Two Trees Make a Forest. Jessica J. Lee

Two Trees Make a Forest - Jessica J. Lee


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the island’s crown are only subtle deviations from the flatlands of the west. But adding terrain to the map, the contrast sharpens. A band of rock forms on the virtual terrain. With a map’s satellite view, the deep green body of the island’s mountains and foothills presses hard against the ligature of roads and pale farmland in the west. A small place already, so much of Taiwan is given to wilderness and altitude. Seventy-five percent of the land is on a slope, and nearly 60 percent is covered in forest.

      The Tropic of Cancer cuts through the midpoint of the island. It is an unseen border, but known to the life that inhabits this place: what is damp mist in the north evaporates into the scorched light of the south. Humidity reigns over all, but the south is hotter, with parched and arid sweeps of mudstone dried into jagged teeth. On islands, as on mountains, the weather shifts on a whim.

      •

      ON THAT FIRST VISIT AFTER MY GRANDFATHER died, my mother and I had been tracing our way through the southernmost jut of the island, winding the coral-strewn route uphill to where the tip of Taiwan could be seen touching the sea. The forest grew thickly there, a short distance inland from the salt of the shore, and the humidity hung heavy. With green-glossed leaves and aerials over everything, the region felt vastly different from the forests I knew well. The trees were heavy-slung with the lazy shapes of lianas dangling from the branches. Every so often in a clearing, we’d find a looking-glass tree, its buttress roots like pale batwings propping the base of the mangrove, its shape a bizarre reflection of its funhouse name. The tree seemed to belong to an inverted fantasy world, with roots braced perpendicular to the ground, exposed to the air and tall enough to reach a child’s height up the trunk, a visible reminder of the vast worlds contained beneath the soil, beneath all the other trees.

      The thought of my grandfather hung there, between us, amid the fig trees. I knew my mother’s mind was on him whenever we went south—his ashes were not far away, in Kaohsiung—and there weren’t words that could salve his absence. She dreamed of him often, she had told me, but in her dreams he was always a ghost, hovering near the ceiling. I didn’t tell her that I dreamed of him too, but the scene was always in his darkened room, him perched at the end of the single bed, hands on his knees, silent. Instead, I clasped her hand every so often, hoping the pulse of my palm might convey our shared grief.

      There is a motif in Chinese myth that transmutes and shapeshifts depending on the tale and the teller. The “sky ladder” could be a mountain, but at other times it was a rope, a rainbow, or occasionally a cobweb. In my favorite tales, the ladder is a tree, impossibly high, a bridge between the earth and the heavens. What might I see at the crown of such a tree? The tree spanned the distance between mortality and immortality, the profane and the sacred. Climbing it was a feeble grasp toward godliness. I thought of my mother’s dream and wondered what Gong had known of the sky, of height. He had been a pilot, after all. He had never had need of such a ladder.

      A song cut through the woods, a sweet-toned trill that rippled on the rustle of the banyan leaves. I glanced up to see a small flock of white-masked, black-mustached birds flitting from tree to tree. Their wings glistened in the afternoon light, bellies quivering with the staccato, pitchy tune they piped without end. I settled beneath the trees and watched them, Styan’s bulbuls. Endemic to the island, while they are common in the south, they are disappearing elsewhere, edged out of their habitats by construction, cities, and encroachment by other mainland species. Already gone from the northeast, they are found only on this peninsula and the eastern coastal mountains. But here they gather in busy flocks, tittering despite the threats, with a wholehearted mirth in their music.

      A short walk uphill, the scent of crushed leaf and rainfall permeated the air. The dusty peaks of limestone coral smelled of dried chalk mingled with the woody scent of the banyan aerials creeping over them. The aerials wound their way into the crevices and pools of shadow, and the trees were just as delicate, hanging precariously atop the fissured outcrops. Banyan roots secrete an acid to erode the coral, enabling their near-acrobatic perches on the rock walls. Among them hung the leathered green-gray of musk ferns and other clutching, epiphytic growths from the trees, and along the paths I saw fine fingers of maidenhair ferns. Having risen from the sea, the ground in the forest was uneven, climbing at once to precipitous cliffs here and then to sunken trenches there, with caves burrowing beneath the damp soil. Stalactites dripped in the darkness of the earth, but we could only peer down toward their caves filled from winter storms with clouded pools of rain.

      We clambered up the hillside, past branches occupied and guarded by brown-fuzzed macaques, silent and watchful. The hum of insects could be picked out from the forest noise only when I focused, training both my eyes and ears to spot them amid the green. Sound preceded sight of the bumblebee—a drone from which they take their Latin name, Bombus—which emerged enormous among the delicacy of violet flowers. The electricity of cicadas faded to the background as I listened, watching the bee’s clumsy flight from blossom to blossom.

      At the end of the steady uphill path, we reached the cleft in the rock known as One-Line Sky. A crack in the tableland rent open by quakes—just wide enough for a person to pass through—ambled through the coral, a single bright strip of sky visible above the trench. It seemed, on first glance, like a corridor to another world, to something elemental and eternal rather than simply the other side of the hill. Sunk down into the mortal world of stone and soil, its walls reached toward the heavens. I gazed vertically to the vast ceiling of the world, and with one hand pressed to rough-worn walls and the other clasped in my mother’s, we ventured through that narrow passage.

      •

      WITH THE FOUNDING OF GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETIES, botanical gardens, and scientific groups in Europe in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, there emerged a strong impetus for exploration concomitant with colonialism. It would take some decades for efforts to gather pace in East Asia. Exploration, in part, then became a process of exchange: China was opened to Western scientists in the last half of the nineteenth century, and so too was Japan, with travelers returning samples to the collections and botanical gardens of Europe or working with local surveyors to gain a grasp of the vast lands of the Asian continent. Within years, Chinese and Japanese branches of a range of sciences—cartography, geology, botany, zoology—began to emerge and thrive, with their scientists venturing to Kew, Berlin, Paris, and Edinburgh to survey and study lands and scientific collections distant from their own.

      By the 1860s, British scientists were working the island into the Western cultural imagination by traveling to Taiwan alongside the Chinese gazetteers, who for centuries had conducted local surveys, often in traditional Chinese cartographic styles. But as the workings of government began to demand the mathematically grounded mapping style of the West, the process of scientific exchange explicitly served political and cultural aims. In cataloguing territory, mapmaking was a tool of colonial governance. The difficult terrain of Taiwan’s mountains became a vital target: first, under Qing administration in the late nineteenth century, and then, under Japanese rule.

      In this same period, islands became an ideal object of biological study. They had long transfixed poets and writers and informed mythologies, but their hold on science was just as potent. Such famous isles come quick to mind: the Galápagos Islands, Darwin’s muse; Madagascar, beloved by botanists. They were and remain of curious fascination.

      Islands can form in a multitude of ways: as land masses attached to continents before becoming encircled by water; at sea, risen from the depths of the ocean by forces tectonic or volcanic; or as accumulated barriers of sand, coral, or glacial remnants. We speak of islands of waste—though the trash vortex does not have the density of ground—and these unseen places enter our collective dreaming of the sea and its familiars, kelp and plastic, intermingled. Still other islands are made in our time: artificial islands, like those military installations hunkered along the coast of China, facing Taiwan, and the contested islands in the South China Sea.

      What islands offer to science is as incalculable as their coastlines: species endemism—when a species is unique to a particular place, having adapted in isolation—is a common feature of islands. Many therefore make a contribution to global biodiversity that is disproportionate to their landmass. Think of the character for “island,” the single bird on the lone mountaintop: 島. It is on islands that life most strays from the


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