In No Other Part Of Timor Do There Appear To Be
Any Recent Igneous Rocks, So That It Can Hardly Be Classed As A
Volcanic Island.
Indeed its position is just outside of the great
volcanic belt, which extends from Flores through Ombay and Wetter to
Banda.
I first visited Timor in 1857, staying a day at Coupang, the chief
Dutch town at the west end of the island; and again in May 1859, when
I stayed a fortnight in the same neighbourhood. In the spring of 1861
I spent four months at Delli, the capital of the Portuguese
possessions in the eastern part of the island.
The whole neighbourhood of Coupang appears to have been elevated at a
recent epoch, consisting of a rugged surface of coral rock, which
rises in a vertical wall between the beach and the town, whose low,
white, red-tiled houses give it an appearance very similar to other
Dutch settlements in the East. The vegetation is everywhere scanty
and scrubby. Plants of the families Apocynaceae and Euphorbiacea,
abound; but there is nothing that can be called a forest, and the
whole country has a parched and desolate appearance, contrasting
strongly with the lofty forest trees and perennial verdure of the
Moluccas or of Singapore. The most conspicuous feature of the
vegetation was the abundance of fine fanleaved palms (Borassus
flabelliformis), from the leaves of which are constructed the strong
and durable water-buckets in general use, and which are much superior
to those formed from any other species of palm. From the same tree,
palm-wine and sugar are made, and the common thatch for houses formed
of the leaves lasts six or seven years without removal. Close to the
town I noticed the foundation of a ruined house below high-water mark,
indicating recent subsidence. Earthquakes are not severe here, and are
so infrequent and harmless that the chief houses are built of stone.
The inhabitants of Coupang consist of Malays, Chinese, and Dutch,
besides the natives, so that there are many strange and complicated
mixtures among the population. There is one resident English merchant,
and whalers as well as Australian ships often come here for stores and
water. The native Timorese preponderate, and a very little examination
serves to show that they have nothing in common with Malays, but are
much more closely allied to the true Papuans of the Aru Islands and
New Guinea. They are tall, have pronounced features, large somewhat
aquiline noses, and frizzly hair, and are generally of a dusky brown
colour. The way in which the women talk to each other and to the men,
their loud voices and laughter, and general character of self-
assertion, would enable an experienced observer to decide, even
without seeing them, that they were not Malays.
Mr. Arndt, a German and the Government doctor, invited me to stay at
his house while in Coupang, and I gladly accepted his offer, as I only
intended making a short visit. We at first began speaking French, but
he got on so badly that we soon passed insensibly into Malay; and we
afterwards held long discussions on literary, scientific, and
philosophical questions in that semi-barbarous language, whose
deficiencies we made up by the free use of French or Latin words.
After a few walks in the neighbourhood of the town, I found such a
poverty of insects and birds that I determined to go for a few days to
the island of Semao at the western extremity of Timor, where I heard
that there was forest country with birds not found at Coupang. With
some difficulty I obtained a large dugout boat with outriggers, to
take me over a distance of about twenty miles. I found the country
pretty well wooded, but covered with shrubs and thorny bushes rather
than forest trees, and everywhere excessively parched and dried up by
the long-continued dry season. I stayed at the village of Oeassa,
remarkable for its soap springs. One of these is in the middle of the
village, bubbling out from a little cone of mud to which the ground
rises all round like a volcano in miniature. The water has a soapy
feel and produces a strong lather when any greasy substance is washed
in it. It contains alkali and iodine, in such quantities as to destroy
all vegetation for some distance around. Close by the village is one of
the finest springs I have ever seen, contained in several rocky basins
communicating by narrow channels. These have been neatly walled where
required and partly levelled, and form fine natural baths. The water
is well tasted and clear as crystal, and the basins are surrounded by
a grove of lofty many-stemmed banyan-trees, which keep them always
cool and shady, and add greatly to the picturesque beauty of the
scene.
The village consists of curious little houses very different from any
I have seen elsewhere. They are of an oval figure, and the walls are
made of sticks about four feet high placed close together. From this
rises a high conical roof thatched with grass. The only opening is a
door about three feet high. The people are like the Timorese with
frizzly or wavy hair and of a coppery brown colour. The better class
appear to have a mixture of some superior race which has much improved
their features. I saw in Coupang some chiefs from the island of Savu
further west, who presented characters very distinct from either the
Malay or Papuan races. They most resembled Hindus, having fine well-
formed features and straight thin noses with clear brown complexions.
As the Brahminical religion once spread over all Java, and even now
exists in Bali and Lombock, it is not at all improbable that some
natives of India should have reached this island, either by accident
or to escape persecution, and formed a permanent settlement there.
I stayed at Oeassa four days, when, not finding any insects and very
few new birds, I returned to Coupang to await the next mail steamer.
On the way I had a narrow escape of being swamped.
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