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Nostromo: A Tale of the Seaboard
by Joseph Conrad
Part First: The Silver of
the Mine
Chapter One
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IN THE time of Spanish
rule, and for many years afterwards, the town of Sulaco--the luxuriant
beauty of the orange gardens bears witness to its antiquity--had never been
commercially anything more important than a coasting port with a fairly
large local trade in ox-hides and indigo. The clumsy deep-sea galleons of
the conquerors that, needing a brisk gale to move at all, would lie
becalmed, where your modern ship built on clipper lines forges ahead by the
mere flapping of her sails, had been barred out of Sulaco by the prevailing
calms of its vast gulf. Some harbours of the earth are made difficult of
access by the treachery of sunken rocks and the tempests of their shores.
Sulaco had found an inviolable sanctuary from the temptations of a trading
world in the solemn hush of the deep Golfo Placido as if within an enormous
semi-circular and unroofed temple open to the ocean, with its walls of lofty
mountains hung with the mourning draperies of cloud.
On one side of this broad curve in the straight seaboard of the Republic of
Costaguana, the last spur of the coast range forms an insignificant cape
whose name is Punta Mala. From the middle of the gulf the point of the land
itself is not visible at all; but the shoulder of a steep hill at the back
can be made out faintly like a shadow on the sky.
On the other side, what seems to be an isolated patch of blue mist floats
lightly on the glare of the horizon. This is the peninsula of Azuera, a wild
chaos of sharp rocks and stony levels cut about by vertical ravines. It lies
far out to sea like a rough head of stone stretched from a green-clad coast
at the end of a slender neck of sand covered with thickets of thorny scrub.
Utterly waterless, for the rainfall runs off at once on all sides into the
sea, it has not soil enough--it is said--to grow a single blade of grass, as
if it were blighted by a curse. The poor, associating by an obscure instinct
of consolation the ideas of evil and wealth, will tell you that it is deadly
because of its forbidden treasures. The common folk of the neighbourhood,
peons of the estancias, vaqueros of the seaboard plains, tame Indians coming
miles to market with a bundle of sugar-cane or a basket of maize worth about
threepence, are well aware that heaps of shining gold lie in the gloom of
the deep precipices cleaving the stony levels of Azuera. Tradition has it
that many adventurers of olden time had perished in the search. The story
goes also that within men's memory two wandering sailors-- Americanos,
perhaps, but gringos of some sort for certain--talked over a gambling,
good-for-nothing mozo, and the three stole a donkey to carry for them a
bundle of dry sticks, a water-skin, and provisions enough to last a few
days. Thus accompanied, and with revolvers at their belts, they had started
to chop their way with machetes through the thorny scrub on the neck of the
peninsula.
On the second evening an upright spiral of smoke (it could only have been
from their camp-fire) was seen for the first time within memory of man
standing up faintly upon the sky above a razor-backed ridge on the stony
head. The crew of a coasting schooner, lying becalmed three miles off the
shore, stared at it with amazement till dark. A negro fisherman, living in a
lonely hut in a little bay near by, had seen the start and was on the
lookout for some sign. He called to his wife just as the sun was about to
set. They had watched the strange portent with envy, incredulity, and awe.
The impious adventurers gave no other sign. The sailors, the Indian, and the
stolen burro were never seen again. As to the mozo, a Sulaco man--his wife
paid for some masses, and the poor four-footed beast, being without sin, had
been probably permitted to die; but the two gringos, spectral and alive, are
believed to be dwelling to this day amongst the rocks, under the fatal spell
of their success. Their souls cannot tear themselves away from their bodies
mounting guard over the discovered treasure. They are now rich and hungry
and thirsty--a strange theory of tenacious gringo ghosts suffering in their
starved and parched flesh of defiant heretics, where a Christian would have
renounced and been released.
These, then, are the legendary inhabitants of Azuera guarding its forbidden
wealth; and the shadow on the sky on one side with the round patch of blue
haze blurring the bright skirt of the horizon on the other, mark the two
outermost points of the bend which bears the name of Golfo Placido, because
never a strong wind had been known to blow upon its waters.
On crossing the imaginary line drawn from Punta Mala to Azuera the ships
from Europe bound to Sulaco lose at once the strong breezes of the ocean.
They become the prey of capricious airs that play with them for thirty hours
at a stretch sometimes. Before them the head of the calm gulf is filled on
most days of the year by a great body of motionless and opaque clouds. On
the rare clear mornings another shadow is cast upon the sweep of the gulf.
The dawn breaks high behind the towering and serrated wall of the
Cordillera, a clear-cut vision of dark peaks rearing their steep slopes on a
lofty pedestal of forest rising from the very edge of the shore. Amongst
them the white head of Higuerota rises majestically upon the blue. Bare
clusters of enormous rocks sprinkle with tiny black dots the smooth dome of
snow.
Then, as the midday sun withdraws from the gulf the shadow of the mountains,
the clouds begin to roll out of the lower valleys. They swathe in sombre
tatters the naked crags of precipices above the wooded slopes, hide the
peaks, smoke in stormy trails across the snows of Higuerota. The Cordillera
is gone from you as if it had dissolved itself into great piles of grey and
black vapours that travel out slowly to seaward and vanish into thin air all
along the front before the blazing heat of the day. The wasting edge of the
cloud-bank always strives for, but seldom wins, the middle of the gulf. The
sun--as the sailors say--is eating it up. Unless perchance a sombre
thunder-head breaks away from the main body to career all over the gulf till
it escapes into the offing beyond Azuera, where it bursts suddenly into
flame and crashes like a sinster pirate-ship of the air, hove-to above the
horizon, engaging the sea.
At night the body of clouds advancing higher up the sky smothers the whole
quiet gulf below with an impenetrable darkness, in which the sound of the
falling showers can be heard beginning and ceasing abruptly--now here, now
there. Indeed, these cloudy nights are proverbial with the seamen along the
whole west coast of a great continent. Sky, land, and sea disappear together
out of the world when the Placido--as the saying is--goes to sleep under its
black poncho. The few stars left below the seaward frown of the vault shine
feebly as into the mouth of a black cavern. In its vastness your ship floats
unseen under your feet, her sails flutter invisible above your head. The eye
of God Himself--they add with grim profanity--could not find out what work a
man's hand is doing in there; and you would be free to call the devil to
your aid with impunity if even his malice were not defeated by such a blind
darkness.
The shores on the gulf are steep-to all round; three uninhabited islets
basking in the sunshine just outside the cloud veil, and opposite the
entrance to the harbour of Sulaco, bear the name of "The Isabels."
There is the Great Isabel; the Little Isabel, which is round; and Hermosa,
which is the smallest.
That last is no more than a foot high, and about seven paces across, a mere
flat top of a grey rock which smokes like a hot cinder after a shower, and
where no man would care to venture a naked sole before sunset. On the Little
Isabel an old ragged palm, with a thick bulging trunk rough with spines, a
very witch amongst palm trees, rustles a dismal bunch of dead leaves above
the coarse sand. The Great Isabel has a spring of fresh water issuing from
the overgrown side of a ravine. Resembling an emerald green wedge of land a
mile long, and laid flat upon the sea, it bears two forest trees standing
close together, with a wide spread of shade at the foot of their smooth
trunks. A ravine extending the whole length of the island is full of bushes;
and presenting a deep tangled cleft on the high side spreads itself out on
the other into a shallow depression abutting on a small strip of sandy
shore.
From that low end of the Great Isabel the eye plunges through an opening two
miles away, as abrupt as if chopped with an axe out of the regular sweep of
the coast, right into the harbour of Sulaco. It is an oblong, lake-like
piece of water. On one side the short wooded spurs and valleys of the
Cordillera come down at right angles to the very strand; on the other the
open view of the great Sulaco plain passes into the opal mystery of great
distances overhung by dry haze. The town of Sulaco itself--tops of walls, a
great cupola, gleams of white miradors in a vast grove of orange trees--lies
between the mountains and the plain, at some little distance from its
harbour and out of the direct line of sight from the sea.
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