< Page:A Glimpse at Guatemala.pdf
This page needs to be proofread.
146
A GLIMPSE AT GUATEMALA.

their beautiful overlapping slopes are lost to sight

towards the

sea.

A

where they sink in mist

short ride brought us to Quirigua, which a few years ago

twenty or thirty houses, but now contains only the comfortable homestead of the cattle rancho belonging to Don Carlos Herrera. The ruins of Quirigua, about six miles distant, are included within the limits

was the

site of a village of

which since the time of our visit has passed into the hands of President Barrios, and it is to be sincerely hoped that he will take measures to guard the monuments against depredations likely to occur by occasion of of the estate,

their proximity to the

new

railway.

Next morning we set out for the ruins. Biding first through a grove of pine-trees, and then gradually descending to the plain, we followed a narrow track into an almost impenetrable forest of coroza palms, mahogany and cedar trees, and all that marvellous tangle of creepers and climbing plants whicii go After about an to make tip that great wonder of nature a tropical forest. hour's ride through the forest, we crossed the line of the new railway, which was as yet innocent of rails, and half an hour later we emerged on the bank of the Motagua, about a mile distant from the ruins, and were welcomed to our new camping-ground by Mr. Hugh Price, my husband's companion and assistant in an expedition to Palenque in 1891. The great river had shrunk to its summer limits, and had left bare long

stretches of sand strewn with the leavings of former floods, reminding one of

dumping ground of some

and no more picturesque than such a A little settlement of half a dozen houses had lately receptacle of rubbish. been formed on the river-bank, and a hundred yards beyond it Mr. Price, who had arrived a fortnight earlier, had built a rancho for us at the cost of about £2 sterling. With our tent pitched beside it for use as a bedroom we were well accommodated but the situation was not a pleasant one. The herds of cattle roaming through the forest would draw down of an evening towards the

great city,

the river-bank,

when

and we were forced

rival bulls

made night hideous with

up again and again

their bellowings,

ward off attacks on the rather frail fence which protected our homestead, and to drive off those animals who came stumbling among the tent ropes and threatened to bring the canvas down on our heads. The poor beasts meant no harm to us, but they were searching wildly for something salt, and they would return again and again to lick and scrape the earth on the spot where we had thrown the small ration of salt which we daily gave to our mules. Woe to the man who left his garments overnight hanging on the fence to diy; nothing would be left of them in the morning but a chewed unrecognizable mass. Unattractive as were our surroundings, it was no doubt preferable living near the river-bank, where the breeze could reach us and the water-supply to

get

to

This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.