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Rough Notes Of A Journey Through The Wilderness - From Trinidad To Para, Brazil, By Way Of The Great Cataracts (1872) (Paperback)
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Rough Notes Of A Journey Through The Wilderness - From Trinidad To Para, Brazil, By Way Of The Great Cataracts (1872) (Paperback)
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Subtitle: From Trinidad to Para,? Brazil, by Way of the Great
Cataracts of the Orinoco, Atabapo, and Rio Negro General Books
publication date: 2009 Original publication date: 1872 Original
Publisher: W. H. J. Carter Subjects: Venezuela Brazil Orinoco River
(Venezuela and Colombia) Rio Negro (Amazonas, Brazil) Indians of
Central America History / Latin America / Central America History /
Latin America / South America History / Americas Social Science /
Archaeology Social Science / Ethnic Studies / Native American
Studies Notes: This is a black and white OCR reprint of the
original. It has no illustrations and there may be typos or missing
text. When you buy the General Books edition of this book you get
free trial access to Million-Books.com where you can select from
more than a million books for free. Excerpt: CHAPTER IV. August
Gth. -- I took the steering paddle, and started, with Rogers,
Watkins, and an Indian, for the Rio Negro. Watkins and Rogers were
in great spirits, and I, of course, did not dwell much upon the
impending difficulties of the way. Seiior Dalla Costa gave me
letters to the governor of Amazonas, as the Venezuelans call their
south-west frontier district. As it was the starting day, we
paddled only to about the distance of ten miles above the town, and
there camped. The rain was nearly at its highest, and in
consequence the current was very strong. Tth. -- This morning we
had been travelling quite among the tree-tops and wild calabash
bushes, as the lowlands were under water. We camped by three
o'clock; found plenty of iguana in the trees. I now began to see
that I was fortunate in my Indian (Ramon); he worked willingly and
well, and, in his Indian way, did things quietly, without my having
to remind him of them. Sth. -- Sunday in camp. The woods had much
improved since the rains; everything therein was now green and
graceful. On the side of the stony hill behind our camp were many
of the trailingcacti, bearing plenty of their pl...
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