meditating (but cheerfully) upon the miseries of human nature, I received notice of your arrival in the Barra. "So you have at last gained that 'lodge' so long pictured in the vista of imagination. You are at last in that Promised Land-a land flowing with caxáça and farinha;1 a land where a man may literally, and safely, sleep without breeches-a luxury which must be enjoyed to be appreciated. "I am now waiting for a passage to Para, from thence to return to England. There is a vessel caulking here I expect will go in two or three weeks. I have a small collection of birds and butterflies, but new species of the latter are very scarce. "The Christmas festa is now over, and this little village has resumed its wonted tranquillity. I suppose you intend soon to proceed up the Rio Negro; no doubt my brother is now glorying in ornithological rarities, and revelling amid the sweets of lepidopterous loveliness. But enough! A little while and the wintry sea is roaring around my pillow; then shall I envy you in your snug redés far from the restless billow; then, whilst vainly endeavouring to swallow preserved salmon or other ship luxury, I shall long for my Amazonian appetite and roasted pirarucú; then― But I will not anticipate hours which are inevitable. I hope yourself and Mr. King are in good health. In this respect I have no cause to complain. Wishing you both a prosperous and a pleasant time, I must now remain, "Yours sincerely, "EDWARD WALLACE." It is evident from this letter that the usual dilatoriness and difficulties of Amazonian travel delayed his arrival at Para about four months beyond the time he calculated on. The answer to the enigma in the first letter, which he says he has enclosed, I did not receive; but I have no doubt it is as follows: "Because it is a corpse (copse) sloping away from 1 Native rum and mandioca meal. the town." "Slope," "sloping," were at that time slang words for escaping or running away, "understanded by the people," which perhaps they may not be now. I may add here that he did not like the name Herbert (his first name), and so took to his second-Edward. The friends of temperance often complain of the want of a good song. I think the following, written by my brother about 1848, may perhaps be considered suitable till a better one is written : "THE CUP of Tea. I. "Some love to sip their Burgundy, There's some will take their brandy neat, While others mix with water; Away with poisons such as these, No Alcohol for me! Oh, fill me up the sober cup, The social cup of Tea. II. "Some love to sing of ancient times, And drinking customs preach; Such customs are-as Shakespeare saith More honoured in the breach; For we can sing a joyous song Without the aid of wine, And court the muse without a glass To spur the lagging rhyme. Then take the pledge, be one of us, And join our melody— 'Oh, fill me up the sober cup, The social cup of Tea.' III. "We pray for that long-wished-for hour When Bacchus shall be slain, John Barleycorn be trodden down And ne'er rise up again; When man, begun to know himself, And still our song shall be, The social cup of Tea.'" The next verses, suggested by a well-known old song, show his early love of humanity and aspirations for an improved social state. It was probably written at Neath about 1847 or 1848. "THE LIGHT OF DAYS TO COME. "The light of other days is faded, But we will not repine, Nor waste the precious hours as they did, We will not sign in gloom and sadness But rather share the mirth and gladness "The past brought luxury and pleasure But equal all shall share the treasure Knowledge shall strengthen each endeavour To set the future right, And Justice with her sword shall sever The iron hand of Might. "The fields where warriors have commanded, And men have fought for fame, Shall in a future age be branded With an inglorious name. Bright souls who perish unassuming, Your work is not yet done, Like scattered seed your deeds shall bloom in The Light of days to come." I preserve the following fantastic little poem because it so well describes the mode of house-building of the dwellers in the grand equatorial forests which supply so many of man's wants in a way unknown in the colder climes. "THE INDIAN'S HUT. "'Twas on the mighty Amazon, We floated with the tide, While steep and flowery were the banks And where the green bananas grow, "Like to the halls of Solomon, "Those wild fantastic slender cords Which hang from branches high, "All silently, for stake and pole Were sharpened where they grew ; And where the house was built, no axe But slow and still the Indian worked, "Oh, for a lodge!' thus Cowper cried; A quiet spot, a calm retreat, I give the following verses on the Cayman or Alligator of the Amazon because I remember how pleased my brother was with the quotation from Macbeth, which so aptly applies to this dangerous reptile. "SONG OF THE CAYMAN. (Written, 1850.) "Thy bones are marrowless, thy blood is cold: Thou hast no speculation in those eyes Which thou dost glare with.' "I bask in the waveless waters When the sun is shining on high, Watching the Indian children With a grim and greedy eye; Woe to the careless bather Who ventures where I lie. "I float on the midnight waters Which flattens the hunter's lead; "I hear the house-dog prowling, I rise again as noiseless And seize him on the brink. "I dwell not in rushing waters, But in woodland pool and lake, "Midnight deeds have I witness'd, I preserve the next little poem because I feel sure that the first three verses were inspired by the memories of his childhood, while the conclusion indicates those deeper feelings still more dominant in that which follows it. |