NICARAGUA
 
 TRAVEL-ADVENTURE SERIES. 
 
 IN WILD AFRICA. Adventures of Two Boys in 
 the Sahara Desert. By Thomas \V. Knox. 325 
 pages. With five Illustrations by II. Burgess. $1.50. 
 
 THE LAND OF THE KANGAROO. Adventures 
 of Two Boys in the Great Island Continent. By 
 Colonel Thomas \V. Knox. 31S pages. Illustrated 
 by II. Burgess. $1.50. 
 
 OVER THE ANDES ; or. Our Boys in New South 
 America. By Hezekiah Butterworth. 370 pages. 
 With five Illustrations by Henry Sandham. $1.50. 
 
 LOST IN NICARAGUA ; or. Among Coffee Farms 
 and Banana Lands, in the Countries of the 
 Great Canal. By Hezekiah Butterworth. 296 
 pages. With five Illustrations by H. Burgess. $1.50.
 
 
 
 r a 

 
 LOST IN NICARAGUA 
 
 AMONG COFFEE FARMS AND BANANA 
 
 LANDS, IN THE COUNTRIES OF 
 
 THE GREAT CANAL 
 
 BY 
 
 HEZEKIAH BUTTKRWORTH 
 
 AUTHOR OF "OVER THE ANDES,'' ETC. 
 
 ILLUSTRATED BY 
 HENRY SANDHAM 
 
 BOSTON AND CHICAGO 
 W. A. WILDE & COMPANY
 
 Copyright, 1898, 
 By W. A. Wii.uk & Company. 
 
 All rights reserved. 
 
 LOST IX NICARAGUA.
 
 Jfi* 
 
 
 PREFACE. 
 
 " Lost in Nicaragua " is a companion book to " Over the 
 Andes," and is designed to illustrate the historical progress 
 and industrial opportunities of Central America, the pros- 
 pective land of the great international highway to the East. 
 Here is to be the gate of the Pacific, where a great city of 
 the future must arise, and become the port of the coffee, 
 sugar, banana, and tropical fruit plantations. 
 
 In 1898 the writer went to Costa Rica, and on his way met 
 a railroad manager, who, on his explorations for a tropical 
 railroad, fell into a cavern covered with reeds and was im- 
 prisoned there. This explorer's experience in a neighboring 
 country suggested the story of Leigh Frobisher's adventure 
 in the underground idol cave of Nicaragua. 
 
 The writer met at Port Limon a young German who had 
 built up a coffee and banana plantation in Costa Rica, which 
 he cultivated for the purpose of the industrial education of 
 the native Indians. His work had received the approval of 
 the government, and it furnishes a model tor like enterprises 
 of Christian philanthropy. This incident, and like incidents, 
 i/ave rise to the character ot Hazel. 
 
 71 8166
 
 6 PREFACE. 
 
 The writer has used his old method in the " Zigzag " 
 books of interpolating stories within a connected narrative. 
 These stories are pictures of the life of the country. 
 
 South America is being Europeanized, the Argentine 
 Republic is producing a new Italy, and a new Latin race 
 seems to be forming under the Andes. Central America is 
 becoming more American, and a great industrial opportunity 
 is opening there. Young Americans and Germans are mak- 
 ing coffee and tropical fruit plantations in all parts of the 
 country, and especially in Costa Rica, in which the San Jose 
 and Cartago region is one of the most beautiful parts of the 
 earth. 
 
 The book, like " Over the Andes," is written in the spirit 
 and interests of Christian education, for influence, and for 
 illustration of the best and most progressive enterprises of 
 life. With little of the spirit of authorship, the writer has 
 sought in " Over the Andes " and " Lost in Nicaragua " to 
 produce two books that will correctly picture the progress of 
 South and Central America in such a way as to interest the 
 best thought in it, and to help life. 
 
 We have used the quetzal, the paradise trogon, the sacred 
 bird of the ancient races, as the object of the search of one 
 of our American travellers, and have related the St. Thomas 
 legend in connection with Quetzalcoatl, and the forest won- 
 ders ot feathers of emerald, ruby, and pearl. The myth is 
 one of the most pleasing of all the parables of the Western 
 world. St. Thomas, the Doubter, probably never visited 
 India, or founded the faith of the Xestorians of Persia, and
 
 PREFACE. 7 
 
 he certainly could never have appeared as Quetzalcoatl 
 in Yucatan and Guatemala. But the legend, as a legend, is 
 one of the most stimulating in prehistoric research ; for the 
 appearance of the cross in the ruins of Palenque seems 
 to be a Christian link between the Eastern and Western 
 worlds. 
 
 Of the quetzal, the sacred bird of these mysteries, and the 
 most beautiful of all the birds of the world, Mr. Stephens, 
 the explorer of the ruins of the ancient Central American 
 cities, says, in speaking of a convent where he was enter- 
 tained : " On a shelf over the bed were two stuffed quezalcs, 
 the royal bird of Quiche, the most beautiful that flies, so 
 proud of its tail that it builds its nest with two openings, to 
 pass in and out without turning, and whose plumes were not 
 permitted to be used except by the royal family." In 
 making the search for this bird, the object of one of the 
 young travellers of our narrative, we are able to introduce in 
 story form some pictures of legendary history. 
 
 We have written into our narrative a brief history of the 
 efforts to secure an interoceanic canal, and have endeavored 
 to picture the route through which the canal is expected to 
 pass. It would seem that in Nicaragua the two oceans are 
 to be wedded. 
 
 We stand on the threshold of new opportunities, and these 
 open countries await the progress of the world. The empty 
 lands of the Southern Cross and the Republics of the Sun 
 are on their way to great events in the future, and the time 
 has come for our young people to know more about them.
 
 8 PREFACE. 
 
 The star of prosperity leads towards the south, and to illus- 
 trate the educational part of this progress, in a popular way, 
 is the aim and purpose of the two books of narratives of 
 travel with interpolated stories. 
 
 28 Worcester Street, Boston.
 
 CONTENTS. 
 
 CHAPTER 
 
 I. The Quetzal The Golden Ace of Quetzalcoatl 
 The St. Thomas Legend and the Mysterious 
 Cross The Story of Nicaragua, the Chief 
 II. Tin-: Young German Coffee Planter . 
 
 III. Bucking against the Climate .... 
 
 IV. Hazel A Story of the Blood Snake 
 
 V. A Very Odd Story Tin-: Washington of Centrai 
 America ........ 
 
 VI. Tin'. Third America: How to reach it from New 
 York ......... 
 
 VII. Costa Rica: -Thi-: Switzerland of the Tropics' 
 VIII. Coffee Land ........ 
 
 IX. Tin; Young Coffee Planter at Home Irazu 
 
 X. Arlla 
 
 XL Hazel's School His Methods .... 
 XII. A Party for the Forests ..... 
 XIII. The Wonders of the Forest regin 
 XIY. An Army of Pigs Bitten i-.y a Jigger 
 XV. The Wounded Monkey . ... 
 
 XVI. Tin: Royal Family of Trogons Leigh finds a 
 Tkogon ReSI'LENDENS .... 
 
 <) 
 
 >3 
 40 
 46 
 
 52 
 
 63 
 
 /i 
 84 
 
 90 
 100 
 108 
 
 "3 
 
 127 
 
 '.V 
 '3* 
 142 
 
 146
 
 IO 
 
 CONTENTS. 
 
 CHAPTER 
 
 XVII. 
 
 XVIII. 
 
 XIX. 
 
 XX. 
 
 XXI. 
 
 XXII. 
 
 XXI If. 
 
 XXIV. 
 
 XXV 
 
 XXVI. 
 
 XXVII. 
 
 XXVIII. 
 
 XXIX. 
 
 XXX. 
 
 XXXI. 
 
 XXXII 
 
 XXXIII. 
 
 XXXIV. 
 
 XXXV. 
 
 XXXVI. 
 
 XXX VII. 
 
 XXXVIII. 
 
 XXXIX. 
 
 The Jaguar Hunt 
 
 The Lost Indian Babies ok Rio Fkio Zapatera 
 
 The Mediterranean of the West 
 
 The Nicaragua Canal Its Promise of the 
 Future 
 
 The Landing at Greytown A New Industry 
 Tin-: Planting of Rubber Groves 
 
 Lost ........ 
 
 In an Idol Cave 
 
 The Tiger Cat 
 
 Apula ....... 
 
 The Rubber Hunters 
 
 The Wild Palm Forest and the Alligator Bird 
 
 Faithful ....... 
 
 Found ....... 
 
 Parted . 
 
 Guatemala, the Land of the Quetzal 
 
 The Trick .Mule Earthquake Land . 
 
 The Mystery of Palenque and the Unknown- 
 Cities . 
 
 A Philosophical Monkey 
 
 A Guatemala Coffee Plantation 
 
 Pequena Paris: A City of Surprise 
 
 'No Hay" and "No Si:" 
 
 Cohan, the City of the Quetzal . 
 
 The Royal Bird 
 
 PACK 
 
 153 
 
 160 
 
 170 
 177 
 
 183 
 
 187 
 
 '94 
 198 
 208 
 213 
 216 
 
 229 
 233 
 
 237 
 242 
 
 247 
 258 
 262 
 267 
 275 
 280 
 289
 
 ILLUSTRATIONS. 
 
 " The people met them with rejoicing, dancing, and garlands 
 
 of flowers " . . . . . . Frontispiece 39 
 
 " ' I glanced at the demon-like looking creature as I held him 
 
 by his wing ' " ........ 83 
 
 " There seemed to be from fifty to a hundred pigs, turning 
 
 hither and thither " . . . . . . .136 
 
 ' Leigh leaped into one of the mahogany dugout boats " .191 
 
 " The woman went out and stood where Leigh had slept, and 
 
 pointed upward " . . . . . . . .226
 
 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 sXKc 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 THE QUETZAL. THE GOLDEN ACE OF QUETZALCOATL. THE 
 ST. THOMAS LEGEND AND THE MYSTERIOUS CROSS. THE 
 STORY OF NICARAGUA, THE CHIEF. 
 
 THE quetzal, or quesal, the paradise trogon (Caluras 
 rcsplcndcns), is one of the most beautiful of the birds in 
 the Western world. To witness the flight of one of these 
 birds in the sun through a Nicaraguan or Guatemalan forest 
 is an event to an ornithologist from England or North 
 America. The paradise trogons that we see in collections 
 give but a suggestion of the marvellous splendor of the live 
 bird as it drifts through the tropical forests, especially when 
 its flight is in a rift of sunlight, amid the long, glimmering 
 shadows. 
 
 The quetzal was the sacred bird of the temples of Central 
 American Andes, and is the national emblem of Guatemala, 
 in memory of the ancient nations and rites of a vanished em- 
 pire that held the gems of nature as among the gifts of 
 its gods. 
 
 The bird in several species is found in the forests of Cen- 
 
 >3
 
 14 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 tral America. It is not rare in the forests or the table-lands; 
 but few, except native Americans, have ever seen it in its own 
 haunts or witnessed the vision of the splendor of its flight. 
 
 Why when this royal and sacred bird, the bird of ca- 
 ciques and of one of the republics of the third America, is 
 the most beautiful of all the birds of paradise on our own 
 continent ? 
 
 The bird lives in mountain forests, at a height of some 
 three or five thousand feet, and not many white travellers go 
 there. 
 
 It is a lazy bird. It sits in bowers of bloom among the 
 orchids and odorous plants, and seems to be dreaming. 
 
 Says a lover of birds of rare plumage : " It is too lazy to 
 turn its head ; it seems to be thinking, thinking, but of what 
 it is thinking no man knows. I would give many pesos to 
 know what these superb trogons are always thinking about." 
 
 The bird has a fussy look about the head, as though its 
 meditations had not been congenial. It has the appearance 
 of a pessimist with all of its optimist plumes. He is a kind 
 of rainbow in the cloud. 
 
 He wears a mantle of golden green, a living mantle with 
 the lustre of gems. Under this mantle burns a waist of 
 carmine red. His eye is brown, his beak yellow, and from 
 his little body sweeps a tail like a trail of a royal creature of 
 nature, white and green. The feathers of this brilliant tail are 
 usually more than two feet long. One wonders that they can 
 ever be borne in the air by this animated beauty of the silent 
 forest. 
 
 He seems not to talk much, with all of his thinking, but 
 what he says is like the voice of the temple of Memnon. He
 
 THE QUETZAL. I 5 
 
 speaks low, lovingly, and melodiously. Then his voice swells 
 and drifts on the warm, fragrant air of his lazy habitudes. 
 He is a bird of mystery. 
 
 The royal bird lives on fruit, and he does not have to hunt 
 for it in the regions of the plantains and palms. He has but to 
 sit in the cool shadow of a tree and eat, and make love, and 
 pipe, and think. He has been thinking for thousands of years ; 
 he was thinking when Columbus came, and he is thinking yet. 
 When he is tamed he falls in love with his keeper. But he 
 does not thrive in captivity ; if you handle him, he dies. 
 
 Our friends the Frobishers, from Milton, Mass., whose 
 travels in South America we pictured in " Over the Andes," 
 had no sooner arrived at Port Limon than they began to in- 
 quire at the consulate in regard to the wonderful bird of the 
 Nicaraguan, Honduran, and Guatemalan forests. Captain 
 Frobisher and his two nephews had secured some strange birds 
 and rare plants in South America ; they wished to add a living 
 quetzal to their collection, and to see the bird in its native 
 woods. 
 
 " I can secure one of the birds for you," said the Consul. 
 "The Indian women have them for sale in Central American 
 towns." 
 
 " I am going to Guatemala," said Captain Frobisher. " Our 
 plan is to visit Costa Rica's beautiful capital, San Jose, to go 
 to Greytown and Hluefields, and thence to Livingston in Gua- 
 temala and to Halise in Honduras. We hope to make an 
 excursion into Lake Nicaragua and to see the ancient ruins 
 in the lake, go to Granada, the old town of ships in the days 
 of Spain, and to see the route of the proposed Nicaraguan 
 Canal. I look upon this canal as certain to be built, and to
 
 l6 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 become the gateway of the Pacific, the new water high- 
 way of the world. We are travelling in part for pleasure, 
 but largely for education, to see the coffee plantations of 
 Central America, the new fruit industries of Nicaragua, 
 Honduras, and Guatemala. We think that great opportuni- 
 ties are here and a great future ; but one of my nephews has 
 a fancy for birds, and we wish to see the home of a moun- 
 tain quetzal, the native bird of paradise, and to secure one for 
 our own collection of birds, and more than one live bird, if 
 possible, for a museum from which we have received letters." 
 
 " You will not find it difficult to carry out your whole plan. 
 It seems to me a very interesting one. Our countrymen fail 
 to see how great is the industrial opportunity in this country 
 of the paradise bird." 
 
 " My nephew Alonzo is more interested in coffee-growing 
 and in the banana trade than in ornithology ; but his brother 
 and I have a great love of what is wonderful in nature. The 
 trogon is among birds what the night-blooming cereus is among 
 plants, and we wish to see it in its native forests. Have I 
 made our purpose of travel clear to you ? " 
 
 " Very clear. I have friends who know the whole country 
 well ; some of them are connected with the new lines of 
 steamers to these parts ; I will introduce you to them." 
 
 " Thank you, Consul. There is one man that always has 
 a vision in his mind, a warm heart, and a ready hand. That 
 man is the Consul, and I see that you are a true representa- 
 tive of the liberal men whom the traveller most wishes to 
 know."' 
 
 Port Limon exists yet only in outline. It was a tropical 
 swamp only a few years ago. It now has several hotels, a
 
 THE QUETZAL. \J 
 
 Protestant and a Catholic church, a public garden in which 
 are beautiful orchids and some wonderful plants, a fine mar- 
 ket-place, and evidences of progress on every hand. It is a 
 very unhealthy place, although it lies between the mountains 
 and the foaming sea. \\ *hy it should be so, with the purple 
 and green Caribbean Sea breaking against the new sea- 
 wall and the palm-shaded mountains towering above it, we 
 cannot see. But so it is. The stranger should avoid the hot 
 sun and the frequent rains here; he should not get wet and 
 then expose himself to the sun. lie will look upon the place as 
 one of nature's paradises when he lands, and will be tempted 
 to rush into the natural parks of wonderful verdure. Let 
 him sit down under the cocoanut palms around his hotel at 
 first, and there ask some resident how many times he has had 
 the fever. 
 
 This question Captain Frobisher asked of Mr. Sobey, the 
 Baptist minister in the place, who had founded and helped 
 to build up a number of churches in this republic of the future. 
 
 "Some twenty times," said the good man, before whose 
 faith and work malaria has been put to flight. " And the 
 black vomit twice," he added. " It is this way : if a man lead 
 a temperate life and has the fever, the chances are ninety- 
 nine to one that he will recover; but if he be dissipated or 
 has lowered his vitality by excesses, his hope ol recovery 
 will not be so great," or words to this effect. Among men ol 
 right habits, the fever is little more dreaded than :i eokl in 
 the North. 
 
 Soldiers, sailors, and fortune seekers come here, tall sick, 
 and some of them die; but those who obevthe laws ol health, 
 like those who follow the ri<Tit laws of all conditions of lite,
 
 1 8 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 overcome the clangers of the climate. Mr. Sobey, with all of 
 his levers, is a very healthy-looking man. 
 
 Many advices are given here as to how to avoid the malaria. 
 
 ' Drink lime water, or let the colored boys bring you the 
 water of the cocoanuts daily, cutting off the top of the cocoa- 
 nuts with his machete, and pouring it out before you, -the 
 water that grows, as it were, in the buckets on the trees. 
 Shun spirits, use much coffee ; never go out into the sun 
 without an umbrella, and not at all if possible; avoid getting 
 wet ; never let wet clothes dry on you. Do not get excited. 
 Live where the winds blow upon the coast." These counsels 
 and many others will be heard here, and some of them will 
 not be approved by all people. It is safe to say that those 
 who are temperate in all things escape, as a rule, the greater 
 dangers of malarial fever. 
 
 It is delightful to sit on the sea-wall in the cool of the day 
 in the incoming breeze from the sea. The sun goes down, 
 red and flaming, behind the dark shadows of the cocoanut 
 palms on the hills ; then the silence of the stars comes over 
 the green land and purple sea. The surf rises and foams, 
 and beats against the sea-wall incessantly ; ships pass, and 
 sails careen by. The colored people come down the prome- 
 nade to share the cool, and but for the danger of malaria 
 Port Limon would be one of the lovely places of the world. 
 The rapid building here will probably cause the malaria to 
 disappear. The place is destined to grow with the new de- 
 velopment of Costa Rica, which promises to be one of the 
 centres of great progress in the future of the Western world. 
 The time of malaria will then be likely to be only a matter of 
 memory.
 
 THE QUETZAL. 19 
 
 THE GOLDEN AGE OF QUETZALCOATL. 
 
 Who was Quetzalcoatl, or Quetzalcohuatl (pronounced 
 Ket-zal-co-wat-tle) ? 
 
 He was the king of the Toltecs, the teacher of truth, who 
 brought the Golden Age to Mexico, and whose disciples car- 
 ried the Golden Age to Central America. His name in some 
 form is impressed upon many ancient cities and monuments. 
 Thus we have Quetzalapan, Quetzalapec, and Ouetzaltenango. 
 He was known as the Feathered Snake, the serpent here 
 meaning not evil but wisdom. The quetzal, the bird of the 
 sun, has the same suggestion. 
 
 Whence came the king of the Toltecs? He appeared one 
 day on the shores of Panuco ; he was a messenger from the 
 Hast; the people received him as a god. 
 
 He taught the people the arts of peace; that violence and 
 bloodshed and war were wrong; that they should live in Jove 
 and cultivate the earth. 
 
 Under this teaching, according to the legend, a Golden 
 Age came. The corn grew so large that it required the 
 strength oi a man to carry away a single ear from the field. 
 The cotton grew in many colors. The trees rejoiced in an 
 abundant fruitage. The birds sung entrancing!)'. 
 
 He disappeared after a reign of twenty years, going away 
 as mysteriously as he had appeared. The people deified him. 
 A part of his followers went to Central America and founded 
 Tollan in Chiapos. The quetzal became an emblem ot the 
 Toltecan king of the Golden Age. 
 
 There is a very beautiful legend associated with the bird 
 that reflects the spirit of the Golden Age.
 
 20 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Iii that age nothing could be killed. But the plumes of 
 the quetzal were the symbol of royalty. Only the kings were 
 allowed to use them, and they must not kill the bird. 
 
 The sacred law ran : that they might capture the bird, mer- 
 cifully remove its long plumes, and give it freedom, but that 
 this must be done by consecrated hands. 
 
 Whatever truth there may be in these legends, this last 
 provision is worthy of a people of any golden age ; for truth 
 is truth, and mercy is mercy, and kindness is kindness wher- 
 ever they may be found. 
 
 The law that we find in this legend has a very Oriental 
 spirit, and one almost wonders if some St. Thomas, not the 
 Doubter, did not come to America from Judea and teach the 
 Toltecs these beneficent things, or if some missionary influ- 
 ence that was begun in St. Thomas, who was supposed to be 
 born in Antioch and who died in Odessa, did not go to the 
 Nestorians in Persia, and to Yucatan, and Guatemala. 
 Fancy likes to question such pleasing suggestions; but the 
 field is one for the poet, the artist, and for those who study 
 the spirit of events in symbolisms. 
 
 THE STRANGE LEGEND OF THE QUETZAL, OR OF ST. THOMAS 
 AM) QUETZALCOATL. 
 
 The quetzal is not only the bird of history and of beauty ; 
 it is associated with a legend as curious as that of the Wan- 
 dering Jew or of the Crossbill. Why no great novel or 
 poem or painting has come out of this most wonderful and 
 mysterious of all the legends of the Western world is remark- 
 able. Impossible as is the story, it is not more so than that
 
 THE QUETZAL. 21 
 
 of the Wandering Jew, and the imaginary associations of the 
 St. Thomas legend are as pleasing as those of the Wandering 
 Jew are terrible. 
 
 What possible connection can there be in the realm of 
 fancy between St. Thomas, the Twin, who would not believe 
 the resurrection without the visible witness of it, and the bird 
 of Guatemala, of Yucatan, and Southern Mexico ? 
 
 The known history of St. Thomas is very brief. " Except 
 I see, I will not believe," pictures the spirit of this disciple. 
 " Blessed arc those who have not seen and yet have believed," 
 was a rebuke that will always engage the mind of a philoso- 
 pher. To accept things by faith is the noblest exercise of the 
 soul. 
 
 The legendary history of St. Thomas forms one of the 
 most pleasing of all the Oriental creations of fancy. Pontius 
 Pilate, among such legends, is pictured as wandering to Lu- 
 cerne, Switzerland, and as dying on the black mountain, now 
 called Mt. Pilatus, where his spirit still summons the clouds 
 of the storm. St. Thomas, too, is represented as a wanderer, 
 but wherever the Doubter went great events followed, and 
 the legend takes him to India. 
 
 On the Malabar coast of the Indian peninsula, the Doubter 
 is supposed to have made his first journeys, and to have re- 
 lated the proof of the resurrection as it had been demonstrated 
 to him. The "Christians of St. Thomas," a religious com- 
 munity there, long under the charge of bishops sent from 
 Persia, attributed their origin to the [(reaching of St. Thomas. 
 The Xestorians continue this history. 
 
 The legend carries the travels of St. Thomas, the Doubter, 
 as a missionary apostle into many lands. The most remark-
 
 22 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 able of these journeys associates him with the Western world 
 and with Guatemala and Yucatan. 
 
 But how did fancy bring the feet of the disciple who had 
 proved the resurrection of Christ to the lost cities of tropical 
 America ? 
 
 We see him in the light of the legend in Chinese Tartary, 
 and going north and crossing into the Western world from 
 the once narrow channel where now is Behring Strait. We 
 may see him wandering in summer down the brightening 
 coastway of the mountains and valleys of what is now Cali- 
 fornia, and thence to the ancient people of Mexico and 
 Yucatan. 
 
 Here he appears not as St. Thomas, but as the god of the 
 Toltecs, who bears the name of Quetzalcoatl. He preaches; 
 the people hear, and golden temples rise in air with the archi- 
 tecture of Greece and Egypt, and in them is set in exquisite 
 sculpture the form of the cross. 
 
 This is fancy, but as a mere legend it is splendid, worthy 
 of a poet's or an artist's work; full of suggestion and inspira- 
 tion, as well as of spiritual beauty, and a charming parable. 
 To St. Thomas, as the imaginary Toltecan god Quetzalcoatl, 
 the beautiful bird of the sun and air, with white plumes and 
 his breast of the sun, was sacred. 
 
 Is there any groundwork for fancies like this? Is there a 
 possibility of the Jewish origin of the extinct cities, whose 
 monuments were full of Egyptian and Grecian suggestions, 
 that now strew the forests of tropical Mexico and Guate- 
 mala ? 
 
 In a work published in 1854, entitled "Peruvian Antiqui- 
 ties," by Mariano Edward Rivero and John James Von
 
 THE QUETZAL. 23 
 
 Tschudi, and translated into English from the original Span- 
 ish by Francis L. Hawks, LL.U., there is narrated some 
 curious events which led up to the Quetzalcoatl legend. 
 From this source we gather the legend of Votan the Wise 
 (the serpent, not in the bad sense). 
 
 "Those authors who attribute a Hebrew origin to the 
 American tribes do not agree among themselves, touching the 
 coming of the Israelites into the New World : some think that 
 they came directly from the Eastern hemisphere to the West, 
 and established themselves in the central and southern parts 
 of this hemisphere ; but the majority are of opinion that they 
 crossed Persia and the frontiers of China, and came in by the 
 way of Behring Strait. 
 
 "An ingenious author of our times considers the Canaanites 
 as the first inhabitants of America, who, proceeding from 
 Mauritania Tingitana, landed somewhere on the shores of the 
 Gulf of Mexico. Fifteen hundred years after the expulsion 
 of the Canaanites by Joshua, the nine and a half tribes of 
 Israel passed over by the way of Behring Strait, and, like the 
 Goths and Vandals, assaulted that people (the Canaanites). 
 For a second time, and on another continent, the descendants 
 of Joshua attacked the Canaanites, whose origin they had 
 discovered, and, animated by their ancient hatred, they burned 
 their temples and destroyed their gigantic towers and cities. 
 
 "At first view, the proofs produced by different authors in 
 favor of an Israelitish immigration may seem to be conclu- 
 sive ; but if closely examined, it will be seen that this hypothe- 
 sis rests on no solid Inundation. 
 
 " But it is time to turn to another hypothesis no less inter- 
 esting, and up to this time never thoroughly examined. The
 
 24 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 author of this is Don Pablo Felix de Cabrera, of Guatemala, 
 who labors ingeniously and with force to show the relations 
 between the Phoenicians and Americans, sustaining his opin- 
 ions by Mexican hieroglyphic inscriptions. This brilliant 
 hypothesis merits a somewhat extended notice. 
 
 " Don Francisco Nunez de la Vega, bishop of Chiapa, pos- 
 sessed, as he himself states in his ' Diocesan Constitutions,' 
 published at Rome in 1702, a document in which a certain 
 vovager or traveller, named Votan, minutely described the 
 countries and nations which he had visited. This manu- 
 script, it is found, was written in the Tzendal (Guatemala or 
 Mexican) language, and was accompanied by certain hiero- 
 glvphics cut in stone ; by order of the same Votan, the manu- 
 script was to be permanently deposited in a dark house (or 
 cavern) in the province of Soconusco, and there confided to 
 the custody of a noble Indian lady and of a number of 
 Indians, the places of all of whom, as they became vacant, 
 were to be continually resupplied. Thus it continued pre- 
 served for centuries, perhaps for two thousand years, until 
 the bishop above named, Nunez de la Vega, in visiting the 
 province, obtained possession of the manuscript and, in the 
 year 1690. commanded it to be destroyed in the public square 
 of Iluegatan; so that the curious notices which it contained 
 would have been completely lost, if there had not existed, in 
 the hands of Don Ramon de Ordonez y Aguiar, in Ciudad 
 Real, according to his own statement, a copy made immedi- 
 ately after the conquest, and which is in part published by 
 Cabrera. 
 
 " Petween two squares may be read the following, at the 
 title or topic ot the manuscript: 'Proof that I am a serpent,
 
 THE QUETZAL. 25 
 
 the Wise.' The author says in the text, that he is the third 
 bearing the name of Yotan ; that by nature or birth he is a 
 serpent, for he is a Chivim; that he had proposed to himself 
 to travel until he should find the way to the heavens, whither 
 he went to seek the serpents, his parents; that he had gone 
 from Valum Chivim to Valum Votan, and conducted seven 
 families from the last-named place ; that he had happily 
 passed to Europe, and had seen them at Rome building a 
 magnificent temple ; that he had travelled by an open path 
 seeking for his brothers, the serpents, and had made marks 
 on this same path, and that he had passed by the houses of 
 the thirteen serpents. In one of his journeys he had encoun- 
 tered other seven families of the Tzequil nation, whom he 
 recognized as serpents, teaching them all that was necessary 
 to prepare a suitable sustenance, and that they for their part 
 were ready to acknowledge him as God himself, and elected 
 him their chief. Such is the tenor of the document. 
 
 " In the ruins of Palenque, Don Antonio del Rio, a captain 
 of artillery, sent in 1786 by the King of Spain to examine 
 the remains of that city, found various figures which repre- 
 sent Votan on both continents, and this tradition was con- 
 firmed some years later by the discovery of divers medals. 
 
 "With great diligence and labor, Cabrera availed himself 
 of these sources and commentaries on the history oi the 
 past, and drew from them the following conclusion, which 
 alone we can here offer to our readers', the limit oi our work 
 not permitting an extended statement ol the ingenious proofs 
 brought forward by the author. 
 
 "Cabrera thinks that ;i Chivim is the same as ;i (iivim or 
 Hivim, i.e. a descendant oi Ileth, the son ol Canaan. To
 
 26 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 the Givims or Hivites (Avims or Avites), of whom mention 
 is made in Deuteronomy (ch. ii. v. 23) and in Joshua (ch. xiii. 
 v. 3), belonged Cadmus and his wife Hermione, who, as we 
 read in Ovid's " Metamorphoses," were changed into serpents 
 and elevated to the dignity of gods. It is probably owing to 
 this table that in the Phoenician language the word ' Givim ' 
 signifies also a serpent. The city of Tripoli, under the 
 dependence of Tyre, was anciently called Chivim ; and the 
 theme or topic of Votan, ' I am a serpent (wise man) 
 because I am Chivim,' simply means, when interpreted, 'I 
 am a 1 Iivite of Tripoli,' a city which he calls Valum Votan. 
 Building on a profound consideration of ancient history, 
 Cabrera believes that the Tyrian Hercules, who, according 
 to Diodorus, went over the entire world, was the ancestor 
 of Votan ; that the island of Hispaniola is the ancient Sep- 
 timia. and the city of Alecto that of Valum, from which 
 Votan began his journevings. lie also thinks that the thir- 
 teen serpents signify the thirteen Canary Isles, which derive 
 their name from their inhabitants, the Canaanites, who tar- 
 ried in them jointly with the Hivites; and that the marks 
 or indications which Votan erected in the pathway to his 
 brothers mean the two columns of white marble found at 
 Tangier, with this inscription in the Phoenician language: 
 'We are the sons of those who fled from the robber Joshua, 
 the >on of Xun, and found here a secure asylum.' 
 
 " The journey of Votan to Rome, and the vast temple which 
 he saw being constructed in that city, are events which, accord- 
 ing to the foregoing conclusions, should have taken place in 
 the year 290 before the Christian era, when, after an obsti- 
 nate and bloody war of eight years with the Samnites, the
 
 THE QUETZAL. 2J 
 
 Romans granted peace to that people, and the Consul Publius 
 Cornelius Rufus commanded to be built a sumptuous temple 
 in honor of Romulus and Remus, an event which, according 
 to Mexican chronology, took place in the year 'eight rab- 
 bits' (Toxli). The seven Tzequil families which Votan 
 encountered on his return were also Phoenicians, and prob- 
 ably shipwrecked persons from the Phoenician embarkation 
 mentioned by Diodorus. 
 
 " According to Cabrera, the first emigration or colony of the 
 Carthaginians in America took place in the First Punic War. 
 The other conclusions of this author relative to the founda- 
 tion of the kingdom of Amahnamacan by the Carthaginians, 
 the emigration of the Toltecs, etc., are incompatible with the 
 limits of our work ; but we cannot do less than remark here 
 on the opinions of many learned men who think that the 
 Toltecan god Ouetzalcoatl is identical with the apostle St. 
 Thomas; and it is observable that the surname of this 
 apostle, Didimus (twin), has the same significance in Creek 
 that Ouetzalcoatl has in Mexican. It is astonishing, also, to 
 consider the numerous and extensive regions traversed by 
 this apostle ; for, though some confine them to Parthia, 
 others extend them to Calamita, a doubtful city in India; 
 others as far as Maliopur (at this day the city of St. Thomas 
 on the Coromandel coast); others even t<> China, and, as we 
 have seen, there are not wanting those who think that be- 
 came even to Central America. 
 
 "Wo decline making any remarks on the documents oi 
 Votan and the interpretations of Cabrera, since, even il they 
 arc not considered fabulous, they do not present a species ol 
 evidence perfectly tree from suspicion."
 
 28 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The association of the American prophet and instructor, 
 Quetzalcoatl, with St. Thomas, and with the emblem of the 
 Toltec faith as found in the quetzal, gives a poetic coloring 
 to the forest wonder of ruby, pearl, and emerald feathers 
 and plumes. A naturalist with a poetic fancy might well 
 search long and far for a living representation of these 
 ancient mysteries. What the odorous cactus is to the flowers 
 of these countries, the quetzal is to the inhabitants of the 
 air, whose home is among the orchids of the ruins and the 
 ancient trees. 
 
 THE MYSTERIOUS CROSS. 
 
 Do the lost cities of Guatemala and Yucatan themselves 
 reveal any suggestions of a Jewish, Egyptian, Greek, or 
 Christian origin ? There are two things found in these ruins 
 that excite the wonder of the most literal mind. One is the 
 arch and the other is the cross. 
 
 We have seen a copy of a sculptured picture found in one 
 of the sanctuaries of Palenque, the lost city of Yucatan. It 
 represents a cross, and a devotee on one side praying to 
 the cross, and another devotee on the other side making an 
 offering to the same cross. The picture is taken from 
 Stephens' classic and immortal work, " Incidents of Travel in 
 Central America." In its suggestions this picture, or the 
 sculpture represented by it, is the most remarkable ever 
 made by a human hand in the Western world. 
 
 Let the reader examine it ; every line is beauty, all the 
 multiple forms are conceptions of the highest art. 
 
 Was there ever drawn a cross of such wonderful beauty? 
 In the cathedral windows of Europe, in St. Peter's, in the
 
 THE QUETZAL. 20, 
 
 Holy Sepulchre, has anything ever appeared that can sur- 
 pass this conception of the agent of crucifixion and sacrifice 
 that has lifted the world ? 
 
 When the Spanish padres beheld this marvellous cross, 
 they said, " The ancient inhabitants of Palcnque were Chris- 
 tians." 
 
 Were they ? Had the religious teacher Quetzalcoatl any 
 association with some wandering St. Thomas from the East- 
 ern world ? 
 
 As the reader is to follow the fortunes of our travellers 
 into Nicaragua, he should, by way of introduction, know 
 something of this great chieftain from which the country of 
 the lakes and the projected canal received its name. 
 
 A STOKV OF THE CACIQUE NICARAGUA, AND (JXE OF LAS 
 CASAS, THE GOOD DOMINICAN*. 
 
 In the old Darien days, long, however, before the Darien 
 scheme, the Spanish governor of the wonderful country 
 sent an adventurer named Davila to explore the coast. In 
 1522, a hundred years before the landing of the Pilgrims at 
 Plymouth, this voyager sailed along the Mosquito country, 
 and came to the harbor near where Greytown now stands, 
 and entered the San Juan River, as the natural canal is now 
 called. The stream was then, as now, an avenue through 
 tropical forests, in which dwelt inquisitive parrots ami still 
 more wondering monkeys. 
 
 As Davila passed along, wonder led to wonder, until there 
 opened before him a lake ot volcanoes, and he came to an 
 Indian city on the lake.
 
 30 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " It is Nicaragua," they said. The word is also written 
 Micaragua, and the place is ealled Nicoya. The town of 
 Rivas stands now near where ancient Nicaragua stood. 
 
 " What is the name of your cacique ? " asked Davila. 
 
 " Nicaragua," answered the Indians. 
 
 The explorer sought an interview with the chief of this 
 marvellous lake, over which rose mountains green with palms 
 and enchanting with fruits and flowers. 
 
 He told the chief that he came to him as a messenger from 
 heaven, to bring him a new religion. The priests told him 
 the tale of the Garden of Eden. 
 
 " How do you know ? " said the chief. 
 
 They told him the tale of the flood. 
 
 " But how do you know ? " asked the chief. 
 
 " God revealed it from heaven," said the priest. 
 
 " But how ? " asked the cacique. " Did he come down on 
 a rainbow ? " 
 
 This was really the cacique's question, if we may trust 
 Peter Martyr, and it shows a very poetic imagination. 
 
 As the priests continued to instruct Nicaragua, they found 
 him a man with a very clear mind. 
 
 To all that they told him he asked, " How do you know?" 
 and as the answers did not satisfy him, they said, 
 
 " We will tell you what we do know, and leave the rest to 
 God." 
 
 But, although he questioned everything, Nicaragua saw 
 that the religion of the messengers was better than his blind 
 idolatries. In the Gospel he found a wonderful revelation, 
 and he rejoiced at its power, and accepted it, and desired to 
 be baptized.
 
 THE QUETZAL. 3 I 
 
 So it was arranged that, like Clovis of France, he should 
 be baptized, and his court and arm)' with him. 
 
 "But," said the invader, "you must promise never to 
 wage war against the Spanish race." 
 
 " That would be hard in case that I were to be wronged," 
 said the king. 
 
 Why this shrewd native did not demand of the Spaniards 
 that they should not wage war against him and his people 
 before he received baptism, we cannot tell, but the Spaniards 
 told him that war was sin, and that he could not receive sal- 
 vation unless he would live a life of peace. 
 
 "Then I will give up war," he said, in a truly Christian 
 spirit. 
 
 Nicaragua and his people were baptized, and gave up war; 
 but the Spaniards soon began to slaughter the Indians for 
 their treasures, and never ceased to do this until they aban- 
 doned the country. Their rule was a long tyranny, in which 
 the poor Indians were enslaved and killed without mercy, 
 and robbed without any sense or pretension of justice. 
 
 The Indians became much better Christians than their 
 masters; they saw the value of Christianity, but wondered 
 how those who preached this sublime Gospel could imperil 
 their own souls by cruelty and wrong. 
 
 The Spaniards had hardly converted the cacicpie and his 
 tribe before they began to show their greed lor gold. 
 
 The chief wondered at this. To him gold represented but 
 little that was essential to true happiness m lite. 
 
 lie one day came to the explorer. 
 
 "I am filled with surprise," he said sorrowfully. 
 
 "At what 3 " asked the explorer.
 
 32 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 "That so few men should so greatly desire so much 
 gold!" 
 
 This was nearly his exact expression. Can we wonder at 
 it? If we are surprised that the Spaniards should have put 
 gold before justice then, can we be less so that it is so now? 
 
 We love to think of the beautiful soul of this chief, so 
 earnest to know the reason of things, and so willing to accept 
 that which was best for him and his people when it was 
 made clear to him. 
 
 And who will not be touched by sympathy for him, at his 
 great disappointment that men who could preach so well 
 should so little heed their own sublime faith, but held their 
 selfish desires above the spiritual life that promises a better 
 world than this. 
 
 So the Indians of Nacoya became a Christian race, and 
 splendid churches and golden altars arose among the palms, 
 fruit gardens, and orchards, and their idols sunk into the earth, 
 where we may find them to-day. 
 
 Central America was the New England of Spain, and Nica- 
 ragua merits mention with the great and noble Massasoit 
 in the deeds of the vanished race. 
 
 THE STORY OF LAS CASAS AND THE SINGING INDIAN MER- 
 CHANTS. 
 
 4 
 
 We must account this story as one of the best ever told in 
 the great Latin empire of the New World. We cannot be 
 sure of the great legends of the Golden Age in Guatemala, or 
 of the Golden Age in Peru, but that one of the most warlike 
 and ferocious tribes of Indians was won to a true and peace-
 
 THE QUETZAL. 33 
 
 ful faith by travelling singers, and the influence of Las Casas 
 of blessed memory, is true, and the story is as beautiful as it 
 is true. 
 
 Of all the missionary priests in early America, Las Casas 
 is the most ideal. He taught justice to the Indians, and the 
 authority of the law of righteousness which applied to all men 
 alike, kings, priests, and people. I le defended the rights of 
 all men, and especially those of the Indians in America. He 
 told kings and ecclesiastics that they had no right to wage 
 war against the natives of America, or to rob them or enslave 
 them because they were "infidels," and had never heard the 
 Gospel. 
 
 Arthur Helps says in his preface to his " Life of Las 
 Casas," that this defender of humanity in the wilderness is 
 the most interesting character that he had ever studied, and 
 that he looked upon him as one of "the most interesting 
 characters that ever appeared in history." He certainly was 
 the truest Christian philanthropist in Spanish America. He 
 was called the "Apostle to the Indies." 
 
 Bartholomew de Las Casas was the son of Antonio de Las 
 Casas, who was one of the companions of Columbus on the 
 voyage of discovery. He was born in Seville, 1474. At the 
 age ot twenty-eight he made his first voyage to America, and 
 at the age of ninety-two this old young man contended be- 
 fore Philip II. in favor of the Guatemalans having courts of 
 justice of their own. 
 
 In 15.36 Las Casas, then over sixty years of age, whieh was 
 the youth of old age to him, came to Guatemala, and occu- 
 pied a convent there. The Spanish rule over the natives ol 
 New Spain, as Central America was then called, was most
 
 34 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 tyrannical and merciless. If Indians could not follow their 
 new leaders into the deep forests, the latter killed them, and 
 hundreds were known to go away with the conquerors and to 
 never return. To rob, kill, and pay no regard to the feelings 
 of the native races was a part of the Spanish policy, which 
 was justified as waging war against "infidels." Las Casas 
 became a defender of the rights of the Indians of Guatemala, 
 both in name and spirit. 
 
 Las Casas, in 1533, wrote a treatise, which then excited 
 the world, in which he claimed that men must be brought to 
 Christianity by spiritual persuasion, and not by force of arms, 
 and that it was not lawful to make war against infidels merely 
 because they Were infidels. He was to New Spain, or Cen- 
 tral America, what Roger Williams was to New England. 
 The Spanish conquerors, who enslaved Indians because they 
 were infidels, were greatly incensed by these doctrines. 
 
 The colonists of Guatemala derided Las Casas. 
 
 " Put your faith into practice," they said. " Convert one 
 of the tribes of Indians by personal appeal and love, and we 
 will then consider your theories." 
 
 "That I will do in God's name," said Las Casas. 
 
 There was a province in Guatemala called Tuzalatan, which 
 bore the name of Tierra de Guerra, or the Land of War. 
 The Indian tribe here was most untamable and savage. No 
 Spaniards dared to go near them, for they were as merciless 
 against them as the Spaniards were themselves cruel to all 
 the Indian races. 
 
 In May, 1537, Las Casas made an agreement with the gov- 
 ernor of Guatemala that if he could Christianize these Indians 
 they should be made subject to their own rulers under the
 
 THE QUETZAL. 35 
 
 Spanish crown, and be treated with justice as a Christian 
 people. 
 
 But how was the benevolent Las Casas to find a way to 
 the savage hearts of these people ? The Indians looked 
 upon the monks as their enemies. He could not go there. 
 He thought on the subject. 
 
 There were certain Indian merchants that went freely 
 among the tribes of Guatemala and Nicaragua, carrying with 
 them choice goods to sell. These could travel freely in the 
 terrible Land of War. Their coming to any place made a 
 holiday. Las Casas saw that through these men he might 
 approach the revengeful savages. 
 
 How ? 
 
 These Indians loved music. Their ears were open to 
 sweet sounds, and gentle music reached their hearts through 
 their ears. Music was to them a language of the soul. 
 It made them kindly ; it tended to love, and help, and 
 tears. 
 
 A band of these trading Indians were friends of the good 
 Las Casas. They could sing and play on rude native instru- 
 ments. Las Casas was familiar with the methods of the 
 troubadours, of whom one may read in Ticknor's "History 
 of Spanish Literature." He would teach these Indian mer- 
 chants to sing the Gospel, and to accompany their songs on 
 musical instruments, and would send them into the Land ot 
 War. The songs must be short and many ; the) - must con- 
 sist ot some two lines each. They must tell of how the 
 world was created; how men sinned; how Christ came into 
 the world to redeem men from sin. They must say that 
 idols are not uods.
 
 36 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 As, for example, although we have no copies of these 
 
 songs : 
 
 The idols cannot see, 
 God only man can see ! " 
 
 or 
 
 or 
 
 "The idols cannot hear. 
 God only man can hear I'' 
 
 " The idols have no power, 
 'Tis God alone has power ! " 
 
 Such couplets they would sing over and over, playing on 
 the musical instruments. The king and his subjects were so 
 susceptible to music that they would listen. So they would 
 wonder at the words in the evening shadows of the moun- 
 tains of Guatemala. 
 
 Now, when the Indian merchants should have sung that 
 idols were not gods, the Indians of the Land of War 
 would say, 
 
 " How do you know ? " and ask, " Who taught you that ? " 
 
 To the last question the traders would answer, 
 
 " We learned our songs from the monks. You must send 
 for them to answer your questions." 
 
 Happy thought! The Indian merchants went away. 
 
 The result of this admirable plan is beautifully told by 
 Arthur Helps in his " Life of Las Casas." We know of no 
 more beautiful story anywhere. Mr. Helps says: 
 
 " The merchants were received, as was the custom in a 
 country without inns, into the palace of the cacique, where 
 they met with a better reception than usual, being enabled to 
 make him presents of these new things from Castile. The}' 
 then set up their tent and began to sell their goods as they
 
 THE QUETZAL. 37 
 
 were wont to do, their customers thronging about to see the 
 Spanish novelties. When the sale was over for that day, the 
 chief men amongst the Indians remained with the cacique to 
 do him honor. In the evening the merchants asked for a 
 "teplanastle," an instrument of music which we may suppose 
 to have been the same as the Mexican teponazli, or drum. 
 They then produced some timbrels and bells which they had 
 brought with them, and began to sing the verses which they 
 had learned to sing by heart, accompanying themselves on 
 the musical instruments. The effect produced was very 
 great. The sudden change of character, not often made, 
 from a merchant to a priest, at once arrested the attention of 
 the assemblage. Then, if the music was beyond anything that 
 these Indians had heard, the words were still more extraor- 
 dinary ; for the good fathers had not hesitated to put into 
 their verses the questionable assertion that idols were demons, 
 and the certain fact that human sacrifices were abominable. 
 The main bod)' of the audience was delighted, and pro- 
 nounced these merchants to be ambassadors from new gods. 
 "The cacique, with the caution of a man in authority, sus- 
 pended his judgment until he had heard more of the matter. 
 The next da)', and for seven succeeding days, this sermon in 
 song was repeated. In public and in private the person who 
 insisted most on this repetition was the cacique; and he 
 expressed a wish to fathom the matter, and to know the 
 origin and meaning ot these things. The prudent merchants 
 replied that they only sang what the)- had heard; that it 
 was not their business to explain these verses, for that office 
 belonged to certain padres, who instructed the people. '.And 
 who are the padres?' asked the chief. In answer to this
 
 38 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 question, the merchants painted pictures of the Dominican 
 monks, in their robes of black and white, and with their 
 tonsured heads. The merchants then described the lives of 
 these padres: how they did not eat meat, and how they did 
 not desire gold, or feathers, or cocoa ; that they were not 
 married, and had no communication with women ; that night 
 and day they sang the praises of God ; and that they knelt 
 before very beautiful images. Such were the persons, the 
 merchants said, who could and would explain these couplets ; 
 they were such good people, and so ready to teach, that if 
 the cacique were to send for them they would most willingly 
 come. 
 
 "The Indian chief resolved to see and hear these marvellous 
 men in black and white, with their hair in the form of a gar- 
 land, who were so different from other men ; and for this 
 purpose, when the merchants returned, he sent in company 
 with them a brother of his, a young man twenty-two years of 
 age, who was to invite the Dominicans to visit his brother's 
 country, and to carry them presents. The cautious cacique 
 instructed his brother to look well to the ways of these padres, 
 to observe whether they had gold and silver like the other 
 Christians, and whether there were women in their houses. 
 These instructions having been given, and his brother having 
 taken his departure, the cacique made large offerings of in- 
 cense and great sacrifices to his idols for the success of the 
 embassage." 
 
 I low beautiful this mission of singing merchants and peace- 
 ful monks must have been ! 
 
 So the monks came to preach where the wandering mer- 
 chants had been singing in the Land of War. Their journey
 
 u 
 
 THE QUETZAL. W 39 
 
 into the country was a triumph. The people met them with 
 rejoicing, dancing, and garlands of flowers. The singers 
 sang and the monks explained the songs. The king received 
 the Gospel through them, cast down his idols, and was bap- 
 tized, and the people followed him and learned the songs of 
 the missionaries. 
 
 A church arose where the idol temple had been. The 
 Indians became Christians and accepted the authority of the 
 King of Spain. 
 
 There was a kind-hearted pope at this time, Paul III. 
 Now Las Casas was a Dominican monk, and when this pope 
 heard of the singing merchants, and what the Dominicans 
 had accomplished, he was greatly pleased, and he pronounced 
 a sentence of excommunication against any who "reduce 
 these Indians to slavery, or rob them of their goods." So 
 there came a Golden Age to the Indian church at Guatemala.
 
 CHAPTER II. 
 
 THE YOUNG GERMAN - COFFEE PLANTER. 
 
 AS we have described our travellers in " Over the Andes," 
 one of the boys, Leigh Frobisher, was greatly inter- 
 ested in botany and ornithology, and the other in coffee 
 raising, tropical fruits, and commercial opportunities. 
 
 They were happy in the acquaintances that they made 
 on the ship that came by the way of Bocas del Toro to Port 
 Limon. 
 
 In one of these they were particularly fortunate. He was 
 a young German who owned a coffee plantation near the 
 ancient city of Cartago, at the foot of the once terrible vol- 
 cano Irazu. Cartago, where are the wonderful hot springs 
 of Costa Rica, famous for the cure of rheumatism and blood 
 diseases, is a very ancient city, some fourteen miles from 
 San Jose. It has an elevation of some five thousand feet, 
 and Irazu rises above it, looking like a simple hill green with 
 farms, but which is really nearly as high as Mt. Washing- 
 ton from this point, in all eleven thousand to twelve thousand 
 feet high, and some six thousand from the valley of Cartago. 
 
 Irazu is a well-behaved mountain now. Perhaps it has 
 
 been baptized, for misbehaving volcanoes were once baptized 
 
 in Central America, and some holy fathers who went over a 
 
 threatening pass to sprinkle one of the smoking peaks never 
 
 returned again. 
 
 4 o
 
 THE YOUNG GERMAN COFFEE PLANTER. 41 
 
 Irazii blew off its head at the last eruption, and left it, over 
 the summit from Cartago, in a quiet valley, where, we are 
 told, it may still be seen. The ancient town of Cartago was 
 largely destroyed in this eruption ; but the people who re- 
 mained picked up the rocks that the giant had thrown down 
 upon them, and built beautiful churches with them ; and the 
 traveller to-day can hardly believe that the cool and peace- 
 ful mountain, whose farms rise above the many towers of 
 Cartago, is the terrible Irazu. 
 
 The climate here is like Xew England in June, or Swit- 
 zerland in September, all the year. People who have had 
 malarial fevers in the cities on the coast flee to Cartago for 
 recovery. 
 
 The young German, whom our travellers met on the 
 steamer, owned a coffee plantation between Cartago and San 
 Jose, a little apart from the magnificent farms or haciendas 
 on the public ways. He was returning to his coffee farm, 
 and taking his father with him. The young man had been 
 in the country some seven years, lie spoke English and 
 Spanish, and was interested in the educational progress of 
 the country. 
 
 One day, on deck, the English captain of the ship, who 
 had a very friendly heart, came and sat down by Captain 
 Erobisher, Alonzo, and Leigh. 
 
 "Captain Morris," said Captain Erobisher, "what do you 
 know about coffee raising in Costa Rica?" 
 
 "Ask young Aleman there, the German; I have for- 
 gotten what the purser said his name was. I call him young 
 Aleman, and his father who is with him old Airman, tor 
 short. He is making money at coffee raising, I am told,
 
 42 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 though the price of coffee has fallen ; these young Germans, 
 they would make money anywhere." 
 
 "Captain Morris," said Captain Frobisher, "is it your view 
 that a young American, like one of my boys here, would do 
 well to settle down on a coffee plantation in Costa Rica?" 
 
 " No ; positively not." 
 
 "Why, Captain Morris? You say that the German 
 young Aleman is prosperous, although the price of coffee 
 is low. If he is doing well, why should not my boys, as I 
 call my nephews, be successful ? " 
 
 " For the reason that they are Americans." 
 
 Captain Frobisher looked surprised. 
 
 " Hut what of that, Captain ? " 
 
 " What ? Everything they are educated wrong." 
 
 " I am surprised to hear you say that, Captain. Explain to 
 me what you mean. Why are my nephews educated differ- 
 ently from the German student ? " 
 
 " Captain Frobisher, your nephews are educated to habits 
 of extravagance. That young German has been trained to 
 habits of economy. He knows the value of a dollar; your 
 nephews do not. Excuse me, my good friend, for plain speak- 
 ing in answer to your own question. Old Aleman there 
 knows the value of a dollar you do not; you think you do 
 your New England ancestors did." 
 
 He continued, "Excuse me, my boys, if I talk plain to you 
 in regard to life in Costa Rica. If there be any true republic 
 on earth, it is Costa Rica. The races there mingle on an 
 equality, and when the young German goes there and slowly 
 makes for himself a coffee farm or a banana plantation, and 
 becomes worth ten thousand to fifty thousand dollars, he does
 
 THE YOUNG GERMAN COFFEE PLANTER. 43 
 
 not go over to England to spend it making a fool of himself. 
 He does not go to the dissipated cities to make a show of 
 himself, or to gratify his appetites and passions in places 
 where he fancies himself a social leader, but where in reality 
 he amounts to nothing at all where he is really of no more 
 consequence than a last year's gadfly. He perhaps goes to 
 Germany, as young Aleman has done, and brings over his 
 old father to his growing plantation, as young Aleman is now 
 doing. Young Aleman has missionary ideas ; these mean the 
 good of the country. He will stay there. 
 
 " When young Aleman there shall be worth say fifty thou- 
 sand dollars, he will not greatly change his present mode of 
 life. The Costa Rieans are proud of their simple living, as 
 much so as your people are fond of show and ot exciting the 
 envy of others by putting those who are less favored at a 
 social disadvantage." 
 
 Captain Frobisher was touched. He pounded his cane 
 on the deck and said, " Show ! that cannot be so. You are 
 prejudiced, Captain Morris." 
 
 "No, pardon me; I am not," said the captain. " Have I 
 not carried thousands of newly rich Americans across the 
 .Atlantic? Your country was once proud of its democracy 
 and social worth and justice and character. You had great 
 men then. A few of your people now become rich, and these 
 take upon themselves almost court airs, and set a low and 
 vulgar example for those who toil and struggle. These 
 people, as a rule, have no place among men ol true worth ;is 
 their ancestors had. They give their children a superficial 
 education in many arts, most of which amounts to nothing; 
 but they are not schooled in the restraints ol honest thrift
 
 44 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 and to the fact that integrity is everything. Much of what 
 you call a high social standing, the Old World looks upon as 
 a cheap, vulgar show." 
 
 Captain Frobisher puffed out his cheeks and pounded his 
 cane again on the deck, and said, 
 
 " Hoys, if I thought that what the captain has been saying 
 applied to you, I would get you educated over again. 
 
 "You are a little too hard, Captain," he added. "I wish 
 that you would introduce us to young Aleman. There may 
 be a grain of salt in what you say, but my boys arc as good 
 as any young German. There ! " 
 
 Captain Frobisher brought his cane down on the deck with 
 a vigorous thump, after which followed the desired introduc- 
 tion. 
 
 "These people, my young German friend," said Captain 
 Morris, "are Americans of the true Washington and Jeffer- 
 son type of real common sense, who have not forgotten 
 their democratic ancestry. They want to know how to plant 
 coffee, and how to live in the country and make money, as 
 you do, and, I hope, how to benefit the country, as you desire 
 to do." 
 
 Young Aleman was a bright-faced German, and his face 
 lighted up at the odd introduction. lie brought his father 
 to the company, and introduced him to Captain Frobisher 
 and Alonzo and Leigh. 
 
 The two Germans, young Aleman and old Aleman, were 
 given to story telling, and to illustrating what they had to 
 sav by narrative and anecdote. 
 
 "We are about to go into Costa Rica," said Captain 
 Frobisher, "and we wish to know how to visit the country
 
 THE YOUNG GERMAN COFFEE PLANTER. 45 
 
 most intelligently. The captain here has been criticising our 
 habits and customs somewhat severely. He thinks we have 
 too large heads ; isn't that it, Captain ? My good German 
 friend, tell us what we should first shun in visiting the 
 country." 
 
 " Well," said young Aleman, " I had much to learn when 
 I first came to Costa Rica ; let me tell you a little story, if 
 you care to hear me; it may prove useful to you."
 
 CHAPTER III. 
 
 BUCKING AGAINST THE CLIMATE. 
 
 I CAM K down to the Mosquito Coast from Hamburg, 
 like a young American from the New England hills and 
 shores, full of hardy vigor, and as well supplied with ambi- 
 tion and resolution. I took this native force into the palm 
 lands, and maintained it for some months. I was full of 
 admiration for the dazzling seas, the green palm groves, the 
 fruits, and the resources of life on every hand; and I looked 
 down with contempt on what seemed to me a lazy and incom- 
 petent people, unwilling to profit by opportunity, and more 
 thoughtful of ease than of progress. I had come here in the 
 hope of helping these people in an educational way ; every 
 one should have a purpose beyond money making. 
 
 " In the glowing hours of the day, they lay under the 
 palms, the sea-walls, or bowery verandas. The great giants 
 of negroes, as well as people of resources and competence, 
 did this. I thought of establishing a mid-day school for 
 them. 
 
 " 'They spend the best part of the day in idleness,' I used 
 to saw ' Idleness is the curse of the country.' My German 
 blood was yet thick. I put on a felt hat, and went forth 
 into the sun in the noonday hours, and into the dews in the 
 evening. 
 
 " They rode lazily on little mules; I walked. They did 
 their marketing in the early morning hours, and then de- 
 
 46
 
 BUCKING AGAINST THE CLIMATE. 47 
 
 sorted the streets. I visited the stores in the afternoon to 
 find them empty, or filled with sleeping people lying about 
 on coffee sacks or boxes of merchandise. 
 
 " But it was not only the native inhabitants who were 
 addicted to these unthrifty habits and easy ways, the foreign 
 population did the same ; and I was accustomed to berate 
 them all. 
 
 " 'There never was a land so unworthy of its inhabitants,' " 
 said I one day to the British consul. 
 
 " ' My friend,' said he, ' how old are you in this country ? ' 
 
 " ' Not three months yet,' said I ; ' but I have lived as much 
 in those three months as your people do in as many years.' 
 
 " ' My German friend, when you have lived here six months, 
 if you should live as many, you will be wiser. Your blood 
 will have to grow thinner, and the change will come to you 
 with a shock some day if you don't get a sombrero, and avoid 
 the noontide sun. People sleep twice a day here. We have 
 two nights every day one of them is night of the shade at 
 noon.' 
 
 " ' But these people do nothing,' said I. 
 
 " ' Providence has provided that they shall not be compelled 
 to work hard,' said the consul. ' Look around you.' 
 
 " I did ; there were cocoanut palms everywhere, burning in 
 the ail - . Orange trees laden with fruit were bending coolly 
 over the fences of sugar-cane. The gardens were green 
 with sweet potato vines. ( )n the hills were sugar plantations. 
 The sea was full of fish. The sails hung loosely over the 
 sleeping forms of negroes on the boats, some ol which were 
 brown, some black, but all of whom were sleeping. 
 
 " Everywhere were water jars with small necks and big
 
 48 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 bodies, and the lime trees seemed to be as numerous as the 
 jars in the corners of the shadows. 
 
 " ' I see,' said I, 'everybody seems to be asleep on the land 
 and on the sea, negroes as well as the planters, sailors as well 
 as the white pantalooned masters of ships. The land itself 
 seems to be resting.' 
 
 " ' You are right, my German friend,' said the consul. 
 ' The whole land is resting, except a few Americans. They 
 will be likely to find a long siesta soon.' 
 
 " A great strapping negro from one of the ships, who had 
 been in the States and among the islands of the Antilles, here 
 showed his white teeth, and ventured to remark, 
 
 "'It am no use to buck against the climate, sir. It am like 
 going for a mad bull with a red rag, sir ; bucking against the 
 climate don't pay in these parts, sir. The person who does 
 that has a poor show.' 
 
 " ' Oh, go about your work and don't stand there, giant 
 that you are, wasting your time. Bucking against the climate, 
 bucking against the climate ; what do you mean by that ? ' 
 
 " 'The Americans and Germans who come down here, all 
 so mighty chipper and smart, as they say, and who begin to 
 feel a little chilly in the hot sun, and to drink a little beer and 
 then a little more, a little brandy and then a little more, forget 
 all about life some morning, boss, and turn up their toes in the 
 night in the unconsecrated ground.' 
 
 "I glared at him. lie showed his white teeth, gave a 
 shrug of the shoulders, and lolled slowly and idly away, and 
 sunk down among his own people in a huge bower of green 
 leaves and red blooms, where parrots were scolding. 
 
 " The port doctor passed by.
 
 BUCKING AGAINST THE CLIMATE. 49 
 
 "'One might as well be dead as to try to live in such a 
 country as this,' said I. ' Doctor, it is high noon, and you 
 and I seem to be the only people who are awake.' 
 
 " ' And I would not be awake had I not been called to a 
 case of fever.' 
 
 " ' What was the cause of the fever ? ' asked I. 
 
 " ' Bucking against the climate,' said he. 
 
 " ' You do not burden yourself with scientific terms,' said 
 I, laughing. 
 
 " ' No, not at this time of day,' he answered. ' The climate 
 forbids much exertion of the mind.' 
 
 " He passed on, holding a large umbrella over his head. I 
 did not carry any umbrella in my customary walks in the mid- 
 day sun. 
 
 " After a time I began to experience a cold heat, coming 
 on between my shoulder blades. My body ran with streams 
 of perspiration that came from some unknown fountain, and 
 yet with the heat there would come a slight and unaccount- 
 able chilliness. I had little shivers here and there, when 
 otherwise I seemed to be melting. My head felt quecrly at 
 times, my mouth was dry, and my tongue turned white. 
 My landlady showed some alarm at these disquieting sensa- 
 tions as I described them to her. 
 
 "One night I went to my bed - a good solid old I Eng- 
 lish bed, although my friends had advised me to sleep 
 in a hammock at a late hour. The thermometer was in 
 the nineties. The land seemed to steam with heat, and the 
 sea lay purple, without a ripple. 
 
 " My landlady had offered me some cool cocoanut water 
 before retiring. 
 
 E
 
 50 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " ' You look yellow and tired,' she said. 
 
 "'No,' said I, 'that is too tasteless and tame. I am a 
 temperance man at home, but to-night I will take a little 
 brandy and some ice water, not as a beverage, but as a 
 medicine.' 
 
 " My poor landlady shook her head. But I followed my 
 own counsel and prescription. I was not to be influenced 
 by the examples of these indolent people. 
 
 "When I woke up, not on the next, but on some other 
 morning, I seemed to be in a very strange place. 
 
 " My face was moist. I put my hand up to it, and found 
 that it was covered with blood. 
 
 " My heart seemed to bound when I found blood flowing 
 from my nose, ears, eyes, and gurgling in my mouth. 
 
 " The doctor of whom I have spoken came into the room 
 hurriedly, and raising his hands, exclaimed, 
 
 "'Thank God, the crisis is past; you are bleeding; it is a 
 good sign ; you will recover ! ' 
 
 "A negro girl was kneeling at the foot of my bed; she 
 seemed to be praying. 
 
 " ' In the name of heaven, doctor, where am I ? what is 
 this ? ' 
 
 " ' You are in the hospital, my friend.' 
 
 " ' How came I here ? ' 
 
 " 'The authorities so ordered, my friend.' 
 
 " ' Have I been sick, doctor?' 
 
 " ' For some days, my friend.' 
 
 " ' Have I been unconscious ? ' 
 
 " 'That question is for you to answer, my friend.' 
 
 " ' What is the matter with me, doctor ? '
 
 BUCKING AGAINST THE CLIMATE. 5 I 
 
 "'Oh, the fever the usual fever. Your life has been 
 balancing, but the danger is past now, provided you favor 
 yourself as the natives here do, in order to live.' 
 
 " ' What was the cause of the fever, doctor ? ' 
 
 " ' Oh, the usual cause in the case of new-comers to this 
 country, and especially of Americans: bucking against the 
 climate, sir, bucking against the climate.' 
 
 " I now follow the manners and customs of the natives. 
 I carry an umbrella in the morning', drink cocoanut water 
 in the evening, and rest under the trees in the noonday 
 hours. I go to sleep after a light lunch every day, hearing 
 the parrots scold on my way to dreamland, and waking up 
 when the trade-winds begin to cause the waves to beat 
 against the sands under the cocoanut groves. 
 
 " I ride a little donkey in the cool of the day, holding an 
 umbrella over my head. I sleep in a hammock, swinging in 
 the open air. 
 
 " I do not worry. I recall a proverb of the inhabitants, 
 which reads, ' Think not, my friend ; to think is to grow 
 old.' " 
 
 The young German had a poetic sense, and he had come 
 to use the picturesque language of the country very much in 
 contrast with the vocabulary of the Northern lands. The 
 tropics make new words for the pioneer.
 
 CHAPTER IV. 
 
 HAZEL A STORY OF THE BLOOD SNAKE. 
 
 THE young German's name was Hazel, Frank Hazel. He 
 was slow and cautious in making acquaintances, but he 
 saw that the Frobishers were true people, and he became 
 greatly attracted to Leigh. He was a lover of natural his- 
 tory, of birds, and flowers, as many German students are, 
 and when he heard Leigh describe the quetzal, after the 
 manner that the latter had read of it and studied its history 
 in books, he found that they had a common ground of tastes, 
 and cautious as he was he liked his new friend's enthusi- 
 asm. He had the theory that the ancient races of these 
 countries were Jews. 
 
 They grew together and gave themselves up to each other's 
 company on the boat, which had stopped at Bocas del Toro, 
 one of the most beautiful places on the coast. 
 
 While waiting here on the boat, in the sunny, purple sea, 
 Leigh said to Mr. Hazel, the young Aleman, 
 
 " I have a purpose that I want to confide to you. You 
 may smile at it, but I am a Yankee, as New England people 
 of invention are called. I am told that no one ever was able 
 to take a live quetzal to the States. The bird is so delicate 
 that it has never been found able to endure confinement and 
 transportation. Now, Mr. Hazel " 
 
 "Call me 'young Aleman,' as do the rest." 
 
 52
 
 A STORY OF THE BLOOD SNAKE. 53 
 
 " Well, my friend, we have a bird house, and an orchid 
 house in the old town of Milton, near Boston, and I have set 
 my heart on securing a royal quetzal, a real peacock trogon, 
 a true bird of the Aztecs, the most splendid of all the 
 American birds of paradise, the bird of the sun, of legend, 
 and of beauty ; I have set my heart, I say, on securing 
 such a bird, and taking it back safely to our orchid house on 
 Milton Hills." 
 
 "You Americans do many things that seem impossible," 
 said young Aleman ; " you form a purpose to do a thing and 
 you accomplish it, though after many failures. The true 
 royal trogons only live in the high mountains, and they are 
 not offered for sale, except perhaps in some Indian towns or 
 in Guatemala. 
 
 " They are found in the mountains around Cartago, and 
 two naturalists named Underwood, at San Jose, who prepared 
 a collection of birds for the Guatemala exposition, and are pre- 
 paring a like collection for the exposition to be held in Paris 
 in 1900, sometimes offer them for sale. But they are dead 
 birds, only their plumage unmounted, and I am sure that the 
 paradise trogons of Cartago are the true birds of the Aztecs. 
 There are many kinds of these birds, I have been told." 
 
 " Could not the hunters who secure the birds for the natu- 
 ralists Underwood of San Jose find me a live Aztec trogon?" 
 asked Leigh. He added, " Xo, I would not trust a hunter to 
 handle such a bird ; I am resolved to find one my sell ; to 
 secure it, and bring it away, and to make the adventure and 
 enterprise all my own." 
 
 "Have you any conception of the dangers ot a tropical 
 forest?" asked young Aleman.
 
 54 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " I have read that there are dangers in the hot woods." 
 
 "You may well say ' hot woods,' my young friend. But I 
 am free to confess that a young American's idea, like a bullet, 
 will find itself in strange places. 
 
 " My friend, I once knew a young naturalist, an orchid 
 hunter, who had your enthusiasm. He was a German, but 
 he had an American mind and heart, lie had resolved to 
 find a certain butterfly orchid which he had heard grew in 
 the forests on the slopes of Irazu. He came to my farm and 
 we made a home for him. 
 
 "If he could secure this particular orchid, it would bring 
 him a round sum at the estates of a German baron. This 
 man had offered purses for rare orchids, and a fixed sum 
 for this particular parasite, of which he had published a 
 description. 
 
 "The young orchid hunter's name was Lotze. 
 
 " I have told you one story for the purpose of illustrating 
 the value of caution in the tropical countries. Let me tell 
 you another and it is a terrible one. Your friends may be 
 interested in it ; it has a very useful lesson, in my view." 
 
 Captain Frobisher, Alonzo, and Leigh drew their sea chairs 
 close to Mr. Hazel. Old Mr. Hazel and Captain Morris 
 joined them, when young Aleman related the following thrill- 
 ing story. 
 
 THE YOUNG ORCHID HUNTER AND THE BLOOD SNAKE. 
 
 "I shall never forget young Lotze; his imagination was 
 all aglow, and his heart was as warm and responsive as his 
 fancy. He was a graduate of a botanical school in Germany.
 
 A STORY OF THE BLOOD SXAKE. 55 
 
 Leigh, here, my new friend, reminds me of him. Lotze's 
 heart seemed to all go into an orchid, as my friend's here 
 seems to be all set upon a certain bird. 
 
 " Costa Rica is the land of orchids, and the English and 
 German hunters go there, as to Venezuela and Surinam. To 
 find a new orchid of any wonderful form or beauty is to 
 secure quite a little sum, so ambitious is the rivalry among 
 the orchid collectors of England and on the Continent. 
 Many English and German students go to the American 
 tropics orchid hunting; but I have never met one who had 
 so strong a passion for the splendid parasites as Lotze. 
 
 " I came to love the boy. I saw that his danger was in 
 impulse of breaking a way without looking before. So 
 when he came to my little coffee farm, I tried to caution 
 him in regard to the dangers of exposure to certain condi- 
 tions of the climate, as I have you, my young friend: may 
 you never meet the fate of poor Lotze ; I could shed tears 
 for him now. 
 
 "He had not been in my little adobe house a day before 
 he showed me the advertisement of the German baron, of 
 which he had told me on introduction, and said, - 
 
 " ' It is mine,' meaning the prize. 
 
 "'A rare gem among flowers it must be,' said I, 'and 
 one hard to find. I have travelled through the forest with 
 Indians, hut have seen nothing resembling it.' 
 
 " ' Hut two specimens <>f it have been found here,' he said, 
 'and the baron is determined that his collection ol orchids 
 shall not be surpassed by any in the country, II I can find 
 a specimen ol it. mv lite is made. It would give me a 
 place as botanist in the best arboretums and botanical <rar-
 
 56 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 dens. If I could find that, I would receive a commission to 
 travel for the gems of flowers. 
 
 " ' Oh, my friend,' he continued, and I see his eyes glow 
 now, 'others seek the gems of the mines; I have a passion 
 for the gems of flowers, as some do for the feathered gems 
 of the air.' 
 
 "I recall that expression, Leigh, 'the feathered gems of 
 the air.' lie would have found the heart of a brother in 
 you. 
 
 "The orchid desired was one of the many butterfly flowers, 
 that bore a perfect resemblance to a swarm of the golden 
 butterflies of the tropics, and could hardly be distinguished 
 from the dazzling insects. 
 
 " I had seen many kinds of insect and butterfly orchids, 
 but none that bore this perfect resemblance to the butterfly 
 of the sun. 
 
 " Lotze hunted the forests under Irazu. He would return 
 after long explorations with an Indian, and bring back won- 
 derful specimens of the flowers, but none that bore a perfect 
 resemblance to the golden butterfly, and that answered the 
 advertised description in all respects. 
 
 " It was a pleasure to me to see him returning at night, 
 his little mule loaded with flowers. He ate little; he pored 
 over the flowers that he had collected each night on his 
 return ; he slept among the blooms and dreamed of flowers. 
 
 "He made long journeys into the low tropical parts of 
 Costa Rica, and there found trees covered with wonderful 
 parasites. 
 
 " I cautioned him against certain poisonous snakes and 
 insects that abound in these regions. I showed him speci-
 
 A STORY OF THE BLOOD SNAKE. 57 
 
 mens of the coral snake, and told him how deadly was its 
 bite, how that even the negroes were sometimes bitten by 
 them in gathering bananas. 
 
 "One day he returned, and, before he reached the house, 
 I saw him throw up his hands and exclaim, 
 
 " ' Eureka ! ' 
 
 " As he came up to the veranda, he called out, 
 
 "'Hazel, you must go with me to-morrow; I have found 
 it, and my life is made.' 
 
 " He did not sleep that night, as he told me he lived in the 
 air, in waking dreams. 
 
 " We set off together in the morning, for I could not resist 
 his enthusiasm when he insisted that I should go with him. 
 
 "After hours of travel on muleback, we came to a tall 
 palm in the midst of giant trees. The palm was very old, 
 and had fallen partly, so that it leaned against the lianas of 
 an adjoining tree, and formed a bough with it. Down from 
 this high tangle fell a long stem, and on this stem was a 
 flower which a traveller would have mistaken for a golden 
 butterfly or a swarm of butterflies. 
 
 " ' See,' said he, ' it has all the lines. My eyes are sharp, 
 and I can see them. I will not trust the Indian to bring it 
 down, I will go for it myself. Let the Indian follow me with 
 his machete. I must bring the wood away with the flower.' 
 
 "The point at which the ancient palm had fallen against the 
 lianas of the great tree was not very high. l.ot/.e gave me 
 a look, full of the spirit of triumph. He drew himself up a 
 liana into the trunk of the great tree, as he could best reach 
 the palm in this way. 
 
 "He stood in the trunk of the immense tree, gazing at the
 
 58 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 orchid which was swaying in the light wind, like a very- 
 shower of gems suspended in the air. 
 
 " Suddenly I saw something yellow roll over at his feet. 
 It coiled and uncoiled, it was reddish yellow, and I recog- 
 nized the terrible form. 
 
 "'Lotze!' called I, 'jump! jump down! Quick!' 
 
 " He did not obey. He stepped around in the dead trunk 
 of the tree. 
 
 " Suddenly he looked down, and threw his hand up to his 
 head. 
 
 " ' It makes me dizzy to see it,' he said. 
 
 "'Jump!' said I. 'Jump down! You are in danger. I 
 have seen something ! ' 
 
 " He dropped upon the ground. 
 
 " ' It makes me feverish,' he said. ' I am dazed with joy, 
 I have sought for it so long ! ! 
 
 " He turned his eyes to the glimmering orchid, then looked 
 towards me and said, 
 
 " ' Something stung me on my foot in the tree.' 
 
 " It was as I had feared. I had taken brandy with me. I 
 brought it to him. 
 
 " ' Drink ! ' said I. 
 
 "'Drink?' said he, 'with that orchid in view! Drink 
 that stuff - never ! ' 
 
 "His face turned red. His arms, hands, and feet turned 
 red. He began to bleed from all the pores of his skin. 
 
 " ' I am in agony ! ' he cried. ' I am going mad ! What 
 has happened ? ' 
 
 " ' You have been bitten,' said I. ' Such things have been 
 before. You must drink ! '
 
 A STORY OF THE BLOOD SXAKE. 59 
 
 " ' What,' said he, 'drink brandy, with that gem of the sun 
 
 in view no, no, never 
 
 " Every pore was now oozing with blood. He was covered 
 with blood. His veins were being emptied. His blood as 
 it were was fleeing from his body. 
 
 " ' You must drink or die,' said I. 
 
 " ' I can't drink I have made my life. See, see the 
 orchid ! ' He added, 
 
 " ' Oh, how I suffer ! What makes me bleed ? ' 
 
 " His body was being rapidly reduced. His blood was 
 separating from it. 
 
 "The Indian saw the situation. He rushed towards the 
 tree with his machete and dealt a powerful blow on the place 
 in the tree where poor Lotze had stood. A shining yellow- 
 ish coil rolled down the trunk. Lotze saw it. 
 
 " ' The blood snake ! ' he cried. ' Let me have the brandy. 
 Oh, that this should happen now when I have made my 
 life ! ' 
 
 " He turned his eyes on the orchid swinging down under 
 the green sea of leaves in the glimmering air. Presentlv 
 his eyes rolled back, and the vision of the orchid forever 
 disappeared he was dead." 
 
 Leigh looked serious. 
 
 " My boy," said Hazel, "you must learn to go slow in this 
 country, and so you may go farther. There are other dan- 
 gers in those seeming paradises of orchids and trogons be- 
 side the blood snake, and such are as subtle, and that a 
 stranger is not expected to know. 
 
 "The eye ol our Indian orchid hunter would have looked 
 down before every movement in a tree like that. It would
 
 60 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 have been placed on his feet. Lotze's eye was fixed on the 
 orchid." 
 
 " I thank you for that story," said Captain Frobisher. " It 
 is a needed story, I am sure. Leigh, remember that story 
 when you go into the woods. I fear for you. You are im- 
 pulsive. Your eye is on the orchid and not on your feet, nor 
 on the way to the orchid." 
 
 " Don't distrust me, uncle. You may be sure that I will 
 never invite any danger like that." 
 
 " My young friend," said Hazel, "the blood snake, whose 
 bite causes all the victim's blood to flow out of his body, is, 
 as I have hinted, only one of a hundred dangers in a tropical 
 forest, and one with your quick impulses and fancy will be 
 sure to find some of them, as you will see." 
 
 " May we never see any harm happen to Leigh," said 
 Captain Morris. 
 
 " I wish to make an excursion into the native forests," said 
 Leigh. " How can I do so safely ? " 
 
 " Go with the rubber hunters ; they will be faithful to you. 
 What do you most wish to see ? " 
 
 " The rarest birds, the most curious animals, and the most 
 beautiful flowers." 
 
 " The rubber hunters have eyes for such sights as these," 
 said Captain Morris. " It is a part of their trade. They see 
 things where other eyes fail. Go with them, go with them, 
 and you will never cease to wonder at what you see as long 
 as you live." 
 
 Leigh's eyes gleamed in view of such an excursion. 
 
 " You need not be afraid to trust him to the rubber hunt- 
 ers," continued Captain Morris, turning to Captain hrobisher.
 
 A STORY OF THE BLOOD SNAKE. 6l 
 
 "I never knew one of them to meet with an accident, or to 
 prove treacherous to any traveller. You have little idea what 
 a wonderful country this is -what natural gardens, and me- 
 nageries, and unexpected things of all kinds can be seen in 
 the tropical forests. Let Leigh find a company of rubber 
 hunters, and go with them on one of their excursions. These 
 people know all of the forest ways, all of the animals, birds, 
 insects, and flowers." 
 
 Leigh listened eagerly. 
 
 "Will you let me join the rubber hunters for a trip with 
 them ? " asked Leigh, of his uncle. 
 
 "Well, I will see," said Captain Frobisher. "I would not 
 like to trust you where I would not go myself. I will think 
 of the matter when we come to know more of the country." 
 
 "You might trust yourself with perfect safety to the 
 rubber hunters," said Captain Morris. " If you met with any 
 accident, the fault would be your own." 
 
 "That is the point," said Captain Frobisher to Captain Mor- 
 ris. " I would not fear that any harm would come to Leigh from 
 the rubber hunters ; but he is an impulsive boy ; he acts, and 
 thinks aftenvards when he is under excitement, and I think 
 that he would be likely to become excited amid the won- 
 ders of a tropical forest; and while I would expect no danger 
 to come to him from his company, I would not be quite so sure 
 that harm would not come to him from himself. It is Leigh 
 that would be likely to lead Leigh into danger, and in ways 
 for which his companions could not be responsible. Hut I 
 am inclined to let the boy have a chance t<> sec the wild lite 
 of the forest in the manner that you recommend." 
 
 Leigh clapped his hands on his knees, and iroin that time
 
 62 LOST IX NICARAGUA. 
 
 he began to dream of excursions among the rubber trees with 
 the rubber hunters, whoever these people might be. He did 
 not tell the captain that he had heard but little of these cu- 
 rious people before. lie began to inquire about them, and 
 about the rubber trees, and the life of the birds and animals 
 among them. 
 
 He began to study the country, by asking questions of all 
 whom he chanced to meet. Que cs eso? was a key to treas- 
 uries of wonders. He sought for stories as for orchids in the 
 orchid land. Stories are the histories of a country ; they 
 picture everything, the past, the future, the present, the 
 manners, and the customs, and the heart of the people. 
 Stories are an education.
 
 CHAPTER V. 
 
 A VERY ODD STORY 
 
 -THE WASHINGTON OF CENTRAL 
 AMERICA. 
 
 THE young German Hazel invited Captain Frobisher and 
 Alonzo and Leigh to accompany him to his coffee plan- 
 tation, a few miles from Cartago and San Jose. 
 
 " I live simply," he said. " I am compelled to do so if 
 my business is to grow, and most people do so here. But 
 my table, my mules, and such rooms as I have will be at 
 your service. You may have to sleep on hard beds or in 
 hammocks. You will not find my one story adobe house, 
 with tiles on the roof and the umbrellas of cocoanut palms 
 over it. an American hotel ; but you shall share my heart, 
 my good will, and all of my seven years' experience. Alonzo, 
 you can study a small cocoanut farm there, and you, Leigh, 
 may find quetzals in the forests, of that I cannot say. I 
 have never hunted lor them, but the books on ornithology 
 say that they are there, and true ones, though not as splendid 
 as those of Guatemala. Captain Frobisher, you shall sit and 
 dream there, and eat bananas and plantains, pine-apples 
 and oranges, and drink cocoanut water, and sum up lite, and 
 learn as far as I can show you whether it would be best tor 
 you to invest in a coffee farm or banana plantation for one 
 oi your boys." 
 
 63
 
 64 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 "My clear Hazel," said Captain Frobisher, "we accept 
 your invitation. Only 1 am an independent now and I 
 must pay you, and pay you well for all that you will do 
 for us. You will give us that which is more than money, 
 and this rare experience of yours we shall appreciate." 
 
 They stopped a few days longer at Port Limon, as young 
 Hazel had to await some farming utensils there which were 
 to arrive on an Atlas steamer from New York. 
 
 Their hotel was situated between the clashing sea and the 
 mountains. It seemed full of adventurers. This brought 
 a new view to our travellers. 
 
 The captain of the ship joined the party at the hotel. He 
 was to remain a few days in town, and he seemed to like 
 Captain Frobisher, his nephews, and the young German 
 coffee planter. 
 
 One evening, as they sat on one of the verandas of the 
 hotel, a nervous young woman passed by. She looked up 
 to the captain, and seemed to shrink up, to wither, as it 
 were. She gave him a second glance and darted away. 
 
 "I know that woman," said the captain. "She is an ad- 
 venturess. You are not only to avoid malaria, and poisonous 
 things here, but adventurers. You have told some stories," 
 he said to young Hazel, "in regard to things to be avoided 
 in this country. The)' are good lessons for our friends. I 
 could relate one to match yours. Hut instead of doing that, 
 1 will give you the moral without the story, beware of 
 adventurers in this country people who come into your 
 experience unexpectedly and vanish." 
 
 The good captain having raised our expectation for a 
 story and disappointed it, was asked to relate some of the
 
 THE HOUSE OF THE DWARF. 65 
 
 popular tales of the country, tie did so, and one of these 
 we will call 
 
 THE STRANGE STORY OF THE HOUSE OF THE DWARF. 
 
 "There lived an old woman in Uxmal, who went about 
 in agitation and mourning. 
 
 " ' Woe is me,' she said. ' Age has overtaken me, and 
 I have no children. The withered stalk does not bloom 
 again, and I never will be young again. Woe, woe is me ! ' 
 
 " She became more wrinkled and withered and her dis- 
 tress grew. 
 
 "She lived in a hut that became a palace and a temple 
 and a wonder of the Indian world; but it is too soon to 
 speak of that transformation now. 
 
 " One day as she was passing to and fro in her wretched 
 room, in her usual tremor and agitation, she found an 
 egg on her table. She said: 'What is that? How came 
 it here? It is as large as an eagle's.' 
 
 " She took it, wrapped a cloth around it, and put it into 
 the warm corner of her room, from which the influence of 
 the sun's heat was never absent day or night. 
 
 " Kvery day she unrolled the cloth, until weeks had passed, 
 when one day, wonder of wonders, instead ol finding an 
 egg in the warm cloth, she found there a criatiira, or a little 
 boy bah)'. 
 
 "The old woman danced for joy. She fondled it and gave 
 all her time to it, and it grew one year and then its growth 
 stopped. It was a dwarf. 
 
 " \ow to be a dwarf was a sign ol wisdom. The old 
 woman was more delighted than ever.
 
 66 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " ' It will be a lord,' she said. 
 
 " Years passed, but the dwarf grew no taller. 
 
 "One day the old woman said to him: 
 
 "'Go to the house of the Governor and make a trial of 
 your strength with the Governor. See which of you can 
 lift the most.' 
 
 "The heart of the dwarf melted, and the boy began to cry. 
 
 "'Go,' said the old woman. 'The time is come for us 
 to find out who you are.' 
 
 " The boy obeyed and made his challenge to the Governor, 
 who was a giant of a man. 
 
 "The Governor laughed at him, and brought him a stone 
 of seventy-five pounds to lift. 'I can lift that,' he said. 
 ' Let me see you lift the stone.' 
 
 "The dwarf looked at it and began to cry, and ran out of 
 the palace and home to his mother. 
 
 "'Go back, go back,' said the old woman. 'Tell the 
 Governor that he must lift the stone first, and that you will 
 lift it afterward. Go.' 
 
 " The dwarf returned to the palace, and said to the 
 Governor, 
 
 " ' If you will lift the stone first, I will lift it after you.' 
 
 " The giant lifted the stone. 
 
 "Then the little dwarf did the same. 
 
 " ' I can lift a heavier stone than that,' said the Gov- 
 ernor. He did so, but the dwarf did the same. 
 
 " ' You rogue,' said the Governor, ' I will punish you for 
 these tricks. You mock me. Now, hark ye, the Governor's 
 house should be the tallest in the place. If you can lift 
 so well, you can build a house taller than all the others,
 
 THE HOUSE OF THE DWARF. 6j 
 
 and if you do not do this, then I will sever your little head 
 from your little body, and will have done with you.' 
 
 "The dwarf ran home to the old woman as fast as he 
 could go, crying", 
 
 " ' O mother, foster mother, the Governor commands me 
 to build him a house higher than all the others.' 
 
 " ' You can do it,' said the old woman. ' Go to work 
 now.' 
 
 "The dwarf went to work at once. He worked all night, 
 and turned a stone heap into a pyramid. (This story should 
 be true, for the pyramid is still pointed out to those who have 
 faith in magic gifts and powers.) 
 
 " The next morning the Governor went to the door of his 
 palace, and his eyes grew big as he saw the sun rising be- 
 hind a pyramid. 
 
 " He sent for the dwarf. 
 
 '"You little rogue,' he exclaimed, 'you have mocked me 
 again. But I will be even with you yet. Go and get some 
 bundles of sticks of cogoiol wood (a very hard wood). Fetch 
 me two bundles. You shall beat me over the head with the 
 sticks out of one bundle, and I will beat you from the sticks 
 of the other.' 
 
 "The dwarf ilew home to the old woman, crying as 
 before. 
 
 "'My son, do as the Governor bids you. Hut first wait a 
 little, and I will make some dough of hard meal, and put it 
 on your head and fit it there under the covering.' 
 
 "So she made a cake, a tortilla <lc trigo, and moulded it 
 in to the top of his head, and covered it over, and sent him 
 out to gather the two bundles ol hard sticks.
 
 68 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 "The Governor called his lords and guards to witness the 
 contest in which he expected to end the dwarf. 
 
 " He beat the dwarf over the head with all the sticks in 
 the bundle, but the little fellow only laughed at him. 
 
 " Then the dwarf whipped up a stick out of his bundle, and 
 broke the Governor's head at the second blow, so the Gover- 
 nor fell down dead. The lords hailed the dwarf as Governor, 
 and so he became the King of Uxmal. 
 
 "The old woman died. Her spirit went into a cave near 
 Merida. She sells water there, sitting under a tree. She 
 keeps a serpent, not an evil serpent, but one of wisdom, by 
 her side. I have never seen a traveller who met her, but 
 have talked with some who have visited the ruins of the 
 House of the Dwarf." 
 
 A picture of General Francisco Morazan hung in the office 
 of the hotel. Leigh inquired of the captain who this hero 
 was, and what deeds or principles had made him conspicuous. 
 
 The captain answered the questions by a useful narrative, 
 which we give. 
 
 THE WASHINGTON OF CENTRAL AMERICA. 
 
 If America has more than one Washington, Francisco 
 Morazan (mo-rah-than) has earned a place among the heroes 
 of liberty who may be associated with that great name. 
 Simon Bolivar has been called the Washington of South 
 American independence. General San Martin, in achieve- 
 ments and in personal character, merits the title of the Wash- 
 ington of Argentina, Chili, and Peru the Washington of 
 the Andes. He not only carried the Banner of the Sun over
 
 THE WASHINGTON OF CENTRAL AMERICA. 69 
 
 the Andes, and won liberty for the empire of the South Tem- 
 perate Zone, but his motto of personal character was, 
 " Thou must be that which thou oughtest to be, else thou 
 shalt be nothing" (Scras lo que debes ser, y sino scras nadd). 
 
 Francisco Morazan was born in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, 
 in 1799. He was of French descent, and was educated by 
 the priesthood. 
 
 The struggle for the independence of his country, which 
 was achieved in 182 1, made him a patriot. He entered 
 into the cause with the fervor of his French blood. Liberty 
 was his native air, and his heart throbbed in sympathy with 
 human rights and welfare. 
 
 Ilcrrera, the President of Honduras, took him into the 
 council of state, and the people elected him as a representa- 
 tive to the legislative body. 
 
 When Honduras, in 1827, was invaded by Guatemala, 
 Morazan, young as he was, led the state troops against 
 them. He was taken prisoner, but escaped to Nicaragua, 
 where he was induced to take command ot a force at Leon for 
 the liberation of his own country, Honduras and Salvador. 
 
 He was looked upon as the leader of the forces ot libera- 
 tion. His march was a triumph. He liberated Honduras, 
 and was made President of the Republic, and defeated the 
 Guatemalan army in Salvador in 1828. 
 
 The young general united the troops of Honduras and 
 Salvador and invaded Guatemala. lie was defeated, but 
 recovered, and captured Guatemala City. 
 
 He was now the recognized leader <it liberty and progress 
 in Central America. He became a liberal, compelled the 
 ecclesiastics to obey the state in civil things, and confiscated
 
 JO LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 the property of the orders that resisted the will of the 
 people. 
 
 Carrcra of Guatemala became a conservative, and received 
 the influence of the aristocratic party. The two generals 
 representing different ideas of democracy found themselves 
 face to face on the battlefield. Morazan was finally defeated 
 in Guatemala. lie went to Peru and raised an army of pa- 
 triots, among whom were many Central American refugees, 
 and, returning to Central America, invaded Costa Rica in 
 1842, was victorious, and was made the executive of the 
 republic. 
 
 He now became the apostle of Central American union, 
 under the model of the government of the United States. He 
 was preparing to march through the country for the purpose 
 of creating a United States of Central America, with equal 
 rights for all people, when he was defeated by a local 
 revolt, and was shot at San Jose, September 15, 1842. His 
 name stands for Liberty and Union, and his political dreams 
 are likely to be fulfilled.
 
 CHAPTER VI. 
 
 THE THIRD AMERICA: HOW TO REACH IT FROM NEW YORK. 
 
 THE tropical lands between the two great divisions of 
 America, known as Central America, promise a great 
 future among the productive regions of the earth. The 
 coffee growing, the coca, the bananas, the orange, and other 
 tropical fruit arc probably to be developed there with great 
 profit to the planters, as the ports of these productions are 
 near to those of the United States. The Central American 
 republics, five in number, Guatemala, Honduras, San Salva- 
 dor, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica, seem destined to form one 
 central republic, and to increase in population and wealth 
 with material development and progress. The coast is 
 unhealthy, but the highlands, as in South America, are 
 among the most desirable parts of the world. 
 
 A fraternal congress of these republics assembled in the 
 city of San Salvador in September, 1889, and concluded a 
 treat}- of union. The federation of the five states was 
 named Centko America, and this unison was to continue 
 for a provisional term of five years, being brought to an end 
 in the year 1900, when it was expected a federal constitution' 
 would be lormed and proclaimed. 
 
 This compact was in part broken by the war between 
 San Salvador and Guatemala, followed by other revolutions. 
 
 71
 
 J2 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The ideal, however, did not fail. A partial union was 
 formed, and the complete and harmonious federation of the 
 republics seems only to be a question of time. 
 
 Another ideal among the progressive men of this country 
 rose and fell, but brought into the progressive education of 
 the country a suggestion which promises in time to succeed. 
 In 1886, under the leadership of ancient Guatemala, a con- 
 gress was held for advancing a scheme of federation on the 
 principle that all disputes between the states should be set- 
 tled by arbitration. Such reforms as this do not come sud- 
 denly, and are disturbed if they come too soon. We may 
 expect to see a united and a pacific republic, formed on 
 advanced ideas, rise on the shores of the American Mediter- 
 ranean, and the opportunities which this land of the future 
 will open to agriculture and trade are a very interesting study. 
 The future republic will be American in race and spirit, and 
 form a part of the highway between both worlds. 
 
 Steamships multiply between the ports of the United 
 States and Central America. Some of these are fine pas- 
 senger steamers, but many of them are fruit boats. Five 
 English steamers go to Balise, and the passengers there may 
 enjoy one of the most beautiful of the intertropical hotels. 
 
 The steamer lines from New Orleans offer most delightful 
 excursions to Port Limon. Fruit steamers from Mobile and 
 other southern ports present an easy route to Central Amer- 
 ica, and a very desirable one to those interested in the 
 productions of the tropical country. The Peddie Trading 
 Company, New York, despatch steamers to the northern 
 Central American ports. 
 
 The circulars, or rather pamphlets, of the Atlas Company
 
 THE THIRD AMERICA : HOW TO REACH IT. J $ 
 
 give some delightful pen pictures of the southern Central 
 American ports. Those of Port Limon and San Jose are 
 particularly pleasing, as is the information in regard to 
 Kingston and Cartagena, and the republics of Honduras and 
 Guatemala. 
 
 There is an increasing interest in travel to these ports. 
 The star of new immigrations turns southward. The immi- 
 gration to South America is becoming greater than to North 
 America, and in this new march of destiny Central America 
 is to share. 
 
 Among these multiplying routes are: 
 
 To Costa Rica (Port Limon, port of San Jose). The port 
 is reached from New York, a distance of 2865 miles, by 
 Pacific Mail steamer to Colon, thence by the Royal Mail or 
 German line; nine days; fare about S120.00. A railroad 
 connects Port Limon with San Jose. The port is more 
 direct!}' reached by some of the steamers of the licet of the 
 Atlas Line Steamship Company, of which we shall speak 
 again ; fare about $80.00. 
 
 It is reached from New Orleans, a distance of 1350 miles, 
 in nine days; fare S50.00. 
 
 Puntarenas on the Pacific side is reached from San Fran- 
 cisco ; 2793 miles ; fare about $80.00. 
 
 Nicaragua is reached by steamers both from Mobile and 
 New Orleans, the former steamers going to Hluefields. The 
 fare to Hluefields, a great fruit port, from New Orleans is 
 about S40.OO. 
 
 Cape Gracias a Dios is reached by steamers from New 
 York, at a fare of about $70.00. 
 
 Corinto on the Pacific side, 2685 miles from San Francisco,
 
 74 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 is reached from the latter port in about eighteen days, at a 
 fare a little rising $100.00. This port connects with the 
 great lakes. Managua, the capital, is reached by steamer 
 to Corinto, rail to Leon, and by rail and lake steamers. 
 
 Greytown is one of the interesting passenger ports from 
 the east, and is reached by many lines of steamers. The 
 landing there is somewhat perilous. The port is 2810 miles 
 from New York, and the fare is about $80.00. Steamers 
 leave Greytown for Granada, on Lake Nicaragua, every four 
 days. These connect by rail and steamer with Managua, the 
 capital, where there is a lake route to the Pacific coast, of 
 which the port is Corinto. 
 
 Honduras is reached by the English and American steam- 
 ers to Balise, Champerico, Guatemala, in sixteen days from 
 New York, and eleven days from San Francisco, by several 
 lines of steamers ; the boats from the east by Panama. 
 Livingston, Guatemala, 2495 miles from New York, is 
 reached in seven days, at a fare of about $70.00. 
 
 The Roval Mail line of steamers despatches a boat from 
 New Orleans to Livingston every Thursday, at a fare of 
 $30.00. Time, six days. 
 
 When Central America shall become the gateway of the 
 Pacific, there must be a great growth of the port cities on 
 the western coast, such as Callao. San Francisco, and most 
 of the ports from Valparaiso to Seattle, as well as ports in 
 Lower California, may then be developed. 
 
 Columbus dreamed of reaching the "mouth of the Ganges" 
 by the way of Central America, and though the "mouth of 
 the Ganges" is far indeed from where he supposed it to be, 
 his dream, in effect, is likely to be fulfilled.
 
 THE THIRD AMERICA : HOW TO REACH IT. 75 
 
 We are told of the terrible swamps through which Nunez 
 de Balboa forced his way when he came to discover the 
 Pacific from the peak of Darien. Columbus had dreamed 
 of a strait between the central land and India, and such a 
 strait Balboa hoped to find. It was sought long by many 
 navigators, but it did not appear. 
 
 Then enterprise determined that such a waterway should 
 be made ; France lavished tremendous wealth on a scheme 
 to build a canal across Panama, but the work is arrested. 
 Ever since the Central American states asserted their inde- 
 pendence, schemes for a canal between the Caribbean and 
 the Pacific have been formed and agitated. Of these the 
 Nicaragua Canal promises ultimate success. 
 
 There are few more interesting places in the world than 
 the proposed route of the Nicaraguan Canal. It runs 
 through a river whose banks are populated by curious 
 races of men, and whose forests are the abodes of monkeys, 
 parrots, and strange birds and animals. It passes islands 
 strewn with ruins of mysterious cities and temples where 
 lived and worshipped a long-gone race. Granada, on one 
 of the proposed routes, once splendid, awakens the curiosity 
 of the traveller. Mountains rise like temple domes over 
 the great lagoons. The land is a museum of nature, of 
 antiquity, of strange wild life, full of beauty and bloom. 
 
 It was to this land of intense interest to the natural- 
 ists and antiquarian, as well as to Costa Rica, that the Fro- 
 bishers were going; here they not only hoped to find the 
 quetzal, but other things as curious, in the new route of the 
 world. 
 
 But they first wished to see Costa Rica (the rich coast)
 
 j6 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 and its bit of Paris, San Jose, under the domes of the 
 dead volcanoes. 
 
 It is an easy thing to reach Port Limon from Panama by 
 connecting steamers. It is not easy to go from Port Limon 
 to Greytown. 
 
 Costa Rica is a terrace between the two oceans. It is the 
 smallest, but one of the most prosperous, of the Central 
 American states, and it has been called the "model repub- 
 lic." It was once called Nueva Cartago. It was assigned 
 by the Crown of Spain to the family of Columbus as a duke- 
 dom, under the name of Veragua. 
 
 The captain's curious allusion to an adventuress, led young 
 Hazel to say : 
 
 " To-morrow evening, or at some other time, I will relate 
 to you a story that may not be as unique and amusing as 
 the captain's might have been, but which has a strange sug- 
 gestion in it that has long haunted me." 
 
 On the day before the company left Limon, young Aleman 
 told the following tale of an adventurer, whose sins, it is 
 probable, had left him no place that he could call home in 
 the world. 
 
 THE STORY OF THE VAMPIRE. 
 
 " When I first came to Central America, on my way to 
 Costa Rica, the ship stopped at Cartagena, the old city of 
 Xew Granada, now the principal port of the United States 
 of Colombia. The harbor is one of the finest in the world. 
 The city walls are said to be sixty feet thick, and with their 
 fortifications and sunken harbor obstructions are fabled to
 
 THE STORY OF THE VAMPIRE, 
 
 77 
 
 have cost so many millions that the old King of Spain thought 
 that he ought to see them from the palace window rising 
 over the sea. Here the sky blazes, and the waves run in 
 ripples of dazzling light. Cocoanut palms cloud the air, and 
 in many of the giant trees could be gathered a cart-load of 
 cocoanuts, as many as a donkey or mule could well draw. 
 The bungalows, or quiiitas, outside of the yellow walls, are 
 walled in bloom. Indian women, naked children, and little 
 donkeys are to be seen everywhere. A coffee bag is suffi- 
 cient clothing for the boatmen on the lagoons; the women 
 go bareheaded, and yet keep their beautiful hair. 
 
 " Everything was done in the days of the viceroys, dons, 
 and grandees to make this town of New Granada the impreg- 
 nable fortress of the golden empire of Spain in the New 
 World. 
 
 " It makes one's heart ache and imagination shrink back 
 to think of the work done here by enslaved native races on 
 these huge walls. How their conquerors and taskmasters 
 cracked their whips above them. What had they to hope 
 for from what they were building but the slavery of their 
 own people who were to come alter them? 
 
 "There are riches that do not enrich, and Spain found 
 such here. The walls have crumbled, countless lizards 
 inhabit them. The Granada of the New World has -one; its 
 Inquisition is a curiosity; the winds of the Caribbean blow 
 through the broken doors of its once golden churches. 
 Poverty fills its streets. The Colombian Railroad of Moston 
 traders is the one source of life and interest. The convents 
 and monasteries are deserted, and the subterranean avenues 
 are untrodden. An ironclad fleet mii/lit soon make its
 
 yS LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 massive walls of crumbling masonry a derision. So comes 
 to nought the grandest schemes of man ! The monuments 
 of Egypt sink into the sand, and Cartagena feeds the palms 
 for scavenger birds, and grows weeds for the lizards. 
 
 " While wandering about in the bowery suburbs without 
 the walls, amid beautiful estates and houses woven of reeds 
 and fenced with sugar-cane, I one day met a man with one 
 o( the most dreadful faces I had ever seen. The man saw 
 that I was from a ship lying in the harbor, and he ap- 
 proached me nervously, and began to make inquiry about 
 the ship from which I had come and the time that it would 
 leave the port. 
 
 "'The steamer goes to Greytown,' said I, 'thence to Port 
 Limon, and thence to New York by way of Jamaica.' 
 
 " ' I want to go to Jamaica,' said the man with sudden 
 decision. 
 
 " I could see that his mind had seized upon Jamaica on 
 hearing the word, and I said, 
 
 " ' Why are you leaving this country ? ' 
 
 " A wild, uncertain light came into his eyes, and he turned 
 his head aside with a shadow of terror, and he answered, 
 
 " ' Something is following me.' 
 
 " ' A human being, an enemy ? ' I asked. 
 
 " ' No ; not that. You could not understand, if I were to 
 tell you. I spoke too soon, but it would come out. I can- 
 not stand the pressure much longer; I have already lost 
 myself, or I would not have said this much. Something 
 haunts me.' 
 
 " My curiosity was greatly excited, but by the man's pitiable 
 looks more than by his words.
 
 THE STORY OF THE VAMPIRE. 79 
 
 "'Your nervous system is suffering,' said I. ' You have 
 been using up your vital energies. Do you sleep ?' 
 
 "'Sleep? I would give fortunes, if I had them, to bring 
 back the sleep of my childhood. That will never come again. 
 No, no ! Things happen after which refreshing sleep never 
 comes again. But here I am talking to my detriment. You 
 have well said, yes, yes, you have well said, Captain, that 
 my nerves are disturbed. I have been bitten by a vampire.' 
 
 " This was a strange confession indeed. I knew the old 
 haunting legend of New Granada, that vampires were the 
 souls of sea-robbers, or pirates, whose crimes would not let 
 them rest. I had heard that these bats fanned their victims 
 with their wings while sucking their blood ; that there was 
 some strange hypnotic influence in this wavy motion, so that 
 the sleeping person or animal was not aware that his blood 
 was being sucked away, and that many stories of adventure 
 had been told of these uncanny and dragon-like denizens of 
 the tropica] forests. 
 
 " We walked towards the boca, and he talked to me in an 
 agitated way, more and more raising my curiosity. 
 
 " Suddenly he stopped, looking out through the tall arcades 
 of palms, and said, 
 
 " 'Captain, I have been bitten twice.' 
 
 " This statement of itself would not have startled me, but for 
 a tone that indicated that something lay in his mind behind 
 the mere words. He took a cigar from his mouth, put his 
 hand on my arm, and said, 
 
 " ' />'v flit' same vampire' 
 
 "'That would not be strange,' \ said; 'the same bat might 
 follow one, alter the way ol the man-eating tiger.'
 
 SO LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " ' They say that it is a sign for a vampire to follow a man,' 
 he said. ' It is a sign that there is something wrong in his 
 mind that affects the blood, that gives a certain quality to 
 his blood that lures him on. Do you believe these bats are 
 animals ? ' 
 
 " ' Nothing more nor less than animals. They devour what 
 their nature craves, like other animals.' 
 
 " ' What their nature craves,' he said. ' You are right. But 
 there is a hidden law in what their nature craves. There are 
 birds whose natures crave carrion. The condor does. Nat- 
 ure has many hidden principles. This is a strange world. 
 There are worlds in worlds. A haunted mind makes bats' 
 blood, they say the kind of blood that the vampire best 
 likes. The vampire follows one who has such blood.' 
 
 " ' Have you ? ' asked I, suddenly. 
 
 " ' Have I ? It is not for me to talk with a stranger about 
 my life. Have I? I only know that I have been bitten 
 twice by the same bat. That unsettles me. I want to sleep 
 on board the ship to-night. When does she sail ? ' 
 
 " ' In the early morning,' said I. 
 
 " He went into the booking office with me and secured his 
 ticket and stateroom. 
 
 " He took his supper on board, went to the smoking-room, 
 and passed his evening among the passengers. Stories were 
 told, and I could see that some of them caused a certain ner- 
 vous twitching of the sympathetic nerves that was not com- 
 mon, except in diseased, nervous states. 
 
 " At about ten o'clock he went to his stateroom, whose port- 
 holes stood open to the wharves. 
 
 " It was a still, splendid night. The heat was intense, and
 
 THE STORY OF THE VAMPIRE. Si 
 
 the sea lay purple under the clear moon and stars. I recall 
 seeing the palm shadows in the fervid air, and hearing the 
 boats of fishermen go by. 
 
 " The city lay still after the gates closed. There was a 
 deep silence on the city, sea, and palm-shadowed shores. 
 
 "It was a long time before I fell asleep. When I awoke, 
 the sun was rising in a red sky, like a chariot of fire. A fresh 
 breeze was ruffling the purple sea ; the harbor was full of 
 fishing boats, drifting here and there, and on some of them 
 parrots were screaming, as they were disturbed by the move- 
 ments of their owners. 
 
 " It was a tropical sunrise. I was putting on thin clothing, 
 in order to take a bath, when there came a rap at my door. 
 
 " ' Sehor, the man who came on board when you did is 
 sick. The doctor says that he is dying.' 
 
 " I rushed out of my room and went to his. Before me 
 lay a face of horror. 
 
 " ' What has happened ? ' I asked of the stranger. 
 
 " ' I have been bitten again,' he said. Me trembled and 
 added, ' By the same bat.' 
 
 "'How do you know that it was the same bat?' I asked. 
 ' You imagine that.' 
 
 " ' It was his eyes,' he said gasping. ' I saw something 
 in them both times.' 
 
 " He laid his right foot bare, and on it was a small wound, 
 and on the bed was a large stain ot blood. 
 
 "'My friend,' said I, 'you are suffering from fright, 
 from seme nervous terror. There can be nothing in even 
 three bites of a bat to cause such a state of exhaustion as 
 you are in. A doctor might bleed you three times, and no 
 
 G
 
 82 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 such effect would follow the loss of blood. We will he at 
 sea in a few hours, and the bat cannot follow yon. Von will 
 never see him again.' 
 
 " He raised his thin arm to his head, and touched his 
 forehead. 
 
 " ' There is a bat here,' he said, ' a vampire.' 
 
 "He turned white as he added, 'I caused him to be there; 
 he it is that leads the other one.' 
 
 "I did not comprehend. I said, 
 
 " 'Well, it is all over now. They are lifting the cables.' 
 
 " The ship moved out into the crimson light of the morn- 
 ing that arched the splendid sea. 
 
 " ' What is the matter with the man below ? ' asked a pas- 
 senger of me at the table. 
 
 " ' He is merely nervous. He has been bitten by a vam- 
 pire or vampires, and he is superstitious, and the accident 
 has unsettled his mind. He will be all right again by night.' 
 
 "The voyage to Port Limon was over a placid sea. The day 
 was one of unclouded splendor. The passengers gathered 
 lazily on deck, read novels, and drank light beverages. 
 
 "The stranger did not appear among them. The steward 
 visited him and attended to his wants. I found him a little 
 feverish at night, and left him, feeling assured that a single 
 night's rest would bring about a renewal of health. 
 
 "Another tropic night passed in stars, shadow, and silence. 
 The ship drove on, ploughing the purple sea into a showery 
 spray. 
 
 " Early the next morning there fell a nervous knock on 
 my door. 
 
 " I called out, ' Who is there ? '
 
 . N AT THE 
 
 3N-LIKE LOOK NG CREA T L-E AS HE.LC H M 
 /. Vj.' "
 
 THE STORY OF THE VAMPIRE. 8$ 
 
 " 'The steward, sir.' His voice was unsteady. 
 
 " ' What has happened ? ' 
 
 "'The stranger, sir.' 
 
 " ' What of the stranger ? ' 
 
 " ' He is lying dead.' 
 
 " I leaped up and hurried to the room. 
 
 "The stranger lav there lifeless. 
 
 " I looked at his feet. There was a fresh wound on his 
 right foot, and the bed under it was saturated with blood. 
 
 " In a corner of the bed was a dark object, like a bundle 
 of leather. I drew it out. It was a little bat not a huge 
 animal like a dragon. I was about to strike him against the 
 door in my agitation and anger. But I glanced at the demon- 
 like looking creature as I held him by his wing. I wanted to 
 see his eyes. I caused him to revolve slowly. 
 
 " There was no expression in those eyes. The body was 
 as eold as the skinny wing. He was already dead. 
 
 " Was it superstition that caused the death of the stranger, 
 or clues the vampire follow certain travellers of contaminated 
 blood, and such as have cause for an unquiet conscience and 
 dark imaginations ? " 
 
 Our story teller had so used the picturesque words of 
 the country that the narrative left the questions long in 
 our minds, though the one in regard to contaminated blood 
 was hut a bit of the art of vivid narration.
 
 CHAPTER VII. 
 
 COSTA RICA I "THE SWITZERLAND OF THE TROPICS." 
 
 COSTA RICA, or the " Rich Coast," has been called 
 "the Switzerland of the tropics." The region around 
 San Jose has a climate like May or June in New England, 
 and is quite unlike most tropical countries in this respect; but 
 there is little resemblance between the dead volcanoes here 
 and the crystal peaks of Switzerland. Mere are no glaciers, 
 no snows, only a white frost in very high altitudes. The hills 
 are carpeted with flowers to the sky. A city like Valencia, 
 in Venezuela, under the shining lines of the white Cordillera, 
 might more fully be termed the Switzerland of the tropics. 
 
 But there is a vital force in the mountain air of the beauti- 
 ful republic that makes the part of it around San Jose and 
 the Hot Springs of Cartago a Switzerland to the inhabi- 
 tants of the plains. Such will ever find health by going up 
 into the mountains. 
 
 The mountains and the mountain region of Costa Rica 
 have not only a cool and exhilarating New England air, but 
 the atmosphere is said to have " mysterious qualities that 
 render it a sovereign remedy for some of the most distress- 
 ing ailments of common life." Consumption is likely to 
 disappear on the coffee farm, and rheumatism at the Hot 
 Springs of Cartago. Here people may always have deli- 
 
 84
 
 COSTA RICA. 85 
 
 cious oranges before breakfast, and cocoanut milk and other 
 fattening fruit at any time of the day. The whole country 
 is literally loaded with plantains and bananas, and on these 
 a seeker after health would soon find his weight increasing, 
 and his thin limbs filling out to the desired dimensions of 
 comfortable rotundity. 
 
 Here people may wear old clothes, and live in the open air 
 with bare heads, and travel about with bare feet. 
 
 The coffee planters and the proprietors of banana farms 
 who begin life here with a little capital, and who become 
 worth, by the growth of their estates, from $10,000 to $50,000, 
 do not greatly change their style of living. One cannot tell 
 here who is rich or who is poor. The rich adhere to simple 
 living. It is the farm that grows and not the luxury of the 
 house. The Costa Rican, whether native or adopted, is as a 
 rule a true democrat, and loves his democracy. He is proud 
 of the wealth that enables him to live simply, and he has 
 little of the vulgar taste that makes so many North Americans 
 who acquire property seek to make a display over their less 
 fortunate neighbors. 
 
 His house is of one story, with a tiled roof. It is built of 
 adobe and is as white as snow. It has a patio, or enclosed 
 court. This is adorned with beautiful vines, orchids in hang- 
 ing p'ts, and flowers. He keeps one or more wonderful 
 parrots here, and some sweet singing birds. 
 
 In the salas around the patio may be a piano, a library of 
 many books, and ornaments made of the woods oi the coun- 
 try. The mats are of the skins and furs of beautiful animals. 
 A quetzal is almost sure to be found among the sala decora- 
 tions, but it is dead.
 
 4 
 86 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 But simple as may be his home, all out of doors is really 
 his home, it is his farm that grows. The cocoanut palms, 
 plantains, and orange trees multiply around his house, and 
 his coffee fields stretch farther and farther away. If he 
 live in the hot regions, he goes up into* the mountains 
 the Costa Rican Switzerland at times. 
 
 The country is rich in historical romance, but has found 
 no great historian or poet. It comprehends the territory 
 granted by the Crown of Spain to the family of Columbus, 
 under the name of the Dukedom of Veragua, of which we 
 have spoken. Here were the famous gold and silver mines 
 that fed the pride of the dons, hidalgos, and grandees of 
 Spain for many years. After the massacre of the Spaniards, 
 all traces of these mines were lost in the growth of the 
 forests which blotted out the footprints of the Spaniards. 
 The wondrous mines of Estralla and Tisingal became a 
 memory. 
 
 "I have been told," said a missionary priest, "that the 
 Cabccuras of the present day relate that after the massacre 
 of the Spaniards, in 1610, vast quantities of gold were thrown 
 into the lake, where they still remain." 
 
 Costa Rica is the southern republic of Central America. 
 It has an area of more than 26,000 square miles, with a dis- 
 puted boundary ; but the extreme fertility of the soil, the 
 beauty of the scenery and vegetation, the salubrity of the 
 climate, the health region of Cartago, or Hot Springs {aguas 
 caliciitc), give this limited area between the Atlantic and the 
 Pacific an untold value in the progress of the near future. 
 It is a coffee land and a banana land now, but in these re- 
 spects its resources have hardly been tested. The old gold
 
 COSTA RICA. 8? 
 
 mines of the cacique may never be discovered again, but the 
 table-lands of San Jose and Cartago are in their vegetable 
 productions a source of gold that will never fail. 
 
 The Andes here rise to the height of nearly 12,000 feet. 
 From the nearly extinct volcano of Irazu the waters of both 
 the Atlantic and Pacific oceans may be seen. On these 
 table-lands, the most delightful in the world, the temperature 
 ranges from 70 to 80 F. throughout the year. The dry 
 season, or season of light and infrequent rains, lasts from 
 December to May. At this period the health conditions are 
 perfect. 
 
 To the lover of Mowers the table-lands are an earthly para- 
 dise. This is orchid land. The ancient trees are gardens 
 of parasites of marvellous forms, hues, and odors, such as 
 elsewhere only enter into dreams. 
 
 The population of the country is only about a quarter of a 
 million, but it is very rapidly increasing. Young Germans 
 and Americans, as we have indicated, are planting coffee 
 farms everywhere, and very extensive banana plantations 
 are being cultivated along the lines of railroads. 
 
 The tourist, as a rule, enters the country by way of Port 
 Limon. The town is very hut, and after a tew days he takes 
 the train for San Jose, at a cost of about S3. 00 American 
 monev, or gold, which is the same. 
 
 Me is at once in wonderland, and his surprise will grow 
 with cverv mile. He will pass through lofty cocoanut groves, 
 in which he may see a cart-load of nuts on a single tree. 
 The groves seem to be endless. lie will imagine that there 
 must If coeoanuts enough here to supply the world. 
 
 He will next enter the region of bananas and plantains, a
 
 88 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 sea of tropical vegetation. The air hangs with bananas. 
 The earth seems to pour out the luxurious vegetation of 
 banana leaves. A half dozen of these would make a tent. 
 
 Orange trees are everywhere. Oranges do not count in 
 this country of tropical luxuriance. 
 
 He will next eome to the regions of tropfcal forests and 
 the valleys of the mad river Reventazon. He will find this 
 river one long cascade. He will look down upon it in many 
 ways through vistas of tropical vegetation. From these wild 
 regions he will come to the valley of Cartago, one of the few 
 earthly paradises, at the foot of Irazii. Here a company 
 some years ago built a large hotel, and laid a tramway or 
 railroad to it, at a distance of two or more miles from the 
 town. The tramway at the time of writing is not in use, but 
 it is an easy walk or horseback ride to the hotel. A gentle- 
 man by the name of Mills has a delightful house of entertain- 
 ment here, with a charming garden and a coffee plantation. 
 
 The ride on the railroad from Cartago to San Jose, some 
 fourteen miles, is most beautiful. A part of it is through 
 coffee plantations buried in plantain leaves, which shade the 
 precious red berries. 
 
 The coffee planters are floral artists in making pictu- 
 resque their plantations. The coffee plants require shade, 
 and this is brought about by planting between the rows of 
 coffee leaf and flowering plants. The land looks like a 
 vast flower garden, but under the glorious vegetation the red 
 berries of the coffee plant are in their season everywhere to 
 be seen. 
 
 Costa Rica's capital, San Jose, would be beautiful any- 
 where in the world. The railroad station is near to the Pub-
 
 COSTA RICA. 89 
 
 lie Garden, and one of the first objects to greet the traveller 
 will be an allegorical statue of the heroic spirit of the 
 country, a work of genius, a poem in stone, a conception at 
 once poetic and sublime. North America has but few 
 works of such true art which express the heart of its history. 
 San Jose is simply beautiful, beautiful. It is beautiful in 
 its situation, beautiful in its simple art, beautiful in its gar- 
 dens. Its women are beautiful, and, better than all, beautiful 
 is the spirit of its people. There are few places in the world 
 that are more lovely than this city of Saint Joseph and its 
 near paradise valley of Cartago.
 
 CHAPTER VIII. 
 
 COFFEE LAND. 
 
 OUR travellers found Port Limon a simple town indeed, 
 of recent settlement ; but it was a place of sunshine and 
 palms, to whose wharves came the products of the table-lands 
 of the bright oceanic atmospheres. Its harbor is good and 
 beautiful, but Limon is a town of the railway, that gathers 
 the coffee and bananas for exportation. 
 
 There were two incidents that startled our travellers in 
 their excursions around Port Limon. 
 
 Freight cars came down the coasts loaded with green 
 bananas. They were lazily unloaded by the natives, who 
 were people of scanty clothing and easy dispositions. One 
 of these carriers, in helping to unload a crate-like car, sud- 
 denly uttered a cry and turned a half somersault shaking 
 his hand. 
 
 " He is bitten," said an Englishman. 
 
 The man did not seem to be alarmed, not more than one 
 would be in the States who had been stung by a wasp. 
 
 Alonzo Frobisher ran to the place, expecting to see a cen- 
 tipede or a serpent. He had read of such things in the 
 land of the taper and vampire bats. 
 
 A huge spider was seen secreting itself in a pile of ba- 
 nanas. The negro, or Indian, seized a coffee bag, and fiat- 
 
 90
 
 COFFEE LAND. 91 
 
 tened the unsightly creature that had bitten him, and went 
 on with his work. 
 
 But with the Indian's howl on being bitten rose another 
 howl, very startling and pitiful. 
 
 Alonzo turned in the direction of the alarming sound. 
 
 He beheld a strange animal in one of the empty slat cars. 
 
 "What is that?" he asked of a trader. 
 
 "A howler," answered the trader. "Have you lost your 
 ears ? " 
 
 Alonzo recalled what he had read of the howling monkeys 
 of the untroubled forest here, and he wondered if this was 
 one of them. But he stepped about very lightly after the 
 curious mishap, and he did not venture any more questions. 
 
 " One needs to be pretty careful in these parts of the 
 world," said the Knglish trader, "and to keep one's eyes 
 peeled. I've seen a creature with more'n a hundred legs 
 come out of a bunch of bananas, and every leg was full of 
 poison; and if he were to bite one, that one might just as 
 well settle up his affairs, so far as the world down here 
 goes, and prepare to move upward." 
 
 He added some other incidents to this not over cheerful 
 introductory intelligence. 
 
 "Thev poisonous spiders and things T don't know 
 what their names may be crawl out of banana bins on board 
 of the ship and visit the passengers nights in their state- 
 rooms. Now if one only lies perfectly still, and lets 'em 
 scatter about freely over one's fare, and don't cough, or 
 sneeze, or speak, or twitch one's muscles it is all well 
 enough. When the- many legs lias made Ins tour ol investi- 
 gation, the creeper will run off on the bedticking, and go
 
 92 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 away to the other parts of the vessel. But it is best for 
 one to lie pretty quiet during such visits as these." 
 
 He cast a curious glance at Alonzo, and said, " Heave 
 ho ! " Alonzo wondered if such visitors were to be found in 
 the hotel. 
 
 How serene the sea looked from the little town, with its 
 purple cleanness and its lively inhabitants of fishes and birds. 
 The air was such as would put one to sleep easily, and the 
 natives seemed to be grateful for the gift of dreaming in the 
 shade, fanned by the sea. How could such poisonous things 
 find a place amid all of this beauty. 
 
 Here was parrot land as well as coffee land, and some of 
 the little houses of the new port were abloom with these 
 gorgeous birds, which never forget to be sociable. Each 
 street has its favorite parrot, and some of the parrots here 
 are said to go visiting. 
 
 The parrots here give the white stranger a cordial wel- 
 come, turning their heads aside with an appreciation of fine 
 clothing, which is not over abundant here among the na- 
 tives, although much of it is very white and clean. 
 
 The parrot is a well-dressed bird, and likes those of its own 
 kind. He has faith in men and things that look well, and 
 aversion to things unsightly and uncanny. When he gets 
 hold of a monkey's tail, the monkey in this port does credit 
 to his name here, and becomes, indeed, a howler. 
 
 The railway from Port Limon to San Jose, which we have 
 already described, is about one hundred miles in length, and 
 over this our travellers went to Cartago, and the English cap- 
 tain, who had business at San Jose, made the journey with 
 them.
 
 THE VANISHING IMAGE. 93 
 
 They stopped for a single night at Cartago, in the house 
 kept by a good German woman by the name of Yokes. 
 The house was near the governor's palace, and it looked as 
 though it might have been built for the residence of some 
 notable person, as some of the rooms were curiously painted. 
 
 They were here under Irazu, that, in 1723, caused the 
 land to tremble for several days, and that filled the sky 
 with smoke, and poured forth fire, and filled the valley 
 with rocks and stones. 
 
 The party visited the Public Gardens and the churches. 
 Then they sat down on the steps of the government house, 
 and after the soldiers had done exercising, the young Ger- 
 man related to them some of the old legends of the place. 
 
 THE STORY OF THE VANISHING IMAGE AND OF THE MIRACLE 
 CHURCH OF CARTAGO. 
 
 One of the most poetic places in Costa Rica is the 
 church of the Queen of the Angels in Cartago. A beau- 
 tiful description of it was given in Harpers Magazine in 
 1 859-1 860, by Thomas F. Meagher. Leigh had read these 
 articles, and he found the church but little changed in its 
 outward or inward appearance since Mr. Meagher wrote his 
 matchless description of it, nearly fort)- years ago. 
 
 The "huge bowlders" are there, the Doric facade, the 
 "cohort of winged, frocked, and buskined angels ol boyish 
 stature." The high altar, hiding in part the organ and choir, 
 gleams as then in all the glory of gold and gems. 
 
 The altar, some thirty feet high, is divided into two 
 chambers, one of which contains the sacrament, and the 
 other, before which hangs a white silk curtain with golden
 
 94 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 fringe, is supposed to contain a miraculous image, the vision 
 of which is capable of healing the sick under the right con- 
 ditions of faith. Of this image a very curious story is told, 
 though one not unlike the legends of Lucan and Guadalupe. 
 
 The legend is after this manner : 
 
 In the year 1643 there lived a peasant woman of simple 
 faith in a forest near Cartago. One day she went out into the 
 woods to gather sticks and she found an image of a lovely 
 and gracious lady, but of rude form, lying on a stone. She 
 was greatly surprised, and she took up the image, and car- 
 ried it to her hut, and placed it in a recess there. 
 
 She went into the wood again to gather sticks, when she 
 was again surprised to find what looked to her to be the 
 same image. She took it up and carried it to her hut, and 
 going to the recess where she had placed the first image she 
 found that the first image was not there, but that the recess 
 was empty. She put the second image in the recess, and 
 wondered where the first image went, or if indeed this was 
 not the same as the one that she had first found. 
 
 She went out a third time to gather sticks and as she 
 approached the stone where she had found the two images, 
 or twice found the same image, another image seemed to be 
 there. She took it up, hurried back to the recess in her hut, 
 and, lo, the second image was gone. 
 
 She was perplexed and alarmed, and went for counsel to 
 the priest, Don Alonzo de Castro, of Sandoval. The good 
 priest took the image and put it into a closet, which had a 
 lock, and turned the key. 
 
 But when the good woman again went into the wood, lo, 
 the disappearing image was found upon the stone again,
 
 THE VANISHING IMAGE. 9$ 
 
 where the three images, or the same image, who could tell ? 
 had been discovered. 
 
 She hastened to tell the priest. Me unlocked the closet 
 and saw that the image was gone. 
 
 "It is the gift of the Holy Virgin. We must build a 
 church in the place, and give the image a throne on the 
 altar or in the sanctuary." 
 
 In 1782 the illustrious Estaten Livenzo de Tristan, 
 bishop of Nicaragua and Costa Rica, in a solemn ceremony 
 declared the image to be the special patron of Cartago. It 
 was consecrated with holy oil, and it was forbidden to touch 
 it save with anointed hands. The church of the image is 
 known as that of the Queen of the .Angels. It was raised to 
 the rank of a basilica by the illustrious Don Anselmo Lorente. 
 
 The veiled image in the golden chamber began to work 
 miracles on the needy faithful, when the veil was removed. 
 The stories of the cures performed on devotees at this shrine 
 would doubtless fill volumes. One may find there almost 
 innumerable votive offerings for benefits in the church. 
 Hut one miracle, supposed to have been performed by the 
 image, has become historical, and is celebrated in a very 
 picturesque way in Cartago. 
 
 In the days of the buccaneers, eight hundred Knglish 
 sea-robbers, under the command of one Captain Mansfield. 
 an associate ol the celebrated Morgan, one of the pirates ol 
 Panama, landed at Matina to invade the rich coast and its 
 lorests in search of the treasures for which tin- country was 
 famous. The helpless people turned tor protection to the 
 image ol the Queen ol the Angels, and bearing it before 
 them marched down the valley to meet the invaders.
 
 o6 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The sight of the image caused the hearts of the robbers 
 to melt and fail, and they Med back to their ships, leaving the 
 sought-for treasures to their native owners. This event is 
 celebrated year by year. The rude image is a treasure of 
 Costa Rica, and as it is associated with a woman of simple 
 faith and with an historic episode and with many supposed 
 cures of healing, one would not care to suggest natural causes 
 for the story, as could be easily done. 
 
 The festival of the image of the Queen of the Angels is in 
 May, the month of flowers. The valley of Cartago abounds 
 in flowers, and especially in rare orchids, and it is the delight 
 of peasant women to bring offerings of the choicest blooms 
 of the mountains and valleys to this church, and to lay them 
 on the steps of the stone altar, amid the lighting of candles 
 and the ringing of bells. 
 
 Few altars in the world ever had, or ever could have, such 
 decorations of flowers. In this valley every road is lined with 
 fantastic and surprising clusters of orchids, of many colors 
 and odors. The tangled forests hang with wonderful floral 
 festoons. The trunks of the trees are flower beds, and the 
 barks on the limbs send down airy flowers on trailing cords 
 or vines. There are air plants everywhere. The air of May 
 here seems to bloom. 
 
 Leigh went to the church, which is a little out of the most 
 compact part of the town, on one of the week days on which 
 is no special feast or celebration. Me sat down to study the 
 golden angels, among which is Gabriel, who seems ascend- 
 ing, bearing in one hand a pair of scales. 
 
 But though the day was a quiet one, steps almost noise- 
 lessly glided in. Many of the worshippers were women
 
 THE VANISHING IMAGE. (J/ 
 
 dressed in black, bearing candles to light before the stone 
 steps of the altar. 
 
 One woman, richly dressed, but with head covered, walked 
 on her knees across the brick pavements of the church, 
 repeating her prayers. Young priests did the same. 
 
 But the scene which most interested him was the coming 
 and going of peasant women with offerings of flowers. 
 
 The land is full of heliotrope. Such flowers filled the church 
 with odor. The most delicate roses grow here. These, too, 
 came in dark hands. The heads of these women were bare, 
 as were the feet of many of them. 
 
 Leigh saw the heliotropes, the roses, the calla lilies, the 
 cacti, the more common orchids, enter as in a floral proces- 
 sion. But dark peons stole into the company of the kneeling 
 flower women possibly Indians from the country. They 
 were clad in rags, but their faces bore the stamp of firm 
 faith and character. Ignorant of books they must have been. 
 Some of them led little children by the hand. 
 
 The flowers that these laid down on the stone steps were 
 for the most part such as only Costa Rica and the South 
 could produce. They were formed of the sun, the air, and 
 the dew. Some of them looked like spirit (lowers. It 
 seemed as though they might have been gathered in a par- 
 adise. 
 
 Leigh was a Protestant. To him the legend of the ( hieen 
 of the Angels was nothing but an illusion, a parable. lie 
 wondered at the influence of such a simple tale. 
 
 But he watched closely the devotions of these Indian peons 
 as they knelt there on the hard brick floor. What strength 
 of hope and comfort there was in their faith !
 
 98 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 As he was making a study of their sincere faces, and was 
 drawn to them by the beauty of their sincerity, the silver cur- 
 tain, or silk curtain with gold fringe, was drawn from the 
 shrine of the image. 
 
 How those dark eyes of the peons, men and women, peered 
 into the glimmering chamber of years, as it stood unveiled 
 before them. Mow their lips moved in prayer. 
 
 They had sins that haunted them from which they wished 
 to be free. They prayed. They had disease preying upon 
 them, it may be. They prayed. They had relatives and 
 friends who were sick. They prayed for them. They prayed 
 as for life. 
 
 The silk curtain fell. The altar lights were extinguished. 
 The peons arose from their knees, and went out into the 
 sunny air, and looked up to IrazAi lying against the sky, 
 green, with peaceful flocks and farms. 
 
 The peons went back to their huts. There was a settled 
 peace on their faces. 
 
 "Victims of superstition, do you say?" said Leigh on re- 
 turning to his friends. " They had followed the best that 
 they knew. They had sought to be true to the divine spirit 
 in them, and between these simple children of faith, with their 
 fairy tales and fables, if such these legends are, and those 
 who better know, but are governed by appetite, passion, and 
 selfish lusts and aims, there is a wide difference indeed. There 
 was a faith beyond all the tales of ceremonies of superstition 
 in the eyes of those Indians, and my soul went out to them 
 in a feeling of brotherhood, and I loved them, for so much 
 of that which is in them that we both believed." 
 
 But the Sunday that followed Leiirh's visit to the church
 
 THE VANISHING IMAGE. 99 
 
 of the poetic legend, filled the young traveller with surprise, 
 for it was market day. The streets thronged with people 
 from the country and hills, bringing in their wares. The 
 plaza was spread with the treasures of the sea, farm, and for- 
 ests, common goods, curious fabrics, pearls from the Gulf 
 of Nicoya, silks from Guatemala, oranges of rich color, 
 bananas as golden, sweet lemons, cocoanuts, zapoles, de- 
 licious drinks of many kinds. In certain places there were 
 cock-fights, and men and boys were to be seen running 
 around with sharp-spurred game-cocks under their arms. 
 
 But the Holy Day had been ushered in by a great ringing 
 of bells, and the streets had been filled with churchgoers. 
 Leigh's mind was dazed and puzzled by all these things; he 
 turned to an English friend, as the sun was throwing its last 
 rays over Irazu : 
 
 "Well, what do you think of it?" 
 
 "Oh, it is the custom of the country." 
 
 " It seems to me that it would be better to hold the market 
 on some other day than Sunday," he said. " But the people 
 do not seem to be intentionally irreverent. The sound of a 
 certain bell would bring them all down upon their knees. In 
 this country, I do not know where I am. Everything is 
 strange to me."
 
 CHAPTER IX. 
 
 THE YOUNG COFFEE PLANTER AT HOME IRAZU. 
 
 THE plantation of young Hazel lay in one of the long, 
 cool valleys among the foot-hills of Irazu. A clear 
 stream ran through it, coming down from the mountain side. 
 The place looked like a plantain farm at the first view, or 
 like a plantain forest, for the plant of shining and majestic 
 leaves had been set in rows between the rows of coffee, not 
 for the purpose of raising plantains, but to afford a shade. 
 The coffee plant, as we have said, must have shade for its 
 perfect development. It would seem that the orange grow- 
 ers in Florida might protect their trees by planting other 
 trees beside them in a like way. 
 
 The plantain leaves glisten in the sun in long rows. Some 
 of them were twelve or more feet high. Here and there a 
 withered leaf gave a touch of contrast to the dazzling 
 green. 
 
 Around the coffee fields were hedges of living trees, 
 trimmed so as to form a fence. These living fences sent 
 out slender spikes, or limbs, which seemed to burn with 
 starry red blooms. Orchids gathered on them, and roses 
 were trained about them at the gateways. Wild morning- 
 glory vines wove a network in them, and here and there 
 an orange tree loaded with golden fruit broke the yellow 
 barrier with its leaves of dark green.
 
 THE YOUNG COFFEE PLANTER AT HOME. IOI 
 
 Under the long rows of plantains were the coffee plants 
 or trees, with leaves as dark as those on the orange trees. 
 They were covered with red berries about the size of small 
 cherries. They were literally buried in the foliage that 
 protected them. 
 
 The house was white and red, of one story, built around a 
 court and a wall. It was made of adobe and blocks of stone 
 which probably had been thrown down from Irazu at the 
 great eruption, and was covered with red tiles, which were 
 covered with flowering vines. 
 
 There was a balcony around the inside of the house. 
 From the roof of the balcony depended pots of orchids, cages 
 of birds, and perches for parrots. At the end, Hazel had 
 built a schoolroom for free education. 
 
 The first sight that arrested Leigh's attention on entering 
 the long, low, rambling building was a quetzal in a collection 
 of beautiful birds in a case. 
 
 " Why ! " he exclaimed, " you have a royal trogon here." 
 
 "So f have," answered young Aleman, "and the stuffed 
 bird is so common an ornament of our houses here that I 
 had really forgotten that I had one of my own." 
 
 The quetzal was beautiful. Its carmine breast was par- 
 ticularly lustrous. It had two very long tail feathers of 
 black and green. 
 
 " Was this bird found here?" asked Leigh. 
 
 "I think so; the Indian hunters find them in the forests 
 o| Irazu." 
 
 " Are there any live ones in the houses on the coffee plan- 
 tations ? " 
 
 " I never saw one," said young Aleman.
 
 102 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Their first breakfast consisted of hot cakes, eggs, black 
 beans (frijoles), fried plantains, and fruit, with superb coffee. 
 
 After this meal the party went out on the veranda and 
 sat down, and the boys looked out on the shining coffee 
 fields. 
 
 " I have a question for you, my young friend," said Cap- 
 tain Frobisher to young Hazel. "If you regard it an imper- 
 tinent one, you will of course excuse me and not answer it. 
 It is, what are the profits of a coffee plantation here, within 
 sight of Irazu the Cartago or San Jose region, you may 
 call it?" 
 
 "The young planters, and old ones as well, have but a 
 single answer to that often-asked epicstion. It is this, ' The 
 amount of one's investment in coffee is, after five years, the 
 amount of one's yearly income.' I invested $3000 in the 
 enterprise ; after seven years my income is more than that as 
 a rule, though this year the price of coffee fell, but it is rising 
 again." 
 
 They looked up the long slopes of Irazu. The volcano 
 did not appear high. The top was shaded here and there 
 with patches of green forests. 
 
 " In those woods, high up on the mountain, is the haunt of 
 the quetzal, I am told," said young Aleman. " I must plan a 
 journey on muleback for you to the summit of the moun- 
 tain." 
 
 " I can go up on foot some day," said Leigh. " I can start 
 early in the morning so as to take time by the way." 
 
 " You would have to start early in the morning, indeed, if 
 you expected to return by night early in the morning be- 
 fore the day of your fancy. Irazu is a great deceiver. It
 
 THE YOUNG COFFEE PLANTER AT HOME. IOj 
 
 would take you two days for the journey, and you would not 
 then be able to rest long by the way." 
 
 " Let us have the company of an Indian hunter," said 
 Leigh, "and we will return with a living quetzal." 
 
 " I will go with you myself, with a peon and mules," said 
 Hazel. 
 
 It was an ever to be remembered day when the party set 
 out very early in the morning for the summit of Irazu, 1 1,000 
 feet above the sea level, and some 6000 feet from their point 
 of starting. The air was cool, the roads hobbly, but lined 
 with Mowers. Here and there were adobe huts covered with 
 dried leaves of the lofty cocoanut palm. They were like 
 little gardens of flowers, birds, and almost naked children. 
 
 As they rose, the land of Costa Rica spread out wider and 
 wider beneath them ; its verdant valleys, its vast forests, its 
 little towns; Cartago, with her churches; San Jose with her 
 quiet domes and towers. 
 
 After a long, winding journey, which became very fatiguing 
 at hist, the\' reached the summit and found a shelter for the 
 night. 
 
 They rose early in the morning. The sky was clear. The 
 red disc of the sun was uplifting an arch of rosy splendor ot 
 light in the far east, over the opal-like sea. The dim waters 
 oi the Atlantic or the Caribbean were there. How vast, how 
 far ! 
 
 They turned their faces to the west. There lay the serene 
 Pacific, a long, low line of shaded water in outlines <>l purple 
 and green. Below them was the living map o| Costa Rica, 
 or land ocean, as it were, of mountains and hills, and valleys 
 filled with tropical life.
 
 104 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 They stood there long as if entranced. But a mist arose 
 in the far distances. The dim Atlantic disappeared ; the 
 Pacific faded. The sun came up in majesty and glory, such 
 as they had never witnessed before. They went to the dark 
 caverns where the crater had been. But the clays of the 
 eruption were long ago. No smoke appeared in the chimney. 
 
 They returned by the way of some bowery woods, but 
 though Leigh scanned the cool shades and saw some flaming 
 orchids there, no quetzals appeared. 
 
 Never had sleep been more sweet to our travellers than on 
 the night after their descent from Irazu. 
 
 A SURPRISE AFTER DANGER. 
 
 One day Leigh noticed a curious insect in his room. It 
 seemed to be tangled up, and to have many angles, and it 
 looked uncomfortable. 
 
 He came out on the veranda and said to Aleman, 
 
 " What kind of an insect do you have in this country that 
 looks like a little pile of sticks ? Come with me to my room, 
 and I will show you one." 
 
 Hazel laughed and followed him, as the latter returned to 
 his room and looked around. 
 
 " It was here, but I do not see it now ; where can it have 
 gone ? " 
 
 "I am not an especial student of bugs," said Hazel; "but 
 from your description of the insect, I would think it to be a 
 scorpion." 
 
 " But what can have become of it?" 
 
 " I do not know, but a scorpion likes to hide. He seeks 
 seclusion and darkness. "
 
 A SURPRISE AFTER DANGER. 105 
 
 " Does he bite ? " asked Leigh. 
 
 " Not unless he is disturbed in some way. He is quite 
 harmless if he is let alone." 
 
 "Is his bite poisonous?" continued Leigh. 
 
 "Yes; it is said to be so. I have never been bitten, 
 though I have often found scorpions in my rooms." 
 
 " Is the bite of the scorpion fatal? " 
 
 " No, not necessarily. There are remedies against the poi- 
 son. The bite sometimes causes temporary paralysis of the 
 hand, or of some part of the body. There have been cases 
 where people have died from the poison of the scorpion. 
 Such things are not common." 
 
 " I should think that the insects would be a source of 
 constant terror," said Leigh. 
 
 "Oh, no! Are wasps and hornets a source of constant 
 terror to people in the States? No, you do not think about 
 them. When I was at a farm-house in New York, there was 
 a hornet's nest in the attic, and the hornets came to it and 
 went from it through a lattice. One of the workpeople slept 
 in the attic. He was never stung." 
 
 Leigh searched the room for the scorpion, but he could 
 not find him. 
 
 "He may be in your clothing, hanging on the wall," said 
 Hazel. 
 
 A very nervous look came into Leigh's face. He searched 
 his clothing very carefully indeed, at the end of a cane, but 
 no scorpion appeared. He changed his clothing with much 
 caution that daw 
 
 The night was cool. There are often cool nights about 
 the region of Cartago. Leigh put extra clothing upon his
 
 106 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 iron-framed bed. He sunk into rest, and slept, and dreamed 
 blessed dreams, for the climate under Irazu was like old 
 New England. 
 
 In the morning when he awoke he thought of the 
 scorpion. 
 
 Hazel tapped on his door. He brought into the room 
 some cocoanut water, deliciously flavored and prepared. 
 
 "That is cool," said Hazel. "It will do you good to 
 drink it on rising. We have had a good night, but we will 
 have a hot day. The sun is rising red." 
 
 " My friend, you are good indeed to be thinking of my 
 comfort so much. What do you suppose became of the 
 scorpion ? " 
 
 " I do not know. Scorpions like to crawl into beds, when 
 a cool night is coming. They like to hide under woollens. I 
 wouldn't wonder if he were somewhere about your bed now." 
 
 " Do they bite people in bed ? " asked Leigh in alarm. 
 
 "Not unless one pushes them," said Hazel. "Not if 
 one lies still. Many a person has slept with a scorpion in 
 his bed, and did not know it until he rose and threw back 
 the clothes." 
 
 Leigh leaped up, and gathered around him his night- 
 dress very carefully. He stepped upon the floor, and threw 
 back the bedclothes. 
 
 His hands darted into the air. 
 
 "Jumping Jackson ! " he said, using an old New England 
 term of surprise. " There 's tlic scorpion noiv. I've been 
 sleeping with Jiim ! " 
 
 "I see," said Hazel, "and you did not harm him. He has 
 had a very comfortable night."
 
 A SURPRISE AFTER DANGER. IO7 
 
 Leigh visited from time to time Costa Rica's beautiful 
 city, San Jose, and spent many hours in the Public Gardens 
 there, now studying the flowers, now admiring the historic 
 monument, now watching the cloud shadows on the moun- 
 tains. There is a sense of beauty everywhere here. Not 
 only that, the people here seem happy. Enterprise mingles 
 with the picturesque life; here it is not always afternoon, 
 as it seems to be in some of the Republics of the Sun. 
 
 At San Jose, Leigh found the store of the taxidermist, and 
 saw the mounted figure of a jaguar, and studied its beautiful 
 spots. The mounted animal was valued at a hundred dollars. 
 The taxidermist had been engaged in collecting animals and 
 birds for mounting for the Guatemalan national exhibition 
 and for the Paris exposition of 1900. 
 
 Leigh saw there the skin of an ocelot, which he thought 
 very beautiful. 
 
 "Where does the animal live?" he asked of the people 
 in the store. 
 
 " In the trees," said one. 
 
 " And as rare to find as the quetzal," said another. 
 
 " In hunting for one, a person sometimes finds the other," 
 said another. 
 
 " Next to seeing a live quetzal," said Leigh, " I would like 
 to find an ocelot alive." 
 
 He did, and in an unexpected situation, as we shall see 
 in the course of our narrative.
 
 CHAPTER X. 
 
 APULA. 
 
 AT young Aleman's plantation Leigh met a very singular 
 character, and one that illustrates that true worth is to 
 be found everywhere. This person was an old india-rubber 
 hunter by the name of Apula. He was a Mosquito Indian, 
 and belonged to the tribe that the English had pledged 
 themselves to protect in the famous treaty that guaranteed 
 neutrality if the Nicaraguan Canal should be built. 
 
 He owned a boat, and in this he made excursions into Lake 
 Nicaragua and into the rivers of the lake in search of rubber 
 trees, which he tapped, and sold the rubber to the comisarios 
 or dealers in rubber. 
 
 His home was not far from Bluefields on the Mosquito 
 Coast, and he from time to time travelled up and down the 
 Mosquito Coast in his boat, from Livingston, the port of 
 Honduras, to Bocas del Toro. 
 
 He had come down to Port Limon in his boat, and gone to 
 Cartago in the cars, which among the coast Indians are a 
 wonder. 
 
 He spoke Spanish imperfectly, and English in the same 
 way. Sometimes he would ask unexpected questions and 
 return intelligible answers in both languages. But usually 
 he would say a few words and then halt. He had learned to 
 
 108
 
 APUI.A. IOQ 
 
 say Tengo la bondad and to follow it by a Spanish verb 
 in the infinitive mood. In this way one might talk in 
 Spanish infinitives. But usually his speech in Spanish hesi- 
 tated, and he made signs to indicate objects and omitted 
 verbs. 
 
 There was one trait of character that Leigh possessed that 
 makes friends in all lands : it was a pleasure for him to stand 
 aside for others. It fulfilled in a perfectly natural way the 
 virtue commended in the Scriptures, " In honor preferring 
 one another." 
 
 Apula, the Indian boatman and rubber hunter, was not at 
 first sight an attractive man. Much of the time when he was 
 in the forest, he was almost literally a rubber man ; he was 
 content with rubber. He had no need to wear rubber shoes, 
 the rubber became a part of his feet. He needed to wear no 
 rubber clothes, the rubber juice or sap adhered to him. He 
 was very tall, very thin, and his muscles were like metal. 
 
 Hut he had a very tender, patient expression in his eyes 
 and about his mouth. 
 
 He came to Hazel's coffee farm to meet a rubber comisario 
 who was spending a week or more there, and who had stores 
 along the coast. 
 
 He stood at the gate of the quinta in his rubber and rags. 
 He wore a tunic made of coffee bags, and this had become 
 glued with rubber. lie had a band about his head, and he 
 carried a machete, or machette, a kind of cutlass, as all 
 rubber Indians do. 
 
 Leigh was sitting on the long veranda of the quinta, talk- 
 ing with a loir to, or parrot, overhead, when he first saw the 
 Indian.
 
 IIO LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The figure stood beside the gatepost of the adobe wall, and 
 looked like a statue. Leigh's honest face met the Indian's 
 eyes with a kindly sympathy, though he did not speak a 
 word. 
 
 An hour passed. Leigh went into the quinta, and came 
 out again, but the Indian still stood there. There were men 
 talking with the comisario under the cocoanut trees, and the 
 Indian felt his humble place in life, and was willing to wait 
 his turn. 
 
 The sun blazed over the trees. Still the Indian stood at 
 the gate. The comisario saw him and shouted out, 
 
 " By and by, Apula," and continued his conversation 
 with the men, which was upon the politics of the country. 
 
 Another hour passed. Leigh began to pity the poor Indian. 
 It seemed unjust to him to keep him waiting so long when 
 he was not an unwelcome visitor, as the comisario's words 
 seemed to imply. 
 
 A large pitcher of lime water was brought out from the 
 tables, and the beverage offered to the comisario and his 
 friends. The drink was sugared and iced, and had a most 
 delicious appearance. The servant passed a glass of it to 
 Leigh. Just then Leigh happened to look towards the gate, 
 and his eyes again met the eyes of the Indian in his gar- 
 ments spotted with rubber. 
 
 The man had waited more than two hours now. His face 
 wore the same patient, kindly expression. Leigh's heart was 
 touched; he felt the injustice of the situation, and with a 
 genuine New England, Thomas Jefferson impulse he went 
 out to the gate and held out his glass of sugared lime water 
 to the wayfarer.
 
 APULA. I [ I 
 
 The Indian's eyes melted. He had seldom met that kind 
 of courtesy before. Even the English on the ships that 
 come to the coast did not treat rubber hunters in that way. 
 
 The Indian raised his dark hand and said, 
 
 " Gracias no sed" (thanks no thirst). 
 
 Leigh's kindly thought of the Indian drew the attention 
 of the comisario. 
 
 "You are a true American," said the comisario to Leigh. 
 " Mosquito Indians are used to waiting." He arose and went 
 to the gate, and had a long talk with Apula. 
 
 As he returned to the seats under the cocoanut trees, he 
 said : 
 
 "The old boatman says that he will never forget that 
 American boy. You have won a true heart to-day, Leigh, 
 for those Indians never forget a favor, and they are not used 
 to being served at the gate with cliicJia by white men." 
 
 Leigh himself saw 7 nothing out of the common in this 
 courtesy. lie had been brought up to believe that his 
 country was the earth, and his countrymen were all man- 
 kind. An old friend of his uncle's, Governor Andrew, used 
 to say, 
 
 " I know not what record of sin awaits me in another 
 world, but this I do know, I never yet despised a man 
 because he was poor, because he was ignorant, or because 
 he was black." If Leigh saw any creature in need of what 
 he could give, he gave it, and he found more pleasure in the 
 act than in anything that would serve himself. 
 
 Leigh had made an impression on Apula that the Indian 
 would never forget. Apula would find Leigh again. 1 lie 
 heart that seeks through love, has little sense ot space or
 
 112 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 time. Apula knew well all of these mid-American countries, 
 and it was his calling to travel in them all. 
 
 Leigh wished to go to Nicaragua by the way of the old 
 road from the coast over the mountains. Me had once heard 
 some agents of a travelling show speak of this route, of its 
 perils, but also of the remarkable life of the Indians, beasts, 
 and birds to be met in the interior. 
 
 He talked with the rubber comisario in regard to the jour- 
 ney. The collector knew it well, and he had met the Rio 
 Frios and other tribes of Indians on the rivers in the dis- 
 puted boundaries of Costa Rica and Nicaragua. 
 
 " If you think of joining a party to the coast by that route, 
 you should have engaged old Apula to have gone with you. 
 There's something singular about that old Indian, but he is 
 honest. Honor is born in some people ; it is a gift of the 
 gods. Apula is an old boatman, and you would need such 
 a guide as he after you reach the lake country. You would 
 need a river guide as well as a mountain guide, with pack 
 mules. I would recommend Apula for any service on the 
 coast and rivers." 
 
 The suggestion had a singular effect on Leigh. The 
 strange figure that he had seen at the gate seemed to enter 
 somehow into his imagination, and he said to himself, " If 
 I could have that Indian for a guide, I would be safe." 
 Apula had gone to San Jose.
 
 CHAPTER XI. 
 
 HAZEL'S SCHOOL HIS METHODS. 
 
 " A YOUNG man should have a purpose in life beyond 
 j~Y mere money-making," young Hazel used to say. This 
 purpose in him found expression in a school which he opened 
 in his own house for the children of the peons who worked 
 on the coffee plantations. To this work he brought his father, 
 who had been an instructor in a German town. 
 
 The old German schoolmaster was a disciple of the school 
 system of Pestalozzi and Froebel. He held that education 
 stands for character, and that to make the spiritual man is 
 the highest of all callings in life. He believed with Froebel, 
 that every child had some special gift from God, and that the 
 development of this gift was the sacred work of the teacher. 
 He was a lover of the old German authors, whom Carlyle 
 especially commends, and greatly quoted Fichte, and that 
 writer's " Way to the Blessed Life." lie followed Froebel's 
 method, and by it sought to put the principles of the Sermon 
 on the Mount into the conduct of the child. 
 
 Young Hazel had begun the school to which he had 
 brought his father. It consisted of a kindergarten for the 
 little children, and a lecture school for the working people, 
 among whom were men of considerable intelligence. '1 he 
 latter was held in the cool of the evening. It was devoted 
 to historical lectures, literature, morals, and music. 
 i "3
 
 114 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Some of young Hazel's methods in the latter school were 
 well adapted to the young people of a country like Costa 
 Rica. In music he taught his pupils the national songs and 
 folk songs of all countries, and made these the texts of his- 
 torical lectures. 
 
 He was giving a course of lectures when Leigh was there, 
 on the noblest deeds of history. The Frobishers were quite 
 intelligent on South American history ; but they were sur- 
 prised at some of the pictures which Hazel drew of the patri- 
 otism of the South American heroes, whose deeds are not 
 widely known. He gave examples of Southern heroes, after 
 the manner of Plutarch's Lives, and at the close of the series 
 of lectures he required the class to answer the question, 
 " Which of these heroes was the greatest ? " 
 
 The class in this case decided that the most unselfish acts 
 were the greatest, which showed the moral influence of his 
 thought training. 
 
 He made his lectures picturesque by using the narrative 
 style. Let me retell one of Hazel's stories, or quinta lectures. 
 
 THE BANNER OF THE SUN. 1 
 
 It was New Year's Day in Mendoza, at the foot of the 
 high Andes. Over the city of the pampas loomed Tupun- 
 gato, like a very dome of the earth, white and glistening, 
 with the condors wheeling below at the point of the rocky 
 crags, but never mounting above the barren crystal heights. 
 The flowers were still blooming on the pampas, although it 
 was so late in the year, but there was eternal winter in the 
 silence of the sky. 
 
 1 This story tirst appeared in "Success," and is used by permission.
 
 THE BANNER OF THE SUN. I I 5 
 
 A company of Spanish and Creole ladies had gone into 
 the chapel of the earthquake-shattered church. They were 
 doing their benevolent work for the Army of the Andes that 
 was encamped on the near pampas. 
 
 An army officer dashed by on a splendid horse. Ma- 
 noeuvring on the open plain stood the glittering Army of 
 the Andes, that might be seen through the lace-work of the 
 trees. 
 
 " Whither go they ? " asked Dona Mira of Lois Beltram, 
 a wandering, mendicant friar. She knew where they pur- 
 posed to go, but as she looked up to the white walls of 
 the Andes, the feat for which they were preparing seemed 
 utterly impossible. 
 
 The wandering friar was one of the strangest men in all 
 history. Me was a Sam Adams or a Benjamin Franklin of 
 South America. He was filled with the fire of liberty. He 
 had ceased to care for himself, and gave himself wholly to 
 the cause of the emancipation of South America from Spain. 
 
 "Whither go they, Dona Mira? Why do you ask? Go 
 they? go they? They are going into the sky, and over the 
 Andes, and they will descend from the sky like the condor, 
 and woe be to the prey on that day ! Whither go the}' ? 
 They go to the stars for the liberation of the fairest land 
 on all the earth! This year, Dona Mira, San Martin will 
 accomplish the miracle of the world, he will cause the Andes 
 to bow down before him, he will move the mountains, and 
 make South America free ! " 
 
 "And how dost thou know, Friar Lois Beltram ? " 
 
 "Know? because to a soul like his nothing is impossible. 
 Lven Hannibal crossed the Alps, and Napoleon followed
 
 Il6 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 him, and the Corsican said that ' impossible ' is the adjec- 
 tive of fools. Dona, did not Cxsar say that if Nature her- 
 self impeded his march, he would compel her to obey ? 
 These were men without faith except in the human will. 
 Dona, General San Martin has a higher faith than that. 
 Did you ever hear his motto of life?" 
 
 " No, Friar Beltram. What may that be ? He will need 
 to follow a high motto indeed if he carries out his purpose, 
 which is now plain." 
 
 " Listen, Dona Mira. This is New Year's Day. The 
 Don San Martin's motto is a good one for this New Year's 
 Day. It is this, 
 
 " ' Seras lo que debes ser, y sino no seras nada ' (Thou must 
 be that which thou oughtest to be, and without that thou 
 shalt be nothing)." 
 
 "Those are marvellous words, Friar." 
 
 "They are words of life. He has made me, friar that I 
 am, director of the forges and arsenals. That will unfrock 
 me, if I serve. ' But I am no Vulcan,' I protested, when 
 he suggested this appointment ; ' I am only a wandering 
 monk.' 
 
 " Then he pointed to the Andes as they rose up in the 
 morning sun, ' Can it be done ? ' he said to me. I answered, 
 'Yes, Don San Martin.' Then, as his sword flashed out, 
 he cried, 
 
 " ' TJiou must be that ivliich thou oughtest to be power 
 lies in that way ! ' " 
 
 Dona Mira looked up at the Andes. 
 
 " Look, look, Dona Mira. Those are the walls that we 
 are to take. We must scale the walls of God."
 
 THE BANNER OF THE SUN. II^ 
 
 Twenty-one thousand feet the Andes gleamed above them, 
 and the lowest pass was twelve or more thousand feet high. 
 Pouring down their sides into the semi-tropical gardens of 
 balm and bloom, were the melting torrents. The work of 
 the ages of the creation was there, when the volcanoes were 
 forges, and mountains rose from the caverns and sunk into 
 valleys of fire. The world of the cacti and thorny plants 
 was there, underneath the white walls of eternal snows. 
 
 The snow was gleaming on the high Cordillera in blind- 
 ing splendor. 
 
 " Doha Mira, for that expedition we shall need a banner 
 of the sun. I am going to take off my frock to weld weapons. 
 Not the cloister, but the great valley of the fires of the 
 forges, where weapons are to be made to free mankind from 
 chains, is to be my place of service. Heaven wills it so. 
 Dona, have you faith that Don San Martin can ever lead an 
 army over the walls of the Andes?" 
 
 " Friar Bertram, I have. This year shall see it done." 
 
 " I have made my Xew Year's resolution ; it is that of 
 San Martin. I must be that which I ought to be, and with- 
 out that / shall be nothing. I go to my forges! " 
 
 " Friar, I will go and call my ladies, and we will make 
 here a banner of the sun. This year I will take God at I lis 
 word, and put my faith in the heavens. Faith can cause 
 mountains to move, faith in man can do much, faith in God 
 everything. I thank thee for this New Year's motto, Friar 
 Heltram. We must be that which we ought to be, and with- 
 out that we shall be nothing." 
 
 On the 17th of January, 1 <S 1 7, there was a high holi- 
 day at Mendoza, the bowery and beautiful city under the
 
 Il8 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Andes, on the plain of Argentina. The streets were bloom- 
 ing with flags. That day the whole Army of the Andes, 
 headed by General San Martin, who has been called the 
 "greatest of Creoles," were to march through the town, and 
 were to receive from the ladies a flag, to be borne at their 
 head as they were to attempt to march over the Andes for 
 the liberation of Chili and Peru. 
 
 The cannon thundered, and the thunder was echoed 
 back from the walls of the Andes. San Martin swept up 
 to the chapel on his charger, and the women gave him the 
 flag that they had made. It was a banner with the figure 
 of the sun. " Bear it up to the sun," said Dona Mira. 
 
 San Martin dismounted and ascended a platform in the 
 great square, or plaza. He waved the flag over his head 
 in the sunlight, and cried, 
 
 "This is the first flag of independence that has ever been 
 raised for the country ! " 
 
 " Viva la Patria .'" rose from the army and the people. 
 
 " Soldiers," he cried, and we use his exact words, if tra- 
 dition may be followed, "swear to maintain it, and to die in 
 defence of it, as I now swear ! " 
 
 The army made the oath. The cannon boomed ; the 
 musketry rolled, and was echoed from the crags. That was 
 a great day of faith for South America and the Austral 
 world. 
 
 Whither go they ? 
 
 Over the Cordillera with the flag of the sun; the flag 
 of redemption for one-half of South America. 
 
 On the 5th of April the Army of the Andes stood on the 
 plain of Maipo. It had come down upon the Spaniards like
 
 THE BANNER OF THE SUN. I 19 
 
 a condor from the sky, and had won a victory. The frozen 
 bodies of some of the soldiers who perished in that march 
 over the Andes were found years afterwards on heights 
 where the condors had not sought them. 
 
 The morning that found the army on the plain of Maipo 
 was overcast. At last the heavens opened, and the sun 
 gleamed on the white summits of the high Andes and 
 streamed over the army. It shone on the flag of the sun. 
 San Martin saw it and hailed it as an omen. 
 
 "The enemy are ours," said the greatest of the Creoles. 
 
 "Yes," said Friar Beltram, "the enemy are ours." 
 
 The Spanish power in South America received its death 
 blow on that clay. The arms made in part by Friar Lois 
 Beltram drove the Spaniards to the sea. 
 
 What a motto was that of San Martin for a New Year's 
 resolution! The achievement of what men call "impossible " 
 is but the attainment of what is possible under the higher 
 law of faith. 
 
 San Martin won the independence of Chili. The coun- 
 try offered him ten thousand ounces of gold as a reward, 
 but he refused it. " I did not fight for gold," he said. 
 
 He must be that which he ought to be. 
 
 He won the independence of Peru. The Spanish Peru- 
 vians offered him the supreme power, the Incarial crown. 
 " I have achieved the independence of Peru," he said, "and I 
 have ceased to be a public man." 
 
 lie went over the sea, from these republics whose inde- 
 pendence he had gained, Argentina, Chili, Peru, and 
 lived an exile, and died in poverty, and ten years afterwards 
 was crowned dead, as il were, his remains being enthroned
 
 120 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 in that glorious temple of Buenos Ayres known as the tomb of 
 San Martin. The Austral world can never forget the opening 
 of the year 1817 at Mendoza and the Banner of the Sun. 
 
 The world is full of disappointed men ; but San Martin 
 in his poverty and exile was not of them. No man will ever 
 be disappointed who finds his happiness in spiritual things 
 or in the good of others. 
 
 Face the Andes of life with the motto of San Martin, the 
 greatest of Creoles. To live is better than to gain ; to lift, 
 better than to lean. What is there that is not possible to 
 a high purpose in life ? 
 
 " Seras lo que debes ser, y sino, 110 seras nada ! " 
 
 "This is not the life to which heaven is promised," wrote 
 Dr. Johnson at New Year's, on reviewing a year of irresolu- 
 tion. That which ought not to be will not be; it has the 
 gravitation of oblivion. 
 
 Would it not be well for you to write in your diary on 
 January 1, 1898, 
 
 " / will be that ivJiich I ought to be, for without that I 
 shall be nothing." 
 
 Hazel led the exercises of the Songs of all Lands with a 
 beautiful adaptation of the supposed hymn of Columbus at 
 
 sea : 
 
 *' Ave. Maris Stella, 
 
 Star forever fair. 
 Light of hope immortal. 
 In the heavenly air. 
 
 Star of stars, and Light Eternal, 
 
 Lead us on across the sea. 
 Salve ! salve ! we are exiles 
 
 From the world, hut not from Thee. 
 Salve ! salve !
 
 HAZELS SCHOOL. 121 
 
 " Ave, Maris Stella, 
 
 Help our weak endeavor, 
 Till, redeemed by Jesu, 
 We are thine forever. 
 
 Star of stars, and Light Eternal, 
 
 Lead us on across the sea. 
 Salve ! salve ! we are exiles 
 From the world, but not from Thee. 
 Salve ! salve ! 
 
 "Now to God, all glorious, 
 One and Blessed Three, 
 On the land and ocean 
 Endless glory be ! 
 
 Salve ! salve ! 
 
 Amen ! " 
 
 He had secured a library of the books that he desired the 
 young people to read, putting Plutarch's Lives at the head 
 of the list of biography. 
 
 As a result of this reading, he required his pupils, young 
 and adult, to relate the incidents of heroism that most 
 greatly interested them. They were thus lead to study biog- 
 raphy for the highest expressions of character in life. 
 
 In one of these exercises, a pupil related in verse the 
 following tale from American-Mexican history: 
 
 THE BROTHERS. 
 
 " Halt ! Stay your j*uns and let me speak, 
 A wounded man ve need not tear; 
 My breath is short, my pulse is weak, 
 Mv last word.-, shall he lew hut hear !
 
 122 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 "Two brothers were we, Juan and I, 
 
 But one in heart were ever ; 
 Our home was on the plain hard by 
 
 The Rio Grande River. 
 My life was Juan's, and his was mine, 
 
 And other men were strangers, 
 'Till from the cool lands of the pine 
 
 Came down the Border Rangers ; 
 And then we boldly joined and leapt 
 
 O'er the Sierra Madre, 
 And down to Buena Vista swept 
 
 With them to El Salada. 
 
 'My brother had a wife and child, 
 
 And made a home for mother ; 
 A happy household on him smiled, 
 
 And I was but a brother. 
 You made us prisoners Juan and I, 
 
 And loyal fear to waken. 
 You one in five condemned to die, 
 
 Of all the captives taken. 
 We heard the general's stern decree 
 
 Read by your chief. Espada, 
 I looked at Juan, he looked at me 
 
 Remember El Salada ! 
 
 "You put fifty seeds in a sack 
 
 From some near peon's acres ; 
 Of those frijoles ten were black. 
 
 And doomed to death their takers. 
 Blindfolded then our fates we drew, 
 
 While prayed the padre holy; 
 I oped my hand my lot to view 
 
 I'd drawn a white frijole.
 
 THE BROTHERS. 123 
 
 And Juan I saw his bandage fall, 
 
 I saw his eyelids quiver, 
 I saw him turn his face from all 
 
 Towards Rio Grande River ; 
 I saw his heart beat in his veins, 
 
 While the Sierra Madre 
 Gleamed out in sunset's golden reins 
 
 Remember El Salada ! 
 
 v. 
 
 "He shut his hand as hard as death. 
 
 And whispered, "Wife, son, mother. 1 
 I touched my hand 'gainst his warm hand, 
 
 As I might touch no other : 
 Juan's blood was mine, and mine was his, 
 
 Though I was but a brother : 
 My veins were his and his were mine. 
 
 Oh, how I felt our fingers twine ! 
 And when our hands unlocked, unclasped, 
 
 I felt a feeling holy, 
 In his hand was the white seed grasped, 
 
 In mine the black frijole. 
 He sudden saw what I had done, 
 
 His white lips whispered Brother!' 
 I answered him in his own words, 
 
 Of wife ' and * son ' and 'mother.' 
 I looked at Juan, he looked at me, 
 
 And on us looked Espada, 
 I kissed Juan's hand I cannot see 
 
 Remember El Salada ! 
 
 VI. 
 
 " I'm blind with tears I cannot see 
 I hear the clarinas singing. 
 And o'er the hacienda, tree. 
 
 The Angelus is ringing. 
 I kissed tin- hand t<> which I'd given 
 Mv life for w ife and mother ;
 
 124 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 And filled my heart a peace like Heaven 
 To hear him say ' My Brother ! ' 
 
 He said no more, but turned his eyes 
 Towards the Sierra Madre, 
 
 Where sunset gleamed like Paradise 
 Remember El Salada ! 
 
 " Espada rode along the line, 
 
 My hand a black seed spotted, 
 They led me forth at dusky eve, 
 
 To face the carbines shotted, 
 The stroke of judgment to receive, 
 
 To meet the doom allotted. 
 I felt like one who blindly treads 
 
 The holy of the holies. 
 They drew the black caps o'er our heads 
 
 Who'd drawn the black frijoles. 
 And then the place was still as death, 
 
 Save some far bell tower ringing, 
 Or passing of some spent wind's breath, 
 
 Or lone clarina singing. 
 ' U)iol ' we heard the captain's word ; 
 
 ' Dos I ' was the dim air sobbing? 
 ' Tresl ' I was shot no muscle stirred 
 
 And yet my heart seemed throbbing. 
 The far Red River seemed to whirl 
 
 Around me. crimson turning. 
 And o'er me gleamed a cross of pearl 
 
 Amid the twilight burning. 
 I knew no more till midnight came, 
 
 I oped my eyes, and o'er me 
 The low stars shone ; the campfire's flame 
 
 Leaped red. a mile before me. 
 I rose and ran ; I climbed the hills ; 
 
 Gained the Sierra Madre; 
 My burning brain the memory fills 
 
 Remember El Salada !
 
 THE BROTHERS. I25 
 
 "You found me "mid the cacti cool, 
 
 Hard by the mountain willow, 
 My bed the shadowy earth, a pool 
 
 Of clotted blood my pillow. 
 You know your orders well, and I 
 
 Respect them, as another ; 
 If not a hero's death. 1 die 
 
 True-hearted as a brother. 
 My brother's blood is more to me 
 
 Than mine which I surrender, 
 I have no wife, or son. but he 
 
 Shares hearts as mine as tender. 
 I've loved him more than self he knows, 
 
 And on the Sierra Madre 
 My lonely grave will ope and close 
 
 Remember El Salada ! 
 
 " Ay, ope my breast make ready now ; 
 
 L'710 dos wait stand steady ! 
 My head is free, and free my brow. 
 
 And Heaven is clear I'm read)'. 
 My soul shall mount where heroes go, 
 
 From earth's o'ershadowed portal; 
 God's sunset temples o'er me glow 
 
 In peace and love immortal. 
 Farewell. <) Rio Grande's tide! 
 
 Farewell. Sierra Madre ! 
 Now read}' ! hold 
 
 Tell Juan I died 
 For him at HI Salada. 
 
 You raise your guns with trembling hands 
 Uno dos men be heroes ! 
 
 (Jno dos trei ! O earth, farewell ! 
 Farewell, O campancros ! "
 
 126 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Three black-mouthed carbines shook the hills 
 
 Of the Sierra Madre, 
 The cacti there with life blood wet, 
 Three soldiers left behind, as set 
 
 The sun of El Salada !
 
 CHAPTER XII. 
 
 A PARTY FOR THE FORESTS. 
 
 THE Frobishers made the acquaintance of a former con- 
 sular agent, a Air. Ladd, whom we will call the Ameri- 
 can. This man was about to go to the Pacific coast and to 
 cross the mountains with an Italian doctor to Granada, in 
 Nicaragua, the very ancient city that had been partly de- 
 stroyed by Walker, the adventurer. 
 
 The Italian's name was Zano, but we will call him the 
 doctor. The American and the doctor were naturalists, 
 and were looking for some advantageous situation for coffee 
 and banana plantations, and the doctor was interested in 
 studying certain rare medicinal plants. 
 
 The two had engaged a Mosquito Indian to accompany 
 them as a guide, whom we will call the guide. The latter 
 had arranged to take with him some mules and dogs. 
 
 A little black boy, named Alio, who had landed at Port 
 Limon from Jamaica, and who was so timid at times that he 
 was called Little A (Paid, and so bold at times that the words 
 were given another meaning, had been engaged as a ser- 
 vant. 
 
 A portly Pnglishman, by the name ot Ilobbs, wished to go 
 with the party, lie was simply a natural traveller. lie had 
 been almost everywhere; hut from his timidity one would 
 suppose that he had been nowhere. He was a great-hearted, 
 
 I2 7
 
 128 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 good-humored man, but he was constantly taking alarm. 
 Many people in different countries had said to him, " Mr. 
 Hobbs, you ought never to go away from home." 
 
 "There is as much danger there as anywhere," he would 
 answer. " The chimney might fall down on me there, who 
 can tell ? " He would laugh and say, " The only way to get 
 out of the way of danger is to keep going." 
 
 He would sometimes give his history in this way: 
 
 " My father followed the sea, and his father before him, 
 and I like to see the world I inherit a love of being in 
 motion. Am I sea-sick ? Yes, yes, always once on a voy- 
 age. But what are a few days of sickness to the pleasures 
 of a voyage ! Have I ever had adventures ? Ask Simple 
 Simon. Yes, yes; but I treat everybody just right, and feel 
 kindly towards all people, and my escapes are equal to my 
 adventures. This is a good world to good-hearted people. 
 Folks laugh at me because I take care of myself, and call 
 me Mr. Careful and all that. But I love to see a new coun- 
 try ; nothing makes me so happy as that. What is there so 
 interesting in the world as folks ? " 
 
 Leigh had formed a very kindly friendship with Mr. Ladd, 
 the former consular agent, and when he learned of this expe- 
 dition to go over the mountains to old Granada, in Nicara- 
 gua, he wished to join it. 
 
 He approached his uncle on the subject. 
 
 " I would be perfectly willing to trust you with Mr. Ladd," 
 said Captain Frobisher, " and I have perfect confidence in 
 the character of 'much afraid' Mr. Hobbs. A man who 
 laughs over his mishaps as the generous Englishman does, 
 is to be trusted ; he is a man whose home is the world ; some
 
 A PARTY FOR THE FORESTS. I 29 
 
 Englishmen are like him ; they are never content unless they 
 are out of doors in some new place. The party seems a safe 
 one. I am willing that you should join it; but as for me I 
 will take the boat from Port Limon to Greytown, and the 
 river boat up the San Juan to Granada, and we will meet 
 there. Alonzo, will you go with Leigh or with me?" 
 
 " I will go with you, Uncle. I am looking for coffee ports 
 rather than plantations ; for the article itself, after it has 
 been raised. Leigh is as safe with Mr. Ladd as he could be 
 with us. He likes birds and flowers, and if the royal trogon 
 is to be found in the forests of this part of the country, he 
 will find it." 
 
 So it was settled that Leigh and Alonzo should sep- 
 arate here, and that Alonzo should go with his uncle back 
 to Port Limon, and thence to Greytown and up the San 
 Juan. 
 
 Mr. Ladd's party was to go to the coast from San Jose 
 over the route that General Casement, from the States, is now 
 surveying for a railroad, and thence up the coast, and over 
 the old Nicaragua road. The way is long and perilous. 
 Passengers to the Nicaragua Lakes, from Costa Rica, go to 
 Punta Arenas, and up the coast to Corinto, and to Greytown 
 through the lakes. The way is a safe one, and takes in the 
 ancient cities of Nicaragua, by boat and rail, Leon, Mana- 
 gua, and Granada. New railways are planned along the con- 
 necting points of this line, which will one day be a famous 
 highway of travel. The steamers from San Francisco con- 
 nect at Corinto with points on the Pacific coast, with Panama, 
 Callao, Peru, and Valparaiso, Chili, and some ot them go 
 around the Horn.
 
 I30 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Strangely enough, Leigh met old Apula again at San Jose. 
 He told Mr. Lack! what the eomisario had said of him. 
 
 " I will engage him as a river pilot, a second guide," said 
 Mr. Ladd. "Our guide is a Mosquito Indian." 
 
 Leigh sought and found the Indian again in San Jose. 
 
 Apula accepted Mr. Ladd's proposal with dancing eyes. 
 
 The way was to be by Punta Arenas on the Gulf of 
 Nicoya, the Gulf of Pearls, and although it was less easy than 
 by the way of the sea, Corinto, Leon, and Managua, it would 
 reveal to the travellers the primitive country. They could 
 thus reach Rivas, and go to Granada by the lake, or go 
 directly to Granada by slow journeys under careful guides. 
 
 To find Granada over this perilous way, they left the coast, 
 and were soon in the virgin forests, and a new life indeed 
 began to open before them. 
 
 Their principal guide could speak both English and Span- 
 ish, as he had seen service on the English trading ships at 
 the docks. He had met Apula before, and the two were 
 friendly. 
 
 Apula at first talked but little with Leigh, but he sought to 
 be near him. His first introduction to Leigh, as his special 
 friend, was made in four English words, 
 
 "My heart knows you. 1 ' 
 
 He laid his hand over his heart, in a humble way. The 
 next day he added four more English words to his expres- 
 sion of friendship, 
 
 1 lie near vou."
 
 CHAPTER XIII. 
 
 THE WONDERS OF THE FOREST BEGIN. 
 
 IT was an odd party, the old English gentleman, who rode 
 on a mule, the Italian explorer and doctor, the principal 
 guide, the American traveller, Leigh, and the Mosquito 
 Indian guide, Apula, and his cargo mule. They were going 
 into a land of wonder, the mountain-shadowed byways of 
 Costa Rica and Nicaragua, and the surprises only a few miles 
 from San Jose began to appear. Leigh found himself in a 
 new, strange world. After leaving the coast, the wonders of 
 the forest began. 
 
 Beyond the brushwood, which grew where the forests had 
 been cut down, opened a vast aerial botanical garden. The 
 trunks of the great trees were encircled in ferns, and the 
 limbs were hung with gorgeous orchids, fit to be the palace 
 of the royal bird of the Aztecs. Lianas ran across the ways, 
 and made a network erf gorgeous glooms, in whose roots and 
 rooms surprises of birds, animals, and insects constantly 
 appeared. 
 
 Parrots in pairs here seemed low: making. Tanagers in 
 black and red drew after them the eye. Insects darted hither 
 and thither, like flowers or gems of the air. Oncer beetles 
 caused Leigh to step aside: and to ask questions oi the 
 Mosquito guide, to receive the same answer always:
 
 132 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 "No, sc, Senor." Bugs, with protective resemblances, 
 which looked like the plant whose little world they occupied, 
 were pointed out by the quick-eyed Italian doctor, here and 
 there. Hairy spiders, which Leigh took for tarantulas, ran 
 out of the footway, but left fearful suggestions in our young 
 traveller's mind. 
 
 The old English gentleman was terrified at every new 
 object, and constantly said, 
 
 " I am glad I am on a mule, as hard as is the saddle." 
 
 His happiness in this respect was destined to be disturbed, 
 when the forests began to reveal the inhabitants in the tree- 
 tops. 
 
 One of the first surprises which greatly terrified the old 
 English gentleman was when the Mosquito Indian cried out, 
 
 " De armie is coming it devour everything before it." 
 
 " What is that ? " asked the Englishman. 
 
 " He means the ecitons," said the American. 
 
 "What are those?" asked the Englishman. "They do 
 not devour people, I hope." 
 
 " Not until they have bled them," said the Italian. " Here 
 they come, thousands of them, with their generals in front 
 and ambulances in the rear." 
 
 " You alarm me without cause," said the Englishman. " I 
 see no army anywhere." 
 
 He looked up into the arcades of lianas, leaves, and blooms. 
 
 A monkey sat grinning at him there. When he looked 
 down again, the earth around him seemed crawling. All the 
 dust appeared to be in motion, like the earth-waves at an 
 earthquake. 
 
 "The army ant," said the Mosquito.
 
 THE WONDERS OF THE FOREST BEGIN. 1 33 
 
 Grasshoppers, spiders, insects, and small birds were flying 
 hither and thither. The insects were leaping into the air, to 
 escape the ants, and the birds were catching them as they 
 leaped. 
 
 The Englishman stopped his mule and cried out, 
 
 " My heyes ! " (eyes). 
 
 The ants caught the insects in their way, tore them to 
 pieces, and sent their remains to the rear, which seemed to be 
 a kind of baggage-train. 
 
 The Italian made a fire in the way, and the whole party 
 stopped to see the army pass. 
 
 Leigh went to the Englishman and leaned on the saddle. 
 
 " See there," said the Englishman, " how much some ani- 
 mals know. See those spiders climbing the bushes. They 
 will escape how fast they go ! " 
 
 But no, they did not escape. The ecitons ran up the 
 bushes after them. They ran to the end of the twigs. The 
 ecitons followed them. They were obliged to drop to the 
 earth into the army. The ecitons seized and devoured them, 
 and added them to their spoil. 
 
 "That is too bad," said the Englishman. "It is the first 
 time that I ever pitied a spider." 
 
 "The army of the ants is not more merciless than human 
 armies have been," said Leigh. 
 
 The army was marching on. It passed. 
 
 There was one spider that escaped in view of the English- 
 man and Leigh. It wove a silk threa 1 out ol itself, as it 
 seemed, and hung suspended between the earth and the 
 bush, until the army had gone by, when it lowered itselt to 
 the desolate track of the march, evidently rejoicing.
 
 134 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " Sec what prudence can do," said the Englishman. "This 
 is a queer world. I wonder what I will see next ? Suppose 
 an army of beasts, or snakes, or something that no one ever 
 heard of before, should come upon us, as the ants came 
 upon the insects. I begin to wish I hadn't come. Who can 
 tell where that Mosquito Indian may lead us?" 
 
 Monkeys were gibbering in the trees. 
 
 " They never form an army, do they, Senor Mosquito, 
 and fall upon unprotected travellers ? " 
 
 The guide laughed at being addressed in this queer way. 
 He had probably never been called "Senor" before. 
 
 An army of curious monkeys filled the trees, a city of 
 them. Parrots of splendid plumage gathered with them. 
 There were monkeys and parrots everywhere. 
 
 With them some trogons appeared, their metallic lustres 
 gleaming in the stray sunbeams. 
 
 " Suppose they were all to fall upon us at once," said the 
 Englishman, "and that the snakes should unite with them, 
 what would happen ? " 
 
 " Do you want to know ? " asked Leigh. 
 
 "Well, no; what would happen, Senor Mosquito?" 
 
 "No, se," said the man from the coast. 
 
 " I will show you," said the Englishman. 
 
 He held up his pistol and fired a blank cartridge into the 
 air. 
 
 Erupit evasit. In a minute not a monkey was to be 
 seen. The parrots rose up into the blue air without further 
 remarks. There was a dead silence everywhere. The only 
 living intelligence left in the tree-tops were two trogons, who 
 mounted lazily to high wood, and trusted to fate for protection.
 
 THE WONDERS OF THE FOREST BEGIN. 1 35 
 
 The male was a beautiful bird. Leigh desired to secure it 
 alive, and asked Senor Mosquito if it could be done. 
 
 Apula shook his head. 
 
 " I will find you a handsomer one higher up," he said. 
 
 " Higher up ? " 
 
 The field for the study of trogons, higher up, was indeed a 
 wide one. How grand the mountains loomed in the sunny 
 air ! The forests were growing more lofty and sombre. 
 Leigh, like the Englishman, wondered as to what surprise 
 would meet them next.
 
 CHAPTER XIV. 
 
 AN ARMY OF PIGS BITTEN BY A JIGGER. 
 
 THE question had not long been asked as to what new 
 surprise awaited our travellers, when the Mosquito guide 
 said, "Hark!" 
 
 The Englishman drew his rein, and the mule was never 
 slow to obey that order. 
 
 There was heard a savage sound as of teeth. 
 
 " My heyes!" said the Englishman, "what is that?" 
 
 "The wari," said the Mosquito. 
 
 "And what are the wari? " 
 
 "Pigs," said the American, "wild pigs; look yonder." 
 
 There seemed to be from fifty to a hundred pigs in a 
 company, turning hither and thither, as though hung on 
 wires. 
 
 "What makes them go in companies ? " asked the English- 
 man. 
 
 "To protect themselves from the jaguar," said the Mos- 
 quito. 
 
 "There are no jaguars in these forests, I hope," said the 
 Englishman. 
 
 " Yes, in the trees." 
 
 " In the trees ? What is to prevent them from jumping 
 down ? " 
 
 136
 
 AN ARMY OF PIGS. I37 
 
 " No se," said the Mosquito, shrugging his shoulders. 
 
 The Englishman began to carefully scan the tree-tops. 
 Each huge macaw that wriggled its tail in a far vista sug- 
 gested the jaguar. 
 
 "The jaguar watches for the pigs," said the Mosquito. 
 
 " He falls from the tree, breaks the neck of one of the 
 wari, and runs up the tree again, leaving the pig to die. 
 When the pigs have run away he comes down the tree again 
 and eats the one whose neck he has broken." 
 
 " He never falls upon a mule?" asked the Englishman. 
 
 "No se," responded the Mosquito, leaving much to our 
 portly friend's imagination. 
 
 " He might fall upon a boy, if he were to stray away- 
 alone, " continued the Mosquito. 
 
 " He means you," said the Englishman. "I would advise 
 you to walk near the mules. I don't care to see one of those 
 animals outside of a menagerie." 
 
 "Everything is a menagerie here," said the Indian, "and 
 we all seem to be in the condition of lion tamers in a cage." 
 
 " Hut what shall we do when it comes dark ? " asked the 
 Englishman. "Ants that devour everything, spiders, and 
 some of them may be tarantulas who knows? wild pigs 
 in droves, and jaguars, and what next? Mozo, say, Senor 
 Mosquito, what will we do when we lie down to-night?" 
 
 " Qiicji sabc" said Mozo, the Senor Mosquito. 
 
 " I couldn't sleep a wink," said the Englishman. " I would 
 In- afraid that I would wake tip dead." 
 
 " You will sleep," said the Italian. "No one ever rode a 
 mule ten hours without sleeping. Every bone in your body 
 will cry out for sleep before the sun goes down, and you will
 
 1 38 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 go to sleep, even though a jaguar be shaking a near tree- 
 top. Build up a fire, and it will be the jaguars that will lie 
 awake." 
 
 They made them camp for the night. 
 
 For a time all was quiet save the humming of insects in 
 the sunset trees. 
 
 " Mozo! " 
 
 It was the Englishman who called out in an anxious voice. 
 
 The guide answered, "What, Serior?" 
 
 " Are there snakes in this country ? " 
 
 " Yes, Senor ; there are coral snakes here, so I have 
 heard, and red blood snakes." 
 
 It was early evening, and in the tropics the world wakes 
 at night. Fireflies, night butterflies, gleamed in the trees ; 
 the air seemed alive. 
 
 "There are deadly centipedes in some places," said the 
 guide. "They will not harm you, for all their hundred legs 
 full of poison, if you will only lie still and let them run over 
 you." 
 
 " But if you don't lie still, they bite," said Little Afraid. 
 
 "What happens then ? " asked the Englishman. 
 
 " You put tobacco on the bite, and you curl up, and you 
 never say no more." 
 
 The Englishman rose up in his hammock, shaking the trees 
 so as to bring down a shower of blooms and insects. 
 
 "The tarantulas are as bad as the centipedes," said Little 
 Afraid, "and the scorpions are as bad as any." 
 
 "What makes all these things have stings and poisons in 
 them, Mozo ? " 
 
 " No sc."
 
 BITTEN BY A JIGGER. 1 39 
 
 "I can't sleep," said the Englishman; "all the air seems 
 buzzing. There's a buzzing in the trees above." 
 
 " Heavens ! what is that ? " 
 
 A dismal sound echoed from the well palms. 
 
 "That's an howl ! " said the American. 
 
 "An owl?" 
 
 " No, an howl." 
 
 " What should make an animal howl like that ? " 
 
 There was a silence. The cry as of woe was repeated. 
 
 " Mozo, what is that animal ? " 
 
 " It is a monkey, Sehor." 
 
 "What makes him howl ? " 
 
 " No sc, Senor." 
 
 The night brightened into a dusky glory. The valley 
 seemed a ghost land of palms. 
 
 The camp had become silent. Each one was sleeping, or 
 on his way to sleep, in easy hammocks. The alarm dog had 
 ceased to bark, when suddenly a powerful voice startled all. 
 
 " Mozo ! " 
 
 " What, Senor?" 
 
 " I am as good as dead now. I have been bitten. I can 
 feci it. Mozo, get up ! " 
 
 The guide reluctantly left his hammock. 
 
 "Oh, it is nothing but a mosquito," he said. 
 
 " Hut I haven't been bitten there" said the alarmed man. 
 "I have been bitten under my blanket. Hurry and look! 
 Time is precious ! " 
 
 The Englishman rolled back his blanket and revealed his 
 leer 
 
 "There is a spot there," said the guide.
 
 140 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 "A spot? A death wound, it burns like fire. Do you 
 suppose it was a tarantula that did it, or a scorpion or what?" 
 
 " Little Afraid, you get up and look ; you have lived on 
 the coast." 
 
 " Drink some brandy," said the doctor. 
 
 " Put some tobacco juice on the wound," said the American. 
 
 "How does it look ?" asked the afflicted man of Little 
 Afraid. 
 
 " I know what it is," said Little Afraid. 
 
 " What ? Not a snake ? " 
 
 " No," said Little Afraid, turning his head as though it 
 was hung on a pivot. 
 
 " A centipede ? " 
 
 " No, Seiior, not that ; there is only one spot, and that is 
 a good one." 
 
 " A good one ? " 
 
 " A red one ; it is growing." 
 
 " It is not a tarantula that has bit me ? " 
 
 " No, Seiior, not a tarantula. You would be all jerky-like, 
 if it was that." 
 
 " Then, you young rascal, why don't you tell me what it is, 
 and not keep me here suspended between life and death? 
 Mow long have I to live ?" 
 
 "As long as you can, Sehor." 
 
 " It is gone in to make its nest there." 
 
 " What ! into my leg ? " 
 
 " Yes, Senor, it lays its eggs there ; then it swells." 
 
 " What swells ? " 
 
 " The spot swells." 
 
 " What made the spot? You young rascal, what is it?
 
 BITTEN BY A JIGGER. /4I 
 
 Why don't you tell me what it is ? I can feel it now. The 
 pain is running up my leg. Answer, don't keep me waiting, 
 what shall I do, what is it ? If you know, why don't you 
 tell ? I might as well be told the truth first as last, what 
 is it ? Oh, oh ! what is it ? " 
 
 "It is a jigger." 
 
 The guide sunk into his hammock again. The American 
 said, 
 
 "Buenos noche" and the Italian "Adios!" 
 
 Little Afraid held his nose to keep from laughing, and the 
 poor traveller, with the jigger intent on nest making, groaned 
 and asked, 
 
 " Are there any more of them in this country ? " 
 
 The negro boy assured him that the land was full of 
 them, and they sometimes made a sore. The boy talked 
 sleepier and sleepier, and amid a humming in the air, like 
 tropical ocean waves, all fell asleep.
 
 CHAPTER XV. 
 
 THE WOUNDED MONKEY. 
 
 THE white-faced monkey has traits and habits that are 
 very human. It has a strong love for its young, and it 
 is a tender sight to see the little monkey mother nursing her 
 young in the leafy covers of the trees. 
 
 The Italian doctor, after a noon siesta in a thick wood 
 where the party had rested from the heat, looked up into 
 some thick limbs and saw a monkey nursing her little one. 
 Yielding to curiosity and to a brutal impulse, which some- 
 times overcomes the humane feelings of even an intelli- 
 gent man, he lifted his pistol and fired a shot at the little 
 mother. 
 
 The poor monkey dropped into the lower boughs, pitifully 
 screaming, but clasping her little one to her breast. 
 
 Her blood was flowing, and when she saw it she cried 
 again, and more closely clasped her little one. 
 
 The party was aroused by the pistol shot, and the monkey 
 looked towards them pitifully and reproachfully. 
 
 "What did you do that for?" asked the Englishman, who 
 had a heart worthy of membership of a humane society. 
 
 " I don't know ; it came over me to do it," said the doctor. 
 " I'm sorry; it did me no good." 
 
 The monkey dropped to the ground, still holding her young. 
 
 142
 
 THE WOUNDED MONKEY. I43 
 
 She dragged herself away at a little distance, faint, bleeding, 
 and crying, and tried to run up some lianas near, but was too 
 weak. She now seemed looking about for some particular 
 leaves or plants. She moved herself to a certain bush, 
 pulled from it some leaves, and put them into the bleeding 
 wound. 
 
 " I am sorry that I did that act," said the doctor. "That 
 monkey has the instinct of a physician. See how she is try- 
 ing to heal herself. I would go to her and try to help her if 
 it would not scare her."' 
 
 She lay gasping for a time, with her little one still trying 
 to nurse at her breast. 
 
 Suddenly she started up and tried again to raise herself on 
 ;i liana, but she had not the strength. 
 
 She turned her eyes towards the party, as if asking 
 for pity and help. She trembled, hugged her little one 
 closely, then dropped to the earth, uttered a little wail and 
 died. 
 
 " I shall never forget those eyes," said the Englishman. 
 "They were as near human as any beast's could be. I am 
 an old traveller; but I have never lost my heart in seeing the 
 world. I wouldn't have shot that monkey for a fortune. 
 What is it in human nature that can make a man desire to take 
 llif life of anv innocent thing? Doctor, excuse me ; it was 
 the right of that monkev to enjoy the sunshine, the air, the 
 trees. It was the right of that little baby monkey, which 
 will die, to have its mother. I have travelled in India ; I am 
 no Brahman or Buddhist ; I have little regard for a system that 
 degrades men and enslaves women ; but I am an Mast Indian 
 in the principle that all harmless life is sacred to God. To
 
 144 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 kill a monkey like that without a purpose is murder. To 
 put out life, except to protect life, is wrong. Excuse me, 
 Doctor." 
 
 "My friend," said the doctor, "you are right. I quite 
 agree with you." 
 
 "What made you do it?" asked the questioner, in a philo- 
 sophical sense. 
 
 "The heast that remains within me. Man has not yet be- 
 come a full human being. The tiger is still in the cat. The 
 kitten that purrs so lovingly in your lap still holds the in- 
 stinct to torture a mouse." 
 
 " Will the time ever come when that instinct will be elimi- 
 nated from the human heart ? " 
 
 " It is so in India to-day," said the Englishman; "but by 
 the influence of superstition. We should put into our reli- 
 gion the best that is in all religions, and Christianity should in 
 part follow Indian cult in the principle of the sacredness of 
 animal life. All animals that are harmless, or can be made 
 so, should be spared, not only for their own good, but for our 
 own good. Doctor, you would have been a better man had 
 you not killed that poor little monkey." 
 
 As they were leaving the place, there was a shadow in the 
 air. Something came dashing down through the trees. A 
 huge hawk seized upon the poor baby monkey and rose, 
 obliquely, and drifted away. 
 
 " The hawk is our brother," said Mr. Ladd, the American, 
 who hunted. " Most people need more kindergarten educa- 
 tion. Froebel taught the brotherhood of little children and 
 animals, and brought the birds into his schoolroom. There's 
 a better day coming to all this blind world ! "
 
 THE WOUNDED MONKEY. 145 
 
 The doctor had need to go back to the Golden Age of 
 Guatemala and learn some lessons of the vanished Quetzal- 
 coatls. No one, then, would have killed a monkey. Why do 
 humane ideas advance, and then retreat again ? 
 
 L
 
 CHAPTER XVI. 
 
 THE ROYAL FAMILY OF TROGONS LEIGH FINDS A TROGON 
 RESPLENDENS. 
 
 LEIGH'S purpose to find a quetzal, the bird of the Mexi- 
 / can deity, and the national emblem of the state of 
 Guatemala, seemed now likely to be fulfilled. There were 
 trogons everywhere. They mingled with flocks of other 
 birds, possibly for protection. 
 
 Leigh made daily inquiries about them and their habits, 
 and was told that they " fed upon the Wing." This could 
 hardly be so, except in the case of insects, for he saw them 
 often lazily gathering fruit on the trees. 
 
 One day he discovered two splendid trogons directly over 
 his head, in a woody arcade. They were green, and the 
 male had a reddish-brown breast, which was not the fiery 
 crimson that he had expected to see. But the lustres of the 
 superb bird, the so-called " feathered snake," were metallic, 
 and the four tail feathers had the same hue. The female 
 bird was an ideal of loveliness, though her plumage was not 
 as " royal " as that of the male. 
 
 "A quetzal," said Leigh to the Mosquito. 
 
 " Ay, ay, a quetzal ; a trogon, call him the splendid tro- 
 gon," said the guide. 
 
 Leigh's heart beat, lie studied the indolent creature, 
 
 146
 
 THE ROYAL FAMILY OF TROGOXS. I47 
 
 perched amid the orchids. There was the golden green, of 
 which he had read, the primrose and amber lustres, but not 
 the vivid ruby red. Nor was the tail curved, nor two feet 
 long. The rounded crest of filamentous feathers had not 
 the imperial appearance that he had seen in pictures. He 
 recalled seeing such a bird in the collection of stuffed trogons 
 in the Boston Museum of Natural History, and that it was 
 given a very conspicuous place among the splendid trogon 
 family, of which there are in all some fifty or more species. 
 
 " Was that the Indian bird ? " asked Leigh of the Mos- 
 quito, who did not comprehend. 
 
 "Ay, ay, the royal bird," said the guide. " Quetzalcoatl, 
 the god, sent him forth. It was death to kill him in the old 
 times, and only the chiefs were allowed to wear his feathers. 
 Quetzaltepec, the chieftain, was named for him." 
 
 "But," said Leigh, "he does not look quite as splendid as 
 I had expected. Are you quite sure that that is a royal 
 trogon .- 1 " 
 
 "They call it the splendid trogon," said the Moscpiito, in 
 Spanish. " I never saw a more splendid bird than that, did 
 you ?" 
 
 "No," said Leigh. "The fringed cape of feathers that 
 partly cover his wings is the richest plumage that I ever 
 saw." 
 
 " Some call him the peacock trogon," said the guide. 
 
 "('mild you capture him?" asked Leigh of the Mosquito, 
 in much excitement. 
 
 " Yes, yes," said the Mosquito. " What will you pay me 
 if I will ?" 
 
 "A pound for the pair," said Leigh.
 
 I48 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " You shall have them,'* said the Mosquito, though he only 
 in part comprehended what Leigh had said. 
 
 "They may fly away," said Leigh. 
 
 " No, no," said the Mosquito. " Trogons don't fly about 
 much in the heat of the day." 
 
 " I must have them both alive," said Leigh. 
 
 " You shall have them alive," said the Indian, comprehend- 
 ing the condition. 
 
 " And the plumage must not be broken." 
 
 "No, no," said the Indian. "The feathers of the trogon 
 come off easily. They must be handled with care. It is no 
 easy thing to stuff those birds, the feathers fit them so lightly. 
 Splendid feathers grow in light soil. But, mon ami, courage, 
 you shall have them both for that one pound that you prom- 
 ised, and not a feather shall be broken." 
 
 Leigh looked up to the male bird with the fussy crest. 
 With all of his splendor, he had not the attraction of his 
 lovely mate. 
 
 " It would do me good to hold that dove-like wife of his in 
 my hand," said Leigh. " How can I carry them away ? " 
 
 " Buy an openwork basket of the Indians in the market- 
 place of some village, and cover the to]) with cloth a large 
 basket." said the guide. 
 
 " What could I feed them with ? " 
 
 "Oh, fruit any kind of fruit, all kinds. They will be 
 contented and happy as long as they are together." 
 
 How was the Indian to capture these beautiful birds 
 among the high orchids ? 
 
 " You will have to go away from here," said the Indian. 
 
 "Why 5 " asked Leigh.
 
 THE ROYAL FAMILY OF TROGONS. 149 
 
 "That I may capture the birds." 
 
 " But you do not capture birds by going away from them ? " 
 
 "Yes, yes; ay, ay, I capture some birds in that way." 
 
 The Indian went to a pack mule. He took from it a 
 bottle of chicha, of the strongest kind, in which were some 
 native berries like cherries. The berries looked very bright 
 and tempting. They were a luxury that the arriero carried 
 with him for the needs of exhaustion ; they had a reputation 
 as a stimulant. 
 
 He took some of the red berries and laid them down in 
 view of the two birds under the trees, and walked away. 
 
 "Will the birds come down to eat them ? " asked Leigh. 
 
 "Ay, ay." 
 
 " But the woods are full of berries." 
 
 "But not of that kind," said the guide. "The trogon 
 knows that berry as soon as he sees it, and he will seize upon 
 it as soon as he is left to do so." 
 
 " But he will not eat the berries when he tastes the alco- 
 hol," said Leigh to the guide. 
 
 "Wait and see, amigo, wait and see. Those berries are 
 sweeter than sugar, and the alcohol gives the sweetness a 
 sting. The bird loves strong berries, as well as sweet ones. 
 The two birds will make a least of the berries in a little time. 
 They are dropping down to the lower limbs of the trees now. 
 See the blossoms fall. That male bird is a beauty. He is 
 as good as caught now." 
 
 The I ndian was right. 
 
 The male bird with a wave of his beautiful plumes dropped 
 upon tin: ground. The female bird followed him. Leigh 
 watched the two with intense excitement.
 
 I50 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 They devoured the soaked berries greedily. The alcohol 
 did not seem to be distasteful to them. 
 
 After eating the berries, they did not rise. They seemed 
 dazed and stood there. Then the male bird spread out its 
 wings helplessly, and sunk upon the ground, and the female 
 bird gave a little Mutter and fell down beside him. 
 
 Leigh started to go to him. 
 
 " Wait a little," said the Indian. " Don't go too soon, lest 
 they flutter and break their plumage. Let me go and find a 
 basket. You can buy a larger basket when you come to a 
 village." 
 
 Leigh waited. The birds fluttered a little and then lay 
 still. 
 
 The Indian went away and came back bringing a basket 
 with a cover, and handed it to Leigh. 
 
 "There are the birds," he said, pointing. 
 
 Leigh went up to them and took up the supposed royal 
 birds, as they lav on the sandy turf dead drunk. He put 
 them into his basket. 
 
 " They will open their eyes when they awake," said Leigh, 
 "and find that their world has grown less." 
 
 "That is the way with folks in that condition," . said the 
 guide. 
 
 " Yes, yes," said the good Englishman, who had come 
 to view the curious scene, and who had heard the last 
 remark. 
 
 " The world grows less to all creatures who do net learn 
 to curb their appetites and passions. Poor birds, I pity ye 
 when ye \v;ike up. I've pitied creatures like you before. 
 What are vou Lfoimr to do with them, Leitrh ?"
 
 THE ROYAL FAMILY OF TROGONS. 1 5 I 
 
 " Take them back to the States. We have a bird-house at 
 home." 
 
 "You will find that no easy matter, my boy." 
 
 "They will be worth the care," said Leigh. 
 
 "There are few collections of living birds that have the 
 royal bird of the Aztecs, the bird of the gods, in their num- 
 ber." 
 
 " Do you think that those are the real birds of the tem- 
 ples ? " 
 
 "Yes," said Leigh. " Trogons resplendens." 
 
 " All trogons resplendens are not royal quetzals," said the 
 Englishman. 
 
 " But look at the crown on this one's head, and the fringed 
 feathers on the wings, and the red breast," said Leigh. 
 
 " But the breast is not carmine," said the Englishman. " I 
 thought that the tail of the quetzal was much longer, and 
 that it was barred and curved, and of variegated lustres. 
 This male bird has too many plumes in his tail. Are you 
 quite sure that this is the bird that you have been seek- 
 ing?" 
 
 " So the Indian says, and he should know." 
 
 Leigh stood in the shadow of the glimmering trees, and 
 studied the lustres of the jewel-like plumage of the helpless 
 bird. All the feathers on the body were soft as silk, and 
 they seemed to have been dipped in jewels. How delighted 
 Captain Erobisher would he when he saw this living treasure : 
 this gem ol the woods, wearing the lustres oi the sun ! 
 
 In a tew hours Leigh looked info the basket to find that 
 the birds had revived. They seemed very much surprised, 
 and to be wondering at what had happened. Their beaks
 
 15-2 I.O.ST IN NICAKAC.UA. 
 
 were of a bright yellow. Leigh put some luscious fruit into 
 the basket, and left it there. 
 
 He dreamed that he secured a treasure of the temples of 
 the gods, whose ruins he would see in Lake Nicaragua and 
 in Guatemala. 
 
 They journeyed slowly into the mountains, rising as it were 
 on stone steps out of green forests into the clear regions of 
 the sky. But, alas, for the royal trogons ! One morning 
 Leigh arose from his hammock, to hear hundreds of tro- 
 gons calling, but his royal birds were both dead. He care- 
 fully removed their feathers. 
 
 He was bitterly disappointed. Apula saw it, and touched 
 him on the shoulder, and said: 
 
 " '1 nose were no true birds. I know I will find you the 
 true bird some day some day. Apula will not forget. 
 My heart is yours."
 
 CHAPTER XVII. 
 
 THE JAGUAR HUNT. 
 
 WITH the party went a curious dog, which was called 
 an "alarm dog," because he always barked when he 
 saw anything that other eyes did not see. In the still nights 
 he was constantly giving an alarm, which made our nervous 
 English traveller very restless. After seeing the army of the 
 ants, the pigs, and being told of the jaguar's habits, under 
 the name of the cougar, his nervous fears grew, and he had 
 suspicions of every bush. 
 
 One night, when they were encamped, he heard what 
 sounded like a child crying in a pavilion-like cluster of trees. 
 He started up and roused Leigh. 
 
 " What's that, boy ? " he asked in a tremor. 
 
 " It is a cry of distress," said Leigh. 
 
 " Mozo," said the Englishman, " Mozo, hello, wake up. 
 There's some one in distress, crying in the wood yonder. I 
 have heard it a dozen times." 
 
 "That's nothing," said the guide. "We must have sleep; 
 we have a hard journey before us for the morrow." He 
 turned in his hammock, and was lost to all cries of distress. 
 
 " I can't sleep with that sound in my ears," said the good- 
 hearted Englishman. 
 
 The Italian doctor was now awake. 
 
 '53
 
 154 LOST IN" NICARAGUA. 
 
 "Doctor," said the Englishman, "you arc younger than I. 
 Go out to the trees yonder and look around. There's a child 
 lost there." 
 
 The Italian rolled out of his hammock, and, taking his gun, 
 went out into the moonlit air. The night was still now ; the 
 trees were glistening with dew and emitted a resinous odor. 
 The near mountains looked like shadows in the air. 
 
 It came again that pitiful cry. The place where they 
 were encamped was called a quebrada. 
 
 The doctor with a light tread stole up the side of the 
 quebrada towards the tall, tent-like trees, whence the sound 
 had come. He entered the cluster and suddenly emerged, 
 and hurried back to the glen of the hammocks. 
 
 "What have you seen ? " asked the Englishman. 
 
 " I hab seen de debil," said the Italian, forgetting his Eng- 
 lish accent. 
 
 The Englishman started up. 
 
 " You have? you mean something that has an evil spirit. 
 But no evil thing cries like that." 
 
 " There was something in the branches of the trees, 
 stretched out long. It has eyes like fire." 
 
 Our good friend's, the Englishman's, eyes began to glow. 
 
 " What a horrible place this is! Mozo, arriero, Mosquito," 
 he called. " Wake up, the evil one has been seen in the trees, 
 crying like a child ! Wake up ! " 
 
 The guide now sat up. 
 
 " What do you think it is ? " 
 
 " A puma," said the guide. The puma is the South 
 American lion. 
 
 " What is that?" asked the Englishman.
 
 THE JAGUAR HUNT. I 55 
 
 " A cougar," said the guide. 
 
 " A painter " (panther), answered the American. " It is 
 nothing but a cat." 
 
 " What is it doing ? " asked the Englishman. 
 
 "Watching," said the Italian. 
 
 " But I do not want to be watched by a cat like that ! Is 
 the puma, cougar, and painter all one cat?" 
 
 "One name for the same cat," said the American. 
 
 "It must be an awful cat to have so many names; I've 
 seen pictures of the animal in natural history books." 
 
 " It is a jaguar," said the doctor, " a Fell's onca. The puma 
 is a wrong name for him a Fclis onca." 
 
 " That sounds more awful than all the rest. That is the 
 animal that leaps upon a wild pig and breaks his back." 
 
 " lie leaps upon an animal from the trees, and breaks his 
 neck by twisting his head around," said the American. 
 
 " I wouldn't want to die like that. Mozo, go out and take 
 a shot at him." 
 
 " Wait until morning," said the guide. 
 
 "Will he wait too ?" asked the Englishman. 
 
 " Yes, yes." 
 
 " Then I couldn't sleep a wink more," said the English- 
 man. " Sometimes I wish that I hadn't come." 
 
 "lie has ;i beautiful skin," said the guide, "yellow, 
 covered with rosettes." 
 
 "With black rings with spots in the middle of them," said 
 the doctor. "The animal has more spots than names." 
 
 " I would like to have his skin to send home tor a Christ- 
 mas present to my daughter," said the Englishman. 
 
 " I would write to her that I no, that my part)- shot it,
 
 156 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 and she would hang it up in the hall, and I could always 
 look upon it with pride, and tell my friends how we hunted 
 it, and made an adventure of it. Mozo, I have heard of a 
 jaguar hunt ; I will give you two pounds for that animal's 
 hide" 
 
 The arriero was awake now, his eyes, too, shone. He 
 rolled from his hammock, lit a torch, and examined his gun. 
 
 "Follow me," he said; "all go." 
 
 lie went towards the high thicket. 
 
 The morning was breaking. The woods resounded with 
 the screams of the parrots and the songs of birds. There 
 was a gleam on the mountain tops, and a fresh odor, as of 
 dewy blooms, everywhere. 
 
 The guide began to bend low as he came to the thickets. 
 The rest of the party followed his example, hardly knowing 
 why they did so, for they saw nothing. The Englishman 
 followed last. 
 
 " Is the jaguar a very large animal ? " he asked of the 
 American. 
 
 "Almost as big as a tiger," said the American. "He 
 could carry you off in his mouth, so I have read some of 
 them arc so large that they can carry off a sheep." 
 
 " I wouldn't want to fall in with one alone," said the Eng- 
 lishman. " In the forest the animal has the right of way, 
 and I would give it to him. What does he live on ? " 
 
 " Monkeys," said the American. 
 
 "You don't say that," said the Englishman. "Monkeys, 
 monkeys. Gramercy, I would rather have his skin than 
 him." 
 
 The guide was now in the wood, tinder the tall trees. The
 
 THE JAGUAR HUNT. 1 57 
 
 crack of his rifle shook the air, and caused a cloud of parrots' 
 wings to rise. 
 
 Something fell. The Englishman turned, and leaped 
 back towards the quebrada. " I'm so slow," he said. 
 
 There was a battle in the bushes, and the American 
 stepped back. 
 
 A beautiful animal with a terrible face rushed out of the 
 thicket, fie was leaping as though wounded, but he came 
 in the direction of the quebrada. 
 
 The Englishman beheld him, and one look at his open 
 mouth and maddened eyes caused him to leap about in the 
 greatest terror. 
 
 " Shoot ! " cried the guide to the Englishman. 
 
 " Shoot him yourself," cried the Englishman, "for heaven's 
 sake, shoot, shoot ! " 
 
 Just then the animal rushed into the space between the 
 guide and our English friend. The guide raised his gun. 
 
 "Molt! holt!" cried the Englishman, "don't shoot me ! " 
 
 The Englishman turned round and round, as the animal 
 rushed by him almost on to the barrel of his gun. 
 
 What a beautiful creature he was with his yellow skin and 
 blaek rosettes. 
 
 He leaped down the quebrada, then up the other side, 
 leaving a trail of blood behind. The animal was wounded. 
 The guide rushed after him. 
 
 ''Follow!" he cried. All saw the animal's hopeless ease, 
 and hurried on after the guide. 
 
 The jaguar, for so it was, and not a puma, ran with great 
 force, but limping, into an adjoining wood, when a marvellous 
 thing happened. In the middle ot the wood was a clear
 
 I 58 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 lake, and on its margin was a tapir drinking. The animal 
 looked like a great hog or a little elephant. She had a little 
 one with her, which caused her to pause when she heard the 
 hunters coming. 
 
 The jaguar ran through some thick bushes on the bank of 
 the stream, then into some reedy grass, near the little tapir. 
 He sunk down for a moment, then gave a leap, and fell upon 
 the back of the tapir, which now tried to run away. 
 
 But the hunters were on one side and the lake or pond 
 on the other, and the frightened animal rushed into the 
 pond with the jaguar on her back. She was soon in deep 
 water. 
 
 " Fire ! " said the guide to the Italian. 
 
 The Italian took aim at the jaguar and discharged his 
 ride. 
 
 The animal sprang forward and rolled over into the water. 
 
 The guide levelled his gun at the tapir. 
 
 " Spare her for the sake of her young," said the American. 
 
 "Well, we have killed the jaguar," said the Englishman. 
 "The next thing will be to get him out of the pond." 
 
 This was not difficult. The beast floated at first, and then 
 was easily dragged ashore. 
 
 It had been wounded in the foreleg, under the breast. 
 It had seemed to have felt its helplessness, and to have 
 sought to use the tapir's legs for its own. 
 
 The skin was very beautiful. The Englishman paid the 
 promised two pounds to the guide, rolled up the skin to send 
 to England, as a trophy of the achievements of the party 
 with which he hunted. We hardly think that he would have 
 claimed more than his share in the hunt, for, although he
 
 THE JAGUAR HUNT. I 5Q 
 
 was a very careful man, he had deep respect for honor and 
 truth, and was also so kind-hearted as to say: 
 
 " It seems a pity to kill an animal that could reason like 
 that. But," he added, " I would not have liked to find 
 my legs in that cat's mouth, that painter, puma, cougar, 
 jaguar cat that is too much of a cat." 
 
 Indeed it was. All these names may be applied to tigers 
 of the same family, but they are not all of the same kind, 
 certainly not the puma. 
 
 They were now far on their way to the lake. 
 
 They occasionally met in the forest a Rio Frio Indian. 
 Some of these were very friendly, some very reserved and 
 shy.
 
 CHAPTER XVIII. 
 
 THE LOST INDIAN BABIES OF RIO FRIO ZAPATERA. 
 
 THE bad Indians of the Rio Frio!" Such is not an 
 uncommon appellation of a tribe of Indians who 
 shun the face of white men, and have become the deadly 
 enemy of the immigrating Europeans. 
 
 But the Rio Frio Indians did not always bear the bad 
 reputation among the white people that they now have. 
 They were a simple tribe, living happily among the india- 
 rubber groves, hunting peaceably, and drifting on their dug- 
 out canoes or burnt-out canoes of the trunks of the great 
 mahogany or other giant trees. In their huts, made proba- 
 bly of cane and roofed with grasses or palms, they raised 
 their families of children in primitive simplicity, were minis- 
 tered to by their wives, and were proud of the beauty of 
 their babies. 
 
 For these babies were very pretty, and the delight of the 
 huts under the river palms. 
 
 The india-rubber trade was carried into this quiet region, 
 and some of the traders were attracted to the simple homes 
 by the beauty of the little children, especially of the babies, 
 with their olive faces, black luminous eyes, and cunning 
 features. 
 
 The followers of the traders began occasionally to steal 
 
 160
 
 THE LOST INDIAN BABIES. l6l 
 
 one or more of these doll-like babies, and carry them to the 
 cities on the lakes and the river San Juan, and give them 
 away. 
 
 But it was soon found that these charming little ones of 
 the rubber groves, like especially attractive monkeys and 
 parrots, had a market value. A Rio Frio baby was a 
 delightful pet for a rich family to hold, and when it grew 
 up, and was no longer desirable on account of its beauty, 
 the captive became a useful servant. For this cause the 
 stealing of Indian babies became common. 
 
 But how did the Indian families regard the loss of these 
 beautiful children, the babies that were their household 
 treasures ? 
 
 The people who captured these bright-eyed beauties spoke 
 of them as though they had the same kind of right to them 
 as they would have had to young monkeys. To them the 
 robbery was nothing more than that of a bird's nest. The 
 stolen treasure was only " an Indian baby." " Come here and 
 let me show you what I have bought for the patio," such a 
 housewife would say; "it is an Indian baby from the Rio 
 Frio; isn't he a little beauty?" The visitor would be taken 
 to it amid the monkeys, parrots, and song-birds, to witness its 
 cunning ways as it lay in the lap of some negro nurse. 
 
 But the conduct of these Indians towards the explorers 
 suddenly changed. The india-rubber traders began to be 
 exposed to poisonous arrows shot by invisible toes from be- 
 hind the great trunks of the trees and webs of lianas. The 
 adventurer who wandered off alone in the Rio Frio was 
 likely to come to a tragic end. 
 
 Suddenly the Rio Frio natives began to be called " bad "
 
 1 62 LOST IN' NICARAGUA. 
 
 Indians in t lie coast cities. It became necessary for the 
 traders to go well armed, and to be very watchful on entering 
 the great shadows of the rubber groves on the river. 
 
 The traders at last seized upon one of the chief Indians 
 by stealth, and tried to persuade him to make a treaty with 
 them. The leader's name we will call Paco. 
 
 " When you shall restore to us the children you have 
 stolen, we will consider your proposal; but never until 
 then," said Paco. 
 
 " Your day of judgment will one day fall," said Paco. 
 " It will happen to you as to all who wrong the hearts of 
 others. Mark you, mark you ! listen to me if you have ears. 
 The children that you have stolen from our huts will one 
 day become men. Mark you, mark you ! and they have 
 mothers. The mothers wander, and they never forget. No, 
 no! The Indian mother may have many little ones, but she 
 never forgets one of them. The mothers whose bosoms you 
 have robbed, they wander, they remember ; and the lost 
 children will grow!" 
 
 The trader took alarm. He had one of the growing 
 babies in his own family, and he had been accustomed to 
 treat the stealing of the beautiful Indian babies as he would 
 have done the capture of monkeys. 
 
 The Indian mother never forgets her babe. 
 
 She wanders, as the chief had said, and the stolen babe 
 would grow to be a man. 
 
 The trader turned over these things in his mind, and 
 he suddenly recalled another fact, that these Indians could 
 practise deadly enchantments, as the arts of destruction were 
 called, and could use poisons in more ways than on arrows.
 
 THE LOST INDIAN BABIES. 1 63 
 
 He surveyed the cacique. He knew that he represented 
 the cause of human right. Every family has the right to its 
 children, no matter how barbarous it may be. He would try 
 to put an end to baby stealing by creating the common sen- 
 timent of justice against such things. 
 
 But he forgot his good resolution in the hurry of trade and 
 traffic, and the incident of his meeting Paco almost passed 
 out of his mind. 
 
 One day on returning to his home, or bungalow, he noticed 
 a tall, sharp-eyed Indian woman among his servants. There 
 was an air of mystery about her that caused him to say to 
 his wife : 
 
 "Where did you find that woman ? She is an Indian." 
 
 " She came here to be hired. I wanted help and engaged 
 her." 
 
 " Does she belong to the same tribe as little Paco ? " 
 
 " I do not know." 
 
 "Is she friendly to little Paco ? " 
 
 " I have never seen them speaking together, but I have 
 noticed that her eyes sometimes rest upon him, and that his 
 are continually following her." 
 
 " Little Paco is a boy now, wife." 
 
 " Yes, I know, he is no longer a curiosity; you must em- 
 ploy him now. Find him a place among the hands in the 
 canefields." 
 
 The explorer's suspicions were aroused that this tall Indian 
 woman had sought work in his home from some other reason 
 than service. She did nut talk Spanish well, and in answer 
 to his questions she uttered only vague words, and seemed 
 disposed to turn away from him.
 
 164 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 He had a beautiful babe, and it began to engage the atten- 
 tion of little Paco, the stolen baby, now a boy. A deep affec- 
 tion sprang up between the two. Paco loved to play with 
 the child whenever the black nurse took it into the patio. 
 
 The hired Indian woman was never seen to speak to the 
 babe or to little Paco, but her eyes were turned towards the 
 happy group, when the babe was brought into the patio and 
 the people gathered around it. 
 
 The trader went and came. His suspicions disappeared. 
 His household seemed to be perfect in happiness and har- 
 mony. 
 
 One day, as he came home, he was met by his wife at the 
 gate, who rushed out of the house, weeping and trembling 
 and throwing up her hands, 
 
 "The babe! the babe!" she cried. "It is gone, they 
 are hunting for it, it is gone ! I woke in the morning and 
 felt for it, but the bed was empty ! " 
 
 "Gone?" exclaimed the trader. "Where is the Indian 
 woman ? " 
 
 " She is gone to find little Paco." 
 
 " Paco ? where is the boy ? " 
 
 " He went away to look for the baby, as soon as I told him 
 that it was gone." 
 
 The babe had not walked away. The nurse had not car- 
 ried it away. It had been stolen. 
 
 Put Paco had gone in search of the thief, and the Indian 
 woman had Hod to find him. 
 
 "Wife," said the explorer, wildly, "that Indian woman 
 was the mother of Paco, and Paco stole the babe, and hid 
 it in the cacti, and has fled with it away. The babe is
 
 THE LOST INDIAN BABIES. 165 
 
 being carried away to the Rio Frio Indians amid the rubber 
 trees." 
 
 The explorer rushed madly about, hither and thither, 
 making inquiries of every one he met in regard to little Paco 
 and the Indian woman. But the going away of the two had 
 been very silent and mysterious. 
 
 The explorer summoned some trusty men, and with them 
 took a canoe, and paddled towards the principal settlement 
 of the Rio Frio Indians. 
 
 He made the men paddle swiftly, and to pay little heed 
 to the dangers of the stream. He never felt the value of 
 the little life of a babe before. 
 
 " On, on," he cried, " anything for the child! " 
 
 As he drew near the place of the settlement, he stood up 
 in the boat and loaded his rifle, with a terrible look in his 
 face. 
 
 Something white cleaved the air from a mangrove near. 
 
 He shook for a moment, dropped his rifle, and sank clown 
 into the boat, and losing his balance fell into the water. He 
 did not try to save himself. They drew him up out of the 
 water, but he was dead. 
 
 They went to the settlements, but the huts were deserted. 
 Neither Paco, little Paco, the Indian mother, if so she was, 
 or the white babe were ever heard of by the rubber traders 
 or seen by any of the white explorers again. 
 
 There has been an American Mission among these Indians 
 for several years, under the patronage of the Brothers Arthur, 
 builders, of Philadelphia.
 
 l66 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The party arrived at the ancient Spanish city of Granada, 
 on Lake Nicaragua. Leigh had expected to find his uncle 
 and brother here, but they had not yet arrived. Leigh re- 
 mained at Granada for a few days, keeping Apula with him. 
 
 Granada seemed to be the old world. There was an 
 ancient air, a faded grandeur everywhere. The scenery from 
 the high points of the city is enchanting, the palm lands, 
 the lake, and the lake volcanoes. Some twenty thousand 
 people live here, and most of them seem to have little to 
 do. It was once a famous port city. 
 
 Between Granada and Rivas (old Nicaragua) is a dead 
 island, or an island of the dead, named Zapatera, the Shoe- 
 maker. It is volcanic and rises nearly two thousand feet 
 high. Here lie the remains of a once wonderful city, a 
 place of worship, like Copan in Guatemala, or Palenque in 
 Mexico. 
 
 Apula secured a bongo, or long boat, and took Leigh to 
 this island. 
 
 A bongo is some fifty feet long with masts, and is made 
 from the trunk of a single tree. 
 
 The sail on the lakes was most beautiful, the volcanic 
 islands rising high in the serene air, like pyramids out of 
 the waters. 
 
 The ruins are found in the midst of tropical forest. The 
 monuments of deified kings and heroes are rude and un- 
 sightly, and without the refined lines of those at Copan, 
 Guatemala, or at Palenque, Mexico. Had these images 
 not been made of solid stone, this place of temples and 
 teocalli would probably have vanished from the memory of 
 man.
 
 ZAPATERA. 167 
 
 One of the proposed routes for the Nicaraguan Canal 
 lies on a point near Rivas to the Pacific. Another takes in 
 both the lakes of Nicaragua and Managua. Should the 
 latter be used, what sights of prehistoric associations may 
 the future traveller see as he passes on shipboard through 
 these lakes, upon whose shores lie the limbs of vanished 
 gods and races ! The canal would cause Lake Nicaragua 
 to become one of the wonders of the world. There Toltecs, 
 Aztecs, Indian tribes, and we may almost say a Spanish 
 race have arisen, raised their temples and churches, and 
 sunk into shade. Education comes next, and it must be 
 the education of the spiritual principles that eternally 
 endure ; though races come and go, and temples rise and 
 fall, the kingdom of the true God lies in the soul. 
 
 After Leigh returned to Granada, the whole party who 
 had made the adventurous journey across Costa Rica were 
 invited by the careful Englishman, Mr. Hobbs, to visit a 
 cocoa, or cacao, plantation, to which he had been taken by a 
 jolly old English friend, who loved to entertain. 
 
 The party were glad to visit the place, for it was famous. 
 The Englishman's name was Holiday Holme. He was a 
 merry story-teller, as well as a hospitable entertainer. 
 
 His estate on the lake, or rather overlooking it, consisted 
 of ten thousand acres. The house was adobe and tiles, 
 full of airy rooms that opened into a court, which was well 
 supplied with little animals, birds, and flowers, after the man- 
 ner of the country. Near the rambling house was an im- 
 mense cattle pen. We would describe the growing trade in 
 cacao here, but have done so in "Over the Andes." 
 
 It gave Holiday Holme more pleasure to entertain twenty
 
 l68 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 than ten. His hacienda was a kingdom, and his wandering- 
 like adobe house was ample enough for a charitable institu- 
 tion. There was almost a village of peon cabins around it. 
 
 To the astonishment of Leigh " Uncle Holiday," as he 
 was called, had an American wife. One of his merry stories 
 was how he met this lady, who was very kind and accom- 
 plished, and who had won his heart through her voice. 
 
 " My wife won me through her heart, which she put into 
 song," said the major domo. " How would you like to hear 
 her sing some of her songs ? She composes music. She 
 sets to music the songs of the country." 
 
 " How ? " There was nothing that could be more agree- 
 able than to hear the American dona sing. The lady com- 
 plied with the request of all in a very hospitable spirit. 
 
 She had a beautiful voice ; there were heart tones in it. 
 One of the songs, Salaverry's " Song of Peace," was espe- 
 cially beautiful; it was a Peruvian poem, which she had 
 set to music. 
 
 salaverry's "song of peace." 
 
 4i Ye warriors of freedom, ye champions of right, 
 
 Sheathe your swords to sweet harmony's strains ; 
 No bayonet should gleam, and no soldier should fight, 
 Where Liberty glorious reigns. 
 
 " Melt your lances to ploughshares, your swords into spades, 
 
 And furrow for harvests your plains ; 
 No shock of the battle should startle the shades 
 Where Liberty glorious reigns. 
 
 "But Plenty should follow where Peace leads the way, 
 And Beneficence waken her strains ;
 
 ZAPATERA. 169 
 
 Let the war bugles cease, and the peace minstrels play 
 Where glorious Liberty reigns. 
 
 " Nor honor is won from the battlefield red, 
 Nor glory from tumult and strife ; 
 That soldier is only by godlike thought led, 
 Who offers his country his life. 
 
 ''Ye warriors of freedom, ye champions of right, 
 
 Sheathe your swords to sweet harmony's strains ; 
 No bayonet should gleam, and no soldier should fight, 
 Where glorious Liberty reigns ! "
 
 CHAPTER XIX. 
 
 THE MEDITERRANEAN OF THE WEST. 
 
 WHILE Leigh and the party of adventurers were thus 
 making their way towards the cities on Lake Nicara- 
 gua, Captain Frobisher and Alonzo were journeying to Grey- 
 town by another way. 
 
 It is an easy thing to get from Greytown to Port Limon, 
 as many vessels go down the coast, touching at Greytown on 
 the way. But few vessels, as we have said, stop at Grey- 
 town on their way from Colon to New Orleans. The Atlas 
 steamers go from Jamaica to Greytown, and thence to Port 
 Limon fortnightly ; but they do not often go the reverse way. 
 So Captain Frobisher and Alonzo had to wait for the coming 
 of a steamer launch, that occasionally runs from Greytown 
 to Port Limon. 
 
 The waiting at Port Limon became tedious. But the 
 launch came at last, and the two found themselves outside 
 the foaming bar and the sheltering island, and gliding 
 towards the terrible bar of Greytown, with long lines of 
 cocoanut trees in sight. 
 
 There is an inland route to Greytown by muleback, and 
 boats on lagoons. But it is full of peril, as the country is 
 unhealthy to strangers, and the traveller usually has to sit 
 in a cramped condition in the boat. 
 
 170
 
 THE MEDITERRANEAN OF THE WEST. \Jl 
 
 The Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea have been 
 called the American Mediterranean. The beautiful waters 
 of the west are here ; their shores are palm lands and 
 tropical gardens, and the islands of the Antilles are the 
 mountain tops of the sea. 
 
 In 1872 there was begun a coast survey of this sea and 
 its islands, which has been continued, and which tells a 
 marvellous story of the geological ages. 
 
 The sea is a world of curious plants and strange forms 
 of organic life; thence the Gulf Stream flows. Here are 
 fishes of the mountains and fishes of the plains. It is the 
 most interesting of the submarine worlds. 
 
 The islands which form the outer barrier of the Caribbean 
 Sea arc, for the most part, connected by a single foundation. 
 What a revelation would there be were the waters to be 
 withdrawn, and the ocean world be left spread out to human 
 view ! 
 
 The plant life of the purple sea is confined to the tidal 
 waters near the coasts. The deep sea blooms with phos- 
 phorescent flowers. 
 
 Here the coral builders are at work. It may be said in 
 a certain sense that Florida is neither the work of God nor 
 man, but of the coral masons and carpenters, all fulfilling 
 an intuitive design. These minute creatures are everywhere 
 building the terraces of the sea, which the mango covers, 
 and which become gardens of the palm, the orange, and the 
 cane.
 
 172 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 THE STORY OF THE COUNTRY OF THE EARLIEST CITIES IN 
 SPANISH AMERICA WALKER THE FILIBUSTER. 
 
 So beautiful is Nicaragua that it was called by the dis- 
 coverers the Paradise of Mohammed. The picture afforded 
 by the name is not inappropriate. Mere was a land 
 where the people have nothing to do. The animal life in 
 man predominates. Put here men were as animals. The 
 sun cared for them. They needed only a strip of clothing, 
 and the fruits of the earth grew without labor and fed them. 
 To-day was all. Yesterday taught them nothing, and to- 
 morrow promised them nothing that they did not have to-day. 
 They were born, they sunned themselves, and died. 
 
 In times before, the conquerors' temples blazed on every 
 hill. A Peru was here, whose fairy-tales are like those of 
 the golden Incas. 
 
 Nicaragua was discovered, in 15 14, by Don Pedrarias 
 de Avila, Governor of Panama. In 15 19 Don Gil Gonzalez 
 de Avila set out from Panama to the north, and discovered 
 Lake Nicaragua. He found here a great chief, or cacique, 
 whose name was Nicarao, and from him the country received 
 its name Nicaragua. lie penetrated to the ancient Indian 
 city called Niquichizi, now the city of Granada, and returned 
 to Panama. 
 
 In 1523, Don Pedrarias, the discoverer, sent out Don 
 Francisco Hernandez de Cordova to conquer the great chief 
 Nicarao. 
 
 This cavalier was the founder of the cities of Granada and 
 Leon. These were among the earliest cities in America, 
 springing up nearly one hundred years before the landing
 
 WALKER THE FILIBUSTER. 
 
 *73 
 
 of the Pilgrim Fathers at New Plymouth. They are nearly 
 four centuries old. A Spanish immigration came, and 
 Granada grew under the volcanoes of the wonderful lake. 
 The Indians were conquered, and became the burden-bearers 
 of the imperious adventurers. 
 
 In 1840 General Francisco Morazan, called the Washington 
 of Central America, attempted to re-establish a federal re- 
 public, but was in the end driven from the country. 
 
 A strange story is next associated with Nicaragua, one of 
 those stories whose suggestions are such that one hesitates 
 to retouch them to life. Suggestion in books is no ordinary 
 power. The young mind follows suggestions, the world 
 does. 
 
 There was born in Nashville, Tenn., on the 1 8th of May, 
 1824, a restless spirit, who believed that he was a man of 
 destiny. Like Napoleon he imagined that fate for him had 
 set in the heavens a star. His name was William Walker. 
 He gained unusual accomplishments. He studied law in 
 Nashville and medicine in Germany. He became a journal- 
 ist in New Orleans and a jurist in San Francisco. 
 
 He was a man of ambition, of dreams, lie thirsted for 
 power, fame, influence. In 1853 he organized an expedi- 
 tion for the conquest of the state of Sonora in Mexico, and 
 landed in Lower California with three field guns and one 
 hundred and seventy men. lie issued a manifesto in which 
 he proclaimed himself President of a new Pacific Republic. 
 
 In 1854 he marched to Sonora, but was arrested by the 
 United States authorities, tried for violation of the neutrality 
 laws, and was acquitted. I lis star had failed him. 
 
 Put it arose airain in his fancy. lie believed in the doc-
 
 1/4 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 trine of the divine order of slavery, and he now planned to 
 erect a new slave state in Nicaragua, the " Mohammed Para- 
 dise." lie landed in Nicaragua with a company of ardent 
 adventurers, and after many struggles he took possession of 
 the city of Granada. Me was joined by other adventurers, 
 and in March, 1856, he found himself at the head of twelve 
 hundred nun. He caused the Nicaraguan general to be shot, 
 and himself to be elected President of Nicaragua. The state 
 had abolished slavery, but he annulled the beneficent act. 
 
 He was now at the height of his power. He fancied that 
 his star shone and led him on. 
 
 Insurrection at length followed. The Central American 
 states united to oppose him, with the agents of the Vander- 
 belt Trading Company. He was defeated, brought to trial, 
 escaped, but struggled against his fate. In i860 he 
 attempted to lead a revolution in Honduras. He fell into 
 the hands of the English commander there, was delivered to 
 the Honduran authorities, and shot. His star went out; if it 
 had any purpose, it was to interest the world in Nicaragua. 
 
 Next came the project of an interoceanic canal, through 
 the San Juan River and the lakes of Nicaragua, a scheme 
 that glows with promise for Nicaragua and for the world. 
 
 The bright birds are here, the sea-birds and land birds. 
 The air is wings. The West Indies have some fifteen 
 species of humming-birds, jewels of the air. Here, once, 
 parrots rose in flocks like clouds, as described by Columbus. 
 
 Tlie original name of this blooming ocean world was Antilia. 
 The navigators fancied such a land in the ocean of shadows ; 
 they found it, it grew ; not one Antilia, but one following 
 another, and leading on, on, ever on, to the mighty regions
 
 THE MEDITERRANEAN OF THE WEST. 1/5 
 
 of the Andes, the hinds of the llama, the alpaca, the vicuna, 
 and the condor. 
 
 The Caribs were the inhabitants. Enslaved by their con- 
 querors, they began to disappear from the time that the gam 
 of the Punta shook the shores of the Western world. 
 
 Antilia became known as the Spanish Main. It was the 
 land of fortune. Then the world called it the West Indies, 
 and so it remains. It only awaits the Nicaragua, Panama, 
 or other canal to unite it in one common ocean way with the 
 East Indies, thus in a sense fulfilling the dream of Columbus. 
 
 The old tales of romance and adventurous action and 
 achievement of the Spanish Main would fill volumes. But 
 we soon forget the achievements of mere money-makers. 
 It is only what is spiritual that has real value and lives. He 
 who seeks his happiness in what is spiritual, is not disap- 
 pointed, and all others are. So with all the robbers of the 
 Spanish Main. Sin brings us nothing to keep. 
 
 The traveller over the sea loves to look down into the 
 plains of the clear waters. The dolphins are there moving 
 about in happy companionship in pairs. The Hying fish 
 rise up like birds, and, perhaps, one or more oi them tall 
 unhappily upon the hard deck. The shark is there. 
 
 Bright fishes are there, the parrots of the sea. The cham- 
 bered nautilus spreads his sail there. 
 
 There in a world of fishes and birds floats the sargossa, or 
 seaweed, glistening and golden, on bladders of air. And 
 there at night, deep down into the abysses, the bright stars 
 shine. 
 
 It is delicious to drift and drift on the Gulf of Mexico and 
 the Caribbean Sea, on the sky, as it were, oi this animated
 
 176 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 under-world. The day is a splendor, and the night a calm, 
 and both bring their enchantments of shore, sea, and air. It 
 is a delight to exist here, and such a delight that the mind 
 for a time looks for nothing more. It is a sufficient satisfac- 
 tion to be grateful. 
 
 But the blast from the north, coming down the Mississippi 
 valley and creating the hurricane in their ardent atmos- 
 pheres, arouses us. Terrible is the American Mediterranean 
 in a storm. 
 
 The explorers of the coast surveys have mapped the 
 under-world of the sea. We may behold it as the fishes do : 
 mountain and cavern, highways and coral workshops, where 
 the little creatures are busy, century after century, in making 
 for mankind a larger world for better people. Such is the 
 story of the explorers.
 
 CHAPTER XX. 
 
 THE NICARAGUA CANAL ITS PROMISE OF THE FUTURE. 
 
 NICARAGUA ! The name is an " open sesame," a magic 
 word ; it suggests a new street in the great city of the 
 whole human family a closer brotherhood of mankind and 
 the United States of the sea. 
 
 Spain had the vision of it in her golden days, and tried to 
 find through Central America a highway to her South Ameri- 
 can possessions. 
 
 England has jealously guarded this precious spot of the 
 earth. She protected her interests in it by the Clayton- 
 Bulwer Treaty. 
 
 What is the substance of this famous treaty? For the 
 sake of coming events, every boy should know. 
 
 In the splendid spirit that followed the earl)- development 
 of the Republic, men hoped that the Nicaragua Canal would 
 be built for the good of the world. Rut England wanted the 
 privilege of accomplishing this work, and she saw that the 
 United States would covet the same. In 1N50 the two jeal- 
 ous nations entered into a treaty, called the Clayton-Ruhver 
 Treaty, which may be ignored, but not abrogated, which 
 pledged that neither England nor the United States will ever 
 exercise for itselt any exclusive control over a Nicaraguan 
 ("anal, nor erect fortifications to command that canal, nor form 
 
 N 177
 
 178 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 alliances with Central American states having such ends in 
 view. There should he no blockade of vessels in time of 
 war. Both nations should protect the neutrality of such a 
 canal. Strangely enough, the rights of Nicaragua herself 
 were not considered in this compact ; it was made as though 
 England and America expected to rule the sea. Such in 
 substance is a part of the famous Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. 
 
 It is no wonder that far-seeing England should have sought 
 for such a compact. 
 
 A tonnage of 10,000,000 per annum to destinations not so 
 easily reached by the Suez Canal and other routes would 
 yield an immense revenue, and practically change the com- 
 merce of the world. The canal at the time of the treaty 
 would have made a new commercial America ; now that we 
 have built a network of railroads everywhere, have a navy, 
 and are ready for expansion on the sea, the importance of 
 such a new gateway to the Pacific cannot be estimated. It 
 would be likely to change the conditions of the west coast 
 of both North and South America. As Benton said of the 
 Northwest coast, "There lies the East there lies India." 
 
 Its history is that of three centuries, and yet it is only 
 begun. In 1550 Antonio Galvan pointed out the route as 
 the natural way between the two oceans. 
 
 In the liberal era of 1825, when the Central American 
 states had formed a federal union, Seiior Don Antonio Jose 
 Canaz, minister to the United States from the new Republic, 
 became the apostle of the project of the Spanish vision and 
 awakened the interest of Henry Clay. 
 
 In 1826 an attempt was made to build such a canal by 
 private enterprise, but it failed for lack of subscriptions.
 
 THE NICARAGUA CANAL. 1^9 
 
 Like schemes arose from time to time for many years with 
 surveys. 
 
 In 1844 Don Francisco Castellon, of Nicaragua, went to 
 France to solicit a protectorate over his country for the sake 
 of building the interoceanic canal. This and other French 
 schemes failed. 
 
 England now began to seek to colonize these coasts as a 
 protector of the King of the Mosquito Indians. This plan of 
 local influence failed. 
 
 Mr. Vanderbilt, of New York, had a plan for a canal which 
 was not executed. Exploration after exploration followed, 
 and in each new administration was brought forth a new plan. 
 
 In May, 1880, a provisional Interoceanic Canal Society, in 
 which appeared the names of General Grant, General McClel- 
 lan, and many leading men, obtained from the Republic of 
 Nicaragua a concession for the construction of a canal. The 
 plan failed in Congress. It was changed into another plan, 
 which was unfavorably affected by the failure of the firm of 
 Grant and Ward. 
 
 Project after project rose and fell. The work now is in 
 the charge of the Construction Company, of which Honorable 
 Warner Miller was made president in 1890. This gentleman 
 went to Nicaragua with a party of engineers and scientists, 
 accompanied by government officers, and a thorough survey 
 of the route was again made. 
 
 What a new chapter in this history will be, alter so many 
 failures and changes, one cannot say, except that in some 
 near time, and in some manner, the canal is as certain to be 
 built as any probable future event can be. 
 
 When completed it will make a new map for the world.
 
 l8o LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The Mosquito coast was the resort of the buccaneers. 
 Many stories of these sea-robbers are told on the vessels 
 trading on the coast, and some of these stories have been 
 repeated for more than a hundred years. Few travellers sail 
 here, or any ships, that do not hear some of these. 
 
 A WITNESS OUT OF THE SEA. 
 
 The story I am about to relate has been told on many 
 ships, in many ways. I must believe it to be the most inter- 
 esting of all the stories of the sea; for it is in the main true, 
 as relics, still to be seen in an old museum in Jamaica, will 
 bear witness. 
 
 In the days of the buccaneers, when the black flag of the 
 pirate glided like a snake over the Spanish Main, seeking its 
 pre) - among the treasure ships of the purple seas, an English 
 man-of-war captured a vessel which was supposed to be that 
 of sea-robbers. 
 
 Port Royal was in existence then, the city of three thou- 
 sand houses, that afterwards sank into the sea. 
 
 The English vessel took the supposed piratical craft into 
 Port Royal, and put the officers and crew upon trial before 
 the Admiralty. Put the strictest examination of the men by 
 the court failed to produce any evidence that the ship was 
 piratical, or engaged in other than legitimate trade. 
 
 Put a suspicion remained. 
 
 The men, finding themselves thus set free, were in high 
 glee, and began to have a lively time in the rich old port, 
 whose remains now strew the bottom of the sea. Liquor 
 flowed, and usual oaths, and merry gibes, and dark droll hints 
 that their good fortune was not what mi<rht have been ex-
 
 A WITNESS OUT OF THE SEA. l8l 
 
 pected evidenced that their high spirits were not altogether 
 those of innocence. 
 
 But they felt safe. 
 
 " Marry, Jack," said one tar to another, "we are all as 
 
 secure as nursing children ; no power on earth could ever 
 touch a hair on our heads." 
 
 " It was hut little that I expected but the yard-arm," re- 
 plied the other. " But all the powers on earth could never 
 reverse the decision of the Admiralty. The court says that 
 no evidence can be found against us, and as sure as the stars, 
 none ever can." 
 
 The sea-rovers were in a delirium of delight. To be free, 
 to give their sails to the blue Caribbean again, when they 
 expected hanging, gave them an exhilaration that they had 
 never known before. 
 
 In the midst of their hilarity there came a ship from 
 Hayti, bringing to the Admiralty a very remarkable object. 
 It was a shark that had been captured, and disembowelled, 
 and a small bundle of papers had been found in the fish's 
 bod\'. 
 
 The papers were examined by the officers of the Admi- 
 ralty. They bore the name of the ship whose officers and 
 crew had just been discharged from the court, and with them 
 unmistakable evidences ot their piracy. 
 
 The government prepared to rearrest the pirates, and to 
 confront them with their own papers, and the evidences ot 
 their guilt which had been found in tin.- shark's body. 
 
 So the merry men were called together again. 
 
 "A new witness has appeared in the case," said the judge 
 to the pirate chief.
 
 182 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 "The ship that came into the port?" said the latter. 
 "That is impossible. We never saw that ship before." 
 
 " No not that. The sea has sent a witness against you 
 there is a providence which reveals all dark deeds. A 
 fish of the sea has come to bear witness against you." 
 
 The pirate was superstitious, and trembled. 
 
 " You threw your papers into the sea. A fish received 
 them and kept them. Did you ever see those papers 
 before ? " 
 
 The judge held up the evidences of their guilt before the 
 pirates. They stood as dumb as though the heavens had 
 opened. 
 
 " In them read your death warrants," thundered the Admi- 
 ralty. " Guilt carries the means of its own revelation." 
 
 They were taken to the gallows, and the story, which is in 
 the main incident true, was long the terror of the Spanish 
 Main. It is claimed that these papers are in existence to-day. 
 Guilt is never secure, and no true story that I ever met more 
 favorably illustrates the truth than this.
 
 CHAPTER XXI. 
 
 THE LANDING AT GREYTOWN A NEW INDUSTRY THE 
 PLANTING OF RUBBER GROVES. 
 
 CAPTAIN FROBISHER and Alonzo found themselves 
 at the foaming bar of Greytown. 
 
 The landing at Greytown, before the Atlas Line of 
 steamers provided launches for the purpose, was a perilous 
 matter indeed. There are few bars on the tropical coast on 
 which so many lives have been lost. The surf is high and 
 raging; the sea is full of sharks, and when a boat is wrecked 
 on the bar, few of the passengers are likely ever to see land 
 again. Even with the launches, which are wobbly at the 
 vessel, and not without suggestions of danger at the foaming 
 bar, the new-comer to the country is very glad when he finds 
 his feet very firmly on shore. 
 
 There is a good hotel in Greytown, and the place is made 
 healthy by the sea winds that constantly blow upon it. 
 
 The construction works for a new canal are seen here 
 as on the railroad across Panama. The "Newport" of the 
 Walker expedition was lying off the bar as our travellers, 
 Captain Frobisher and Alonzo, landed here, and it is thought 
 that the American Congress will be influenced by the report 
 to be made by this expedition to make the necessary appro- 
 priations for the undertaking of this great enterprise of open- 
 ing a direct way to the South and the Orient. 
 
 183
 
 184 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Alonzo, always seeking for new opportunities for young 
 people, met a young man from the States at Greytown, by 
 the name of Singer, who had spent nearly two years in the 
 country, and who thought that he saw a new need of the 
 
 markets of the manufacturing world. 
 
 "What do you think of the prospects of coffee plantations 
 in this country ? " asked Alonzo of the young man, who had 
 lived in Boston and Minneapolis, and knew so much of the 
 Hast and West in the States. 
 
 "I think it is good," said the young man; "but to my 
 view there is being created a need that will make another 
 industry here more certain and more profitable." 
 
 " .And what is that ? " asked Alonzo. 
 
 "The raising of india-rubber. The wild india-rubber 
 trees are becoming exhausted by the india-rubber hunters. 
 This is a natural land of the rubber tree ; it is easily grown, 
 and the ports for disposing of rubber are near and easy. 
 Had f means, f would plant india-rubber groves. In a few 
 years they would yield a product that would be far more 
 valuable than coffee, and the groves could be planted at less 
 expense." 
 
 "How would you plant the groves, my friend? I seem 
 to see that there will soon be such a need as you describe." 
 
 " Simply by placing the seeds in the earth of lands 
 that cost next to nothing. The young trees would require 
 no cultivation. One would only have to wait a few years 
 for them to grow large enough for them to be tapped. After 
 that time they would yield an amount of rubber juice that 
 would bring to the owner a large yearly income. I think 
 that the growing of rubber groves here will become a great
 
 A NEW INDUSTRY. 1 85 
 
 industry on the building of the canal. Think what a market 
 there must soon be for rubber, owing to the failing supply, 
 and consider also what a great port city on the new canal 
 would offer here for a new rubber trade ! " 
 
 He added : " I am earning and saving what money I can 
 and am putting it into rubber groves. I can see a future 
 need of this product, and good price for it, especially from 
 this country if the canal is built." 
 
 "I think," said Alonzo, ''that you are one of those young 
 people who see their opportunity. There is something in 
 your plan that appeals to my common sense, although I am 
 but a new-comer here. I must study this opportunity, and 
 inquire at the consular offices about it." 
 
 Alonzo and his uncle went to Rivas (old Nicaragua), situ- 
 ated at a point near the lake. The journey was like an 
 excursion through a tropical port, though here everything 
 was rude, crude, and delaying. This country to-day is the 
 land of inanana (to-morrow); but it will not be the land of 
 to-morrow when the flags of all the lands shall pass to the 
 ports of all lands through the new canal. 
 
 The present semi-civilization will pass away, and soon be 
 as dead as the days of the old sea-robbers. Spires will rise 
 over the white surf of the serene, purple sea, and bells will 
 ring in them, domes of commerce will burn in the hot air, 
 and men of progress will sit at the desks under them in the 
 cool arcades. Here the railroad whistles shall break upon 
 the silence of the hills, as the long trains of coffee and 
 bananas come tugging down to the sea. The soul ol prog- 
 ress is to-day restless to bring about the wonder; the new 
 world of Central America is about to appear, and the wonder
 
 1 86 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 that will come with the new century will break the continent 
 and tend to draw into closer brotherhood the races of man- 
 kind. 
 
 From Rivas, or old " Nicaragua city," the captain and 
 Alonzn went to Granada, and the party with which Leigh 
 had gone in search of the quetzal had already, as we have 
 pictured, arrived here. 
 
 The Mosquito Indian guide, Apula, now left Leigh to join 
 a party of rubber hunters on the coast. He parted from 
 Leigh reluctantly. 
 
 "It may be," he said in his broken Spanish, "that I will 
 see you again. My eye shall be for your safety. I look 
 after you. You have a good heart. The Indian never for- 
 gets a good heart." 
 
 The captain and Alonzo and Leigh went to Rivas. Leigh 
 had heard that there were most beautiful colonies of trogons 
 on the northern shores of Lake Nicaragua. Having made 
 one adventurous expedition, he now planned a bolder one, 
 and secured his uncle's consent to go up one of the rivers 
 of the ancient Xicaraguan forests with guides to study the 
 botany and natural history of the country. 
 
 " You should have kept Apula," said Captain Frobisher, 
 when he heard Leigh's account of the faithful Indian. 
 
 " I am sorry that I did not try to do so," said Leigh. " It 
 may be that I can find him again. I would feel perfectly 
 sale with him. I would not wonder if he were somehow to 
 follow me."
 
 CHAPTER XXII. 
 
 LOST. 
 
 LEIGH left his uncle and brother at Rivas, and with an 
 Indian boatman and a guide he set out to penetrate the 
 Nicaraguan forest, whose immense rubber trees were famous 
 for rare animals and birds, and especially for certain splendid 
 trogons, among which was the royal bird of the Aztecs, in 
 all the glory of its sunset breast and sacred plumes. 
 
 His boatman and guide had been endorsed as perfectly 
 trustworthy Indians by the india-rubber traders, and were 
 known to an American agent at Greytown, who had said, 
 
 " You will be as safe in the hands of those men as in those 
 of a Rhode Island Quaker or a Presbyterian deacon." 
 
 The agent had seen vice-consular service in the country. 
 
 So it was with a light heart that Leigh bid his friends 
 good-bye. 
 
 "I shall see," he said, "what no American boy before 
 saw, so the boatman tells me." 
 
 The boatman was right. Leigh had an experience that 
 was probably unlike that of any other American boy. 
 
 They glided along the quiet waters for a time, then crossed 
 to a stream that came drifting down from the hills through 
 recesses of ancient trees, whose limbs formed a kind of natu- 
 ral hedge above it for monkeys and animals. 
 
 187
 
 [88 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The stream led into an almost impenetrable forest. Mon- 
 keys came to the near branches of the trees, as if to inquire 
 the purpose of the expedition, and threw dead wood towards 
 the boat. Trogons were there, but his imperial majesty, the 
 royal and sacred bird, did not appear among them. 
 
 The stillness of the forest became oppressive. The waters 
 were shaded, but the heat was intense, and there arose from 
 the dark waters a steam or vapor which could not be seen 
 close at hand, but was visible at a little distance. 
 
 "There is fever in the air," said Leigh to the boatman. 
 
 " Si, Seiior," answered the boatman truthfully, but plying 
 the oars faithfully. 
 
 "Malaria?" said Leigh to the guide. 
 
 " Si, Seiior." 
 
 Leigh began to take alarm, for, notwithstanding the heat, 
 he felt chills at times creeping down his back, and his head 
 began to be dull and heavy. 
 
 They came at last to a clearing, where were abandoned 
 huts of reeds and palm leaves. 
 
 It was near nightfall. The red sun was burning through 
 the trees; the parrots were scolding, as often before settling 
 down for the night. 
 
 "Shall we spend the night here?" asked Leigh. "We 
 can hunt from here to-morrow. This is an abandoned camp, 
 once used by the rubber men." 
 
 " Hunt the jaguar?" inquired the guide. 
 
 " Yes ; or any other animal." 
 
 ' Xo ; not it you follow my direction. We will not sleep 
 in the huts, but under our white mosquito netting in the 
 open air. Xo beast ever attacks one who spreads a white
 
 LOST. 189 
 
 mosquito netting over him in the form of a cage. The jaguar 
 will circle around it, but always at a greater and greater dis- 
 tance. He seems to think that the open net is a trap, 
 spread to ensnare him. The longer he watches it, the more 
 wary he is of it. They all seem to look upon a white net as 
 a snare." 
 
 The guide took from the boat a mosquito net and spread 
 it on some short poles in a curious way, so that it looked like 
 a large, square trap. "We can sleep under that with perfect 
 safety," he said, " at least, so far as the wild beasts are con- 
 cerned. We will also be safe from snakes and poisonous 
 insects. But we have another enemy. At least you have, 
 Leigh. I have some fear of it." 
 
 " What is that ? " asked Leigh. 
 
 "The white air that you saw at a little distance, mist, fog, 
 vapor, do you call it ? It is poison to some Americans. It 
 causes swamp fever. Hut you may escape strangers some- 
 times do who have temperate habits. It is a foe to the weak. 
 Have you quinine ? " 
 
 " Yes," said Leigh. 
 
 " I would advise you to take a little of it before you lie 
 down for the night." 
 
 The guide made a bed of palm leaves, and spread on the 
 ground a meal of stale bread, hard eggs, and cheese. 
 
 They found here some little boats that were constructed 
 ot mahogany logs. These logs were hollowed by burning. 
 Their bottoms were charred. Leigh tried one of these 
 abandoned boats, using a paddle, but the red twilight was 
 soon over, and he came back to the net and lay down inside 
 of it for the ni<rht.
 
 IQO LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The stars rose in the shadows as it seemed, and hung 
 above the trees. The darkness became dense, even under 
 the clear stars. The air grew thick, like steam. Leigh could 
 see white forms of mist in the far-away starlight. His head 
 ached, and the palms of his hands and the soles of his feet 
 burned. 
 
 Xow and then the cry of some wild beast was heard in the 
 far forest. If any animal came near, it did not venture near 
 the white net, whose form was clear in the darkness. 
 
 How lonesome, how desolate, how wild is a night in a 
 tropical forest ! There are foes everywhere. They come 
 and go, when or where, one does not know. Every sound 
 is an alarm ; every cry of beast, or note of bird, is, somehow, 
 hostile to man. 
 
 The stars look friendly, but they are far-away torches. 
 The moon arising lights the gloom, but only to reveal doubt- 
 ful shapes in the shadows. 
 
 Man feels there a friendlessness nowhere else to be found. 
 He has made himself an enemy to the animal kingdom, and 
 the animal world in the darkness is a foe to him. 
 
 The very air has its dangers as well as the thicket. The 
 ghosts of poison come unseen, and sometimes invisibly, 
 but not always. Such ghosts may long tarry to haunt the 
 life, or may take the life away, and so vanish into the eternal 
 silence. 
 
 Leigh awoke the next morning with new resolution. His 
 hands and feet were a little cold ; his tongue was white, but 
 his head was clear again. 
 
 The forests were resounding with birds. The hills seemed 
 to be full of armies with wings. Some of these bird calls
 
 _e:gh leaped into one of the mahogany DUGOUT BOATS."
 
 LOST. I9I 
 
 were like trumpet blasts. He was sure that among all these 
 echoing and re-echoing cries, a family of royal trogons would 
 be found. 
 
 He leaped into one of the mahogany dugout boats that 
 had been abandoned by Indians, or possibly by hunters for 
 india-rubber trees, and paddled up the river alone, leaving 
 his boatman and guide to prepare a meal. The guide kindled 
 a fire for the purpose of making coffee. 
 
 The banks of the river were full of birds, cranes, trogons, 
 and gaunt buzzards in ominous flocks. The monkeys scam- 
 pered away here and there in the near trees as he passed 
 along. The parrots were having their morning scold. 
 
 The river suddenly widened, and there lay spread out 
 before him great meadows of reeds and feathery grasses. 
 
 In the midst of these meadows of high grass were some 
 great trees full of lianas, parasites, orchids, and birds. A 
 white morning mist half enveloped them, but this became 
 dissipated as the sun arose. 
 
 Leigh gave a second glance at these monarchs of vegetation. 
 A flock of parrots was there and some rose-colored cranes. 
 
 Hut something more beautiful was there. In the first rays 
 of the sun he beheld a resplendent trogon, which he felt sure 
 was the sacred bird, lie held his boat, and looked at the 
 feathered wonder with admiration, and was seized with a 
 strong desire to secure that particular bird. 
 
 1 low ? He had his rifle with him, but it was not a tlead 
 bird that he wanted. As he continued to gaze on the beauti- 
 ful king of the world of plumes, another quetzal in the same 
 thicket of trees came into view then another and another. 
 There seemed to be a royal family of them.
 
 IQ2 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 He began to study how to get to the trees. The place was 
 a very strange one the most remarkable that he had ever 
 seen. 
 
 He was on a placid stream under great trees. Before him 
 was a dome-like opening of high reedy grass, taller than 
 his head. A part of it was green and a part dry. Beyond 
 it was the trees and lianas in which were the splendid tro- 
 gons. The grass plat between the boat and the trees was 
 about one hundred feet wide and twice as many long. 
 
 He could not go around the plat. There were swamps on 
 each side of it. The plat seemed once to have been an eleva- 
 tion like that on which the great trees grew. 
 
 Suddenly a very strange object met his eye. 
 
 He pushed open the reeds with his paddle where it 
 appeared. It was a stone image. It leaned, and was half 
 sunken in the great bed of reeds. 
 
 It was a piece of sculpture. It had two heads and four 
 hands. One of the heads rose above the other. There were 
 inscriptions upon the sides of the stone. 
 
 He again glanced at the trees. The trogons were still 
 there in all the splendor of green and crimson, with metallic 
 lustres, which shone in the risen sun, which now poured 
 down his rays over the open space. 
 
 He resolved to cross the plat of reeds, and go to the trees 
 where the trogons were. How should he secure his boat ? 
 He would drive it into the reeds with his paddle and leave it 
 there until his return. 
 
 It was not difficult to do this at a point of shallow water. 
 He forced the mahogany dugout into the reeds, out of view 
 on the stream, and began to cross the plat of high grass.
 
 LOST. I93 
 
 He had to move slowly and cautiously. There were alli- 
 gators here and probably poisonous serpents. 
 
 He broke the way with the stock of his rifle. The grass 
 was some eight or ten feet high. 
 
 The ground grew harder and firmer as he continued to beat 
 a path. He found another stone image. It was lying in the 
 earth with only the upper part visible. Had there once been 
 a temple here ? 
 
 He passed the image. The grass became denser. He 
 made more resolute efforts. Suddenly a terror seized him 
 his heart stood still. He found himself sinking, going down 
 from the matted grass. I le grasped the grass with one hand, 
 holding his rifle with the other. The grass tore away. He 
 fell many feet and struck on soft earth. He started up and 
 looked around. He found himself in a deep pit, the top 
 of which was partly closed by the dry grasses, and the sides 
 of which were concave. The pit was at least twenty feet 
 deep.
 
 CHAPTER XXIII. 
 
 IN AX IDOL CAVE. 
 
 THE pit or cavern into which Leigh had fallen was shaped 
 like an open dome. The light fell into it through the 
 waving grass tops, but a boatman might have passed the 
 place a hundred times without a suspicion of the existence 
 of such a curious cavern there. The heads of sculptured 
 monuments rose anglewise out of the dead leaves. Had 
 the cavern been a place of tombs ? 
 
 Leigh was filled with terror and apprehension, but he did 
 not regard his case as hopeless. He could not climb up on 
 the inside, for the roots of the reeds here were dry and broke 
 away. He must dig out, or dig up to firm roots, with the 
 stock of his rifle. 
 
 He sunk down on the dry leaves to plan. In the middle 
 of the cave was a little pool. 
 
 As he was thinking how best to climb up to the top of 
 the mound, he heard a movement among the dry leaves. 
 He saw a huge adder uncoiling there on the edge of the pool. 
 Following his impulse, he struck at the reptile with his gun 
 stock. The snake rolled about, trying to lift his wounded 
 head. Leigh struck at it again. The slipper)- body of the 
 agitated reptile caused the rifle to slip from Leigh's hand. 
 As it did so, it sunk into the pool and disappeared. 
 
 194
 
 IN AN IDOL CAVE. 195 
 
 Leigh's heart now sunk. What place was this ? Where 
 was he ? Could he dig out of it with his hands ? 
 
 He began to pull at the roots. They broke ; they could 
 sustain no weight. 
 
 He sat down on one of the nearly buried stones. Among 
 the figures graven on it was that of a bird. He felt sure that 
 it was the image of a quetzal. 
 
 But what were quetzals to him now ? He made another 
 effort to climb up the side of the cave by the earth and roots 
 of dead vegetation, but the roots gave way, and the earth 
 caved in. His hopes began to waver, and he felt his heart 
 beating violently. A burning heat came over him. Was 
 he going to fall sick in this solitude of solitudes, in this 
 cavern of which no man knew ? 
 
 He would utter a cry for help, but who would hear? He 
 cried out again and again, but had a boatman been passing, 
 he could not have heard him. His voice had no outlet or 
 echo. 
 
 He sank down again and wondered if he w r ere to perish 
 here. The guide and the boatman might pass the place and 
 not find him, as the dugout was hidden by the reeds and 
 grass. 
 
 His head began to grow dizzy. He would try to rest for 
 a moment and recover strength for a supreme effort to dig 
 up the cave. 
 
 He chanced to look up. The light was glimmering in 
 the grass tops, and across the opening of the cave lay a huge 
 alligator. 
 
 Hope after hope died within him ; but all hope never dies. 
 Somehow he believed that he would be rescued.
 
 IO/S LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 But how? 
 
 lie thought of his brother at Rivas, of his good uncle, of 
 his New England home. Were all his plans of life to come 
 to an end in this utterly unknown place? 
 
 The top of the cave darkened at last. Night was coming 
 on. Could he live through a night in the place? If he 
 could, what hope was therein the morning? 
 
 He sank down exhausted. His left side seemed inflamed 
 by the beating of his heart. 
 
 In the night he heard the cry of the jaguar in the trees. 
 
 Sleep did not come to him. He thought so vividly that 
 his dreams of rescue seemed to be actual things. 
 
 Suddenly a thought came to him that thrilled him and 
 caused his hope to revive again. He had with him a red 
 handkerchief, such as were sold on market days in Nicara- 
 guan towns. He might make a pole of dead stems of the 
 grasses by tying them together with shreds of clothing, and 
 lift the red banner above the tops of the reeds. The hand- 
 kerchief might be seen by the boatman. 
 
 There was a single, small loaf of stale bread in his pocket 
 that he had taken from the camp to eat on his way on the 
 stream. He would partake of this sparingly, and use his last 
 strength in weaving the pole for the signal. 
 
 The plan was a desperate one. 
 
 The morning broke with a great screaming of birds. 
 Leigh ate a few mouth fuls of the bread, and set himself to 
 the work of weaving the pole. He spent nearly the whole 
 day upon it. When he attempted to raise it, it toppled over 
 and fell. 
 
 Nothing but nervous excitement and a faith in fate sus-
 
 IN AX IDOL CAVE. 1 97 
 
 tained him now. He was weak, feverish, in a prison from 
 which escape seemed impossible. His friends would have 
 searched for him and found no trace of him. What could 
 they do ? They would be compelled to return to Rivas, 
 and to report that he had disappeared. 
 
 But what could they say ? That he had been killed by an 
 alligator? No, for where was the dugout? That he had 
 been attacked by a jaguar? No, for the boat would in 
 that case not have drifted far. That he had been drowned? 
 The boat should have been in evidence again. He might 
 have met with many accidents in such a forest, which would 
 have caused his own disappearance, but not that of the boat. 
 The guide and the boatman were honest men ; but would they 
 have the courage to return and report the loss of their pas- 
 senger in the face of the danger of being falsely accused of 
 causing his disappearance. What story could the)' tell ? The 
 truth could hardly be believed. The truth would seem to 
 bear witness against them.
 
 CHAPTER XXIV. 
 
 THE TIGER CAT. 
 
 LEIGH had noticed that these forests abounded with mon- 
 i keys. He had twice seen a long, supple, beautiful ani- 
 mal in the trees, which he had taken for a jaguar, but which 
 looked too small for that animal. 
 
 Once when he was on the boat with the men, he had seen 
 a like animal that had captured a little monkey that was cry- 
 ing pitifully. The men started up, and the tawny animal 
 with the monkey disappeared in the trees. He had uttered 
 the word "jaguar" at the time, but the men shook their 
 heads. He thought that the animal might be a young jaguar. 
 
 The next morning there was a stir in the earth at one end 
 of the cavern. Something living was there. Might it be 
 a serpent or some burrowing animal ? 
 
 A little earth fell down, then all was still. Presently a 
 little more earth fell in the same place, as though something 
 was digging there. 
 
 Leigh felt a certain sense of relief to be within the range 
 of any living thing. 
 
 I lis hope revived. " Where any living creature has come 
 doivn" he argued, " 1 can go up. There are no animals here 
 that are dangerous to man except the jaguar, and this animal 
 
 iq8
 
 THE TIGER CAT. 1 99 
 
 lives in thick coverts and trees. If there were pumas in this 
 part of the country, such must inhabit caves." 
 
 lie had heard the rubber men say that the puma and 
 jaguar were harmless, unless they were attacked or their 
 young were in danger. 
 
 A little more earth fell. 
 
 He expected to see the head of some burrowing animal 
 appear, and that the animal would be frightened away, and 
 where it had dug down, that he would be able to dig up 
 and follow the beast, whatever it might be, into the light. 
 His heart beat fast ; he saw in his fancy a sure way of escape 
 at hand. 
 
 More earth fell. Then a paw appeared, now and then 
 breaking through the side of the cave. 
 
 The paw was like that of a cat, only larger. 
 
 "The animal must be of considerable size," he thought, and 
 lie felt sure that he could escape through the burrow it had 
 made. 
 
 A considerable quantity of earth now tumbled in, and a 
 head indeed appeared. It was a beautiful head, but with 
 sharp teeth and defiant eyes. Its mouth was open and 
 snarled defiant]}'. Hut the fur was sleek and of a yellow 
 color and spotted with brown. It looked like the animal that 
 he had seen disappearing in the trees with the crying mon- 
 key. 
 
 lie thought it to be a jaguar. 
 
 The animal ceased digging, and looked at him in a defen- 
 sive way. Whenever he moved, it drew back its small, 
 pointed ears and snarled. 
 
 Presently a load of earth gave way, and the animal fell
 
 200 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 into the cave. It instantly turned and disappeared. Leigh 
 felt that a sure way of escape had now opened before him. 
 
 lie went towards the opening that the animal had made. 
 It was dark there, but he was able to discern objects. There 
 was another cave at a little distance, and in this was the 
 animal that he had seen and two little animals. 
 
 He did not doubt that the animal was a jaguar, and that 
 the cave was the lair of that animal, and that this one had 
 scented him, which had caused her to dig through the wall 
 of earth to discover if there were danger to her young. 
 The animal started when she saw him, snarled again, and 
 breathed defiantly. He could not leave the cave while she 
 was there, and she would not be likely to leave her young 
 while he was there. 
 
 His condition was more perilous than before. 
 
 He sat down at a point opposite the opening to the bur- 
 row of the animal. The yellow color made her almost lumi- 
 nous, and he could watch her movements in the dark. 
 
 " She nursed her young. She will carry them away soon," 
 he thought, " and I can follow her place of exit." 
 
 After nursing her young, she came to the opening and 
 looked at Leigh, drew back her ears, and then moved in a 
 circle around her young, again and again. 
 
 Then she lay down beside her young. She did not seem 
 to seek to attack Leigh, but appeared only to care to be 
 watchful of her young. 
 
 After a time, she repeated the same jealous movement. 
 Her body was long and flexible and leopard like. 
 
 Leigh saw that she would not be likely to attack him, nor 
 to leave her voung alone while he was there. He must
 
 THE TIGER CAT. 201 
 
 threaten her, so that she would take her young away, and 
 enable him to follow her way of escape. 
 
 He approached the opening. She rose up to warn him 
 away, passing around her young in the same circle, and 
 growling at times with a look and in a tone whose meaning 
 was unmistakable. 
 
 "When night comes, she will take her young away," rea- 
 soned Leigh. " She must go away for food, and she will 
 not leave her kittens alone.'' 
 
 In the night there was a great growling in the cave. It 
 increased as if more than one animal was there. At last the 
 sound began to retreat. Leigh could hear it farther and 
 farther away. He thought that he heard it outside of the 
 cave at last, in the direction of the trees. He heard also a 
 cawing in the trees the bird's notes of warning. 
 
 He now thought that the jaguar had taken her young 
 away, and he awaited the coming of the light with new hope. 
 
 In the first light of the morning he went to the opening. 
 Another animal was there, larger and longer than the first, 
 and beside it was a captive monkey, yet alive. 
 
 The animal stalled up as he saw Leigh. It was evidently 
 a male, and had come here to guard the young. He did 
 not snarl, or growl, but his attitude was one: ot resolution. 
 Leigh saw that to venture one step more would be perilous. 
 
 His ln-art sunk. I fe believed that the animal was a. jaguar, 
 that the mother would not take her young away, but would 
 leave them for the male to protect ; that it would be useless 
 to try to pass by either while the young were there, or to 
 intimidate them, or to frighten them away. He must seek 
 other means of escape.
 
 202 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The animals were not jaguars, as Leigh supposed, but 
 ocelots, a tiger cat that is easily tamed, and that does not 
 attack human beings except for its own defence or that of its 
 young. It is a very beautiful creature, with yellowish fur, 
 which has chains of dark brown spots along its sides. It 
 feeds on birds, and captures monkeys also for food, often by 
 stratagems. In domesticity it may be fed on milk or por- 
 ridge. 
 
 When Leigh saw the ocelot running away with the little 
 monkey in the trees, he only thought of it as an incident 
 of forest life. The pitiful little cry came back to him now. 
 It touched his heart. He had never known what it was to 
 be a captive before to find himself in circumstances from 
 which he could not break away in a trap, a cage, under a 
 powerful paw. 
 
 Another incident had awakened feelings in his heart, of 
 which he did not know before. The captive monkey in the 
 den had looked towards him as if imploring help, as if to 
 say, " Pity me ! " The glance of the eye was almost human. 
 Leigh longed to answer that glance. He had a tender 
 heart when he saw suffering, and he never saw as now 
 how animals may suffer. He himself was like an animal 
 in a cage now. The animal longed for the freedom of 
 the sun and woods again in its captivity; it was its right to 
 live. 
 
 In the morning the poor monkey, though broken and 
 torn, attempted to escape. It rushed into the cave where 
 Leigh was, and made a leap towards the opening into which 
 the sunlight streamed. It might as well have attempted to 
 leap over Irazu. It fell back, and was seized by the ocelot
 
 THE TIGER CAT. 2C>3 
 
 and dragged again into the den. Leigh heard it utter a cry 
 of sharp pain, and he never saw it again. 
 
 The incident showed him that the ocelot's den, which he 
 thought to be a jaguar's, was the most dangerous part of 
 his cave dungeon. 
 
 He longed to be free with his uncle again ; to be back to 
 the old New England orchards of Milton ; to be on the free 
 streams with the india-rubber men ; to feel again that he 
 was master of life, and not a prisoner of circumstances. 
 
 The world all looked different to him now. He pitied 
 every one in distress ; his heart went out to animals in cap- 
 tivity. He resolved to live a life of mercy, sympathy, and 
 helpfulness, should he ever be free again ; to help every one, 
 and to hinder no one, and seek his happiness in the happi- 
 ness that he created in others, which now looked to him to 
 be the highest joy that could be found in the world. 
 
 Had he known that the supposed jaguar was an ocelot, he 
 might have further seen the possibilities of a gentle hand. 
 
 A second night in the cave had greatly reduced the boy's 
 strength. Lying awake and feeling about in his pockets in 
 a state of nervous excitement, he suddenly touched some- 
 thing that again caused his hopes to revive. In a side 
 pocket were three matches. 
 
 A new thought flashed across his mind. lie might lift 
 a lighted match on the pole that he had woven of dry stems 
 and set the dry grasses at the top of the cave on tire. He 
 mended the pole. 
 
 The column of smoke might be seen by some boatman 
 on the river and lead him here to learn the cause. 
 
 It was night when the thought came to him. He had but
 
 204 LOST IN XICAKAC.UA. 
 
 three matches, and he must use these in his experiment with 
 the greatest care. 
 
 Hut a morsel of food was now left him, and he must lose 
 no time. 
 
 lie lighted the first match in the darkness. There was 
 no breath of air in the cave and it burned well. He gathered 
 a bundle oi sticks on the edges of the cave, and set them on 
 fire. There being no draught, the stems burned slowly. 
 
 I Ie lighted the top of the mended pole. It burned. Me 
 could reach the dry grass at the top of the cave with it. 
 He did so with a trembling hand. 
 
 A flame shot up into the air. The reeds and grasses were 
 on fire. In a few minutes the top ot the cave stood open in 
 the flame. As the winds swept the smoke away from the 
 opening, the very heavens seemed to be on fire. 
 
 Monkeys in the trees began to scream. Leigh could hear 
 the flames rolling over the reedy meadows. The reeds and 
 grasses were very dry, and about the swampy bottom were 
 collected the inflammable stems of years. 
 
 The morning broke amid smoke and flame. The air 
 resounded with cries of birds and animals. If Leigh could 
 reach the top ot the cave, there would be no danger now 
 from alligators. Hut this could not be done. He lay on the 
 dry leaves looking out, and watching the smoke ascend from 
 the still burning stems outside of the cave. 
 
 Then the fire in the reeds on the mound died away. The 
 birds ceased to cry. The sun was up. A dead silence came 
 over everything. Leigh had indeed made a signal. Hut 
 who could see it ? Would it be seen ? Would the blackened 
 reeds attract some boatman after the fires had died?
 
 A FRIENDLY FACE. 2C>5 
 
 He was weaker now. He was without food or clothes, 
 or any power to do anything more. 
 
 It was approaching high noon. 
 
 The top of the cavern stood open now. Leigh could see 
 the sky. Suddenly the air was filled with black wings, like 
 a cloud. The light seemed darkened with buzzards. The 
 fire had evidently killed some animal or animals, possibly 
 an alligator or alligators, if anything could destroy life in 
 such a creature, or perhaps some colony of water animals 
 that had found a covert there. Leigh never knew what 
 caused it, but hundreds, and it seemed to him thousands, 
 of buzzards covered the burnt-over mound and began 
 quarrelling over some kind of food which they found 
 there. 
 
 One buzzard, with a morsel of food in his mouth, dropped 
 into the cave. 
 
 The buzzards went as suddenly as they had come. The 
 air was black with flying wings, and evidently a man or a 
 jaguar or some animal was approaching the place. 
 
 There was a footstep, very light as it seemed, on the verge 
 of the cave. Leigh feebly shouted and looked up. 
 
 A dark, withered face stretched over the edge of the 
 opening, slowly, cautiously. It was the face of an old 
 Indian, an ancient Xicaraguan, with black eyes, black hair, 
 hollow cheeks, and thin lips. He looked like Apula. 
 
 Leigh stretched up his hands. 
 
 The ancient Indian comprehended the case at once and 
 drew himself up, and at once with the greatest vigor began 
 to cut the earth with his heavy machete. He swung his 
 arms as though it was the lite of a brother that was in peril.
 
 206 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Blow followed blow, and the earth and roots came tumbling 
 down into the cave. 
 
 He soon had broken down the roof of the cave. As he 
 did so another remarkable thing happened. As the top of 
 the roof tumbled in, it revealed a stone image some twelve 
 or more feet high. The Indian dropped down upon this, and 
 from it leaped into the cave. 
 
 But he stepped on the brink of the pool, and in almost an 
 instant disappeared. 
 
 But a hand was lifted out of the water. The ancient 
 Indian was rising up from the well, or pool. Leigh seized 
 his hand, which could show his will, but without strength. 
 The Indian was Apula. 
 
 The Indian climbed over the edge of the pool and ex- 
 claimed, 
 
 "Salnd!" 
 
 He saw that Leigh was famishing. He knelt down and 
 drew the boy's arms over his back, and held them together on 
 his breast with one strong hand, dropped his machete into 
 his belt, and, rising, lifted himself and Leigh up by the image. 
 He soon gained the top of the cave, carried Leigh to the 
 shadows of the great trees, where the quetzals had first ap- 
 peared, and laid him down on the cool ferns. 
 
 He then rushed away and soon returned, bringing Leigh 
 the fruit of the wild bread tree, and fruit juice from some 
 unknown habitation. 
 
 Leigh revived at once. The breadfruit gave him a new 
 sense of life. The Indian went away again and returned, 
 bringing him black cooked frijoles and plantains. A cabin 
 was evidently near, or some encampment.
 
 A FRIENDLY FACE. 207 
 
 It was the latter. Apula and others were going into the 
 deep forests to /////// for rubber trees. 
 
 As soon as Leigh could walk, Apula led him to the en- 
 campment. 
 
 The party of Indians with whom Leigh had embarked had 
 gone away. He would follow the party of Apula. But how 
 was he to get word of his safety to his friends at Rivas ? 
 Apula told him, in his Spanish-English way, that the party 
 would soon return to the lake, and that he would send a mes- 
 senger to the consul.
 
 CHAPTER XXV. 
 
 APULA. 
 
 LEIGH felt that he owed his life to the old Indian, and 
 sought every occasion to show his gratitude. He helped 
 him in little things. This sympathy deepened the old man's 
 quick affection. 
 
 Apula loved to he near Leigh. To point out to him curious 
 things on the sea and land. They sat and enjoyed the sun- 
 rises and sunsets together. They were like comrades. 
 
 "Domic vara?" which Leigh understood meant that he 
 wished to ask him, not where he was going, but what was his 
 purpose in travelling. To this Leigh returned, 
 
 " Comprar quetzal (to buy a quetzal)." 
 
 The old man lifted his hand and stared. He then shook 
 his head. "The same boy," he said, meaning that he was 
 bent on the same errand. Apula spoke English after his 
 own idioms. His language was that of the Mosquito tribe. 
 
 " Le quetzal del reys (the quetzal of the kings)?" 
 
 " Si" said Leigh. "The quetzal of the kings." 
 
 " In Guatemala ? " 
 
 Apula then spread out his hands as if in worship, and said 
 again, " Le quetzal del reys" implying that the old kings 
 worshipped or greatly venerated the bird. 
 
 I'aya usted Guatemala (Go you to Guatemala)?" he 
 
 208
 
 APULA. 209 
 
 said, " en montana ? " He added in English, " Apula will go 
 with you, one day." 
 
 Leigh had often heard that the true quetzal, the real royal 
 trogon of the ancient temples, was only to be found in the 
 mountains of Guatemala. 
 
 Apula seemed greatly surprised that Leigh should still 
 be searching for the sacred bird. "The same boy," he said ; 
 " the same bird." 
 
 One day the sun set in a blaze of fiery red clouds. The 
 heavens seemed to be a sheet of crimson fire. 
 
 The Indian pointed to the red glow and said, 
 
 "The quetzal," and made a circle on his breast, indicat- 
 ing that the breast of the bird was like the sunset. " Guate- 
 mala quetzal ! " 
 
 As they were sailing the shadow of a passing cloud turned 
 the purple water into a deep sheeny green. The Indian 
 screamed, 
 
 "The quetzal," and he patted Leigh on the back to in- 
 dicate the wings of the quetzal. 
 
 At another time the flashing spray turned into rainbows 
 as the boat moved along, and the Indian made the same ex- 
 clamation, meaning that the quetzal was like a broken rain- 
 bow. 
 
 But he endeavored to describe to Leigh the habits of the 
 bird in a way that the latter could not understand. They 
 were on the beach, under a tent of dry palm leaves which 
 was open at each end. 
 
 "The quetzal," he said, and he entered the tent very 
 carefully, looking down to one side of him and then the 
 other, and holding his sea frock tightly around him. He
 
 2IO LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 passed in this way through the tent, as if he were a bird 
 guarding her plumage, and came out the other side and be- 
 gan to whistle very low and sweetly. Then his voice swelled 
 out in undulations of rapturous tone, and he turned to Leigh 
 and said again, 
 
 " The quetzal." 
 
 Leigh understood that he meant by the whistle to imitate 
 the song of the royal bird ; but he did not understand the 
 meaning of his careful movement through the tent. Did the 
 quetzal make a tent for its nest and come out of it and sing ? 
 
 The Indian saw that he had not been understood in the 
 imitation of the habit of the bird. He repeated the move- 
 ment. As he entered the tent, he said "into" (one), and as 
 he came out of it whistling, he said " dos" (two), and point- 
 ing to the two openings of the palm cover, exclaimed, 
 
 " Casa de quetzal (the house of the quetzal)," by which 
 Leigh understood that the nest of the quetzal had two doors. 
 
 Why ? 
 
 Was it so that it might not ruffle its plumage ? 
 
 Leigh was curious to know if his interpretation of the 
 Indian's dumb exhibition was correct. He would learn about 
 the nest of the bird, if he found quetzals in Guatemala. 
 
 As often as they saw trogons, the Indian would shake his 
 head and say, with a look of contempt, 
 
 " Xa, na, no quetzal" indicating that the trogons were 
 altogether inferior to the royal bird. 
 
 Apula picked up new words from Leigh in answer to 
 questions made in imperfect Spanish. He asked him what 
 was the English word for descubrir, and with much aptness 
 said, with an expression of delight,
 
 APULA. 211 
 
 " I will discover you one." 
 
 He looked intently into Leigh's eyes. " I find you 
 one." 
 
 What did he mean ? He could hardly be going to the 
 mountains of Guatemala. The distance by sea was great, 
 and the mountains were far from the coast. 
 
 But he repeated, 
 
 "I find you one," and added, "in Guatemala." 
 
 Leigh wished to show the Indian how kindly he felt towards 
 him. He knew not how best to do it. He had a ring on 
 his finger, with a bit of fire opal in it. It had no sacred value, 
 as it had been given him by Arline J to remind him not to for- 
 get some home errand when they were living at Milton, and 
 he had continued to wear it, not as a keepsake, but because 
 the opal burned with a sharp flame, and he sometimes liked 
 to see the mysterious point of fire. 
 
 Apula noticed the ring, and his eye was often drawn to 
 the tiny blaze, as it revealed some new glint of color. 
 
 Leigh could spare the ring, and one evening as they were 
 lying on the ground side by side, and the fire of the sunset 
 was going out in the high palms, he took it off his finger, 
 and said to Apula, pointing to the red flame, 
 
 " The quetzal." 
 
 "Si," said Apula, " le quetzal." 
 
 Leigh lifted the ring and turned it in the light. The Ind- 
 ian's eves glowed as he watched the tiny ruby flame, burn- 
 ing and changing color in the gold. Leigh took Apula's 
 withered hand and slipped the ring over his index finger. 
 
 " I give it to you," he said in Spanish. 
 
 1 Sec "Over the Andes."
 
 212 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The poor old Indian's lips began to quiver. Tears came 
 into his eyes. He pointed to Leigh's finger where the ring 
 had been and said, 
 
 " You none." 
 
 Leigh replied in Spanish, 
 
 " I would rather that you would wear it for me." 
 
 " Siemprc? (always)," asked Apula. 
 
 " Siemprc" said Leigh. 
 
 The Indian touched his heart with his hand, and then 
 tapped Leigh on his shoulder, and said, 
 
 " I find you the quetzal in Guatemala. I die for you." 
 
 He lifted his withered hand in the fading light and 
 watched the opal as it flashed. Leigh saw that Apula was 
 fully resolved to secure the royal bird for him, but where, 
 when, and how? He had won the old Indian's heart. 
 
 Water, forests, mountains, dangers, hardships, were nothing 
 to an Indian when he wished to secure a purpose from the 
 motive of love. To favor one who has gained his affections 
 is a supreme passion with him. Leigh was certain that a 
 royal trogon would be returned to him for the ring. He 
 could trust Apula to accomplish anything within human 
 power. The sympathy that gives a gem, wins a crown. 
 Leigh could read the Indian's heart, but he could not 
 fancy the way in which the bird and the hunter would 
 some day come to him together. But they would come. 
 
 Apula had seen opals, but never one set in gold before. 
 The burning gem became to him what the bird was to the 
 imagination of Leieh.
 
 CHAPTER XXVI. 
 
 THE RUBBER HUNTERS. 
 
 " jrilXGA /" said Apula 
 * understood. (Come ! ' 
 
 to Leigh, which word the latter 
 (Come ! ) 
 
 Leigh followed him. He knew that he was now safe. 
 
 They came to a camp under some immense trees that 
 spread their umbrella tops in the high air. 
 
 Had Apula been watching for his safety since first he 
 started ? 
 
 There were four men in the camp, and they started up 
 with a wild cry as they saw old Apula returning to them with 
 a white companion. They were rubber hunters, and their 
 boats lay on the banks of the near stream. To these hunters 
 Apula seemed to act as chief. 
 
 Leigh tried to tell them in Spanish that he wished to send 
 a word to Rivas. They answered him with much talk, which 
 he understood to mean that he must first go with them or 
 return alone. 
 
 He tried to think what he best should do. He could 
 secure a dugout of mahogany wood for a journey down 
 the stream, but it would not be safe for him to try to cross 
 the lake alone in his exhausted and feverish condition. He 
 had received one severe lesson indeed of the dangers of the 
 country, lie must put himself under the care of Apula, 
 
 21 ;
 
 214 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 make him understand that he would be well rewarded for 
 returning him to Rivas, and follow him into the forests 
 whithersoever he might go. 
 
 His friends would think him lost or dead, but that could 
 not be helped. The United States Consul would act as his 
 friend whenever he should return. The consulate is the 
 common country of all lost people, and he had met the United 
 States Consul of Greytown at Rivas. 
 
 The party of Indians carried with them buckets and great 
 machetes. They were living on fish, stale bread, and fried 
 plantains, and seemed to agree wonderfully well among them- 
 selves. 
 
 They pushed on into the forests. When they came to 
 open spaces between clusters of giant trees with sunny 
 tops, the homes of many birds and monkeys, they some- 
 times stopped and went in search of rubber trees, which 
 they milked. That is, they tapped them with a slash of 
 the machete, and filled their buckets with the rubber juice. 
 
 Old Apula taught Leigh how to gather breadfruit, and to 
 fry fish and plantains, and to prepare the food for the hunters. 
 The Indians left Leigh to keep camp for them when they 
 went in search of the great trees. 
 
 Leigh could trust Apula. He felt no fear for his own 
 safety, for he had somehow got at the heart of the old 
 Indian who had rescued him. The thought of the anxiety 
 of his friends haunted him continually. Had it not been 
 for this, his life would have become a charmed one with the 
 recovery of his health. 
 
 What days were these ! 
 
 The sun rose and set, but he saw it not, only the bright
 
 THE RUBBER HUNTERS. 21 5 
 
 glimmer of rays in the immense tops of the trees. Lianas, 
 like cords of a ship, seemed to anchor every great tree to 
 the earth. Splendid orchids depended from mossy limbs; 
 the tops of many of the trees were gardens of fantastic 
 parasites with burning colors. 
 
 These blazing flowers were the nesting places of birds as 
 gorgeous in color as were the blooms. The tree-tops were 
 full of life. Below them, except for the crocodiles, all was 
 silent. The shadowy silence was sometimes painful. 
 
 There was a Quaker-like bird that used to come to Leigh 
 when he was about his work, that seemed to have such a 
 New England character in his plumage that he came to 
 love it above all others. It was half white and half brown, 
 and the colors were divided in the middle. The head and 
 neck and shoulders were white like a kerchief, and the rest 
 of the body was a Quaker brown. 
 
 The strange thing about the bird was that it had whiskers. 
 Its true name was the calandria. When Leigh was waiting 
 for food to cook by the fires made of sticks, he would study 
 this beautiful whiskered Quaker bird, and dream of the 
 Milton Mills, where the brown thrushes sang. He would 
 have given more for a calandria than the grandest trogon, 
 except the true historic bird that he was seeking. 
 
 There were multitudes of trogons here cities of them. 
 They wore in these glowing solitudes all the colors caught 
 from the atmospheres of the sun. 
 
 The Indians were fast filling their boats with rubber. 
 Leigh expected that the) - would soon return to the lake.
 
 CHAPTER XXVII. 
 
 THE WILD PALM FOREST AND THE ALLIGATOR BIRD. 
 
 AT one of the places on the winding stream where the 
 rubber hunters stopped, there appeared a wild palm 
 forest. It was vast in extent; every tree looked just like 
 every other tree, and seemed to be of the same height, and 
 the whole stretching far away glistened like a sea. 
 
 The hunters left Leigh here to guard their boats, to make 
 a fire, and to prepare food and coffee for their return. 
 
 They told him they were in the vicinity of the Hidden 
 River (famous as a hiding-place for pirates in the days of 
 the buccaneers). Where this was, Leigh could not know. A 
 vast wilderness lay around him, and the stream had so nar- 
 rowed that the boat had been passing under bridges of 
 limbs overhead. At some places the boatmen had to push 
 back the foliage in order to make their way. 
 
 Fantastic and beautiful was much of this foliage, starred 
 with red and orange blooms. Water lilies rose here and 
 there out of the margins of green, and at several points the 
 rcina del nocJic (the queen of the night), or night-blooming 
 cereus, appeared. Alligators were often seen with their 
 heads turned towards the wider parts of the stream. 
 
 The rubber hunters went away, but they did not return 
 
 216
 
 THE WILD PALM FOREST. 217 
 
 that day nor the next. They had evidently found new trees, 
 and had waited for the juice to harden before attempting to 
 convey it to the boats. 
 
 Leigh passed the first day in preparing food. On the 
 second he had little to do, but he began to be very greatly 
 interested in a singular feature of the wild palm forest. In 
 the sunny hours of the day this forest was full of butterflies. 
 The air seemed to bloom with them. They moved about in 
 swarms. 
 
 He had never seen such beautiful butterflies before, nor 
 could he have imagined that such had any existence. Their 
 wings were of the most vivid colors ; some of these had 
 metallic lustres, and the large ones were to the atmosphere 
 what the orchids in these forests are to the trees. 
 
 If he could make a collection of these air flowers, as they 
 seemed to be, and take it home, what a souvenir of perilous 
 adventure it would be ! what memories it might recall ! 
 
 The thought filled him with delight and hope. It gave 
 play to his fancy amid the dispiriting situation. 
 
 Me began the work. Hut in order to secure the most 
 brilliant wings, he now and then followed a flock some dis- 
 tance from the shore. 
 
 At the end of the first day of butterfly hunting he found 
 that he had secured a collection of insects so wonderful in 
 form and color as to excite the wonder of any naturalist in 
 tiie States to whom he might show them. 
 
 He resolved on the following day, if he were left alone, to 
 go farther into the wild palm forests, and to add to the col- 
 lection the rarest of these gems of the air that it would be 
 possible to secure.
 
 2l8 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The hunters did not return. He found himself alone by 
 the silent boats. 
 
 The morning sun rose dazzling over the palm forest. The 
 great trees and lianas on the opposite side of the stream 
 were full of birds, whose cries were almost deafening. The 
 howling monkeys united their cries with the gay parrots and 
 lively trogons. 
 
 Leigh prepared a net for the hunting of the butterflies, and 
 set out in the fascinating forest of dazzling palms. 
 
 New specimens of butterflies constantly appeared, and he 
 added treasure to treasure. 
 
 The heat became intense, and he sat down under a tree 
 and studied the wonderful colors and color lines of the 
 captive wings. 
 
 He rose up to go back to the stream. 
 
 Which way ? 
 
 Every tree here looked like every other tree. His mind 
 had been so filled with the pursuit of new wonders of color, 
 that he had lost all sense of direction, and knew not the east 
 from the west, the north from the south. 
 
 He would climb a palm. But all the palms were of the 
 same height, all looked exactly alike, there was nothing 
 about them to distinguish one from another. 
 
 Were he to go one way, it might take him to the river or it 
 might take him in the opposite direction. There were great 
 trees on the opposite side of the river, so there might be at 
 some other side of the shining forest. 
 
 lie tried to find his own tracks, but the burning sun had 
 withered all traces of them. He wandered a little way here 
 and a little way there, and there came over him that strange
 
 THE WILD PALM FOREST. 2ig 
 
 sense of bewilderment that falls upon one lost in a place 
 where all objects are alike. 
 
 Had he again fallen into peril and trouble ? Young 
 Aleman had warned him against such dangers as these, and 
 he had been confident that he would avoid them. 
 
 He would cry out. But who was to hear ? The wild 
 palm forest was silent at mid-day. Only the hum of insects 
 broke the monotony of the universal stillness. There 
 seemed to be no birds, beasts, or serpents. It was a jungle 
 of butterflies. 
 
 He would find the tracks of beasts whom he thought 
 might go towards the stream. There were none. He would 
 watch the flight of birds, but there were no wings in the air. 
 All was a dead calm, hot, lifeless, motionless, save butter- 
 flies, butterflies everywhere. 
 
 The beautiful wings now became a mockery to him as 
 the\ r flitted about. 
 
 He would mark the course of the sun. But his mind had 
 been so absorbed in the pursuit of the flying flocks of gold, 
 amber, and rubies that he knew not whether the stream of 
 the rubber canoes was now on the east or the west. Every- 
 thing seemed to mock him. For him there were no points 
 of compass. There were wild palms of the same height and 
 form tilled with happy insects everywhere. 
 
 It was but uncertainty to go this way or that. On every 
 hand was the same glimmering, dazzling appearance of 
 everything. 
 
 He would light ;i fire as in the cavern. Hut he had no 
 matches with him now. 
 
 Night came. The butterflies vanished. The wild palms
 
 220 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 began to gleam with fireflies. He knew the mariner's stars 
 as they appeared one by one ; but he did not know the way 
 in which he should go. 
 
 There was nothing for him to do but sink down upon the 
 earth, and to await events. He might watch the flight of 
 birds in the morning, and it would be likely to be towards 
 the stream which led to the sea. 
 
 The night passed. There were no flocks of birds when 
 the red sun appeared. As the light filled the trees, butter- 
 flies arose again. The air glimmered again with wings. 
 There was the same intense light, the same glimmering green 
 of the palms, the same silence. 
 
 Almost maddened by the situation, which looked more 
 hopeless hourly, there appeared amid all the greenness and 
 brightness the brownish-black wing of a bird. It settled on 
 the stem of a palm, and Leigh could see that the bird was 
 startled to find a being like himself in this strange place. 
 The ashy wing, too, looked strange there. He had seen 
 birds of that kind before. Where ? On the oozy, misty 
 banks of the stream where alligators were. He thought 
 that it was what was popularly called the alligator bird. 
 
 Why this bird and the alligator should be friends is one 
 of nature's mysteries. The thought flashed through Leigh's 
 mind, " The bird's course will be towards the river. I will 
 follow its wing." 
 
 The solitary bird did not seem shy or afraid. It ruffled 
 its feathers as in surprise. It did not rise on its wing above 
 the trees. It seemed to like the shade and low ground. 
 
 "Yes," gasped Leigh, "you are the little bird of the la- 
 goon."
 
 THE ALLIGATOR BIRD. 22 1 
 
 He had hoard it said that this bird "picked the alligator's 
 teeth." This may have been a forest superstition. It was 
 enough for Leigh to know that the bird hovered about the 
 reedy haunts of the alligators, and that this one was a wan- 
 derer, and would be certain to wing its way towards the water. 
 
 The bird flew slowly from tree to tree under the shade, 
 a dark object in the stream of shadow. Leigh followed it. 
 At times it stopped at certain spaces, as if to listen. Then 
 it would away again, but always seeking the coolest streak 
 of shadow, as if it were upon a stream. 
 
 The way was long and slow. The bird had been used to 
 low and short stages of flight. It suddenly disappeared. 
 Leigh rushed forward, and to his delight found himself on 
 the banks of the stream. 
 
 He was sure that it was the stream that he had left, 
 although the boats did not at this point appear. But he 
 found an abandoned mahogany dugout, and he followed the 
 stream in this until he came to the place of the camp. 
 
 The hunters had not returned. 
 
 But they came back that night, and he was glad indeed to 
 meet again old Apula who had rescued him from the cave. 
 
 Leigh was now led to watch the habits of the little ashy 
 birds, the alligators' friends. He did see them alight near the 
 great reptiles' mouths, though he did not see them pick the 
 creatures' teeth. It is said that the alligators never harm 
 this feathered visitor to the open door of its mouth ; we hope 
 it is true, for one likes to find in everything everywhere some 
 characteristic that has the resemblance of goodness. The 
 reptile, however, probably finds the bird in some way useful 
 to him.
 
 CHAPTER XXVIII. 
 
 FAITHFUL. 
 
 LEIGH'S heart beat joyfully as the Indians turned the 
 boats to the lake and he saw the volcanoes rising out 
 of the lake again. 
 
 He expected that the Indians would land him at some 
 point near Rivas, or that they would leave him at Granada 
 or Greytown, whither he thought they would carry the 
 rubber. 
 
 It was with great' alarm, therefore, that he found the Ind- 
 ians drifting to the San Juan, and passing Greytown in the 
 night as though they were hiding their cargo. 
 
 They went out into the open sea, and their boats fol- 
 lowed the coast. Whither were they going ? 
 
 Leigh tried to induce Apula to land him at Greytown. He 
 pointed frantically towards the land and the disappearing 
 cocoanut palms. 
 
 Apula put his hand on his heart and said, 
 
 " Corarjou vcradcro sincere) leal fiel franco I" 
 
 They were all Spanish words. Corazon means " heart." He 
 wished that Leigh should understand that his heart was 
 "true," "sincere," "loyal," "faithful," and "frank." Leigh 
 believed the old Indian. But where were they going? And 
 why in this mysterious way? 
 
 222
 
 FAITHFUL. 223 
 
 "Where do you sell your rubber?" asked Leigh in Span- 
 ish. 
 
 "No vender,'" said Apula. "No sell." lie added, "For 
 
 the king." 
 
 He then tried to make Leigh understand that they were 
 going to the king's palaee, which was on the coast. 
 
 "The king's house is like a mountain," he added. "Its 
 top almost touches the sky. Great is the king. We hunt 
 for him." 
 
 The party was on its way to some tribal king, or cacique, 
 who lived in a very high house in some place near the coast. 
 
 Leigh understood that he was to be taken there. What 
 next was to happen to him ? 
 
 His heart beat fast as the old Indian said again, in part 
 Spanish, 
 
 " My heart is true, loyal, and faithful," and added : 
 
 " I will return with you alone. I will go back with you to 
 Granada. I will never leave you until you are safe with your 
 own people. Xo, no; old Apula will never leave this boy 
 that he found in the cave of the temple. Apula's heart is 
 faithful and true." 
 
 In broken Spanish he said further, crooking his forefinger 
 wisely betore his cheeks, 
 
 "Calandria, the little bird all white and brown, he know 
 the white boy. The bird with the whiskers, he know the 
 white bow The bird with the white shirt, he know the 
 white boy. The calandria, he come and talk with the white 
 boy in the camp. Apula can see." 
 
 Leigh believed the old man. Had his friends known 
 where he was, he would have been happy to have gone in
 
 224 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 this wild way to visit a native Indian king, and to have seen 
 the king's tall house in the native wilderness. 
 
 " Why did you not leave me on the land ? " he said, or 
 tried to make Apula comprehend. 
 
 " We under orders of the king he live in the house of 
 the sky, high, high, high. You shall see. Apula go back 
 to him, then he will be free. Then he return with the boy 
 that the calandrias come to visit. Apula will tell the king 
 that the calandrias talked with the boy that Apula found in 
 the temple, the temple of the quetzal." 
 
 The last words spoken in broken Spanish startled him. 
 How strange it was that he was hunting for the quetzal, and 
 should have fallen into one of the temples of the sacred bird, 
 if this indeed had been the case! 
 
 The surf thundered on the coast as they passed along 
 on the smooth water of the open sea. Groves of cocoanut 
 palms stood everywhere shining in the sun. 
 
 At one point a sail boat with an American flag lay in the 
 distance, at another a steamer, with a British flag appeared. 
 
 Sharks were everywhere to be seen in the clear, sky-blue 
 water. 
 
 On and on went the boats. Where would they land ? 
 Would Leigh ever see his friends and home again ? lie 
 would sit silent and brooding. Then old Apula would re- 
 peat, " vcradcro -sinccro leal fiel." 
 
 Leigh believed him. There was that in the old Indian's 
 heart that was true to the pathway of the stars. There are 
 true hearts to be found everywhere in the world. 
 
 The place of landing Leigh never knew, except that it 
 was on the Mosquito Coast. The rubber had dried and be-
 
 THE TALL HOUSE. 22 5 
 
 come hard, and he understood that the king who dwelt in 
 the tall palace was to sell it to a comisario, as the Spanish 
 rubber traders were called, and that rubber was one of his 
 sources of revenue. 
 
 They came to the palace of the king. It was indeed a 
 structure unlike anything that Leigh had ever seen before. 
 It looked like a hill with an opening in its sides. 
 
 It was built of cane and palm leaves, or like native vegeta- 
 tion. It was large enough to shelter a council of the people. 
 
 The Indians were not dressed like those he had seen else- 
 where. They wore the clothes of civilization. The dusky 
 queen was particularly ornamental in her attire. There were 
 people of mixed blood there. 
 
 Should Leigh disclose his strange story here to any Eng- 
 lish-speaking people, if such there were ? No, he would 
 trust to the integrity of Apula who had rescued and protected 
 him. 
 
 " Vcnga ! " said Apula to him, after he had saluted the 
 king, and had had some words with him in regard to the 
 young stranger. 
 
 Leigh followed Apula, and they came to a palm hut in the 
 woods. Here the Indian lived with his family, and here he 
 was left with Apula's daughter and friends, while the Indian 
 attended a meeting of the tribe in the council rooms of the 
 tall house, and took part in a tribal merry-making there. 
 
 In the morning Leigh was awakened in his hammock by a 
 howling, like lions in a menagerie. lie had heard the puma 
 called the American lion, but he had never imagined that 
 he howled like this, nor did he know that there were pumas 
 here.
 
 226 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 His hammock was swung under some tall trees, and pres- 
 ently a powerful roar echoed from a thicket above him. He 
 started up and ran into the hut, awaking the Indian woman 
 and her children. 
 
 " Lion ! " he exclaimed. He pointed up. " Lion en 
 arbol 7 (lion on the tree)." 
 
 The people looked puzzled. 
 
 Presently there was heard a terrific roar above the cabin, 
 as of two or more lions. Leigh made signs of alarm. 
 
 The roar was again set up as though there was an army of 
 lions coming down from the trees to devour the whole house- 
 hold. 
 
 "Congo 7/10)10,'" said the woman. " Pequeno ! (little)." 
 
 Leigh shook his head. 
 
 " No pequeno" he said. " Lion ! " 
 
 The light was breaking. The woman went out and stood 
 by the hammock where Leigh had slept, and pointed upward. 
 
 " Nada ! (nothing)," said Leigh, meaning that he saw- 
 nothing there. 
 
 There were indeed a few little black monkeys with gray 
 faces in the trees, but no lions, nothing that could seem so 
 to roar as to shake the hills. Such roars as he had just 
 heard might frighten an army. 
 
 All was silent for a time. The woman and children stood 
 still, looking up. 
 
 The sun was now rising in the clear sky, as was seen in 
 the red glow in the tree-tops. The parrots were sending 
 forth deafening cries. Leigh wondered that such fearful 
 noises could ever proceed from the throats of such small 
 birds.
 
 THE TALL HOUSE. 227 
 
 Suddenly a roar filled the place. It was followed by a 
 chorus of terrific sounds, like the lions in a menagerie when 
 impatiently waiting for their food. 
 
 The woman turned to Leigh, laughing, and the children 
 wearing the like face, and pointed upward. 
 
 It was indeed the little black monkeys with gray faces 
 that were roaring like lions. 
 
 Leigh would hardly have believed his eyes more than his 
 ears, had he not heard some parrots almost outdo the little 
 monkeys in the strength of their cries. 
 
 " Peqiiaw," said the woman. 
 
 " Pequcno" said the children. 
 
 " Pequcno" assented Leigh in humiliation, and disclosed 
 in broken Spanish that he thought that only a lion could ever 
 send forth a roar so terrible. 
 
 In the morning Apula returned, saying in Spanish, 
 
 " Great news ! " 
 
 "What ?" asked Leigh, wondering if in any way it related 
 to his friends. 
 
 " The king has received a message that a white boy has 
 been lost. / r oiga ! " 
 
 Leigh followed his faithful friend. The two went down 
 to the sea to the long lines of cocoanut palms, against which 
 the green and purple sea was thundering and tossing into 
 surf. He found a boat there awaiting him. The two went 
 out from a bend where the force of the surf was broken, and 
 Leigh felt sure now that he was on his way to Hluefields or 
 Greytown, or some like port. He could not know the geog- 
 raphy of the place, but he could trust his guide. 
 
 Who were those strange Indians that he had met?
 
 228 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 He had heard of the King of the Mosquito Coast, who 
 was protected by the English government after the trend of 
 the English-American treaty of a generation ago. Could the 
 king that he had met have been him? He could not tell. 
 He only knew that Apula used the paddles with a kind of 
 gladsome vigor, and that he was not expected to be able to 
 understand all of the scenes that he had met. 
 
 The place was the palace or tall house of the Mosquito 
 Indians' king. The real king, however, was in Jamaica; the 
 man before whom the Indians had danced was only a chief, 
 or deputy governor.
 
 CHAPTER XXIX. 
 
 FOUND ! 
 
 ' TT^ENGA /" was the welcome summons of Apula at last, 
 
 ' after Leigh's enforced visit to the Indian palace. 
 
 Leigh entered the boat with the faithful Indian, and he was 
 afloat on the serene waters under the calm skies beyond the 
 thundering surf. 
 
 They came to the foaming harbor of Greytown. 
 
 As the boat touched the strand, Apula rose up, tall and 
 thin, 
 
 " MucJiaclio (boy)," said he, " Apula's heart has been true, 
 sincere, faithful. Me found you in the cave of the quetzal; 
 he returns you to your own. Remember Apula ! " 
 
 The tall Indian pointed to a flag in the town and said, 
 
 "The Consul American. Apula is true, loyal, faith- 
 ful. He wants money nada (nothing). You are going to 
 Guatemala." 
 
 He stood in the boat, pointing to the flag. 
 
 " Leap ! " said ho, " lea]) and be free ! " 
 
 He held the boat to the strand with the paddle, while the 
 surf broke and foamed around it. 
 
 Leigh leaped to the shore, and turned around. Already 
 Apula was gone; his boat was breaking through the surf 
 towards the calm, green sea. Why had he gone? 
 
 Leigh hastened to the house of the Consul. The latter 
 
 229
 
 23O LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 rose up as though a ghost had appeared when he saw him 
 coming. 
 
 " Have you come out of the earth ? " said the Consul. 
 
 "Yes," said Leigh, "I have." 
 
 " Do you know that your absence has alarmed the country, 
 and caused me hours of trouble and anxiety? Do you know 
 that your uncle has nearly gone mad on your account, and 
 that your brother has lost all interest in everything for the 
 same reason ? Do you know that your name and description 
 have been sent to all the American consulates ? Where have 
 you been ? " 
 
 " Let me first ask you where now are my brother and 
 uncle ? " 
 
 " They have gone to Corinto on the other side. They 
 have been continually going from city to city, from port to 
 port, from place to place, seeking for tidings from you. Do 
 you know what a place you make in your friends' hearts?" 
 
 " Consul, telegraph to them that I have been lost in the 
 woods, and found by friendly Indians and returned." 
 
 "Lost? How could that have been? You went away 
 from your guide around a single bend in the river, and was 
 gone ; boat and all were gone. I can believe your guide. I 
 never knew him to deceive any one, and I have known him 
 long." 
 
 "Telegraph, and I will explain all." 
 
 The Consul sent an immediate message to Captain Fro- 
 bisher at Corinto, and then heard Leigh's strange story. 
 
 When he had concluded, the Consul said, 
 
 " There is one man whose heart is broken." 
 
 "Who?"
 
 found! 231 
 
 "The guide." 
 
 " Where is he ? " 
 
 "At Rivas." 
 
 " Send word to him that I have been found." 
 
 " I am going to Rivas to-day. You shall go with me." 
 
 The American flag on the Consul's boat came trailing into 
 the port of Rivas. On the landing stood a solitary Indian 
 with straining eyes. 
 
 As Leigh leaped to the shore, he found himself clasped in 
 the iron arms of an Indian, and patted on the back after the 
 manner of the country. 
 
 " Consul, Consul," the Indian cried out in a frantic tone, 
 "my words were true, my words were true! I did not harm 
 the boy. I could die now. Everybody will know that my 
 words were true ! I would rather die than not be true ! " 
 
 The Indian, a lord of the waters that he was, began to 
 tremble and cry. He leaped about in the sand. He stopped 
 suddenly and asked, 
 
 " Where did you go, boy ? what became of you, boy? Did 
 you go up to the sky, or down into the earth ? " 
 
 " Down," said Leigh. 
 
 " Down under the water ? " 
 
 " Down beside the water down into a pit." 
 
 " Where was your boat ? " 
 
 " In the reeds." 
 
 " Why did you go into the reeds, boy? " 
 
 "In search oi the quetzal. There were quetzals in the 
 trees beyond the reeds. The trees were full of trogons." 
 
 " Did you fall into the temple, boy ? " 
 
 " Into a pit, Senor."
 
 232 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 "I see, I see it all now how strange how very 
 strange ! The old temples were there caves now. I see, 
 I see. But, hoy, why did you not call ? " 
 
 " I did, but nobody could hear me I was underground ! " 
 
 " How did you get away ? " 
 
 " I was found by an Indian rubber hunter." 
 
 " He brought you back ? " 
 
 " He brought me back." 
 
 " All of the stars be praised ! No one can ever suspect me 
 of doing you harm any more." 
 
 The meeting between Leigh and his uncle was a revela- 
 tion to the boy. 
 
 " Leigh," said Captain Frobisher, embracing him as the 
 Indian had done, " if the sun were gold, and I owned it all, 
 I would have given it for you. This is the happiest hour of 
 my life." 
 
 " I did not know that I was worth so much as that," said 
 Leigh. " If I have that value, I will try to take better care 
 of myself in the future." 
 
 Alonzo met Leigh in his usual practical way. 
 
 " Well, my good brother, you seem to have had many ad- 
 ventures, and to have made much commotion in our little 
 world. You have visited the temple of the quetzal, I hear, 
 but where is the quetzal ? " 
 
 " I will find him yet. I have not given up the search. I 
 will do yet what no other person ever did. I will secure a 
 royal trogon, and take him back to our Milton home, as a 
 companion for the condor there. Wait and see ! " 
 
 Leigh felt sure that he would meet Apula again ; that the 
 Indian would be true to the ring.
 
 CHAPTER XXX. 
 
 PARTED. 
 
 OUR travellers went up the coast. 
 At Bluefields Apula had suddenly appeared one even- 
 ing, and said to Leigh in broken language, 
 
 "Are you going to Guatemala, my young friend?" 
 
 "Yes, we go to Livingston, and then go over the moun- 
 tains to Guatemala City." 
 
 " The mountains las montanas f " 
 
 "Yes, Apula." 
 
 "There is the forest of the quetzal, the true, true bird 
 the real quetzal." 
 
 He turned around nervously and said, 
 
 " I follow you I find you Ciudad Guatemala. When ? " 
 
 Leigh explained to Apula the plan of their journey, to 
 which the Indian answered : 
 
 " I know the jcfcs of the towns the comandantcs. I 
 have hunted there. The cochineal is grown there." 
 
 The jcfcs? who were these ? Were they men, or animals, 
 or birds ? Were they what the Indian had hunted? 
 
 They were none ol these. They were the local judges, 
 the governors ol places, the mayors, as it were, ol towns. 
 They were like the judges in Oriental stories cadis, or the 
 alcaldes of Spanish towns. The jefc was the man of the 
 
 233
 
 234 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 place. This man would be their chief advisor on the inland 
 ways of Guatemala. 
 
 Apula held up his ring to the light, patted Leigh affec- 
 tionately on the back, after the custom, and turned away as 
 if reluctantly. 
 
 What did he mean by " I will follow you " ? Why 
 should he seek to follow Leigh ? It was reputed to be a very 
 hard journey to Guatemala City, over the mountains, and 
 English and American travellers found it so, even those who 
 had plenty of money, as the Frobishers had. 
 
 There are comforts that are needed in travelling that 
 money cannot buy. The way was not only a very difficult 
 one, but a long one. 
 
 The Indian, with no resources except his knowledge of how 
 to live in the country, could better overcome the difficulties 
 than an English traveller with means. Time was of little 
 account to him. But what could be the Indian's motive for 
 desiring to follow him. 
 
 Leigh might believe it to be a good one, a matter of disin- 
 terested affection. But Captain Frobisher and Alonzo could 
 hardly be brought to believe this. 
 
 Leigh saw in the Indian's face a resolution that showed 
 that he was in earnest in what he had said. 
 
 Why not take the Indian with him as a guide ? Because 
 his uncle and brother would distrust him. Leigh had made 
 so many mistakes already, through over-confidence in his own 
 plans, that he did not dare to venture upon another, or to sug- 
 gest anything that on its face would excite suspicion. How 
 could he know that Apula was not a robber. 
 
 He had read the dark tales of the buccaneers. He had
 
 PARTED. 235 
 
 been told strange things of the Mosquito Coast Indians. He 
 must not again lead his friends into trouble. But he wished 
 to kno\v,more of this Indian, who had said that he would find 
 him in Guatemala City. 
 
 He went to the Moravian missionary at Bluefields. 
 
 " Did you ever meet a Mosquito Indian by the name of 
 Apula? " asked he. 
 
 "Apula? Apula, the rubber hunter? Yes. Has he 
 offered himself to you as a guide ?" 
 
 "No. He rescued me from a pit, and brought me out of 
 the woods, near the lake, where I was lost." 
 
 '"He is an honest man." 
 
 The missionary added: 
 
 " Apula has a daughter. She is a very beautiful girl. He 
 is very fond of her and very proud of her. She goes with 
 him on journeys, except when he goes rubber hunting. She 
 is as devoted to him as he is to her. Apula's wife is dead, 
 and his daughter, whom he calls Nina, is all he has. He is 
 an uncommon Indian. I could recommend him to you as a 
 guide. He would be true, as true as the courses of the stars, 
 to one in whom he believed. 
 
 " You will need a native guide in all your plans of travel 
 in these countries. You are going to Guatemala. Well, my 
 young friend, you will not find Guatemala to be another 
 Costa Rica. There are no long railroads there, amid German 
 and Knglish plantations. Splendid churches are there, but 
 thev are dead : lino monoliths, but thev are sinking into the 
 earth of the forests; no one knows who erected them, or to 
 whom thc\' were erected. You will need a guide. Let me 
 advise you to engage Apula and his daughter."
 
 236 LOST IX NICARAGUA. 
 
 To all of this Leigh's heart responded. But he had lost 
 credit, as a counsellor, in plans of travel. His blunders 
 had cost his uncle too much money and anxiety already. 
 
 No, he must not advise the securing of Apula as a guide. 
 He must simply assent to the plans of the others, as the 
 youngest traveller ; but he did desire the old Indian's com- 
 pany in the long journey that he was about to take. Would 
 he ever see him acrain ?
 
 CHAPTER XXXI. 
 
 GUATEMALA, THE LAND OF THE QUETZAL. 
 
 GUATEMALA was the land of ancient glory, and it 
 promises again to become a garden, and its ports are 
 growing again. Here luscious oranges grow in a luxurious 
 abundance, without any danger from frost. The ports of 
 Guatemala lie only a few days' sail from Mobile and New 
 Orleans. Except for a sometime choppy sea the water is 
 serene and beautiful. Of this land of ancient splendor, and 
 of wonderful vegetation always, Livingston is the principal 
 port. 
 
 A delightful way to visit this country, which is the largest 
 of the five republics that promise to make up the new central 
 confederation, would be to go to San Erancisco, thence by 
 steamer to San Jose in Guatemala, whence there is a railroad 
 to Guatemala City, the magnificent. Or, again, to Panama, 
 and take a steamer to San Jose, and thence to the capital by 
 rail. The quick way is to go to New Orleans, thence by 
 boat direct to Livingston. 
 
 Livingston is a town of warehouses and huts; a store- 
 house of tropical fruits, whence one may take a steamer for 
 the Rio Dulce the sweet river. Sweet river it is. One 
 starts through a flower garden of waters, and sails through a 
 
 237
 
 23o LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 canon some ten miles long. Was there ever a canon like 
 this? We see the canons of the West; they rise barren and 
 bare, and overwhelm us with the grandeur of their gloom. 
 
 But here there are walls of flower gardens. Would you 
 behold the hanging gardens of Babylon with flowers that the 
 Median mountains never knew ; they are here. 
 
 Not cascades but vegetation pours over the walls, and 
 spreads its carpets of bloom down to the sweet waters. 
 
 What flowers are here ? One does not know. Go ask the 
 botanist. What tangles of berries, what marvels of leaves, 
 who can tell ? 
 
 The green walls look like the ruins of castles, and the 
 river winds and turns among them, turns and winds again. 
 
 Here and there a vine-colored arabesque of limestone 
 looks out amid the bloom a seeming gargoyle, as from the 
 broken walls of a mediaeval cathedral, in some gone-by 
 province of the times of the Palmers. 
 
 In and out. When will the narrow vistas break, and the 
 mountain fields appear ! 
 
 The veil is lifted ; the river broadens into a gulf, and the 
 gulf is a garden of islands, and the islands are abloom like 
 the walls of the canon. 
 
 The mountains rise and fill the air; great arms of the 
 Andes, which have only gone down at Panama to rise again. 
 Everything is vegetation, the shores, the islands, the moun- 
 tains. The earth here all turns into palms and balms and 
 blooms. 
 
 We are next in Lake Isabel, whose shores were once 
 famous for pottery. But amid these splendors, growing and 
 glowing, inviting the highest development of social life and
 
 GUATEMALA, THE LAND OF THE QUETZAL. 239 
 
 progress, what a scant and wretched population lined these 
 shores. The town of Isabel had only one public house, and 
 that was built of mud. The houses here were huts ; the 
 people followed the simple instincts of their animal nature ; 
 they seemed to care for nothing" more. They played the 
 iiarimba, an instrument of sweet-sounding sticks, they danced, 
 then idled. Time with them came and went ; they were 
 sorry to see it go, and that was all. 
 
 The sun came up day by day to serve them, to clothe them, 
 to make the shade a joy, and to provide them with food. 
 What did they want more ? 
 
 Through a narrow stream called the Polochic our travellers 
 entered the wilds of the mountain-shadowed world. The 
 river wound through swamps now and woods of monkeys, 
 baboons, and parrots. 
 
 The monkeys came to look at them, the baboons to gibber 
 at them, and the parrots to ask many questions in an un- 
 known tongue. 
 
 In the midst of 111 i s tangled land, where the inhabitants of 
 the woods came out on the branches to view the wonder of 
 the steamboat, the steam whistle blew. Erupit ! cvasit, the 
 monkeys were gone in the twinkling of an eye without any 
 adios. The parrots had no more questions to ask. They 
 knew it all now, whatever their wonder might have been. 
 
 "Toot ! toot ! " 
 
 Kven the little naked children ran to their mothers to 
 inquire what kind oi men were those who could thus cause 
 the monster to utter such an unexpected cry. 
 
 The river curved and wound about hither and thither. 
 The)- seemed going about hither and there, and making no
 
 24O LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 progress. " Toot ! toot ! " The canoemen held their paddles 
 to wonder. 
 
 They were on the verge of the great mahogany forests. 
 The trunks of ancient trees were flower gardens. The wild 
 orange was here, the orchid, the mighty ceiba, putting out 
 its giant arms to the light. 
 
 It was bird-land here, a bird aristocracy was here. 
 
 "Mere," said Captain Frobisher, "black crane and the 
 white crane ; here is the quaca, whose breast flames ; here 
 humming-birds hang in the flowers. 
 
 " Parrots, look at them colonies of them ! all asking 
 questions about the things that they do not know. Does 
 the royal quetzal live here ?" he asked of the pilot. 
 
 " Farther up," said the pilot. 
 
 Alligators were everywhere to be seen enjoying the sun. 
 Hideous were they ? Yes, but lovely in comparison with the 
 iguanas which were clothed in scales, and had an ugly-look- 
 ing pouch under their throats, with long snake-like tails, and 
 spines like a saw upon their backs. Some of them were five 
 feet long. 
 
 "I declare," said Captain Frobisher to the pilot, "those 
 iguanas are the ugliest looking reptiles I ever saw. They 
 look as though they would kill you, saw you up, and put you 
 in their pouches." 
 
 "They be very tender, very goot," said the pilot. "They 
 haf no offence." 
 
 " What do you mean, that they are gentle and harm- 
 less?" 
 
 " Yes, all that, Captain. And they are tender to eat, also, 
 and very goot."
 
 GUATEMALA, THE LAND OF THE QUETZAL. 24 1 
 
 "They do not look as though the)' had such double quali- 
 ties as those," said the captain. 
 
 The Indians here had the forbidding looks and amiable 
 qualities of the gentle iguana. 
 
 "Where are you travelling to ? " asked the pilot of Captain 
 Frobisher. 
 
 "To see a coffee plantation in the interior," said the 
 captain. 
 
 " It is a safe journey that you will haf," said the pilot. 
 "The Indians are all honest and true here." 
 
 So it was. The Indians are gentle and faithful, and they 
 bend their backs like beasts of burden and carry the travel- 
 lers' baggage in wooden cages strapped upon their shoulders. 
 
 They carry the coffee in this way from the plantations to 
 the sea, and none of it is ever stolen, and nothing entrusted 
 to them is ever lost. 
 
 A man here gets about a shilling a day for carrying a hun- 
 dred pounds at a rapid pace upon his back. Truly, truly, 
 these people need kindergarten schools.
 
 CHAPTER XXXII. 
 
 THE TRICK MULE EARTHQUAKE LAND. 
 
 GUATEMALA once included the whole of Central 
 America, but the historic part of this New England 
 of Spain was the country now lying on the Mexican border. 
 Here flourished and passed away a form of civilization like 
 that of the Incarial empire of Peru, and at about the same 
 period. The Spanish empire followed. The mysterious 
 period of the Aztecs and Quiches left the ruins of pyramids 
 and temples in this part of the peninsula ; and the Spanish 
 rule, magnificent churches tumbling into decay. What is to 
 follow ? In pagan times and in Christian eras it has been 
 faith that has toiled. There must be a revival of faith to 
 make a third era of development here; ignorance is every- 
 where. The great period of education is yet to come. 
 
 But the land is one fair garden of many climates. Here 
 are the most beautiful flowers in the world. The air is 
 a marvellous tree garden filled with bird and insect life. 
 
 The traveller Stephens has excited the imagination of the 
 world by his description of the ancient city of Utatlan, the 
 seat of the Quiche kings. 
 
 It was Leigh's desire to visit this city, and the comman- 
 dante offered mule boys, mules, and a guide. Captain Fro- 
 bisher became interested to visit this ruin. 
 
 242
 
 THE TRICK MULE. 243 
 
 The way was over the mountains, and was lined with dark 
 forests that changed color as new variations of climate 
 brought forth new flowers. 
 
 There were little villages and puestos along the way, with 
 long names ending in " ango " and " ult," with fountains and 
 eucalyptus trees in some of them. Orange trees were every- 
 where ; sweet lemons and citrons were to be found. Here 
 sapotes grew as large as apples, and some as large as cocoa- 
 nuts. The tiles of the roofs of houses were buried in the 
 flowers and foliage of creeping vines. Pinks, lilies, gladioli, 
 sunflowers, made happy families, and cacti were everywhere, 
 even on the trees, and maguey plants were used for fences. 
 
 Leigh had been given a mule which had bright trappings, 
 but a head of its own. It looked as meek as Moses at 
 starting, but had a habit of zigzagging in such a way as to 
 bring the rider's feet against the trees. 
 
 In one of the ascents on a mountain side, Leigh came to 
 some old orange trees loaded with fruit, and hung with fan- 
 tastic orchids. He drew the rein to gather some of the 
 oranges, when the mule went down all in a heap, leaving him 
 standing over her, as he quickly drew his feet from the 
 stirrups. 
 
 " What is the matter with the mule ? " asked Captain Fro- 
 bisher of the guide. " Is she going to die ? " 
 
 " .VeT, rf," said the guide, " she be a trick mule. Step 
 away from her a minute." 
 
 Leigh obeyed. The arriero gathered up a long cord 
 attached to the saddle, and began to strap her with it, utter- 
 ing some words of hard letters that sounded profane. 
 
 The little animal came to her feet.
 
 244 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " Look out for your legs if she serves you again like that," 
 said the guide. 
 
 " What is it that ails her ? " asked Leigh. " I have handled 
 her gently." 
 
 " Handled her gently ! " said the arriero. " It is the diablo 
 in her, the diablo in her head that makes her knees go down. 
 I can see it in her eyes now. Gar-r-r!" 
 
 Leigh had never heard of that disease before. He would 
 look for the word in the Spanish dictionary on his return. 
 
 They came to a roadside puesto, and asked for hospitality 
 for the night. 
 
 The Indians there were full of kindness, and took charge 
 of the mules ; but one of them going behind the trick mule 
 found that quality in them that some people call principle. 
 He did not use a word with many r's ; he was a pious 
 Indian, and rubbed his bruised leg and crossed himself. 
 
 " That is a vicious beast," said the captain. 
 
 " Can we have beds ? " he asked. 
 
 He found that they might have a mahogany bedstead if 
 they would use a board, lint hammocks were offered them. 
 After a supper of Juicvos (eggs) and more coffee la superba, 
 they trusted themselves to the care of the natives. 
 
 "These people cross themselves at every sign of evil," said 
 the captain, "and I feel safe. I am so tired that I am sure 
 of good rest to-night. Every bone in me is praying for rest." 
 
 " I never felt more sure of sleeping in all my life than 
 now," said Alonzo. 
 
 " I would wager a peso that I will be asleep before my 
 hammock gains its poise," said Leigh. 
 
 The three stood before their hammocks.
 
 EARTHQUAKE LAND. 245 
 
 " Well, it is a blessing to be sure of something in this 
 uncertain world," said the captain. 
 
 "Well, I am sure of sleep to-night and right off now," said 
 Alonzo. 
 
 "And I am sure of sleep after two winks," said Leigh. 
 
 The three travellers were just swinging into the hammocks 
 when their feet trembled. 
 
 A fearful shriek rent the air. It came from an Indian 
 woman. The Indian men were running out of the patio into 
 the fields. 
 
 " The house is shaking," said the captain. 
 
 "The tiles are breaking up," said Leigh. 
 
 "The earth is moving away," said Alonzo. 
 
 " I feel as though I were at sea," said Leigh. "Why are 
 the Indians running? I feel so strangely." 
 
 A hollow sound followed, as though there was a tempest in 
 the earth. 
 
 "Tcrrcmoto / " cried an Indian, running past the door, and 
 falling. 
 
 Our travellers rushed out. The building was staggering, 
 and the adobe was falling down. 
 
 The Indians were crossing themselves in the fields, and 
 crying, "Tcrrcmoto, Tcrrcmoto /" 
 
 The walls of the posada, if so the puesto might be called, 
 fell in, the sight of which sent the Indians upon their knees. 
 
 "We will never sleep in that house," said the captain. 
 " We were too sure for once. Hut we are safe here." 
 
 Night was tailing. There was a deep silence everywhere. 
 Birds were (lying about without uttering a cry, and sinking 
 upon the ground with quivering winirs.
 
 246 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The world seemed to darken at once. Suddenly, in the 
 far distance, rose a column of fire, like a pillar of the sky, 
 and the earth trembled again. 
 
 "Where are we?" asked Leigh. 
 
 " In earthquake land," said Captain Frobisher. " But we 
 are safe now." 
 
 " It is over," said one of the Indians. " We will have to 
 sleep in the fields to-night, Senor." 
 
 The three travellers lay down in the fields, but not to 
 sleep. The moon came up with a coppery hue, and a strange 
 odor filled the air. 
 
 They watched the column of fire as it burst from some far 
 volcano. It fell before morning, but as tired as they were 
 they could not sleep. 
 
 On the morrow they set out again for the ruined city. 
 
 The walls of many of the houses which they passed by 
 were broken. But the morning was full of freshness and 
 splendor, and the Indians seemed happy that the earth had 
 been merciful in sparing their lives. One would not like to 
 build in earthquake land.
 
 CHAPTER XXXIII. 
 
 THE MYSTERY OF PALENQUE AND THE UNKNOWN CITIES. 
 
 NEARLY fifty years ago, John Lloyd Stephens published 
 a work entitled " Incidents of Travel in Central Amer- 
 ica, Chiapas, and Yucatan." It was illustrated by Frederick 
 Catherwood, and became a classic. It gave a pen and pict- 
 ure view of the ruins of Central America which excited the 
 wonder of the world. 
 
 His accounts of Quiche and of Palenque may be regarded 
 as among two of the most marvellous chapters in the litera- 
 ture of travel. The readers will wish to know something 
 about the lost city of Palenque, in Yucatan. 
 
 In 1750 a party of Spanish travellers, probably seeking 
 for some new LI Dorado, entered the province of Chiapas. 
 They came to a vast solitude, and saw that it was the remains 
 of an ancient city, as vast as the greatest cities of the world 
 had been, and whose arts must have recalled Egypt. The 
 ruins, according to their account, were some twenty-four 
 miles in extent. They were afterwards reported to cover an 
 area of some sixty miles, and to be larger than London, 
 a claim that Mr. Stephens discredits. The city has been 
 overgrown with a thick and almost impenetrable forest, so 
 that its extent cannot now be known. Mr. Stephens assigns 
 to it an area of only twenty-five or thirty acres. 
 
 '17
 
 248 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 A part of the ancient palace and the images of unknown 
 heroes, called "idols," have survived the wreck of the once 
 populous streets and houses. The palace with the stuccoed 
 figures on the pilasters had not only been magnificent, but 
 furnished an example of art such as had not been found 
 before in the Western world. The golden temples of Peru 
 displayed no such development of the sense of beauty as the 
 ruins of Palenque. 
 
 The glory of this vast city rose and passed, before the 
 Eastern world had ever heard of the continent. The country 
 here was as populous as the land of the pyramids on the 
 Nile. 
 
 The records of kings, heroes, and imaginary gods, if such 
 they are, make the ruin a vast graveyard, which even the 
 Indians shun with superstitious awe. The few travellers 
 who go there, drive the birds and beasts away from the pal- 
 aces of splendid monarchs, who may have thought that the 
 sun was created and rose and set for them, and whose armies 
 dominated one of the fairest regions on earth. 
 
 The story of the ruined city of wonderful art and civiliza- 
 tion grew, and excited the attention of the antiquarians of 
 the world. In 1786 the King of Spain ordered an explora- 
 tion of the flowery land of desolation and mystery, and in 
 1787 the explorers, under a commission from the government 
 of Guatemala, went to Palenque. 
 
 The explorers may have been affected by their imagina- 
 tions, for in the report of Captain Del Rio, the commander, 
 an Egyptian origin was claimed for the ancient people, a 
 view very stimulating to the antiquarian. Poetic minds have 
 shown how there was once a continent called "Atlantis,''
 
 THE MYSTERY OF PALENQUE. 249 
 
 which communicated with the Nile regions, over which these 
 people came ; also how the same people were a lost tribe of 
 Israelites, who brought with them the arts of Egypt. 
 
 Think of it whether this city was once as great as the 
 early explorers believed it to be, or as restricted as it is 
 described by Mr. Stephens, it would have held rank, had it 
 been in Asia, with the great cities of the world. Its art 
 would have held a place among the wonders of the ages. 
 Yet we know not so much as its name. 
 
 Its kings and heroes rise in stone monuments before us, 
 with their eternal records wrapped, as it were, around them 
 yet who were they? They dreamed themselves immortal, 
 but none can read the language that relates their deeds. 
 Will the names of Homer, Shakespeare, and Newton some 
 day perish? Is oblivion only a matter of time? answer, 
 O pyramids of Palenque, Oxmal, Quiche, and Copan ! 
 
 Our travellers could not expect to visit Palenque nor 
 Quiche. But they studied these cities in Stephens' work, 
 with the wonderful Catherwood illustrations, and they hoped 
 to see Copan, which was on the highway to Guatemala 
 City and near the Atl".;/dc coast. 
 
 The description of Quiche in Stephens' work filled them 
 with this desire to see with their own eyes some of the fallen 
 monuments with which the tropical forests of Guatemala 
 abound. They did not expect to find the ruins of splendid 
 Christian churches here: no traveller does; but every ex- 
 plorer is astonished, whatever he may have been told, to 
 meet with crumbling structures oi the cross, not two cen- 
 turies old. The monkeys tenant them, the parrots, the bats. 
 Two civilizations have arisen, shone, and gone down in these
 
 250 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 vast gardens of nature's wonder-world. The third high 
 civilization must take the form of Christian education : that 
 education in which Christ is the great teacher ; the Sermon 
 on the Mount the text-book, and Froebel the interpreter to 
 the present age. Such education must come to all the coun- 
 tries of the South as an undenominational missionary move- 
 ment, as a force of evangelical faith ; spiritual education will 
 soon be the new missionary event of the world. 
 
 Quiche ? What of the wonder ? How may we rebuild 
 it in our fancy ? How see it alive, with its altars flaming, 
 its temples glowing, the processions of the kings filling 
 the streets with music, amid the glitter of gold and gems ? 
 Quiche was the city of the quetzal, the sacred bird ; what is 
 now left of the temples and palaces, where the bird, more 
 beautiful than the peacock, once recalled how beautiful 
 nature in her highest expression could be? 
 
 Stephens thus describes some of the scenes that he saw in 
 the ruins of this habitation of splendor, art, and beauty, where 
 the sculptors were the poets of the race, where the poems 
 yet live in stone, but which no human being may read : 
 
 "At half-past three, witli an alguazil running before us 
 and Bobon trotting behind, we set out again, and crossed a 
 gently rolling plain, with a distant side-hill on the left, hand- 
 somely wooded, and reminding us of scenes at home, except 
 that on the left was another immense barranca, with large 
 trees whose tops were 2000 feet below us. Leaving a vil- 
 lage on the right, we passed a small lake, crossed a ravine, 
 and rose to the plain of Quiche. At a distance on the left 
 were the ruins of the old city, the once large and opulent 
 capital of Utatlan, the court of the native kings of Quiche,
 
 THE MYSTERY OF PALEXQUE. 25 I 
 
 and the most sumptuous discovered by the Spaniards in this 
 part of America. It was a site worthy to be the abode of a 
 race of kings. We passed between two small lakes, rode 
 into the village, passed on, as usual, to the convent, which 
 stood beside the church, and stopped at the foot of a high 
 flight of stone steps. An old Indian on the platform told us 
 to walk in, and we spurred our mules up the steps, rode 
 through the corridor into a large apartment, and sent the 
 mules down another flight of steps into a yard enclosed by a 
 high stone fence. The convent was the first erected in the 
 country by the Dominican friars, and dated from the time of 
 Alvarado. It was built entirely of stone, with massive walls 
 and corridors, pavements, and courtyard strong enough for a 
 fortress ; but most of the apartments were desolate or filled 
 with rubbish ; one was used for sacate, another for corn, and 
 another fitted up as a roosting place for fowls. The padre 
 had gone to another village, his own apartments were locked, 
 and we were shown into one adjoining, about thirty feet 
 square, and nearly as high, with stone floor and walls, and 
 without a single article in it except a shattered and weather- 
 beaten soldier in one corner, returning from campaigns in 
 Mexico. As we had brought with us nothing but our 
 ponchas, and the nights in that region were very cold, we 
 were unwilling to risk sleeping on the stone floor, and with 
 the padre's Indian servant went to the alcalde, who, on the 
 strength ot Carrcra's passport, gave us the audience-room of 
 the cabildo, which had at one end a raised platform with a 
 railing, a table, and two long benches with high backs. 
 Adjoining was the prison, being merely an enclosure of four 
 high stone walls, without any roof, and filled with more than
 
 252 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 the usual number of criminals, some of whom, as we looked 
 through the gratings, we saw lying on the ground with only 
 a few rags of covering, shivering in the cold. The alcalde 
 provided us with supper, and promised to procure us a guide 
 to the ruins. 
 
 " Early in the morning, with a Mestitzo armed with a long, 
 basket-hilted sword, who advised us to carry our weapons, as 
 the people were not to be trusted, we set out for the ruins. 
 At a short distance we passed another immense barranca, 
 down which, but a few nights before, an Indian, chased by 
 alguazils, either fell or threw himself off into the abyss, 
 1400 feet deep, and was dashed to pieces. At about a mile 
 from the village we came to a range of elevations, extending 
 to a great distance, and connected by a ditch, which had 
 evidently formed the line of fortifications of the ruined city. 
 They consisted of the remains of stone buildings, probably 
 towers, the stones well cut and laid together, and the mass of 
 rubbish around abounded in flint arrowheads. Within this 
 line was an elevation, which grew more imposing as we ap- 
 proached, square, with terraces, and having in the centre a 
 tower, in all 120 feet high. We ascended by steps to three 
 ranges of terrace, and on the top entered an area enclosed 
 by stone walls, and covered with hard cement, in many 
 places still perfect. Thence we ascended by stone steps to 
 the top of the tower, the whole of which was formerly 
 covered with stucco, and stood as a fortress at the entrance 
 of the great city of Utatlan, the capital of the kingdom of 
 the Quiche Indians. 
 
 "According to Fuentes, the chronicler of the kingdom of 
 Guatemala, the kings of Quiche and Kachiquel were de-
 
 THE MYSTERY OF PALENQUE. 253 
 
 scended from the Toltecan Indians, who, when they came 
 into this country, found it already inhabited by people of 
 different nations. According to the manuscript of Don Juan 
 Torres, the grandson of the last King of the Quiches, which 
 was in the possession of the lieutenant-general appointed by 
 Pedro de Alvarado, and which Fuentes says he obtained by 
 means of Father Francis Vasques, the historian of the order 
 of San Francis, the Toltecas themselves descended from the 
 house of Israel, who were released by Moses from the tyr- 
 anny of Pharaoh, and after crossing the Red Sea fell into 
 idolatry. To avoid the reproofs of Moses, or from fear of his 
 inflicting upon them some chastisement, they separated from 
 him and his brethren, and under the guidance of Tanub, their 
 chief, passed from one continent to the other, to a place 
 which they called the seven caverns, a part of the kingdom 
 of Mexico, where they founded the celebrated city of Tula. 
 From Tanub sprang the families of the kings of Tula and 
 Quiche, and the first monarch of the Toltecas. Nimaquiche, 
 the fifth king of that line, and more beloved than any of his 
 predecessors, was directed by the oracle to leave Tula, with 
 his people, who had by this time multiplied greatly, and con- 
 duct them from the kingdom of Mexico to that of Guatemala. 
 In performing this journey, they consumed many years, suf- 
 fered extraordinary hardships, and wandered over an immense 
 tract of country, until they discovered the Lake of Atitlan, 
 and resolved to settle near it in a country which they called 
 Quiche. 
 
 " Nimaquiche was accompanied by three brothers, and it 
 was agreed to divide the new country between them. Nima- 
 quiche died ; his son Axcopil became the chief of the Quiches,
 
 254 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Kachiquels, and Zutugiles, and was at the head of his nation 
 when they settled in Quiche, and the first monarch who 
 reigned in Utatlan. Under him the monarchy rose to a high 
 degree of splendor. To relieve himself from some of the 
 fatigues of administration, he appointed thirteen captains, or 
 governors, and at a very advanced age divided his empire 
 into three kingdoms, viz., the Quiche, the Kachiquel, and the 
 Zutugil, retaining the first for himself, and giving the second 
 to his eldest son, Jintemal, and the third to his youngest son, 
 Acxigual. This division was made on a day when three suns 
 were visible at the same time, which extraordinary circum- 
 stance, says the manuscript, has induced some persons to 
 believe that it was made on the day of our Savior's birth. 
 There were seventeen Toltecan kings who reigned in Utatlan, 
 the capital of Quiche, whose names have come down to pos- 
 terity ; but they are so hard to write out that I will take it for 
 granted the reader is familiar with them. 
 
 "As we stood on the ruined fortress of Resguardo, the 
 great plain, consecrated by the last struggle of a great peo- 
 ple, lay before us grand and beautiful, its blood stains all 
 washed out, and smiling with fertility, but perfectly desolate. 
 Our guide leaning on his sword in the area was the only per- 
 son in sight. But very soon Bobon introduced a stranger, 
 who came stumbling along under a red silk umbrella, talking 
 to Bobon, and looking up at us. We recognized him as the 
 cura, and descended to meet him. He laughed to see us grope 
 our way down. By degrees his laugh became infectious, and 
 when we met we all laughed together. All at once he stopped, 
 looked very solemn, pulled off his neck cloth and wiped the 
 perspiration from his face, took out a paper of cigars, laughed,
 
 THE MYSTERY OF PALENQUE. 255 
 
 thrust them back, pulled out another, as he said, of Habane- 
 ras, and asked what was the news from Spain. 
 
 "The whole area was once occupied by the palace, semi- 
 nary, and other buildings of the royal house of Quiche, 
 which now lie for the most part in confused and shapeless 
 masses of ruins. The palace, as the cura told us, with its 
 courts and corridors, once covering the whole diameter, is 
 completely destroyed, and the materials have been carried 
 away to build the present village. In part, however, the 
 floor remains entire, with fragments of the partition walls, 
 so that the plan of the apartments can be distinctly made 
 out. This floor is of a hard cement, which, though vear 
 alter year washed by the floods of the rainy season, is hard 
 and durable as stone. The inner walls were covered with 
 plaster of a finer description, and in corners where there had 
 been less exposure were the remains of colors : no doubt 
 the whole interior had been ornamented with paintings. It 
 gave a strange sensation to walk the floor of that roofless 
 palace, and think of that king who had left it at the head 
 of 70,000 men to repel the invaders of his empire. Corn 
 was now growing among the ruins. The ground was used 
 by an Indian family, which claimed to be descended from the 
 royal house. In one place was a desolate hut, occupied by 
 them at the time of planting and gathering the corn. Ad- 
 joining the palace was a large plaza, or courtyard, also 
 covered with cement, in the centre of which were the relics 
 dt a fountain. 
 
 "The most important part remaining of these ruins is that 
 which is called Kl Sacriticatorio, or the place of sacrifice. It is 
 a quadrangular stone structure, sixty-six teet on each side at
 
 256 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 its base, and rising in pyramidal form to the height, in its pres- 
 ent condition, of thirty-three feet. On three sides there is a 
 range of steps in the middle, each step seventeen inches high, 
 and but eight inches on the upper surface, which makes the 
 range so steep that in descending some caution is necessary. 
 At the corners there are four buttresses of cut stone, dimin- 
 ishing in size from the line of the square, and apparently 
 intended to support the structure. On the side facing the 
 west there are no steps, but the surface is smooth and 
 covered with stucco, gray from long exposure. By break- 
 ing a little at the corners, we saw that there were different 
 layers of stucco, doubtless put in at different times, and all 
 had been ornamented with painted figures. In one place we 
 made out part of the body of a leopard, well drawn and 
 colored. 
 
 " The top of the Sacrificatorio is broken and ruined, but 
 there is no doubt that it once supported an altar for those 
 sacrifices of human victims which struck even the Spaniards 
 with horror. It was barely large enough for the altar and 
 officiating priests, and the idol to whom the sacrifice was 
 offered. 
 
 " The barbarous ministers carried up the victim nearly 
 naked, pointed out the idol to which the sacrifice was made, 
 that the people might pay their adorations, and then extended 
 him upon the altar. This had a convex surface, and the body 
 of the victim lay arched, with the trunk elevated and the 
 head and feet depressed. Four priests held the legs and 
 arms, and another kept his head firm with a wooden instru- 
 ment, made in the form of a coiled serpent, so that he was 
 prevented from making the least movement. The head
 
 THE MYSTERY OF I'ALENQUE. 257 
 
 priest then approached, and with a knife made of flint cut 
 an aperture in the breast, and tore out the heart, which, yet 
 palpitating, he offered to the sun, and then threw it at the 
 feet of the idol. If the idol was gigantic and hollow, it was 
 usual to induce the heart of the victim into its mouth with a 
 golden spoon. If the victim was a prisoner of war, as soon 
 as he was sacrificed they cut off the head to preserve the 
 skull, and threw the body down the steps, when it was taken 
 up by the officer or soldier to whom the prisoner belonged, 
 and carried to his house to be dressed and served up as an 
 entertainment for his friends. If he was not a prisoner of 
 war, but a slave purchased for the sacrifice, the proprietor 
 carried off the body for the same purpose. In recurring to 
 the barbarous scenes of which the spot had been the theatre, 
 it seemed a righteous award that the bloody altar was hurled 
 down, and the race of its ministers destroyed."
 
 CHAPTER XXXIV. 
 
 A PHILOSOPHICAL MONKEY. 
 
 IF our travellers could not well visit the mysterious ruins of 
 Palenque or Quiche, they could go to see the tall monu- 
 ments of Quiriqua, an easier journey of a few clays by water, 
 and the royal road, and this they determined to do. They 
 secured a negro guide at Lake Isabel, and set out in a 
 mahogany boat at first, then over the public way. Their 
 journey lay over magnificent elevations, commanding wide 
 and enchanting prospects, and through forests of mahogany 
 and cedar, in which a thousand parrots, and many monkeys, 
 inquired why they had come. 
 
 The monuments of Quiriqua are called " idols," though 
 whether or not they were ever used for the latter purpose 
 can never be known, until some " Egyptologist " or, rather, 
 " Guatemalologist," shall find the lost key to the inscrip- 
 tion left by the vanished race, whose records are now a 
 mystery. 
 
 The first monument that they met in the great forest grave- 
 yard was curious indeed, with the front of a man and the 
 back of a woman. It rose some twenty feet above the 
 ground, and was covered with inscriptions, every letter of 
 which represented a lost art. 
 
 Near it, like a leaning tower, was an obelisk, some twenty- 
 
 25S
 
 A PHILOSOPHICAL MONKEY. 259 
 
 six feet high. On it were sculptured two, probably royal, 
 heads, but whose, the visitor could know no more than the 
 trees. 
 
 They sat down under the trees, at the base of what had 
 been a pyramidal wall, and surveyed the zigzag repositories 
 of history and legend around them. 
 
 The guide prepared for them their comida (dinner) there. 
 He spread out his tortillas, and kindled a fire, and boiled 
 a number of hucvos (eggs), which he had brought with him 
 for the purpose. 
 
 Parrots gathered around the place, and seemed to be hold- 
 ing a convention. Monkeys gathered near, on the trees, and 
 held a council, or conference meeting, or, perhaps, an inquiry 
 meeting. There was one venerable-looking monkey to whom 
 the others seemed to look for wisdom. He dropped down 
 carefully from limb to limb, and glanced from time to time 
 significantly at the others some of whom were little rogues 
 in appearance, as much so in habits, as the end of their delib- 
 erations proved. 
 
 Having wandered away from the place of the fire, while the 
 food was preparing, cutting down bushes around half-sunken 
 monuments, with their machetes, the travellers became lost to 
 the view of the guide, and he came to look for them, crying, 
 
 "Comida, Senores ! " 
 
 They returned with him to the meal, very hungry, when 
 they saw his eyes widen and heard him cry out, as in a spasm. 
 
 The tortillas had vanished ; so had the eggs, and every- 
 thing. 
 
 The little monkeys were gone, and the parrots seemed to 
 be laughing or wondering, when they saw the old philosopher
 
 260 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 of the monkey colony looking down upon them, from a high 
 limb of a tree to which he had ascended. 
 
 The guide saw him, and hurled terrible words at him. He 
 seemed to have a lively sense of the disappointments of this 
 world, and he pointed to some vines at a little distance. 
 
 They went to the place, and found under them the cooked 
 eggs, but no monkeys. The latter had fled, like a village at 
 some terrible news. Why had they gone ? 
 
 The guide began to pick up the eggs. He dropped one, 
 shaking his fingers. 
 
 " Caliente (hot)," said he. 
 
 " That was what the little monkeys said to each other 
 before they made their adios," exclaimed the captain. 
 
 "You are right," said the guide. "The eggs burned their 
 fingers, and they seem to have all found it out in one place ; 
 they could not hold them to run up the lianas." 
 
 They gathered up the eggs and looked up to the tree for 
 the philosopher, but he too had gone. What the monkeys 
 had to say to each other at their next conference meeting 
 we do not know ; probably that eggs are not desirable for 
 food. 
 
 The interest which these tall monuments had awakened 
 led the travellers to desire to go onward to Copan, which 
 was near. Here a great city, whose very name was now 
 lost, had been. 
 
 Copan lies in the Honduras district in a fertile valley, 
 famous for its tobacco. Here are the ruins of a temple, 
 whose river wall is more than six hundred feet long and 
 nearly ninety feet high. It is thought that here rose gigantic 
 monuments that faced the river.
 
 A PHILOSOPHICAL MONKEY. 26 1 
 
 To have seen this temple in the day of its glory, with its 
 gates, its wide avenues, its painted and sculptured walls, and 
 its probable ornaments of gold, silver, and gems, would have 
 been to have taken a view of the New World in the day of its 
 barbarian glory. Magnificent " idols," statues, and monu- 
 ments were everywhere to be found. What sculptors must 
 have lived here ! what schools of sculpture must have opened 
 their doors to the sun ! One of the most beautiful of these 
 monuments was larger at the top than at the bottom. 
 
 They did not lose their dinner here, but spread it on a 
 sculptured altar amid the fallen terraces of kings.
 
 CHAPTER XXXV. 
 
 A GUATEMALA COFFEE PLANTATION. 
 
 OUR travellers had seen many coffee estates on their 
 long journey, but never one like that which they were 
 now about to visit in the plateau of Guatemala. It belonged 
 to an Englishman, who derived an almost fabulous income 
 from it; but it was in charge of an American to whom Cap- 
 tain Frobisher had letters of introduction. The latter's name 
 was Holme. 
 
 The plantation occupied hundreds of acres, a sun land 
 under mountain shadows. 
 
 " The most beautiful sight in all the gardens of the world," 
 said Eeigh Frobisher, as the plantation came into view. The 
 planter's house was covered with airy verandas, open doors, 
 and latticed windows. Tall trees spread over it right-angled 
 limbs, like priests at the benediction. 
 
 They entered the grounds on muleback. 
 
 The coffee plants were some six or more feet high and 
 were covered with crimson berries. They were arranged in 
 long rows, or gardens, covering many acres, and were sub- 
 divided by avenues of bowery trees. 
 
 The house was like an island in a sea of flowers. 
 
 Senor Holme, although a stranger, received the party as 
 
 262
 
 A GUATEMALA COFFEE PLANTATION. 263 
 
 though they were a part of his own family. He had learned 
 the delights of Spanish hospitality. His wife, the seiiora, 
 had caught the same spirit. 
 
 The house on the inside had French furniture, and with its 
 slender form seemed like a structure of the air. 
 
 After a tropical meal, they were taken out to view the 
 place. 
 
 " My nephew, Master Alonzo," said Captain Frobisher, 
 " has been studying the coffee trade somewhat in the South 
 American ports. We have seen some small coffee fields, but 
 never an estate like this." 
 
 They rode out into the bright, glowing coffee gardens, 
 under the shade of the long avenue of trees. The coffee 
 plants stood in rows on every hand. 
 
 " There seems not to be a weed anywhere," said Alonzo 
 to Senor Holme. 
 
 " No, the peons do their work thoroughly," said the senor. 
 " We pay our Indian workmen, which is not clone on many 
 plantations." 
 
 " How do they secure the service of Indians on other 
 plantations ? " asked Captain Frobisher, in some surprise. 
 
 " When a grandee purchases an estate on which are 
 Indians, he allows the Indians to live there and exacts their 
 work as rent." 
 
 " But is not that slavery ? " asked Leigh. 
 
 "A kind of slavery," said the senor. "The English 
 plantations are conducted, as a rule, with fairness towards the 
 peons, though the Indian labor costs little, a real or shilling, 
 or twelve and a hall cents a day, a small sum compared 
 with the pay for like work in the States."
 
 264 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " How much coffee does an estate like this produce ? " 
 asked the captain. 
 
 " A thousand or more quintals yearly," said the planter. 
 
 " Will you tell us how the crop is produced ? " asked 
 Alonzo in intense interest. 
 
 " Yes ; but the fields tell their own story. 
 
 " You see the stems, the drooping branches, and the red 
 berries. The leaves in the early season are of a deep green, 
 the flowers are small and white and fragrant. 
 
 " You see what the red berries are. I will pick some for 
 you and we will examine them." 
 
 The planter secured some of the cranberry-like berries. 
 They consisted of a pulp, in which were two seeds which 
 grew facing each other, but with oval sides. 
 
 The gardens were shaded. In one part of them were 
 beautiful trees with overhanging branches, in another part 
 were lofty banana leaves. The planter explained that the 
 coffee plant requires shade, as does the South American 
 cocoa. As the planter becomes rich, he employs many oxen, 
 and uses expensive machinery. 
 
 " We pick the berries," explained the planter, "and run 
 them with water through a pulping machine which separates 
 the kernel from the pulp. The coffee is then dried in the 
 sun. It is then picked over, graded, and bagged, and taken 
 to the port by oxen, mules, or on the backs of Indians. 
 
 "The coffee crop here goes to England and Germany. It 
 is exported from Champerio and other ports." 
 
 "What are the profits of a coffee plantation?" asked 
 Alonzo. 
 
 " A large coffee plantation produces a very large income.
 
 A GUATEMALA COFFEE PLANTATION. 265 
 
 It is claimed that after six years it will yield yearly an income 
 as large as the original cost. The owners of the coffee plan- 
 tations become rich men ; the crop does not fail, and a ready 
 market awaits the superior berry." 
 
 As they rode along under the bowery avenues, Leigh 
 looked up to the mountains. 
 
 "Do you ever find rare birds in the mountain forests?" 
 he asked. 
 
 " Yes, my lad, some very curious birds and animals. Are 
 you an ornithologist?" 
 
 " I have been trying to secure a few specimens of rare 
 birds. I found a quetzal in Nicaragua, and was very much 
 gratified to have such a treasure to take home with us, when 
 I found that, it was not the royal bird of the caciques, and 
 the national emblem of Guatemala, but of an inferior family 
 of the species." 
 
 " Would you like a true quetzal ? " 
 
 " Nothing would please me more, Sehor." 
 
 "I will let one of the Indians find one for you, my young 
 friend. Yon shall go with him, if you like. The Indians 
 here are to be trusted, and there is nothing that they are not 
 glad to do for a. white stranger. I will make you acquainted 
 with one oi the Indians who is skilled in hunting." 
 
 " It might be hard to secure a quetzal alive," ventured 
 Leigh. 
 
 "Trust to the Indian, my bow trust to him. He will get 
 for you a live quetzal, it any one can. You shall surely have 
 a royal bird to take back to the States as a souvenir ot 
 Guatemala ! " 
 
 The Indian secured a quetzal. It was a beautiful bird.
 
 266 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 He put it into Leigh's hands. The bird struggled. Its 
 plumes came off. In his attempt to handle it lightly, he let 
 it escape. It tried to reach a tree, but fell upon the ground, 
 torn and dead.
 
 CHAPTER XXXVI. 
 
 PEQUENA PARIS : A CITY OF SURPRISE. 
 
 FIVE thousand feet above the sea level stands Guatemala 
 City, and the first view of it is an astonishment. The 
 traveller who crosses the flat, dreary Canadian plains, and is 
 brought suddenly into view of the glorious city of Montreal, 
 wonders if he is not dreaming or bereft of his senses. He 
 has not expected to find a city so vast and beautiful. So 
 with the tourist over the weary mountain roads of Guate- 
 mala -he does not expect to come upon a mountain glory 
 in the city of the high valley or plateau. 
 
 The climate here is said to be one of the most beautiful on 
 earth. It has the charm of being no climate at all no hay. 
 Heat and cold have disappeared; it is such an atmosphere as 
 a poet might picture in some ideal and visioned world. Here 
 the roses might weave their wreath around the year. In the 
 dry season every day is sunshine. In the rainy season the 
 clouds come suddenly every day ; the rain falls deliciously, and 
 then the clouds dissolve in splendor and all is bright again. 
 
 Nearly fifty thousand inhabitants enjoy these balmy airs 
 ol the city of the mountain solitudes, which is only about one 
 hundred and twenty-five years old. The old capital Antiqua 
 went down, and this city rose in its place. It cannot be said as 
 
 267
 
 268 LOST IX NICARAGUA. 
 
 of Caracas that Guatemala City sleeps in her own grave, for 
 Antiqua lies in ruin some thirty miles away. 
 
 One is at home here in these far mountains. There are 
 no " dont's " here. The horse-car and the electric lights 
 are here, and the streets are hospitable, broad, and firmly 
 paved. Parks are here, pleasant squares, and very beautiful 
 gardens, all balm and bloom. 
 
 And the quetzal is here, the true quetzal, that outvies 
 with his plumes the rarest orchids and lustrous green of the 
 palm, the balsam, and vine. Here is the city of the quetzal. 
 The bird of the sun in its trailing splendor stands for the 
 state. 
 
 The public buildings are the angles and proportions of 
 beauty. The houses are low, but they enclose squares of 
 flowers, birds, and tasteful adornments, that cause the visi- 
 tors' feet to move slowly, as is the case in the suburbs of 
 Montevideo, or in Belgrano and Flores, the beautiful sub- 
 urbs of Buenos Ayres. 
 
 Does one wish to hide from the world, to shut out the 
 social pressure upon him, to hear nothing of far-away dis- 
 sensions, suicides, defalcations, human afflictions? -here is a 
 place for him to rest. 
 
 The houses look like prisons at first until their iron doors 
 are opened. Then all is brightness, verdure, bloom, and 
 beauty. 
 
 The Grand Hotel we are not advertising- is a place 
 where one may find a hearty English welcome, and feel that 
 there beat honest hearts within, and fifty thousand hearts 
 as honest around him. " Dont's " are not a part of the 
 habit of the streets and squares, so the cheats and thieves
 
 PEQUEXA PARIS : A CITV OF SURPRISE. 269 
 
 and book agents, and people who would benefit themselves 
 in the name of the varied needs of humanity, do not bother 
 you here. They talk Spanish here, and English and 
 German. 
 
 The hotel is two stories high, and it encloses a square, 
 and from the balcony on the inside one looks down on a 
 Guatemalan garden. 
 
 How lovely is this garden, from which rises a fountain. 
 The palm is here, the orange tree, the peach, the flowers 
 that nestle in vines. It is the home of the busy and inquisi- 
 tive parrot and native birds. The sky is its roof, and the 
 stars come to visit it at night, when the fountain plashes and 
 the birds have put their heads under their wings. 
 
 One has pancakes with honey and fried plantains on his 
 breakfast bill here, and coffee la sitpcrba, and the chocolate 
 of the country, and the fruits of the same ; one has for din- 
 ner almost everything, and everything one may call for during 
 the rest of the day. One may have coffee and sweet bread 
 brought to one's room before rising if one so desires, when 
 the birds are singing and the sun is pouring his splendors 
 over the dewy palm lands, and causing even the lazy quet- 
 zal to move about and shake its gorgeous feathers. 
 
 The Great Plaza the Plaza Mayor is a place to which 
 it is a delight to return. Here is a cathedral, built by the 
 Spaniards in the days of fabulous riches, that recalls the 
 cathedral of Lima and that of Mexico. One wonders how 
 such a structure should have found a place here. The gov- 
 ernment buildings are fine. The cathedral does not stand 
 alone among the surprising splendors. There are other 
 churches of great beauty built in the Spanish period. We
 
 2/0 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 speak of Spain as cruel and wanting in a sense of justice, 
 but one wonders at the development of religious instinct as 
 illustrated by such piles of reverent beauty as one finds in a 
 wilderness like this. What pleasing frescoes! what curious 
 paintings ! what dazzling altars ! 
 
 But the market is the place of merriment, and one turns 
 from the squares of cacti to it, with new wonder daily. Here 
 the Indians come down from the mountains with their wares. 
 As honest as they are, they compete and barter, and kill time 
 by market talk. The Indian women arc clever, and the 
 girls are beautiful, and the latter follow you about with bas- 
 kets on their heads, which answer for express wagons in tak- 
 ing away your purchases. What fruits are here ! what 
 flowers ! what vegetables ! One feels here that this is a 
 most beautiful world, and wonders why the holiday does not 
 last forever. 
 
 There is an English school here, and a very prosperous 
 one, and to the traveller from the States it has the attraction 
 of a song of the homeland. Guatemala City is a place of 
 colegios and schools, the fruit of the policy of President 
 Barrios. The boys' school here has some three hundred 
 pupils. It has a gymnasium and a museum. The geological 
 garden contains all the principal animals and birds of the 
 country, and the botanical garden is a revelation of the 
 resources of the Guatemalan world. 
 
 But with all this arc the evidences of a progressive spirit 
 everywhere. The little Paris, in the far, far mountains of 
 the vanished races, is one of the rarely conditioned spots of 
 the world. 
 
 From Guatemala City our travellers visited a remarkable
 
 PEOUEN'A PARIS: A CITY OF SURPRISE. 2"] \ 
 
 little republic, than which few places more ideal are to be 
 found. 
 
 THE LITTLE REPUBLIC THAT WINS SUCCESS. 
 
 San Salvador is a wonder, and the wonder grows ; she is 
 the little republic that in prosperity may be said to outdo 
 the others. San Salvador has an area of only about seven 
 thousand square miles, is only one hundred and eighty-six 
 miles long, and of varying narrowness ; and yet, relatively, she 
 is the richest and most densely populated state in Central 
 America, and in the wonders of her physical features is in 
 some respects one of the most interesting. She has one of 
 the most curious volcanoes in the world, a chimney of fire 
 in a lake. 
 
 The plains here are ancient ashes, and the crust of these 
 when broken is most fertile. Here one rides on craters of 
 long-dead volcanoes, and knows it not. Here the air is a 
 splendor, the mountains a glory, and existence a charm. 
 The mountains overshadow the plantations, and the deep sea 
 lies placid before them. Everything seems to grow here, 
 and coffee is wealth. Like the Yellowstone Park, the land 
 is full of strange springs and lakes in a state of ebullition, 
 earths of many colors caused by gases, and ausoles, or ground 
 eruptions, that deposit these variegated clays. 
 
 The volcano ol Izalco is a wonder, it belongs to those 
 that haw: made their appearance since the time of discovery. 
 ( )n February 23, 1770, the earth suddenly opened and poured 
 forth a fiery mass ol lava and smoke. Then a cone began 
 to rise above the earth, and has continued to rise, grow, and 
 expand, sending into the air a column ol smoke.
 
 2J2 LOST IN' NICARAGUA. 
 
 This smoke once enshrouded a body of fire, which was 
 emitted with tremendous explosions. It was a natural light- 
 house to the still Pacific, and was called " Faro del Salvador" 
 (the lighthouse of Salvador). 
 
 There came to the new wonder a period of rest in 1866, 
 when two naturalists ascended it, and found there three 
 craters, one of which hissed and rumbled. 
 
 As wonderful is Lage Yelopango, which is some sixteen 
 hundred feet above the sea, and has an area of twenty-four 
 miles. 
 
 This lake seems to have moved about. In 1873 it was 
 raised up, with a violent agitation, and in 1879 it was in like 
 manner raised again. 
 
 It was dammed up, but made for itself a channel. In 
 fifty or more days it fell some thirty-five feet. The waters 
 smoked, flamed, and boiled, and islands rose in the midst of 
 the seething waters. 
 
 When this period of agitation was over, there remained in 
 the lake a single smoking chimney of hard lava, one hundred 
 and sixty feet high, and one of the most curious objects of 
 the recent miracles of the natural world. 
 
 (See The Earth and its Inhabitants, Vol. II. D. Apple- 
 ton & Co.) 
 
 It is a land of volcanoes, and the view of the Pacific and 
 the palm regions from some of them is most glorious. Here, 
 too, the earth trembles from time to time, and the city of 
 San Salvador has been overthrown some seven times in three 
 hundred years, or during the historic period. 
 
 The inhabitants arc largely of Spanish-Indian descent. 
 The native Indians cultivate maize and bananas.
 
 SAN SALVADOR. 273 
 
 The population of this volcanic country has grown from 
 1 17,436, in 1778, to 777,895, in 1891, being now about seventy 
 inhabitants to the square mile. 
 
 To the planters it was formerly a land of indigo ; now it is 
 a garden of coffee and sugar, from which a great revenue 
 is derived. 
 
 It has fine carriage roads, which bring the produce down 
 to the sea. 
 
 San Salvador was formerly a part of the viceroyalty of 
 Guatemala. She achieved her independence of Spain in 
 1 82 1. The President is elected for a term of four years. 
 The national assembly is elected yearly. 
 
 San Salvador, the capital, has twenty thousand inhabi- 
 tants. 
 
 Primary school education here is free and compulsory, 
 and though a Catholic state, all religions are tolerated. In 
 1890, 355 steamers entered its ports. 
 
 These facts make an ideal picture of the people of 
 a land that is very narrow and less than 200 miles long, 
 a part of which shakes, trembles, and moves about, and 
 whose income from coffee alone is more than 4,000,000 
 pesos. 
 
 The bit of a republic, so active and progressive, exported 
 to the United States, in 1 890-1891, eoffee to the value of 
 $1,670,869. 
 
 The forests of San Salvador are beautiful. Here is the 
 land of balsams and healing plants, of which there is a large 
 export to the United States. 
 
 The little land of progress is reached from New York via 
 Panama, a distance of nearly 3000 miles, and from San 
 
 T
 
 274 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 Francisco, a distance of 2499 miles, in sixteen days, at a 
 fare of $100. 
 
 The travellers returned to the Atlantic coast by the way of 
 Coban. Their journey had been one of remarkable scenes, 
 but they had not yet secured a quetzal.
 
 CHAPTER XXXVII. 
 
 NO HAY AND " NO SE. 
 
 " J Z OIL A les Etats Unis!" was the cry that greeted our 
 travellers as they rode into an Indian town, on their 
 way to the beautiful Indian city of Coban. The place was 
 some five thousand feet above the level of the sea. They 
 were very tired after a long ride, and they sunk down 
 under a shed in which stood a row of mules. 
 
 Leigh was the least fatigued, and he began to seek to 
 make arrangements for the comfort of the party. 
 
 "Where is the tavern ? " he asked of the muleteer. 
 
 " No hay (there is none)," said the easy-going man. "No 
 hay, Senor." 
 
 " What do travellers do who arrive here at night without 
 friends?" continued Leigh. 
 
 "No sc (I do not know)," answered the muleteer. " A T o 
 st\ Senor." 
 
 "Where is the posada (lodging house)?" 
 
 "No hay, no hay, Senor." 
 
 "Where is the cabildo (town house)?" 
 
 "No hay, no hay, Senor it is the jail." 
 
 " Do they lodge travellers in the jail here?" asked Leigh.
 
 2/6 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " Si, Sen or." 
 
 " Where can we find a supper ? " 
 
 " Aqui (here)." 
 
 "Bucno" said Leigh. The muleteer went into his long hut 
 which stood under an immense hill, with sheltering arms high 
 in the air. In front of the hut, women were rubbing coffee 
 berries, separating the pulp from the kernel. 
 
 " Tortillas" said the muleteer to one of the women, who 
 was probably his wife. 
 
 Leigh went back to Captain Frobisher and Alonzo and 
 informed them, to their joy, that he had ordered a supper in 
 the house. 
 
 They waited to be called to the meal, for which they had 
 a mountain appetite. 
 
 But there is plenty of time in Guatemala, and time to 
 spare. 
 
 "When will the supper be ready?" asked Alonzo of the 
 muleteer at last, impatiently. 
 
 " No se, Senor." 
 
 The man went to the kitchen, which in this case was 
 the whole house, and after more spare time, of which there 
 seemed to be plenty, he beckoned to the weary, hungry party 
 from the door. 
 
 Our travellers started up. The odor of the tortillas (cakes) 
 filled the room. 
 
 There was a board for a table, and on this the cakes were 
 set, with frijoles (black beans). Black coffee followed. 
 They were impatient to eat. 
 
 " A knife ? " said Captain Frobisher. " Confavor. ,y 
 
 " No hay" answered the woman. "A machete?"
 
 "no hay and "no se." 277 
 
 "No, no," said Captain Frobishcr. " CucJiillo (knife)." 
 
 "No hay, Scnor." 
 
 "Fork, Scnora ?" 
 
 " No hay, Scnor." 
 
 " Spoon, Scnora?" 
 
 " No hay, Scnor." 
 
 "We cannot cat without knife, fork, or spoon," said 
 Leigh. 
 
 " But how did people cat when there were no knives, forks, 
 or spoons?" asked Captain Frobishcr. "I am so hungry 
 that I am going back to that time." 
 
 He did. He found that fingers had their ancient power of 
 service. The boys followed his example. 
 
 The cakes were excellent, the black beans good, and the 
 coffee bitter. 
 
 "Milk, Scnora," said Leigh. 
 
 " A T o hay, Scnor." 
 
 She added, " I will go and fetch some." 
 
 But our travellers could not wait. 
 
 " Beds," said Captain Frobishcr. " Beds for the night." 
 
 She pointed to a building of some pretensions across the 
 way, and made the startling announcement, 
 
 " You must go to the jail, Scnor." 
 
 Leigh looked at Alon/.o, and both to Uncle Frobishcr. 
 
 "What for?" asked Captain Frobishcr. 
 
 " For a traveller, Scnor." 
 
 "I must seethe commandantc (governor or mayor)," said 
 Captain Krobisher. 
 
 lie went to the large house over the way, and found the 
 commandantc.
 
 2/8 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " Where can some travellers find lodgings, Senor ? " he 
 asked. 
 
 " Here, my friend." 
 
 " Is not this a prison ? " 
 
 " Yes, my friend, it is so used when there is need. There 
 are no prisoners here now. I will have cots brought in for 
 you." 
 
 They were at ease now, and went out into the short twi- 
 light to see the town. It had been a market day, but most 
 of the people had gone away. A few remained in some 
 tents. 
 
 Here one could buy as many luscious bananas as one could 
 carry away for a few pennies. Pineapples, cocoanuts, and 
 many curious fruits, whose names are unknown to the new- 
 comer, could be had for a trifle. 
 
 They returned to the cabildo, where chicha (the popular 
 beverage) was offered them by a morjo (manservant.) 
 
 Before they retired, Leigh was sent out to ask the muleteer 
 when he would be ready to start in the morning. He 
 returned doubtfully. 
 
 "What is it?" asked Captain Frobisher. 
 
 " A r o sc," answered Leigh. 
 
 They bid the commandante "Buenos nocJie (Good night)." 
 When surveying their room, Captain Frobisher ventured 
 once more to bring back the customs he had left beyond 
 the mountains. 
 
 " Mozo! " 
 
 " Si, Sen or ? " 
 
 " Agua (water), water, Mozo." 
 
 "No hay:'
 
 "NO HAY AND "NO SE. 279 
 
 Then they heard strange musical instruments in the dis- 
 tance ; then light after light went out in the Indian huts ; 
 then the light vanished in the hall of the cabildo ; then all 
 was dark and still, in the land of no hay and no se.
 
 CHAPTER XXXVIII. 
 
 COBAN, THE CITY OF THE QUETZAL. 
 
 WHEREVER of late Leigh had inquired about the 
 royal bird of the Aztecs, whose form appears on the 
 beautiful national emblem of Guatemala above the scroll 
 bearing the words " Libertad \^th de Setiembrc, 182 1," he 
 was told, "You will find it at Coban, the mountain town." 
 He might have expected to have heard the bird's name asso- 
 ciated with Ouezaltenango, in the same region ; but Coban 
 was the place commonly assigned as the market-place of the 
 feathered splendor. 
 
 " Ticnc ustcd quetzal (have you the quetzal)?" he asked 
 again in market-places in Guatemala. 
 
 " Coban," was the invariable answer. 
 
 He had pictured to himself a bird market at Coban, in 
 which the royal bird should appear to the wonder and 
 delight of the traveller. He was told that its value there 
 depended on the length of the tail plumes, some of which 
 were said to be three feet long. It would in such a case be 
 a difficult pet to manage. Some of the natives had said that 
 it was ticrno (tender), which he fancied might mean to eat. 
 
 "Are there many quetzals in the country?" he asked of 
 a dealer in birds. 
 
 280
 
 COBAN, THE CITY OF THE QUETZAL. 28 1 
 
 " Many, Senor." 
 
 " Where do they live ? " 
 
 " High up high up, amid the mountain forests," said the 
 pajarcro, "at Coban." 
 
 After a long, hard journey, amid tropical roads, cooled by 
 lofty trees, every trunk of which seemed to be a flower gar- 
 den, the\' came to the city of the supposed market-place of 
 the historic bird. 
 
 Coban stands at an elevation of some 4500 feet, and the 
 hills rise above it. The pass in the mountains here over- 
 looks a region of rich coffee kinds. The picturesque town 
 appeared, a street with narrow pavements, flooded with 
 water, and a posada with tiled roof and a simple veranda. 
 
 The inn had a home-like look, with its sala, aposentos, and 
 comedor. 
 
 They sought the comedor (dining room) at once, where 
 they found tortillas, tostadas (cakes), sausages, eggs, and 
 superb coffee. 
 
 About the patio, or open court, birds hung in cages amid 
 baskets of flowers ; but there was no quetzal among the 
 feathered beauties that gave a cheerful atmosphere to the 
 place. 
 
 They went out and walked up the street to the casa Muni- 
 cipal, where they passed through an arched gateway into the 
 plaza. 
 
 The scene in the plaza was most interesting. Here 
 were gathered hundreds of Indies bartering their produce 
 for goods. Here were displayed granadcllas (the passion 
 flower fruit), cacao, blankets, straw hats, and palm-leaf um- 
 brellas.
 
 282 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 The Indian women all wore skirts of blue cotton, and their 
 backs were covered with a wealth of long hair, which, with 
 its ornaments, reached nearly to the ground. 
 
 They found the commandante at the cabildo, or chapter 
 house, a very obliging man, who could speak English. 
 
 He walked about the town with them. The houses were 
 low and were covered with stucco. Their windows were pro- 
 tected by iron grills. Leigh peered through some of these 
 in the hope of seeing a quetzal among the hanging flower 
 baskets and caged birds. But no quetzal appeared. 
 
 They entered the church, which was simple and impressive, 
 with a tiled floor and curious pictures. 
 
 It was very warm, and they slept in hammocks in the 
 hotel. Strangely enough, their guide had turned out their 
 mules to wander outside of the town. 
 
 The night in a mountain town in Guatemala may bring a 
 sense of loneliness and remoteness to a traveller from the 
 East. Here one is surrounded by those who know but little 
 of the wide, wide world. The mountains are filled with giant 
 trees, strange birds and animals. Everything is primitive as 
 in the early days of the creation. 
 
 The stars hang lonely in the clear sky. When the moon 
 comes up, her face seems like that of a familiar friend. 
 
 The morning bursts in song. The forests resound with 
 the happy voices of birds. The flowers seem to be ani- 
 mated. 
 
 The day marches on, a fiery tide of sun ; but the town is 
 still. The posada does not wake. The morning sleep is 
 sweet, amid the coolness of the air. The mozos are reluc- 
 tant to leave their hammocks and beds. It is always after-
 
 COBAN, THE CITY OF THE QUETZAL. 283 
 
 noon or to-morrow here. The climate takes care of the bodies 
 of the people ; the sun, as of old, is the provident father to 
 all. 
 
 Leigh arose early in the morning, and went out into the 
 silent streets. Nothing but the birds were stirring. The 
 mountains gleamed above the town like tents of the sun. 
 There had been light rains, and the waters flowed under a 
 bridge through the gardens of flowers. Palms feathered the 
 air, the strawberries were in bloom in the gardens. 
 
 Rut to-day people were on their feet earlier than usual 
 it was a market day. 
 
 He heard a cry it sounded like "Ocho!" The market 
 people were coming to the town, men on mules, and with 
 other mules bristling with produce ; women in blue dresses 
 and streaming head-dresses, light-hearted, happy people 
 read)' for barter when the people should arise. 
 
 The church doors stood open. Mere and there a woman 
 began to steal out of the unfastened doors of the houses, and 
 demurely make her way to the church under the low bell 
 tower. 
 
 Then more Indios came, and the market-place or plaza 
 filled with trade people. The town was waking. 
 
 Leigh went into the inn, and had eoffee and naranjas 
 foranges), fried plantains, and frijolcs ncgras. He was the 
 first in the comedor. 
 
 Captain Frobisher came next. 
 
 "This is to be my bus)- day," said Leigh. "To-day I am 
 to find the royal (piet/.al." 
 
 "We don't seem to find any on the table," said the cap- 
 tain ; " but I suppose that the woods are full of them. The
 
 284 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 mountains are certainly full of woods. Wait for me and I 
 will go with you, and we will visit the markets together. 
 There arc many curious things to be found in markets like 
 these the people, for instance." 
 
 Leigh waited impatiently. The dining-room was nearly 
 empty ; how could people be so unmindful of a glorious 
 morning like this ! " 
 
 At last Captain Frobisher, after an easy breakfast, with 
 much coffee, seized his hat and cane and said, "Varmoits! 
 (let us go)." 
 
 They met the commandante at the cabildo. He was wash- 
 ing his dignity outside of the door, in an easy, lazy way. 
 
 "We will have a peppery day," said he, after the usual 
 many salutations. " No showers ; you should take your um- 
 brellas, my friends. Strangers should never expose them- 
 selves to the sun." 
 
 " Sehor," said the captain, " my nephew here is greatly taken 
 with the stories that he has heard of your national bird." 
 
 "The quetzal the paradise trogon peacock trogon, as 
 some call them." 
 
 " Yes, and we have been told that we can find them here 
 in the market-places." 
 
 "Yes, yes, that is so. The Indians bring them down from 
 the mountains chiefly from the forests of Alta Vera Paz." 
 
 How promising the name of the home of the royal bird 
 sounded the "height of the true peace," Alta Vera 
 Paz ! 
 
 "Can we find them in the market to-day?" asked Captain 
 Frobisher. 
 
 " Any day, always. You can get one with feathers three
 
 COBAN, THE CITY OF THE QUETZAL. 285 
 
 feet long for a peso. You have to handle them very care- 
 fully." 
 
 " Would we have any difficulty in taking one home to the 
 States with us ? " asked Leigh, eagerly. 
 
 " None, only handle it carefully. All travellers take 
 quetzals away with them. They say that the plumes are the 
 finest in the world. They are all that is left us now of 
 the ornaments of the race who built temples as fine as 
 those of the Old World. I mind that there was once a 
 continent between here and Egypt, and that it sunk, don't 
 you ? " 
 
 " I have heard such a theory. Is the quetzal a quiet 
 bird ? " asked Leigh. 
 
 " Quiet, nothing is more quiet. What, do you mean those 
 sold by the Indios?" 
 
 "Yes; they do not break their feathers in carrying them 
 away ? " 
 
 "That depends on you. Of course they will not break 
 their feathers. No, sir ; they are not magic birds. Break 
 their feathers ? No, no ; the days are gone by for such things 
 as those." 
 
 How strangely the mayor was talking. 
 
 He continued, emptying the water from the basin on the 
 ground, 
 
 "There was a time when they say a magician ascended 
 into heaven and remained there seven days, and then came 
 down again, and told what he had seen. Then he went down 
 to hell, and rose again ; but the quetzal is no longer a miracle 
 bird." 
 
 What did the man mean ?
 
 286 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " If I can secure a quetzal and a cage, how shall I take 
 care of him ? " 
 
 "Why, boy, it won't need no care; it will take care of itself, 
 the same as birds on hats. It is that kind of a bird." 
 
 " What may I give it to eat, may I ask ? I am a stranger 
 here." 
 
 "That you are indeed. Feathers don't eat." 
 
 "Does it not live on fruit, in the mountains, may I ask ?" 
 
 " Yes, in the mountains, but not in the markets. You 
 don't understand the process." 
 
 Leigh, indeed, did not, nor what the commandante meant 
 by the process. But he would go and see. 
 
 It was in the middle of the forenoon now. The sky was 
 clear and the hills were dazzling. 
 
 In the door of one of the chapters of the buildings of the 
 plaza sat an old Indian surrounded with birds. Some of the 
 parrots were not caged; they seemed to think that they could 
 not fly. They called the man Roberto. 
 
 Leigh went up to him. Roberto's face beamed. 
 
 "Parrots, Senor ? " he asked, using the English word for 
 birds of most beautiful plumage. 
 
 " No, amigo," said Leigh, "the quetzal - resplendens 
 paradiso." 
 
 The Indian rose quickly. He turned around twice. He 
 opened a long box, like a treasure chest. 
 
 " Si, quetzal? " 
 
 " Si, amigo, the bird royal." 
 
 "The bird royal ? " 
 
 He lifted a cloud of glimmering feathers from the long 
 box, putting it over his finger, and holding it up to the sun.
 
 COBAN, THE CITY OF THE QUETZAL. 287 
 
 " The quetzal una peso." 
 
 The yellow beak was there, the carmine feathers on the 
 breast, the wing coverts of metallic lustres and lace-like 
 edges, the long tail plumes, the royal crest. 
 
 " Bueno," said Roberto, as he turned the shimmering lustres 
 in his hand. 
 
 " But he has no eyes, no body, no life ; he is dead." 
 
 " Si, Seiior." 
 
 " I want a live bird." 
 
 " No hay, Seiior." 
 
 " A T o hay ! " What did the man mean ? 
 
 The commandante appeared. 
 
 " It is a live quetzal that I want, Seiior," explained Leigh. 
 
 "There are none here." 
 
 " Do they never have live quetzals to sell in Coban ? " 
 asked Leigh. 
 
 " No, no ; not for long ; the birds do not live in confinement. 
 They are very tender." 
 
 Captain Frobisher stared and laughed. Was this the end 
 of the long search for the North American paradise bird ? 
 
 They bought six beautiful quetzals, but they were as dead 
 as the mummies of the temples that were sinking into the 
 earth in this region of a lost civilization and a vanished race. 
 
 " Mayor," said Leigh, " I would travel miles to see one of 
 those royal birds alive." 
 
 "Go with the Indians into the Alta Vera Paz," said the 
 commandante. " You will be safe, if I send a guide with 
 you." 
 
 He added: " You may find them in your journey higher 
 up. Look out ior them."
 
 288 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 " I wish to hold a live bird in my hand, if I had to let him 
 go again," said Leigh. 
 
 "If he were to struggle greatly, he would tear his feathers 
 and would die. The quetzal is made of the sun, the fruits, 
 and the air." 
 
 Leigh was more than ever desirous of seeing the royal 
 bird alive in his native trees.
 
 CHAPTER XXXIX. 
 
 THE ROYAL BIRD. 
 
 EARLY one morning a hand shook Leigh's hammock. 
 "Wake up," said a voice, "I have something strange 
 to show you." 
 
 Leigh awoke. The hammock was swung under a net in 
 a long veranda. As the boy looked up, he saw his brother 
 standing beside him. lie rubbed his eyes. In the rising 
 light of sunlight rose the mountains green with palms, in 
 which the birds were singing, songs in reality breaking upon 
 the air. The tops of the ornamental trees were in bloom, 
 and were lighted here and there with the joyous rustle of a 
 bird's wing. The thousands of oranges in some near trees 
 shone in dewy billows of green leaves. As a contrast to 
 these bright scenes, black buzzards were dropping down 
 from the high trees here and there, very lightly, as though 
 their legs were made of glass, and they were fearful of break- 
 ing them in alighting. 
 
 "Wake up, wake up!" said Alonzo, "and look out into 
 the yard." 
 
 Leigh rose up in the hammock and looked into the yard, 
 which was filled with breadfruit trees, covered with tangled 
 vines, which spread over the trees a cloud of crimson blooms. 
 
 His eyes were instantly fixed on an unexpected and unac- 
 countable object. It was the form of a tall Indian, thin and 
 c 2Sy
 
 29O LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 old, standing motionless, as if patiently waiting. He wore a 
 grass garment, had a single green plume in a band about his 
 head, was barefooted, and his lower limbs looked like leather. 
 
 He stood with one hand resting on a strange cage of reeds, 
 some three feet high. In the cage was a broken limb of a 
 tree. It was hollow. 
 
 The hollow part of the limb had two openings, and out of 
 one of the holes, or openings, was projected the head of a 
 bird, and out of the other opening the tail of the same bird. 
 So much Leigh could see through the wicker work. 
 
 He knew the Indian's face at once, and his heart bounded, 
 for the purpose of the Indian's coming was suddenly clear 
 to him. 
 
 Leigh looked into the Indian's face and called, 
 
 "Apula!" 
 
 A joy as from the heart came into the Indian's face. He 
 stepped forward to the veranda, lifting the tall, broad cage 
 very carefully before him. 
 
 He stood there in silence for a moment, then lifted his 
 hand. On it gleamed the fire opal. 
 
 "Apula fid!" he said, "Apula faithful." 
 
 He blew a reed whistle and called out " Nina ! " 
 
 A girl of some fifteen years rose up among the bushes. 
 
 " Nina Jiabla" said Apula, " habla por Apula." 
 
 Nina could speak Spanish, and Apula had brought her 
 here to talk for him. She was his daughter. 
 
 The girl was beautiful. Leigh had rarely seen so beauti- 
 ful a face. 
 
 She said in the Spanish of the country : 
 
 " I have come to talk with you for father. I have been to
 
 THE ROYAL BIRD. 2()I 
 
 the English school on the coast. I live with the people of 
 the Mosquito king. I know the Moravians there." 
 
 " What have you in the cage ? " asked Alonzo. 
 
 "It is a quetzal two trogons, such as the Aztecs placed 
 in their temples, and their nest taken from the tree ! " 
 
 "Why did you bring the nest with the cage?" asked 
 Alonzo. 
 
 " It is the royal bird ; it is very tender ; if he is not happy, 
 his heart break, and he dies. Mis feathers are very ten- 
 der ; they fall out if he is handled ; they fall out if he is 
 vexed or scared. He loves his mate and his nest. lie no 
 lives if he is made a captive ; he no lives unless he is 
 happy. He was made to be a happy bird. He is the bird 
 of the sun." 
 
 " Will he not live ? " asked Alonzo. 
 
 "Yes, he will live; but another would not live." 
 
 " Why will he live and not another? " asked Alonzo. 
 
 " He was brought up from a little bird in the trees of the 
 yard. He was fed from the hand of the mistress of the 
 cabin. He is happy with people who treat him kind]}'. He 
 will live while he is happy. He has his mate and his nest. 
 You can carry him away, if you treat him kindly. He will 
 live ; another would die." 
 
 Apula opened the tall cage, and took from it the hollow 
 limb of the tree. On it were two trogons, the superb bird of 
 magic and mystery, and his Quaker-like wile. 
 
 Apula put out his hand to the royal trogon. The bird, 
 carrying his trailing plumage very carefully, stepped upon it. 
 Apula held him up to the sunlight proudly and said, 
 
 " The quetzal ! vera - vera vera ! "
 
 2Q2 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 How splendid the bird looked, with its emerald lustres and 
 its ruby heart, and trail of curious plumes, like the end of a 
 rainbow ! What wonder that the dead nation when it lived in 
 its glory thought that this creature was the bird of the gods ! 
 What wonder that they made it the penalty of death to 
 touch its sun-illumined plumes ! What wonder that they 
 placed it on their majestic altars, and inscribed it on the 
 forests of monuments that promised a paradise and immor- 
 tality to the dead ! And of all the glory and pomp of these 
 nations, of all their worship of forgotten gods, of all of the 
 kings who led armies to victory and defeat, who rose and 
 fell, and who left their records on monoliths that none can 
 now read, this bird alone survives among living emblems. 
 
 Apula next took out the hollow section of the tree which 
 he had cut out with his machete. He set it down on the ver- 
 anda and loosed the quetzal from his arm. The royal bird 
 entered the hollow nest with the two openings, while his 
 mate watched him with seeming pride without any fear of 
 strangers. She had never known harm ; she probably had 
 no sense that anything could harm her, or do her otherwise 
 than good. 
 
 Her superb lord gathered up his feathers to enter the nest. 
 How carefully he did this, as though he knew that every 
 plume was a gem, and that it was the purpose of his rare 
 existence to guard them! He entered the hollow with a 
 really royal movement, and stood on the bark between the 
 two openings in such a way as not to touch a feather. Then 
 Leigh knew what Apula had meant when he made the mys- 
 terious movements in trying to describe in sign language the 
 habits of the royal bird.
 
 THE ROYAL BIRD. 293 
 
 Leigh's heart was thrilled when he saw that he had been 
 made the master of such a mystery, and that he, probably 
 the first among American naturalists, would be able to take 
 back to the States a royal trogon, a true bird of the temples 
 of the gods, of the races of mystery. 
 
 His admiration for the conduct of the Indian could not be 
 expressed. 
 
 What should he say to him ? 
 
 Me would offer him money. Me went into the cabin, and 
 brought out his purse that contained American gold, and 
 poured it on a bench beside the trogon. 
 
 Me began to count out some ten pieces, and he held them 
 out to Apula. 
 
 " SVa, ua," said the Indian, in an accent of his race. Me 
 then spoke to Nina. 
 
 " Father desires no reward," said the girl. " Me says that 
 his reward is in your heart ; that you paid him well in the 
 love that prompted you to give him the ring." 
 
 The Indian moved away, facing Leigh and Alonzo as he 
 did so. lie moved back to the white adobe wall, where was 
 a gate. Me stopped at the gate, lifted his withered arm, 
 spread open his hand so that the ring and the topaz shone in 
 the sun. 
 
 " Adios ! ad/os / " he exclaimed. " Vaya listed con Dios 
 (Go thy way with God, or, Go with you God). 
 
 The two Indians turned away. Leigh never saw them 
 again. 
 
 In the orchid house with the captive condor and some 
 wonderful blue-front parrots was placed, a tew weeks later, a 
 trogon, a true bird of the golden temples of nature, the sun
 
 2Q4 LOST IN NICARAGUA. 
 
 and stars ; and the bird while it lived recalled not only a 
 strange and delightful journey through the lands of the 
 future, and that a persevering will may bring about an 
 almost impossible purpose, but that he who wins the heart of 
 a man, be that man a savage, may have the choicest treas- 
 ures that the human mind can secure. 
 
 Our travellers had had glimpses of South and Central Amer- 
 ica, the new lands of opportunity, but glimpses only. The 
 temperate regions of the Andes, of both South and Central 
 America, await the need of the growing populations of the 
 world, and history is to write her great pages there. There 
 art is to rise, and poets are to sing, and music awaken new 
 chords. But it is only the temperate regions that can make 
 homes for the Anglo-Saxon race. The Latin race must form 
 the life of the semi-tropics, and the ancient races and the 
 tribes of the Incas must come again, and be schooled in the 
 civilized arts of the world. With the Anglo-Saxon race in 
 the temperate zones and altitudes in the Andes; a new Latin 
 race in Argentina and the South ; the Indian races of old, 
 civilized, Christianized, and educated in the Peruvian and 
 Bolivian highlands and the Brazils what may we not rea- 
 sonably expect of the republics of the South under the fiery 
 arch of the equator, the Southern Cross, and the shadows of 
 the eternal peaks of the palms ! 
 
 THE END.
 
 IF. A. Wilde &> Co., Publishers. 
 
 War of the Revolution Series. 
 
 By Everett T. Tomlinson. 
 
 rHREE COLONIAL BOYS. A Story of the Times 
 of '76. 368 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 It is a story of three boys who were drawn into the events of the times, is patriotic, 
 exciting, clean, and healthful, and instructs without appearing to. The heroes are 
 manly boys, and no objectionable language or character is introduced. The lessons of 
 courage and patriotism especially will be appreciated in this day. Boston Transcript. 
 
 r'LLREE YOUNG CONTINENTALS. A Story of 
 the American Revolution. 364 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 This story is historically true. It is the best kind of a story either for boys or girl.5, 
 and is an attractive method of teaching history. Journal 0/ Education, Boston. 
 
 w 
 
 ASHLNGTONS YOUNG AIDS. A Story of the 
 
 New Jersey Campaign, 1776-1777. 391 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 The book has enough history and description to give value to the story which ought 
 to captivate enterprising boys. Quarterly Book Review. 
 
 The historical details of the story are taken from old records. These include 
 accounts of the lite on the prison ships and prison houses of New York, the raids of the 
 pine robbers, the tempting of the Hessians, the end of Fagan and his band, etc. 
 Publisher's Weekly. 
 
 Few boy;,' stories of this class show so close a study of history combined with such 
 genial story-telling power. The Outlook. 
 
 rlVO \OUNG PATRIOTS. A Story of Burgoyne's 
 Invasion. 366 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 The crucial campaign in the American struggle for independence came in the sum- 
 mer of 1777, when Gen John Burgoyne marched from Canada to cut the rebellious 
 colonies asunder and join another British army which was to proceed up the valley of 
 the Hudson. The American tones wire brave, hard fighters, and they worried and 
 harassed the British and finally defeated them. The history of this campaign is one 
 of great interest and is well brought out in the part which the " two young patriots" 
 took in the events which led up to the surrender of General Burgoyne and his army. 
 
 The set of four volumes in a box, $6.00. 
 
 OUCCESS. By Orison Swktt Marden. Author of 
 
 Kj "Pushing to the Front," "Architects of Fate," etc. 3 1 7 pp. 
 Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 It is doubtl 1 whether any suci 1 is books foi the young have appeared in modern 
 times whit h are so thoroughly pa< ked from lid to lid with stimulating, uplifting, and in- 
 spiring material as the self-help books written bv Orison Swett Marden. There is not a 
 dry paragraph nor a single hue ol useless moralizing in anv of his books. 
 
 To stimulate inspire, and guide is the mission of his'iatest book, " Success," and 
 he! pf nines- i- i's -.eyiiote. I Is objci t is to spur the perplexed youth to act the Columbus 
 to his own un 1; . - erl possibilities: to urge him not to wait for great opportunities, 
 but to seize i ortiim. moiJoii. and make them great, for he cannot tell wiien fate may 
 take his meas > . f higher pl.u e. 
 
 //'. A. Wilde -' Co., I'.ostoii and C/iiat.i,
 
 IV. A. Wilde & Co., Publishers. 
 
 Brain and Brawn Series. 
 
 By William Drysdale. 
 
 rHE YOUNG REPORTER. A Story of Printing 
 House Square. 300 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 I commend the book unreservedly. Golden Rule. 
 
 " The Young Reporter '' is a rattling book for boys. Ne~M York Recorder. 
 
 The best boys' book I ever read. Mr. Phillips, Critic for New York Times. 
 
 rHE EAST MAIL. A Story of a Train Boy. 328 pp. 
 Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 " The Fast Mail " is one of the very best American books for boys brought out this 
 season. Perhaps there could be no better confirmation of this assertion than the fact 
 that the little sons of the present writer have greedily devoured the contents of the vol- 
 ume, and are anxious to know how soon they are to get a sequel. The Art Amateur, 
 New \ 'ork. 
 
 Cr-'IIE REACH RATE OR A Story of the Life-Saving 
 
 J. Service. 318 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 The style of narrative is excellent, the lesson inculcated of the best, and, above all, 
 the boys and girls are real. New York Times. 
 
 A book of adventure and daring, which should delight as well as stimulate to higher 
 ideals of life every boy wlio is so happy as to possess it. Examiner. 
 
 It is a strong book for boys and young men. Buffalo Commercial. 
 
 rHE YOUNG SURER CARGO. A Story of the 
 Merchant Marine. 352 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 Kit Silburn is a real "Brain and Brawn" boy, full of sense and grit and sound 
 good qualities. Determined to make his way in life, and with no influential friends to 
 give him a start, he does a deal of hard work between the evening when he first meets 
 the stanch Captain Griffith, and the proud day when he becomes purser of a great 
 ocean steamship. His sea adventures aie mostly on shore; but whether he is cleaning 
 the cabin of the North C,i/<t\ or landing cargo in Yucatan, or hurrying the spongers 
 and fruitmen of Nassau, or exploring London, or sight seeing with a disguised prince 
 in Marseilles, he is always the same busy, thoroughgoing, manly Kit. Whether or not 
 he has a father alive is a question of deep interest throughout the story; but that he 
 has a loving and loyal sister is plain from the start. 
 
 The set of four volumes in a box, $6.00. 
 
 s 
 
 ERATH, THE LITTLE 1 70 /.IMS IE. By Mrs. 
 C. V. Jamieson. 300 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 The scene of the story is the French quarter of Xew Orleans, and charming bits of 
 local color add to its attractiveness. The Boston Journal . 
 
 Perhaps the most charming story she has e\ er written is that which describes Seraph, 
 the little violiniste. 'Transcript, Boston. 
 
 IV. A. JVildj 6 Cc, Boston and Chicago.
 
 IV. A. Wilde &-= Co., Publishers. 
 
 I 
 
 Travel=Adventure Series. 
 
 V WILD AFRICA. Adventures of Two Boys in the 
 Sahara Desert, etc. Bv Thus. W. Knox. 325 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 A story of absorbing interest. Boston Journal. 
 
 Our young people will pronounce it unusually good. Albany Argus. 
 Col. Knox has struck a popular note in his latest volume. Springfield Republican. 
 
 rllK I AND OF THE KANGAROO. By Thos. 
 W. Knox. Adventures of Two Boys in the Great Island Con- 
 tinent. 31S pp. Cloth, Si. 50. 
 
 His descriptions of the natural history and botany of the country are very interest- 
 ing. Detroit Free Press. 
 
 The actual truthfulness of the book needs no gloss to add to its absorbing interest. 
 The Book Buyer, New i ork. 
 
 r\VER THE ANDES; or, Our Boys in New South 
 L/ America. By Hezekiah Butterworth. 368 pp. Cloth, 
 
 Si. 50. 
 
 No writer of the present century has done more and better service than Hezekiah 
 Butterworth in the production of helpful literature for the young. In this volume he 
 writes, in his own fascinating way, of a country too little known by American readers. 
 Christian Work. 
 
 Mr. Butterworth is careful of his historic facts, and then he charmingly interweaves 
 Ins quaint stories, legends, and patriotic adventures as few writers can. Chicago Inter- 
 Ocean 
 
 The subject is an inspiring one, and Mr. butterworth has done full justice to the 
 high ideals which have inspired the men of South America. Religious Telescope. 
 
 L 
 
 OST IN NICARAGUA ; or, The Lands of the Great 
 Canal. By Hezekiah Butterworth. 295 pp. Cloth, #1.50. 
 
 The book pictures the wonderful land of Nicaragua and continues the story of the 
 travelers whose adventures in South America are related in " Over the Andes."' In this 
 companion bonk to " I )ver the Andes," one of the boy travelers who goes into the 
 Nicaraguan forests in search of a quetzal, or the royal bird of the Aztecs, falls into an 
 am ii-nt idol cue. and is rescued in a remarkable way by an old Mosquito Indian. The 
 narrative is told in sui li a way as to give the ancient 'legends of Guatemala, the story of 
 the chieftain, Nicaragua, the history of the Central American Republics, and the natural 
 historv of the wonderlands of the ocelot, the conger, parrots, and monkeys. 
 
 Since the voyage of the Oregon, of 13,000 miles to reach Key West the American 
 people have seen what would be the value of the Nicaragua Canal. The book gives the 
 history of the projei ts for the canal, and fatts about Central America, and a part of it 
 was written in Costa Kit ,\. It enters a new held. 
 
 The set of four volumes in a box, $6.00. 
 
 
 
 CANTER DECK AND EOK'SLE. By Molly 
 
 Ki.i.iott Si AWKi.i.. 272 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 Mi - Seawell has done a notable work for the young people of our country in her 
 excellent stone of naval exploits. They are of "the kind that causes the reader, no 
 
 matter whether young Id, to thrill with pride and pati iolii in at the deeds of daring 
 
 of the heroes of our navy. 
 
 //'. //. Wilde C- Co.. Boston and Chicago. 
 
 3
 
 W. A. Wilde & Co., Publishers. 
 
 Fighting for the Flag Series. 
 
 By Chas. Ledyard Norton. 
 
 J 
 
 4CK BENSON'S LOG ; or, Afloat with the Flag in 
 '61. 281pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 An unusually interesting historical story, and one that will arouse the loyal impulses 
 of every American boy and girl. The story is distinctly superior to anything ever 
 attempted along this line before. The Independent. 
 
 A story that will arouse the loyal impulses of every American boy and girl. The 
 Press. 
 
 A 
 
 MEDAL OF HONOR MAN; or, Cruising Among 
 Blockade Runners. 280 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 A bright, breezv sequel to " Jack Benson's Log."' The book has unusual literary 
 excellence. 1'lie Book Buyer, Neiv York. 
 
 A stirring story for boys. The Journal, Indianapolis. 
 
 M 
 
 IDSHJPMAN JACK. 290 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 Jack is a delightful hero, and the author has made his experiences and ad- 
 ventures seem very real. Congregationalist. 
 It is true historically and full of exciting war scenes and adventures. Outlook. 
 A stirring story of naval service in the Confederate waters during the late war. 
 Presbyterian. 
 
 The set of three volumes in a box, $3.75. 
 
 A 
 
 GIRL OF '/6. By Amy E. Blanchard. 331 pp. 
 
 Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 "A Girl of '70'' lays its scene in and around Boston where the principal events of 
 the early period of the Revolution were enacted. Elizabeth Mall, the heroine, is the 
 daughter of a patriot who is active in the defense of his country. The story opens with 
 a scene in Charlestown, where Elizabeth Hall and her parents live. The emptying of 
 the tea in Boston Harbor is the means of giving the little girl her first strong impression 
 as to the seriousness of her father's opinions, and causes a quarrel between herself and 
 her schoolmate and playfellow, Amos Dwight. 
 
 A 
 
 SOLDIER OF THE LEGION By Chas. Led- 
 yard Norton. 300 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 Two boys, a Carolinian and a Virginian, born a few years apart during the last half 
 of the eighteenth century, afford the groundwork for the incidents of this tale. 
 
 The younger of the two was William Henry Harrison, sometime President of the 
 United States, and the elder, his companion and faithful attendant through life, was 
 Carolinus Bassett, Sergeant of the old first Infantry, and in an irregular sort of a way 
 Captain of Virginian Horse. He it is who tells the story a few years after President 
 Harrison's death, his granddaughter acting as critic and amanuensis. 
 
 The story has to do with the- early days of the Republic, when the great, wild, un- 
 known West was beset by dangers on every hand, and the Government at Washington 
 was at its wits' end to provide ways and means to meet the perplexing problems of 
 national existence. 
 
 //'. A. Wilde &-> Co., Boston and Chicago.
 
 IV. A. Wilde & Co., Publishers. 
 
 rHE ORCUTT GIRLS; or, One Term at the Academy. 
 By Charlotte M. Vaile. 316 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 A well-told story of school life which will interest its readers deeply, and hold 
 before them a high standard of living. The heroines are charming girls and their 
 adventures are described in an entertaining way. Pilgrim Teacher. 
 
 Mrs. Vaile gives us a story here which will become famous as a description of a 
 phase of New England educational history which has now become a thing of the past, 
 with an exception here and there. Boston Transcript. 
 
 s 
 
 UE ORCUTT. A Sequel to "The Orcutt Girls." By 
 
 Charlotte M. Vaile. 330 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 It is a charming story from beginning to end and is written in that easy flowing 
 style which characterizes the best stories of our best writers. Christian Work. 
 
 It is wholly ;i piece of good fortune for young folks that brings this book to market 
 in such ample season for the selection of holiday gifts. Dernier Republican. 
 
 The story teaches a good moral without any preaching, in tact it is as good in a way 
 as Miss Alcott's books, which is high but deserved praise. Chronicle. 
 
 rHE M. JM. C. A Story of the Great Rockies. Bv 
 Charlotte M. Vaile. 232 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 The pluck of the little school teacher, struggling against adverse circumstances, to 
 hold for her friend the promising claim, which he has secured after years of misfortune 
 in other ventures, is well brought out. The almost resistless bad luck which has made 
 " Old Hopefull's'' nickname a hollow mockery still followed him when a fortune was 
 almost within his grasp. The little school teacher was. however, a new element in " < )ld 
 Hopefull's " experience, and the result, as the story shows, was most satisfactory. 
 
 r HE ROMANCE OE DISCOVERY ; or, a 'Thousand 
 Years of Exploration, etc. By William Elliot Grifkis. 
 305 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 It is a book of profit and interest involving a variety of correlated instances and 
 influences which impart the flavor of the unexpected. Philadelphia Presbyterian. 
 
 An intensely interesting narrative following well-authenticated history. Telescope. 
 
 Hoys will read it for the romance in it and be delighted, and when they get through, 
 behold ; they have read a history of America. Aivakener. 
 
 rHE ROMANCE OF AMERICAN COLONIZA- 
 T/ON ; or, How the Foundations of Our Country Were Laid. 
 By William Klliot Grikfis. 295 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 To this continent, across a great ocean, came two distinct streams of humanity 
 and two rival civilizations, the one Latin, led and typified by the Spanish, with 
 Portugese and French also, and the other Germanic, or Anglo-Saxon, led and typified 
 by the Knglish and reinforced by Dutch, German, and liritish people. 
 
 /I SON OF 77/ T REVOLUTION. An Historical 
 ^/l. Novel of tin: Days of Aaron Burr. By Klhridoe S. Brooks. 
 
 301 pp. ( 'loth, Si. 50. 
 
 The story of Tom Edwards, adventurer, as it is connected with Aaron I'.urr, is 
 in every way faithful to the facts ol history. As the story progresses the reader will 
 wonder where the line between fact and fiction is to be drawn. Among the characters 
 that figure in it are President Jefferson, Gen Vndrew lackson, General Wilkinson, 
 and many other prominent government and army officials. 
 
 IV. A. Wilde 6^ Co., IJoslon and Chiea^ 
 
 5
 
 W. A. Wilde 6- Co., Publishers. 
 
 M 
 
 A 
 
 1LVERN, A NEIGHBORHOOD STORY. By 
 Ki.i.kn Douglas Deland. 341 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 Her descriptions of hoys and girls are so true, and her knowledge of their ways is 
 so accurate, that one must feel an admiration for her complete mastery of her chosen 
 field. The A rgus, Albany. 
 
 Miss Deland was accorded a place with Louisa M. Alcott and Nora Perry as a 
 successful writer of books for girls. We think this praise none too high. The Post. 
 
 SUCCESSFUL VENTURE. By Ellen Douglas 
 Deland. 340 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 One of the many successful books that have come from her pen, which is certainly 
 the very best. Boston Herald. 
 
 It is a good piece of work and its blending of good sense and entertainment will be 
 appreciated. Congregationalist. 
 
 4TRINA. By Ellen Douglas Deland. 340 pp. 
 
 Cloth, $1.50. 
 
 " Katrina "' is the story of a girl who was brought up by an aunt in a remote village 
 of Vermont. Her life is somewhat lonely until a family from New York come there to 
 board during the summer. Katrma*s aunt, who is a reserved woman, has told her little 
 of her antecedents, and she supposes that she has no other relatives. Her New York 
 friends grow very fond of her and finally persuade her to visit them during the winter. 
 There new pleasures and new temptations present themselves, and Katrina's character 
 develops through them to new strength. 
 
 BOVE THE RANGE. By Theodora R. Jenness. 
 
 332 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 The quaintness of the characters described will be sure to make the story very pop- 
 ular. Book Xeivs. Philadelphia. 
 
 A book of much interest and novelty. The Book Buyer, New York. 
 
 K 
 
 A 
 
 B 
 
 F 
 
 IG CYJTiESS. By Kirk Munroe. 164 pp. Cloth, 
 
 $1.00. 
 
 If there is a man who understands writing a story for boys better than another, it is 
 Kirk Munroe. Springfield Republican. 
 
 A capital writer of boys' stories is Mr. Kirk Munroe. Outlook. 
 
 OREMAN JENNIE. By Amos R. Wells. A Young 
 
 Woman of Business. 26S pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 It is a delightful story. The Advance. Chicago. 
 
 It is full of action. The Standard, Chicago. 
 
 A story of decided merit. The Epivorth Herald, Chicago. 
 
 M 
 
 YSTERIOUS VOYAGE OF THE DAFHNE. 
 
 By Lieut. H. P. Whitmarsii. 305 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 One of the best collections of short stories for boys and girls that has been pub- 
 lished in recent years Such writers as Hezekiah Butteruorth, Wm.O, Stoddard, and 
 Jane (). Austin have contributed characteristic stories which add greatly to the general 
 interest of the book. 
 
 IV. A. Wilde e~ Co., Huston and Chicago.
 
 IV. A. Wilde & Co., Publishers. 
 
 piI/JJP LEICESTER. By Jessie E. Wright. 264 
 
 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 The book ought to make any reader thankful for a good home, and thoughtful for 
 the homeless and neglected. Golden Rule. 
 
 The story is intensely interesting. Christian Inquirer. 
 
 f>AE'A r THISTLETOP. By Sophie Swett. 282 pp. 
 
 W Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 Sophie Swett knows how to please young folks as well as old ; for both she writes 
 simple, unaffected, cheerful stories with a judicious mingling of humor and plot. Such 
 a story is " Cap'n Thistletop." The Outlook. 
 
 T ADY BETTY'S TWINS. By E. M. Waterworth. 
 
 J. J 117 pp. With 12 illustrations. 75 cents. 
 
 The story of a little boy and girl who did not know the meaning of the word 
 "obedience.'' They learned the lesson, however, after some trying experiences. 
 
 r'HE MOONSTONE RING. By Jennie Chappell. 
 iicSpp. With 6 illustrations. 75 cents. 
 
 A home story with the true ring to it. The happenings of the story ate somewhat 
 out of the usual run of events. 
 
 r'HE BEACON LIGHT SER/ES. Edited by Nat- 
 alie L. Rick. 5 vols. Fully Illustrated. The Set, $2.50. 
 
 The stories contained in this set of books are all by well-known writers, carefully 
 selected and edited, and they cannot, therefore, tail to be both helpful and instructive. 
 
 r'LLE ALLAN LOOKS. Edited by Miss Lucy 
 Whkklock. 10 vols. Over 400 illustrations. The set in a 
 box, 52. 50. 
 One of the best and most attractive sets of books for little folks ever published. 
 They are full of bright and pleasing illustrations and charming little stories just adapted 
 to young children. 
 
 rlM MARJORIE BOOTS. Kdited by Miss Lucy 
 WlIEELOCK. 6 vols. Over 200 illustrations. The set, Si .50. 
 
 A very attractive set of books for the little folks, full of pictures and good stories. 
 
 r\0TS LIBRARY. Kdited by Miss Lucy Whkklock. 
 
 JS 10 vols. Over 400 illustrations. The set, $2.50. 
 
 In every way a most valuable set of books for the little people. .Miss Wheelock 
 
 possesses rare skill in interesting and entertaining the little ones. 
 
 IV. A. Wilde c-- Co., Boston mid Chicago. 
 
 7
 
 W. A. Wilde &-> Co., Publishers. 
 
 pELOUBETS SELECT NOTES. By F. N. Pei.ou- 
 JT bet, D. D., and M. A. Peloubet. A Commentary on the Inter- 
 national Sunday-school Lessons. Illustrated. 340 pp. Cloth, $1.25. 
 
 This commentary is the one book every teacher must have in order to do the best 
 work. It interprets the Scripture, illustrates the truths, and by striking comments con- 
 vinces the mind. 
 
 It is comprehensive, and yet not verbose, and furnishes winnowed material in the 
 most attractive and yet convincing form from both spiritual and practical standpoints. 
 Accurate colored maps and profuse original illustrations illuminate the text, and create an 
 intelligent and instructive view of the subject matter. 
 
 Teachers are invited to send for sample pages of " Select Notes." 
 
 JlfAYS OF WORKING; or, Helpful Hints to Sunday- 
 rr school Workers of all Kinds. By Rev. A. F. Schauffler, 
 D. D. 23S pp. Cloth, $1.00. 
 
 A really helpful manual for Sunday-school workers. The Sunday-school Times. 
 
 It unlocks the door to the treasure-house of Sunday-school success. F. N. 
 Peloubet, D. D. 
 
 The best all-around book for a Sunday-school worker I know of. Marion Law- 
 rence, Secretary Ohio State S. S. Association. 
 
 This book absolutely covers every phase of Sunday-school work in a clear, instruc- 
 tive manner, and cannot fail to be of marked benefit to every worker. Send for sample 
 pages. 
 
 s 
 
 FECIAL SONGS AND SER VICES for Primary and 
 
 Intermediate Classes. Compiled by Mrs. M. G. Kennedy. 160 
 pp. Price, 45 cents. $40.00 per hundred. 
 
 The book contains Exercises for Christmas, Easter, Children's Day, Harvest, etc.; 
 Lessons on Lord's Prayer, Commandments, Hooks' of the I'.ible, Missions, and many 
 other subjects. Adapted to Primary and Intermediate Classes, Junior Endeavor 
 Societies, etc. 
 
 It has ninety pages of new, bright music for all occasions, including a large number 
 of Motion Songs that are now so popular. We feel sure the book will prove instruc- 
 tive, interesting, and entertaining. It is printed on heavy paper, bound in board covers. 
 Sample pages sent on application. 
 
 <rr*HE PALM BRANCH: or, the Gospel in Song. By 
 _Z Mrs. J. A. Hodge. 112 pp. Price, 35 cents each; $30.00 
 per hundred copies. 
 
 A new hymn book for little children in the Sunday school and home. Its object is 
 to call fortli the iove of the children to Christ, by teaching them the truths concerning 
 Christ, and their relation to Him. The language is therefore simple, within their com- 
 prehension. The music has been carefully selected ,from good composers, of a high 
 order, and well adapted to the voices of children. Another peculiarity of the book 
 is that it is beautifully illustrated with seven full-page pictures. 
 
 s 
 
 UNDA Y- SCHOOL PICTURES. Illustrating the In- 
 ternational Sunday-School Lessons. A set of Sixteen Pictures 
 for each Quarter. 
 
 Eacli picture is printed on 7x9 inch heavy card, and the set enclosed in a neat port- 
 folio, costing only 35 cents in heavy manila, or 50 cents in cloth. Circular free. 
 
 W. A. Wilde 6 Co., Boston and Chicago. 
 8
 
 SOUTHERN REG.OJWLUWW ^^ 
 from whlchjn^ ^^
 
 I I II I II 
 
 3 1158 00794 6956 
 
 REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY 
 
 A A 000 085 650 o