78 Idle Days in Pataqouia. 



nature. For when man begins to cultivate tlie soil, 

 to introduce domestic cattle, and to slay a larger 

 number of wild animals tlian ho retjuires for food 

 — and civilized man must do all that to create the 

 conditions he imagines necessary to his existence — 

 from that moment does he place himself in anta- 

 gonism with nature, and has thereafter to suffer 

 countless persecutions at her hands. After a cen- 

 tury of residence in the valley the colonist has 

 established his position so that he cannot be driven 

 out. Twenty- five yeai's ago it was still possible for 

 a great cacique to gallop into the town, clattering 

 his silver harness and flourishing his spear, to 

 demand with loud threats of vengeance his unpaid 

 annual tribute of cattle, knife-blades, indigo, and 

 cochineal. Ts'ow the red man's spirit is broken ; iu 

 numbers and in courage he is declining. During 

 the last decade the desert places have been abun- 

 dantly watered with his blood, and, before many 

 years arc over, the old vendetta will be forgotten, 

 for he will luive ceased to exist. 



Nature, albeit now without his aid, still maintains 

 the conflict, enlisting tlie elements, with bird, 

 beast, and insect, against the hated white disturber, 

 whose way of life is not in harmony v,ath her way. 



There are the animal foes. Pumas infest the 

 settlement. At all seasons a few of these sly 

 l)ut withal audacious I'obbers haunt the riverside ; 

 but in winter a great many lean and hungiy in- 

 dividuals come down from the uplands to slay the 

 sheep and horses, and it is extremely difficult to 



