26.1.08

Porto Praya - St. Jago - Cape de Verd Islands por Charles Darwin em 1832

Já tinha escrito sobre a Viagem do Beagle (ver posts relacionados nas etiquetas: expedições e Darwin). Como encontrei o livro em word na net fica o link e um pequeno excerto para despertar o interesse...
"The neighbourhood of Porto Praya, viewed from the sea, wears a desolate aspect. The volcanic fires of a past age, and the scorching heat of a tropical sun, have in most places rendered the soil unfit for vegetation. The country rises in successive steps of table-land, interspersed with some truncate conical hills, and the horizon is bounded by an irregular chain of more lofty mountains. The scene, as beheld through the hazy atmosphere of this climate, is one of great interest; if, indeed, a person, fresh from sea, and who has just walked, for the first time, in a grove of cocoa-nut trees, can be a judge of anything but his own happiness. The island would generally be considered as very uninteresting, but to any one accustomed only to an English landscape, the novel aspect of an utterly sterile land possesses a grandeur which more vegetation might spoil. A single green leaf can scarcely be discovered over wide tracts of the lava plains; yet flocks of goats, together with a few cows, contrive to exist."
O mais engraçado é que, passados 176 anos, as cabras e as vacas, para além de existirem, andam pelos lugares mais improváveis desta Menina do Atlântico. Adiante...
Num outro site, com as obras completas de Charles Darwin (digitalizadas e em word) encontrei o mapa acima - desenhado na mesma viagem - que revela o recorte do litoral e um pouco do interior de Santiago. É interessante constatar que o Monte Vermelho (actualmente minguando a olhos vistos) tem esse mesmo nome há muitos mais anos do que imaginava.