Capitolo 5
produces an enormous difference in the pluvius quantity in which it falls
different regions. In the northern part of South America, where the earth
it is confined with on every hand from tropical and enormous seas that load the warm one and
thirsty air with vapor, and where the mighty Cordillera of the Andeses
backs his/her frozen tops to cool and to fall again the vapors a,
pluvius quantity that amounts to more than ten feet in perpendicular height
fallen in one year. To St. Petersburg, on the other hand the quantity this way
to fall in one year is but few more than a foot. The immense downpour
what it pours down from the clouds in South America, if the water
it was to remain where it fell, completely it submerges and it floods the country.
As it is, in to flow away through the valleys to the sea, the united one
streams form the greatest river on the globe--the horsewoman; and the
vegetation, stimulated by the heat and it fed from the abundant one and
incessant provisionings of the damp, become so line, and you load the earth
with such pitched mass and cover of mats of trunks and stems, and twisting
garlands and grapevines that man you/he/she is almost excluded by the scene. The
become boundless forests an enormous jungle and almost impenetrable,
surrendered to wild beasts, repent harmful, and enormous and fierce birds
of prey.
Clearly, the district of St. Petersburg, with his/her frozen winter his/her minimum
and weak sun and his/her twelve pluvius thumbs annual, owes
necessarily present, in all of his/her phenomenons of vegetable and the animal life,
an impressive contrast to the exuberant prolificness of the Grenada Nuova. It is,
however, later everything, not completely the opposite extreme. There is
certain regions on the surface of the earth that indeed is rainless;
and it is these that introduce us with the truth and indeed they contrast to the
luxuriant vegetation and the life that it abounds some country of the horsewoman. In
these regions of rainless necessarily all are silence, devastation and
death. Anybody plant can grow; any animal can live. Man is also forever, and