Nine: Frei
Lothar
The seated
figure, waiting for a tambaqui fish to be baked and served on a banana leaf,
which would be reinforcement to his heart and stomach, was rendered sadder by
the shade of the kapok tree. It was the
first substantial meal he would be eating for the two days in which he had been
traveling. Frei Lothar felt tired and
reflected on his life and misfortunes like the one he had just endured. He was still gasping, upset by the
calamity. He felt a certain obscure
fragility, old age at the least, and so he knew that the appointment of his
days in Amazonia was coming to the end and that now he would have to abandon
everything, retire and die. Coming by
canoe through a channel of the Numa Slough, he was passing over a floating
island of tea wort when the canoe tore into a kind of moving fabric, a horrible
carpet in the shape of a map of Brazil formed by crackling and armed yellow
scorpions, in an area of several square yards; they were advancing, one on top
of the other, crossing the river in migration.
A caboclo started to shout and the canoe almost overturned.
“Quick!”,
the padre commanded.
But
already the scorpions threatened to climb on board and Frei Lothar, lighting a
fire with the newspapers he was bringing to the judge in Calama, filling the
barque with flames and getting burnt all over, exclaimed, “Oh, my Amazon!, God
is great but the forest is greater and I am not the same.”
Beginning
to recover strength, he was waiting to depart after lunch on the Barão do Juruá,
now owned by Antonio Ferreira, as was everything else there. But Ferreira had gotten a bad deal; the price
of rubber was declining more and more from what it had been a hundred years
before, as the Brother had seen on the trip he made this month to the Rio
Machado – rubber tappers decimated by fever, ruined by the crash, unemployed
since rubber from Ceylon, without microcyclus, supplanted production in the
Amazon; thousands of tappers witnessed the permanent end of the gigantic
empire, in which vast fortunes made overnight disappeared and the Amazon
returned to what it had been before 1850: hell entrenched in an economic crisis
that lasted a half century and killed thousands.
There were
still a few places where Frei Lothar could stand to go and Manixi was one of
these. The brother had lost his faith,
spoke coarsely, spit on the ground, went around armed, was cross and smelled
bad. The Rio Machado dazzled him,
seduced him, its green water running over emeralds, strange country of a
strange world where one only met with adventurers and Indians: the
sparrow-hawks, the macaws, the bobtails, the shelf fungi, wild, savage,
indomitable, hidden in the high and shady forest. It was paradise, it was hell, and Frei Lothar
loved it; he could not live without those trips, adventures in search of the
unknown. But the worst trip he made was
in 1908, when Frei Lothar, in a caravan carrying rubber latex from Cruzeiro do
Sul to the Cocame plantation, from the Rio Juruá to the Rio Tarauacá, crossed
the Manixi plantation, crossing the Rio Gregório, the Acurauá, proceeding on a
rough trail over a distance of two hundred miles. At that time, however, Frei Lothar was young
and at his hardiest.
Not much
time had passed when, with sandals sinking in the muddy clay, he was watching
the loading of the barge that the Barão do Juruá would be pulling to
Manaus from the Rio Jordão. His old
cassock stank, as it was soaked with sweat.
Sweat dripped upon much older sweat drenching the patches. Under a big, old and ill-fated black
umbrella, the friar looked ridiculous on the steep river bank, a strange type,
exotic, on the edge, in the greatest difficulty. The Barão do Juruá was being loaded
and the friar debarked for lunch, unsteady, in need of terra firma and an
escape from the heat, his feet sank in the soft mud. He was clambering up the slippery ladder of
the bank with difficulty when the first dogs appeared. At first, there were two that came down the
ladder in a fury. Then others came and
Frei Lothar eventually found himself surrounded by dogs and was using the cross
of his rosary to defend himself. The
children and men were laughing – the old good-for-nothing. Some of them owed their life to him. But Fernando Fialho, the harbormaster, showed
up suddenly and rescued him. Fialho was
busy loading jute, the new commodity of the region, on its way to Manaus. It seemed that Frei Lothar could not board
because the stevedores had taken the gangplank away and, strong and squat, they
were going back and forth on it weighed down by their loads so that they were
sinking into the bank. Frei Lothar
looked at the muddy water that dirtied his sandals. Boys had gone down the ladder. They had not even asked for his
benediction. It was said that he liked
little boys, which was a lie. The boys
jumped into the turbid water near him.
Water sprayed, sparkling. They
were near to giving the missionary a bath.
Frei Lothar did not protest because he was ill, with the illness of old
age, without strength, without courage, without nerves, without vitality,
without spirit, without faith. He looked
upon all this with compassion, sweat and impatience. It was truly satisfying – that splashing
which refreshed him. If he could he
would have taken off his smelly cassock and happily submerge himself in the
water. All these events blended together
for Frei Lothar: the scorpions, the dogs, the dousing, illness, old age,
calumny. The end. Annihilation.
Death. His legs trembling, Frei
Lothar was on the point of fainting in the heat. Miserable dogs! Miserable urchins! Miserable life! Evening began to fall and night was
approaching. The Barão do Juruá was going to sail,
finally, empty – a blessing that Antonio Ferreira forbade it to carry
passengers. No, it was not true that
the world was against him. Just the day
before he had been treated well.
Ferriera tolerated the old padre who administered medicine to people on
the plantations. The Barão do Juruá and everything that belonged to the Bataillon
empire was the property of Antonio Ferriera.
The Barão was going empty,
the friar would travel in peace, in comfort.
He had known trips in vessels full of pigs and hammocks, stinking of
excrement and putrid fish. The padre's
neck was burning with the heat, sweat was pouring and was rushing into his
chest. How easily those men lifted and
loaded the heavy bales! Oh, youth,
youth! Ah, the strength of their arms! Frei Lothar had come from Tarauacá, which he
still called Villa Seabra, had crossed on foot the arduous São Luis slough and
the São Joaquim, by way of Universo, Santa Luzia, Pacujá, he came by canoe by
that hidden channel. Now, no... He was no longer up to it. Let him prepare to die. But Frei Lothar did not want to die, he had
spent his life fighting death. He would
end up sunk in a hammock in Manaus in the parish of Aparecida in the midst of
wretched charity. Well no, that was not
certain. He would like to die in peace
or return to Europe, a dream that dissipated, as he was poor. Forty years in the depths of this hell, forgotten,
diminished, lost in the jungle. Would he
know how to live far away from this savage world? How would he be able to get to Europe, to
Strasbourg, his native city? He had done
everything that had to be done, fought off wild animals and fevers, said masses
among the Indians, baptized illegitimate urchins on river banks. What more?
Would they still want him? As he
could no longer ride horseback due to sciatica, he had to live on foot, bent
over by the weight of years and arthritis – my God! - his entire life most sad,
wasted, among serpents, vilified, chased by dogs … a difficult world! And within the Church, Frei Lothar only saw
the struggle for power! He had saved the
lives of thousands of men and was accused of illegitimately practicing medicine! The families of Manaus had nothing to do with
him as he had a bad reputation and bad character. He spit on the ground and used vulgar
language. No, he received nothing in
exchange, he never had money, never had a place to live, never flattered the
powerful, never tolerated them, always irritated them. After working forty years he only reaped
enemies. And the heat and mosquitos, the
suffocating nights. He had forged his
way into impenetrable forests full of snakes, spiders and scorpions. And how did they acknowledge him? With malicious gossip, with dragging his name
through the mud. Those scoundrels could
not understand his life among the Indians as other than for some sordid motive
born from their sick imaginations. No
one believed that he had labored in that hell for forty years in exchange for
nothing. This ate at his soul. There were letters from superiors with
accusations, the Provincial came with rumors … Ah, let them take him from there
so he would be gone forever – if they killed him they would be doing him a big
favor! … He was superfluous in that world; he would certainly like to die to
oblige the parish priest who detested him.
No one liked that ugly man who only wore the habit of a padre. His rough and weary voice, his crude and strong
hands, his fierce expression. Frei
Lothar hated the ruling class, hated religion and the faith; rather for him it
was medicine and practice. He did not
talk of pious matters, scratched his balls, prayed unwillingly, was irreverent,
laconic, frank, aggressive, gruff with the authorities, primitive and
rude. Frei Lothar was an irritated
soldier in Amazonia, God's officer, armed.
The night
was quite dark when the barge was fully loaded.
The plank
was transferred to the Barão
which was already stirring and near departure.
Frei Lothar carefully climbed on board and went to his cabin where he
took a bath before dinner.
Then,
clean and sated after his dinner, he was in a better mood. The Barão
continued its journey in the middle of the night – risky, but as could be
expected Ferreira wanted the boat in Manaus right away. The sound of the engines did not bother him,
he was resigned to it. Frei Lothar went
up towards the stern in the dark to a sort of terrace. He was alone.
The wind began to feel good to him, that wind had a delicate scent, an
atmosphere; he remained looking out at the dark night while sailing downstream
between the forms of shadows. It was as
he always felt – a passenger in the world.
He never stopped, here today, gone tomorrow... He thought of the man he
had been tending in Villa Seabra. That
man was about to die … What is death?
What is faith? Many men had died
in his arms and he could do nothing.
What was death? His faith lost
long ago. Let the Provincial get
angry! What Frei Lothar saw and observed
his whole life – it was not God: it was suffering, pain and death, misery and
desolation. Frei Lothar got up with
effort and left to go to his cabin from which he emerged with his violin. He sat down.
He would practice until sleep came.
It was Bach's Second Partita that he knew by heart but he never
succeeded in overcoming certain difficulties.
He played without the score. He
practiced without a score, in the dark, in the fleeting wind. Alone.
Without a score and without light, without anyone. Oh! It
was thus in the Amazon. The Amazon did
not have a score, light or anyone. The
Amazon was an immense plain of misery.
The economic depression hovered in its monstrous silence. The Partita came out rather well from his
old, arthritic fingers. He never had
time to practice, never had the conditions, the leisure. He traveled with his violin in ships and
canoes, in channels and pools, and almost lost the violin with the scorpions:
it was a valuable violin and symbolized what he had never been. A bad padre, a bad doctor, a bad
violinist. He had never done anything
well. Nothing complete. Now he was old, weak, having little faith,
little knowledge, little technique. “Oh,
worse than death is mediocrity!”, thought
Frei Lothar; the violin moaned, litanies, recitations, reflections. He attended the sick without resources; said
masses without passion; and now played the Partitia badly. Without remedies, without scores, without
know-how. Frei Lothar played with
imagination. The violin was a
Guarnerius. It was a present from Juca
de Neves, one of the few men with whom Frei Lothar was on terms of friendship. Actually, a Guarnerius is not an
imitation. It is a refinement of a
Stradavarius and much more resonant, appropriate for concert halls and with
large orchestras, whereas Strads were for suited for chamber music. Aided by inspiration the Partita came out
quite well. The Barão continued on in the middle of
the night. Suddenly, the friar recalled
the Brahms Double Concerto – what beauty! - and he modified one of the sections
of the Partita with the violin part from that other work. All was unease and sublimity in the Double
Concerto. He imagined himself surrounded
by the orchestra, remembered his dreams of becoming a musician, and not a
priest; he immersed himself in the concerto, hearing the cello and the entire
big orchestra. He saw full galleries
from which triumph burst forth, the applause, all that far away from the
Amazon, far away from death. He was
elevated by his daydream. Why? Nothing was left of the old mysticism. Why?
He played Brahms plying his way through the Amazon forest. Night was at its height and the Amazon sky
suddenly became transparent and clear, covered with stars that sparkled, and
everything appeared to him as of one nature, in a whole in which he did not
exist but was integrated in a totality – and Frei Lothar stopped playing, ran
to the ship's rail with tears in his eyes and suddenly saw, ecstatic, immensity
and eternity appearing suddenly there before him, approaching and arriving to
him, wide, entering through his eyes, his ears, and everything was one
Immeasurable... - and he, one with it, eternal, gave a shout and felt
incomprehensibly happy.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário