Manuel Rojas,
La Cuidad de los Césares,
Santiago, 1936.
Â
The Patagonian Giants
Helen Wallis, âThe Patagonian Giants', in
Byron's Circumnavigation,
Hakluyt Society, London, 1964.
R. T. Gould, âThere were Giants in those Days', in
Enigmas,
London, 1946.
For help in pinning down the origin of the word âPatagonia' I am most grateful to Joan St George Saunders and Professor Emilio Gonzales Diaz, of Buenos Aires.
Â
The Revolution
Osvaldo Bayer,
Los Vengadores de la Patagonia Trágica,
3 vols, Buenos Aires, 1972â4.
Jose Maria Borrero,
La Patagonia Trágica,
reprinted, Buenos Aires, 1967.
Contemporary copies of the
Magellan Times
printed in Punta Arenas.
Â
Folklore of Chiloé
Narciso GarcÃa Barria,
Tesoro Mitológico de Chiloé,
1968.
Â
Indians of Tierra del Fuego
Lucas Bridges,
The Uttermost Part of the Earth,
London, 1948. Samuel Kirkland Lothrop,
The Indians of Tierra del Fuego,
New York, 1928.
Martin Gusinde,
The Yámana,
trans. F. Schütze, New Haven, 1961.
Â
Edgar Allan Poe
Introduction to
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym,
by Harold Beaver, Penguin Books, London, 1975.
Â
Simón Radowitzky
Osvaldo Bayer,
Los Anarquistas Expropiadores,
Buenos Aires, 1975.
Â
The Dictionary
Rev. Thomas Bridges,
YámanaâEnglish Dictionary
, ed. Professor T. Hesterman, Mödling, Austria, 1933, limited edition of 300 copies.
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The End of the World
Unmentioned in the text are Jules Verne's symbolic last novel
The Lighthouse at the End of the World
, and W. Olaf Stapledon's
Last and First Men
, London, 1930. In this memorable fantasy, the human species, now completely Americanized, perishes through epidemics of cannibalism and pulmonary and nervous diseases. A few stragglers, however, survive to the south of BahÃa Blanca, and a new civilization springs up in the Far South under the influence of an adolescent of prodigious sexual capacity, known as The Boy who Refused to Grow Up. The Patagonian Civilization colonizes the rest of the globe, but is no less stupid than its predecessor and destroys itself with an atomic cataclysm.
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Captain Charles Amherst Milward
I could not have written this book without the help of Charley Milward's daughter, Monica Barnett, of Lima. She allowed me access to her father's papers and the unpublished manuscript of his stories in her possession. This was particularly generous since she is writing her own biography in which they will appear in full. My sections 73, 75 and 86 are printed from the manuscript with minor alterations. His other stories, from sections 72 to 85, have been adapted from the original.