Through the Brazilian Wilderness
Etext prepared by John Bickers and Dagny
THROUGH THE BRAZILIAN WILDERNESS By Theodore Roosevelt
Etext prepared by Dagny, dagnypg@yahoo.com and John Bickers, jbickers@ihug.co.nz
This is an account of a zoo-geographic reconnaissance through the Brazilian hinterland.
The official and proper title of the expedition is that given it by the Brazilian Government: Expedicao Scientifica Roosevelt- Rondon. When I started from the United States, it was to make an expedition, primarily concerned with mammalogy and ornithology, for the American Museum of Natural History of New York. This was undertaken under the auspices of Messrs. Osborn and Chapman, acting on behalf of the Museum. In the body of this work I describe how the scope of the expedition was enlarged, and how it was given a geographic as well as a zoological character, in consequence of the kind proposal of the Brazilian Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, General Lauro Muller. In its altered and enlarged form the expedition was rendered possible only by the generous assistance of the Brazilian Government. Throughout the body of the work will be found reference after reference to my colleagues and companions of the expedition, whose services to science I have endeavored to set forth, and for whom I shall always feel the most cordial friendship and regard.
THEODORE ROOSEVELT. SAGAMORE HILL, September 1, 1914
One day in 1908, when my presidential term was coming to a close, Father Zahm, a priest whom I knew, came in to call on me. Father Zahm and I had been cronies for some time, because we were both of us fond of Dante and of history and of science—I had always commended to theologians his book, Evolution and Dogma. He was an Ohio boy, and his early schooling had been obtained in old-time American fashion in a little log school; where, by the way, one of the other boys was Januarius Aloysius MacGahan, afterward the famous war correspondent and friend of Skobeloff. Father Zahm told me that MacGahan even at that time added an utter fearlessness to chivalric tenderness for the weak, and was the defender of any small boy who was oppressed by a larger one. Later Father Zahm was at Notre Dame University, in Indiana, with Maurice Egan, whom, when I was President, I appointed minister to Denmark.
Theodore Roosevelt
---
THROUGH THE BRAZILIAN WILDERNESS
PREFACE
THROUGH THE BRAZILIAN WILDERNESS
I. THE START
II. UP THE PARAGUAY
III. A JAGUAR-HUNT ON THE TAQUARY
IV. THE HEADWATERS OF THE PARAGUAY
V. UP THE RIVER OF TAPIRS
VI. THROUGH THE HIGHLAND WILDERNESS OF WESTERN BRAZIL
VII. WITH A MULE TRAIN ACROSS NHAMBIQUARA LAND
VIII. THE RIVER OF DOUBT
IX. DOWN AN UNKNOWN RIVER INTO THE EQUATORIAL FOREST
APPENDIX A.
APPENDIX B.
APPENDIX C.