Зображення сторінки
PDF
ePub

Which, with their fragrant scents, perfume the air, | So shall thy canes defy November's cold,

Burst into being; while the canes put on
Glad Nature's liveliest robe, the vivid green.
But chief, let fix'd Attention cast his eye
On the capt mountain, whose high rocky verge
The wild fig canopies, (vast woodland king,
Beneath thy branching shade a banner'd host
May lie in ambush!) and whose shaggy sides, 380
Trees shade, of endless green, enormous size,
Wondrous in shape, to botany unknown,
Old as the deluge.-There, in secret haunts,
The watery spirits ope their liquid court;
There, with the wood-nymphs, link'd in festal band,
(Soft airs and Phoebus wing them to their arms)
Hold amorous dalliance. Ah, may none profane,
With fire, or steel, their mystic privacy:
For there their fluent offspring first see day,
Coy infants sporting; silver-footed dew
To bathe by night thy sprouts in genial balm;
The green-stol'd Naiad of the tinkling rill,
Whose brow the fern-tree shades: the power of rain
To glad the thirsty soil on which, arrang'd,
The gemmy summits of the cane await
Thy Negro-train, (in linen lightly wrapt)
Who now that painted Iris girds the sky,
(Aerial arch, which Fancy loves to stride!)
Disperse, all-jocund, o'er the long-hoed land.

390

401

The bundles some untie; the wither'd leaves,
Others strip artful off, and careful lay,
Twice one junk, distant in the amplest bed:
O'er these, with hasty hoe, some lightly spread
The mounded interval, and smooth the trench:
Well-pleas'd, the master-swain reviews their toil;
And rolls, in fancy, many a full-fraught cask.
So, when the shield was forg'd for Peleus' son;
The swarthy Cyclops shar'd th' important task:
With bellows, some reviv'd the seeds of fire;
Some, gold, and brass, and steel, together fus'd
In the vast furnace; while a chosen few,
In equal measures lifting their bare arms,
Inform the mass; and, hissing in the wave,
Temper the glowing orb: their sire beholds,
Amaz'd, the wonders of his fusile art.

While Procyon reigns yet fervid in the sky;
While yet the fiery Sun in Leo rides;
And the Sun's child, the mail'd anana, yields
His regal apple to the ravish'd taste;
And thou green avocato, charm of sense,
Thy ripened marrow liberally bestow'st;
Begin the distant mountain-land to plant:

410

Ungenial to the upland young; so best,
Unstinted by the arrow's deadning power,
Long yellow joints shall flow with generous juice.
But, till the lemon, orange, and the lime,
Amid their verdant umbrage, countless glow
With fragrant fruit of vegetable gold;

| Till yellow plantanes bend the unstain'd bough 490
With crooked clusters, prodigally full;
Till Capricorn command the cloudy sky;
And moist Aquarius melt in daily showers,
Friend to the cane-isles; trust not thou thy tops,
Thy future riches, to the low-land plain:
And if kind Heaven, in pity to thy prayers,
Shed genial influence; as the Earth absolves
Her annual circuit, thy rich ripen'd canes
Shall load thy waggons, mules, and Negro-train.

But chief thee, planter, it imports to mark 440
(Whether thou breathe the mountain's humid air,
Or pant with heat continual on the plain)
What months relent, and which from rain are free.
In different islands of the ocean-stream,
Even in the different parts of the same isle,
The seasons vary; yet attention soon
Will give thee each variety to know.
This once observ'd; at such a time inhume

Thy plants, that, when they joint, (important age,
Like youth just stepping into life) the clouds 450
May constantly bedew them: so shall they
Avoid those ails, which else their manhood kill.
Six times the changeful Moon must blunt her horns,
And fill with borrowed light her silvery urn;
Ere thy tops, trusted to the mountain-land,
Commence their jointing; but four moons suffice
To bring to puberty the low-land cane.

461

In plants, in beasts, in man's imperial race,
An alien mixture meliorates the breed;
Hence canes, that sickened dwarfish on the plain,
Will shoot with giant-vigour on the hill.
Thus all depends on all; so God ordains.
Then let not man for little selfish ends,
(Britain, remember this important truth!)
Presume the principle to counteract
Of universal love; for God is love,
And wide creation shares alike his care.

470

'Tis said by some, and not unletter'd they,
That chief the planter, if he wealth desire,
420 Should note the phases of the fickle Moon.
On thee, sweet empress of the night, depend
The tides; stern Neptune pays his court to thee;
The winds, obedient at thy bidding, shift,
And tempests rise or fall; even lordly man,
Thine energy controls.-Not so the cane;
The cane its independency may boast,
Though some less noble plants thine influence own,
Of mountain-lands economy permits
A third, in canes of mighty growth to rise:
But, in the low-land plain, the half will yield 480
Though not so lofty, yet a richer cane,
For many a crop; if seasons glad the soil.

Ver. 393. Whose brow the fern-tree.] This only grows in mountainous situations. Its stem shoots up to a considerable height, but it does not divide into branches, till near the summit, where it shoots out horizontally, like an umbrella, into leaves, which resemble those of the common fern. I know of no medical uses whereto this singularly beautiful tree has been applied, and indeed its wood, being spungy, is seldom used to economical purposes. It, however, serves well enough for building mountain-huts, and temporary fences for cattle.

Ver. 418....... the mail'd anana.] This is the pineapple, and needs no description; the cherimoya, a South American fruit, is by all, who have tasted both, allowed to surpass the pine, and is even said to be more wholesome. The botanical name of the pine-apple is bromelia. Of the wild pineapple, or ananas bravo, hedges are made in South America. It produces an inferior sort of fruit.

While rolls the Sun from Aries to the Bull,
And till the Virgin his hot beams inflame;
The cane, with richest, most redundant juice,
Thy spacious coppers fills. Then manage so,
By planting in succession, that thy crops
The wond'ring daughters of the main may waft

Ver. 482....... if seasons glad the soil.] Long-continued and violent rains are called seasons in the West Indies,

To Britain's shore, ere Libra weigh the year:
So shall thy merchant cheerful credit grant,
And well-earn'd opulence thy cares repay.

490

Thy fields thus planted; to secure the canes
From the goat's baneful tooth; the churning boar;
From thieves; from fire or casual or design'd;
Unfailing herbage to thy toiling herds
Would'st thou afford; and the spectators charm
With beauteous prospects: let the frequent hedge
Thy green plantation, regular, divide.

With limes, with lemons, let thy fences glow,
Grateful to sense; now children of this clime: 500
And here and there let oranges erect

Their shapely beauties, and perfume the sky.
Nor less delightful blooms the logwood-hedge,
Whose wood to coction yields a precious balın,
Specific in the flux: endemial ail,

Much cause have I to weep thy fatal sway.-
But God is just, and man must not repine.
Nor shall the ricinus annoted pass;
Yet, if the cholic's deathful pangs thou dread'st,
Taste not its luscious nut. The acasse,

510

Ver. 500. ...... now children of this clime.] It is supposed that oranges, lemons, and limes were introduced into America by the Spaniards; but I am more inclined to believe they are natural to the climate. The Spaniards themselves probably had the two first from the Saracens, for the Spanish noun naranja, whence the English word orange, is plairly Arabic.

Ver. 503.. the logwood-hedge.] Linnæus's name for this useful tree is hæmotoxylon, but it is better known to physicians by that of lignum compechense. Its virtues, as a medicine, and properties as an ingredient in dying, need not to be enumerated in this place. It makes a no less strong than beautiful hedge in the West Indies, where it rises to a considerable height.

With which the sons of Jewry, stiff-neck'd race,
Conjecture says, our God-Messiah crown'd;
Soon shoots a thick impenetrable fence,
Whose scent perfumes the night and morning sky,
Though baneful be its root. The privet too,
Whose white flowers rival the first drifts of snow
On Grampia's piny hills, (O might the Muse
Tread, flush'd with health, the Grampian bills
again!)

520

Emblem of innocence, shall grace my song.
Boast of the shrubby tribe, carnation fair,
Nor thou repine, though late the Muse record
Thy bloomy honours. Tipt with burnish'd gold,
And with imperial purple crested high,
More gorgeous than the train of Juno's bird,
Thy bloomy honours oft the curious Muse
Hath seen transported: seen the humming bird,
Whose burnish'd neck bright glows with verdant
Least of the winged vagrants of the sky, [gold;
Yet dauntless as the strong-poune'd bird of Jove;
With fluttering vehemence attack thy cups,
To rob them of their nectar's luscious store.
But if with stones thy meagre lands are spread;
Be these collected, they will pay thy toil:
And let Vitruvius, aided by the line,
Fence thy plantations with a thick-built wall.
On this lay cuttings of the prickly pear;

530

strong cement; and the main stem, being wounded,
produces a transparent gum, like the Arabic, to
which trees this bears a strong resemblance.
Ver. 515.

....་..

The privet.] Ligustrum. This shrub is sufficiently known. Its leaves and flowers make a good gargle in the aphthæ, and ulcered throat. Ver. 520....... carnation fair.] This is indeed a most beautiful flowering shrub. It is a native of the West Indies, and called, from a French governor, named Depoinci, poinciana. If permitted, it will grow twenty feet high; but, in order to make it a good fence, it should be kept low. It is always in blossom. Though not purgative, it is of the senna kind. Its leaves and flowers are stomachic, carminative, and emmenagogue. Some authors name it cauda pavonis, on account of its inimitable beauty; the flowers have a physicky smell. How it came to be called doodle-doo I know not; the Barbadians more properly term it flower fence. This plant grows also in Guinea.

Ver. 508....... Nor shall the ricinus.] This shrub is commonly called the physic-nut. It is generally divided into three kinds, the common, the French, and the Spanish, which differ from each other in their leaves and flowers, if not in their fruit or seeds. The plant from which the castor-oil is extracted is also called ricinus, though it has no resemblance to any of the former, in leaves, flowers, or seeds. In one particular they all agree, viz. in their yielding to coction or expression a purgative or emetic oil. Ver. 526....... seen the humming bird.] The humThe Spaniards name these nuts avellanas purga-ming bird is called picaflore by the Spaniards, on activas; hence Ray terms them avellana purgatrices count of its hovering over flowers, and sucking their novi orbis. By roasting they are supposed to lose juices, without lacerating, or even so much as dispart of their virulency, which is wholly destroyed, composing their petals. Its Indian naine, sayı say some people, by taking out-a leaf-like substance Ulloa, is guinde, though it is also known by the apthat is to be found between the lobes. The nut ex-pellation of rabilargo and lizongero. By the Caceeds a walnut, or even an almond, in sweetness, and yet three or four of them will operate briskly both up and down. The French call this useful shrub medecinier. That species of it which bears red coral like flowers is named bellyach by the Barbadians; and its ripe seeds are supposed to be specific against melancholy.

Ver. 510....... The acasse.] Acacia. This is a species of thorn; the juice of the root is supposed to be poisonous. Its seeds are contained in a pod or ligumen. It is of the class of the syngenesia. No astringent juice is extracted from it. Its trivial name is cashaw. Tournefort describes it in his voyage to the Levant. Some call it the holy thorn, and others sweet-brier. The half-ripe pod affords a

ribbeeans it was called callobree. It is common in all the warm parts of America. There are various species of them, all exceeding small, beautiful, and bold. The crested one, though not so frequent, is yet more beautiful than the others. It is chiefly to be found in the woody parts of the mountains. Edwards has described a very beautiful humming bird, with a long tail, which is a native of Surinam, but which I never saw in these islands. They are easily caught in rainy weather.

Ver. 536.......prickly pear.] The botanical name of this plant is opuntia; it will grow in the barrenest soils, and on the tops of the walls, if a small portion of earth be added. There are two sorts of it, one whose fruit is roundish and sweet, the other, which

541

550

They soon a formidable fence will shoot:
Wild liquorice here its red beads loves to hang,
Whilst scandent blossoms, yellow, purple, blue,
Unhurt, wind round its shield-like leaf and spears.
Nor is its fruit inelegant of taste,
Though more its colour charms the ravish'd eye;
Vermeil, as youthful beauty's roseat hue;
As thine, fair Christobelle: ah, when will Fate,
That long hath scowl'd relentless on the bard,
Give him some small plantation to enclose,
Which he may call his own? Not wealth he craves,
But independence: yet if thou, sweet maid,
In health and virtue bloom; though worse betide,
Thy smile will smooth Adversity's rough brow.
In Italy's green bounds, the myrtle shoots
A fragrant fence, and b'ossoms in the Sun.
Here, on the rockicst verge of these blest isles,
With little care, the plant of love would grow.
Then to the citron join the plant of love,
And with their scent and shade enrich your isles.
Yet some pretend, and not unspecious they,
The wood-nymphs foster the contagious blast.
Foes to the Dryads, they remorseless fell
Each shrub of shade, each tree of spreading root,
That woo the first glad fannings of the breeze.
Far from the Muse be such inhuman thoughts;
Far better recks she of the woodland tribes,
Earth's eldest birth, and Earth's best ornament.
Ask him, whom rude necessity compels
To dare the noontide fervour, in this clime,
Ah, most intensely hot; how much he longs
For cooling vast impenetrable shade?
The Muse, alas, th' experienc'd Muse can tell :
Oft hath she travell'd, while solstitial beams
Shot yellow deaths on the devoted land;

559

570

Oft, oft hath she their ill-judg'd avarice blam'd,
Who, to the stranger, to their slaves and herds,
Denied this best of joys, the breezy shade.
And are there none, whom generous pity warms,
Friends to the woodland reign; whom shades delight?
Who, round their green domains, plant hedge-row

trees;

580

And with cool cedars screen the public way?
Yes, good Montano; friend of man was he:
Him persecution, virtue's deadliest foe,
Drove, a lorn exile, from his native shore;
From his green hills, where many a fleecy flock,
Where many a heifer cropt their wholesome food;
And many a swain, obedient to his rule,
Him their lov'd master, their protector, own'd.
Yet, from that paradise, to Indian wilds,
To tropic subs, to fell barbaric hinds,
A poor outcast, an alien, did he roam;
His wife, the partner of his better hours,
And one sweet infant, cheer'd his dismal way.
Unus'd to labour; yet the orient Sun,
Yet western Phoebus, saw him wield the hoe.
At first a garden all his wants supplied,
(For Temperance sat cheerful at his board)
With yams, cassada, and the food of strength,
Thrice-wholesome tanies: while a neighbouring dell,

589

who exceed in drinking or exercise, are liable on their arrival in the West Indies. The French call it maladie de Siame, or more properly, la fievre des matelots. Those who have lived any time in the islands are no more subject to this disease than the Creoles, whence, however, some physicians have too hastily concluded, that it was of foreign extraction.

Ver. 595. Cassada,] Cassavi, cassava, is called has more the shape of a fig, is sour. The former jatropha by botanists. Its meal makes a wholeis sometimes eaten, but the other seldom. The some and well-tasted bread, although its juice be French call them pomme de raquette. Both fruit poisonous. There is a species of cassada which and leaves are guarded with sharp prickles, and, may be eat with safety, without expressing the even in the interior part of the fruit, there is one juice; this the French call camagnoc. The colour which must be removed before it is eaten. The of its root is white, like a parsnip; that of the leaves, which are half an inch thick, having a sort common kind is of a brownish red, before it is of pulp interposed between their surfaces, being scraped. By coction the cassada juice becomes deprived of their spines, and softened by the fire, an excellent sauce for fish; and the Indians premake no bad poultice for inflammations. The pare many wholesome dishes from it. I have given juice of the fruit is an innocent fucus, and is often it internally mixed with flour without any bad conused to tinge guava jellies. The opuntia, upon sequences; it did not however produce any of the which the cochineal insect breeds, has no spines, salutary effects I expected. A good starch is made and is cultivated with care in South America, from it. The stem is knotty, and, being cut into where it also grows wild. The prickly pear makes small junks and planted, young sprouts shoot up a strong fence, and is easily trimmed with a sci-from each knob. Horses have been poisoned by mitar. It grows naturally in some parts of Spain. Ver. 538. Wild liquorice.] This is a scandent plant, from which the Negroes gather what they call jumbee beeds. These are about the size of pigeon-peas, almost round, of a red colour, with a black speck on one extremity. They act as an e natic, but, being violent in their operation, great caution should be observed in using them. The leaves make a good pectoral drink in disorders of the breast. By the French it is named petit panacoco, to distinguish it from a large tree, which bears seeds of the same colours, only much bigger. This tree is a species of black ebony.

Ver. 559. contagious blast.] So a particular species of blight is called in the West Indies. See its description in the second book.

Ver. 571....... yellow deaths. ] The yellow forer, to which Europeans of a sanguine habit of body, and

eating its leaves. The French name it manibot, magnoc, and manioc, and the Spaniards mandiocha. It is pretended that all creatures but man eat the raw root of the cassada with impunity; and, when dried, that it is a sovereign antidote against venomous bites. A wholesome drink is prepared from this root by the Indians, Spaniards, and Portuguese, according to Pineda. There is one species of this plant which the ludians only use, and is by them called baccacoua.

Ver. 596. Tanies.] This wholesome root, in some of the islands, is called edda: its botanical name is arum maximum Egyptiacum. There are three species of tanies, the blue, the scratching, and that which is commonly roasted. The blossoms of all three are very fragrant, in a morning or evening. The young leaves, as well as the spiral staiks which support the flower, are eaten by negroes as a salad,

(Which Nature to the soursop had resign'd)
With ginger, and with Raleigh's pungent plant,
Gave wealth; and gold bought better land and
slaves.
599

Heaven bless'd his labour: now the cotton-shrub,
Grac'd with broad yellow flowers, unhurt by worms,
O'er many an acre shed its whitest down:
The power of rain in genial moisture bath'd
His cacao-walk, which teem'd with marrowy pods;
The root makes a good broth in dysenteric com-
plaints. They are seldom so large as the yam,
but most people think them preferable in point of

taste.

Ver. 597.....to the soursop.] The true Indian name of this tree is suirsaak. It grows in the barrenest places to a considerable height. Its fruit will often weigh two pounds. Its skin is green, and somewhat prickly. The pulp is not disagreeable to the palate, being cool, and having its sweetness tempered with some degree of an acid. It is one of the anonas, as are also the custard, star, and sugar-apples. The leaves of the soursop are very shining and green. The fruit is wholesome, but seldom admitted to the tables of the elegant. The seeds are dispersed through the pulp like the guava. It has a peculiar flavour. It grows in the East as well as the West Indies. The botanical name is guanabanus. The French call it petit corosol, or cœur de bœuf, to which the fruit bears a resemblance. The root, being reduced to a powder, and snuffed up the nose, produces the same effect as tobacco. Taken by the mouth, the Indians pretend it as a specific in the epilepsy.

Ver. 600. Cotton.] The fine down, which this shrub produces to envelope its seeds, is sufficiently known. The English, Italian, and French names, evidently are derived from the Arabic algodon, as the Spaniards at this day call it. It was first brought by the Arabians into the Levant, where it is now cultivated with great success. Authors mention fourspecies of cotton, but they confound the silk-cotton tree, or ceiba, among them. The flower of the West India cotton-shrub is yellow, and campanulated. It produces twice every year. That of Cayenne is the best of any that comes from America. This plant is very apt to be destroyed by a grub within a short time; bating that, is a profitable production. Pliny mentions gossipium, which is the common botanical name of cotton. It is likewise called zylon. Martinus, in his Philological Lexicon, derives cotton from the Hebrew word katon, or, as pronounced by the German, Jews, kotoun.

His coffee bath'd, that glow'd with berries, red As Danae's lip, or, Theodosia, thine,

Yet countless as the pebbles on the shore; Oft, while drought kill'd his impious neighbour's grove.

610

In time, a numerous gang of sturdy slaves,
Well-fed, well-cloth'd, all emulous to gain
Their master's smile, who treated them like men;
Blacken'd his cane-lands: which with vast increase,
Beyond the wish of avarice, paid his toil.
No cramps, with sudden death, surpris'd his mules;
No glander-pest his airy stables thinu'd:
And, if disorder seiz'd his Negro train,
Celsus was call'd, and pining Illness flew.
His gate stood wide to all; but chief the poor,
Th' unfriended stranger, and the sickly, shar'd
His prompt munificence: no surly dog,
Nor surlier Ethiop, their approach debarr'd.
The Muse, that pays this tribute to his fame,
Oft hath escap'd the Sun's meridian blaze,

620

those who plant cacao-walks, sometimes screen them by a hardier tree, which the Spaniards aptly term madre de cacao. They may be planted fifteen or twenty feet distant, though some advise to plant them much nearer, and perhaps wisely; for it is an easy matter to thin them, when they are past the danger of being destroyed by dry weather, &c. Some recommend planting cassada, or bananas, in the intervals, when the cacao-trees are young, to destroy weeds, from which the walk cannot be kept too free. It is generally three years before they produce good pods; but, in six years, they are in highest perfection. The pods are commonly of the size and shape of a large cucumber. There are three or four sorts of cacao, which differ from one another in the colour and goodness of their nuts. That from the Caraccas is certainly the best. None of the species grow in Peru. Its alimentary, as well as physical properties, are sufficiently known. This word is Indian.

Ver. 605. His coffee.] This is certainly of Arabic derivation; and has been used in the East, as a drink, time immemorial. The inhabitants about the mouth of the Red Sea were taught the use of it by the Persians, say authors, in the fifteenth century; and the coffee-shrub was gradually introduced into Arabia Felix, whence it passed into Egypt, Syria, and lastly Constantinople. The Turks, though so excessively fond of coffee, bave not known it much above one hundred and fifty years; whereas the English have been acquainted therewith for upwards of an hundred, one Pasqua, a Greek, having opened a coffee-house in London about the middle of the 17th century. The famous traveller, Thevenot, introduced coffee into France. This plant is cultivated in the West Indies, particularly by the French, with great success; but the berry from thence is not equal to that from Mocha. It is a species of Arabian jasmine; the flower is

Ver. 604. ...... cacao walk.] It is also called cocao and cocô. It is a native of some of the provinces of South America, and a drink made from it was the common food of the Indians before the Spaniards came among them, who were some time in those countries ere they could be prevailed upon to taste it; and it must be confessed, that the Indian cho-particularly redolent, and from it a pleasant corcolate had not a tempting aspect; yet I much doubt whether the Europeans have greatly improved its wholesomeness, by the addition of vanellas and other hot ingredients. The tree often grows fifteen or twenty feet high, and is straight and handsome. The pods, which seldom coutain less than thirty nuts of the size of a flatted olive, grow upon the stem and principal branches. The tree loves a moist, rich, and shaded soil: hence

dial water is distilled. It produces fruit twice every year; but the shrub must be three years old before any can be gathered. It should not be al lowed to grow above six feet high. It is very apt to be destroyed by a large fly, which the French call mouche a caffe; as well as by the white grub, which they name puceron. Its medical and alimentary qualities are as generally known as those of tea.

490
Beneath yon tamarind-vista, which his hands
Planted; and which, impervious to the Sun,
His latter days beheld.-One noon he sat
Beneath its breezy shade, what time the Sun
His sultry vengeance from the Lion pour'd;
And calmly thus his eldest hope addrest.

650

"Be pious, be industrious, be humane;
From proud Oppression guard the labouring hind.
Whate'er their creed, God is the Sire of man,
His image they; then dare not thou, my son,
To bar the gates of mercy on mankind.
Your foes forgive, for merit must make foes;
And in each virtue far surpass your sire.
Your means are ample, Heaven a heart bestow!
So health and peace shall be your portion here;
And yon bright sky, to which my soul aspires,
Shall bless you with eternity of joy."

640

He spoke, and ere the swift-wing'd zumbadore
The mountain desert startled with his hum;
Ere fire-flies trimm'd their vital lamps; and ere
Dun Evening trod on rapid Twilight's heel:
His knell was rung; ......................

650

And all the cane-lands wept their father lost.
Muse, yet awhile indulge my rapid course;
And I'll unharness, soon, the foaming steeds.
If Jove descend, propitious to thy vows,
In frequent floods of rain; successive crops
Of weeds will spring. Nor venture to repine,
Though oft their toil thy little gang renew;
Their toil tenfold the melting heavens repay;
For soon thy plants will magnitude acquire,
To crush all undergrowth; before the Sun,
The planets thus withdraw their puny fires.
And though untutor'd, then, thy canes will shoot:

Ver. 624. Tamarind-vista.] This large, shady, and
beautiful tree grows fast even in the driest soils,
and lasts long; and yet its wood is hard, and very
fit for mechanical uses. The leaves are smaller
than those of senna, and pennated: they taste
sourish, as does the pulp, which is contained in
pods four or five inches long. They bear once a
year. An excellent vinegar may be made from
the fruit; but the Creoles chiefly preserve it with
A pleasant
sugar, as the Spaniards with salt.
The name is, in
syrup may be made from it.
Arabic, tamara. The ancients were not acquainted
therewith; for the Arabians first introduced tama-
rinds into physic; it is a native of the East as well
as of the West Indies and South America, where
Its
different provinces call it by different names.
cathartic qualities are well known. It is good in
sea-sickness. The botanical name is tamarindus.
Ver. 641. and ere the swift-wing'd zumbadore.]
This bird, which is one of the largest and swiftest
known, is only seen at night, or rather heard; for
it makes a hideous humming noise (whence its
name) on the desert tops of the Andes. See Ulloa's
Voyage to South America. It is also called condor.
Its wings, when expanded, have been known to ex-
ceed sixteen feet from tip to tip. See Phil. Trans.
No. 208.

Ver. 643. Ere fire-flies.] This surprising insect is frequent in Guadaloupe, &c. and all the warmer parts of America. There are none of them in the English Caribbee, or Virgin Islands.

Ver. 644. ...... on rapid Twilight's heel.] There is little or no twilight in the West Indies. All the year round it is dark before eight at night. dawn is equally short.

The

660

Care meliorates their growth. The trenches fill
With their collateral mould; as in a town
Which foes have long beleaguer'd, unawares
A strong detachment sallies from each gate,
And levels all the labours of the plain.

And now thy cane's first blades their verdure lose,
And hang their idle heads. Be these stript off;
So shall fresh sportive airs their joints embrace,
And by their dalliance give the sap to rise.
But, O beware, let no unskilful hand
The vivid foliage tear: their channel'd spouts,
Well-pleas'd, the wat'ry nutriment convey,
With filial duty, to the thirsty stem;
And, spreading wide their reverential arms,
Defend their parent from solstitial skies.

THE SUGAR-CANE.
BOOK II.

ADVERTISEMENT.

670

THE following book having been originally addressed to William Shenstone, esq. and by him approved of; the author should deem it a kind of poetical sacrilege, now, to address it to any other. To his memory, therefore, be it sacred; as a small but sincere testimony of the high opinion the author entertained of that gentleman's genius and manners; and as the only return now, alas! in his power to make, for the friendship wherewith Mr.

Shenstone had condescended to honour him.

ARGUMENT.

Subject proposed. Address to William Shenstone, esq. Of monkeys. Of rats and other vermin. Of weeds. Of the yellow fly. Of the greasy fly, Of the blast. A hurricane described. Of calins and earthquakes. A tale.

10

ENOUGH of culture.—A less pleasing theme,
What ills await the ripening cane, demands
My serious numbers: these, the thoughtful Muse
Hath oft beheld, deep-pierc'd with generous woe.
For she, poor exile! boasts no waving crops;
For her no circling mules press dulcet streams;
No Negro-band huge foaming coppers skim;
Nor fermentation (wine's dread sire) for her,
With Vulcan's aid, from cane a spirit draws,
Potent to quell the madness of despair.
Yet, oft, the range she walks, at shut of eve;
Oft sees red lightning at the midnight-hour,
When nod the watches, stream along the sky;
Not innocent, as what the learned call
The Boreal morn, which, through the azure air,
Flashes its tremulous rays, in painted streaks,
While o'er Night's veil her lucid tresses flow:
Nor quits the Muse her walk, immers'd in thought,
How she the planter, haply, may advise;
Till tardy Morn unbar the gates of light,
And, opening on the main with sultry beam,
To buraish'd silver turns the blue-green wave.
Say, will my Shenstone lend a patient ear,
And weep at woes unknown to Britain's isle?

29

« НазадПродовжити »