About
Bali History
One
of the smallest, but perhaps the most extraordinary, of the islands,
is the recently famous Bali - a cluster of high volcanoes, their
craters studded with serene lakes set in dark forests filled with
screaming monkeys. The long green slopes of the volcanoes, deeply
furrowed by ravines washed out by rushing rivers full of rapids
and waterfalls, drop steadily to the sea without forming lowlands.
just eight degrees south of the Equator, Bali has over two thousand
square miles of extravagantly fertile lands, most of which are beautifully
cultivated. Only a narrow strait, hardly two miles across, separates
Bali from Java; here again the idea that the two islands were once
joined and then separated is sustained by the legend of the great
Javanese king who was obliged to banish his good-for-nothing son
to Bali, then united to Java by a very narrow isthmus. The king
accompanied his son to the narrowest point of the tongue of land;
when the young prince had disappeared from sight, to further emphasize
the separation, he drew a line with his finger across the sands.
The waters met and Bali became an island.
The
dangers lurking in the waters around the island suggest a possible
reason why Bali remained obscure and unconquered until 1908. Besides
the strong tidal currents and the great depths of the straits, the
coasts are little indented and are constantly exposed to the full
force of the monsoons; where they are not bordered by dangerous
coral banks, they rise from the sea in steep cliffs. Anchorage is
thus out of the question except far out to sea, and the Dutch have
bad to build an artificial port in Benoa to afford a berth for small
vessels.
info"+---++
|