TEXT B At last her efforts bore
fruit. Burton was appointed to Santos, in Brazil, where Isabel might also go.
They made their farewell rounds and Isabel learnt Portuguese while she packed
up. At Lisbon three, inch cockroaches seethed about the floor of their room.
Isabel was caught off her guard, but Burton was brutal," I suppose you think you
look very pretty, standing on that chair and howling at those innocent
creatures." Isabel’s reaction was typical. She reflected that of course he was
right; if she had to live in a country full of such creatures, and worse, she
had better pull herself together. She got down and started lashing out with a
slipper. In two hours she had got a bag of ninety-seven. On
arrival in Brazil she found that Portuguese fauna had been nothing. Now there
were spiders, as big as crabs. In the matter of tropical diseases it seems to
have ranked with darkest Africa; there were slaves, too, and in a society where
men drank brandy for breakfast, no one condemned the habit of chaining mad slave
to the roof-top as a sort of domestic pet, or clown. There was cholera too, and
the less dramatic but agonizing local boils," so close you could not put a pin
through them." The Emperor found the new Consul and his wife a
great addition to the country, and once again Burton’s wonderful conversation
held his audience spellbound. But chic Brazilians looked askance at Isabel
wading barefoot in the streams, bottling snakes, painting and doing up a ruined
chapel, or accompanying Richard on expeditions to the virgin interior. There
were gymnastics and cold baths, and Mass and market," helping Richard with
Literature" (his writing was always in capitals to her) and the wearisome pages
of Foreign Office reports she was always so loyal and dutiful in copying out for
him. About now, a note of sadness creeps into Isabel’s letters
home. We sense an immense loneliness behind the courage with which she always
faced life. Richard was going through a particularly trying phase. The explorer
was dying hard, strangled in office tape. He would cut loose and disappear for
weeks at a time, returning as bitter and restless as when he left. It was she
who held everything together and kept up the facade, both with the Foreign
Office, who were constantly making the most awkward enquiries, and the local
society, who were equally curious. There were few diversions for her,
Richard preferred discussing metaphysics and astronomy with the Capuchin
monks to going to the local dances. She was learning now to be self-sufficient,
to manage, unobtrusively, the practical side of their lives, and to rough it,
both physically and emotionally. She had to combine the shadow-like devotion of
the Oriental woman with a fighting spirit seldom found in women, and certainly
not in most Victorian women. When her husband laughed at her reaction, Isabel decided
A.to hit her husband with a slipper. B.to carry on calmly with what she was doing. C.to pull herself towards the chair she was standing on. D.to calm down and behave sensibly.