Page:The crater; or, Vulcan's peak.djvu/113

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

OR, VULCAN S PEAK. 107 maturity, would necessarily change their properties in that climate; some for the worse, and others for the better. From the Irish potato, the cabbage, and most of the more northern vegetables, he did not expect much, under any circumstances; but, he thought he would try all, and having several regularly assorted boxes of garden-seeds, just as they had been purchased out of the shops of Phila delphia, his garden scarce wanted any plant that was then known to the kitchens of America. Our mariners were quite a fortnight preparing, manur ing, and sowing their parterre, which, when complete, oc cupied fully half an acre in the very centre of the crater, Mark intending it for the nucleus of future similar works, that might convert the whole hundred acres into a gar den. By the time the work was done, the rains were Jess frequent, though it still came in showers, and those that were still more favourable to vegetation. In that fort night the plants on the mount had made great advances, showing the exuberance and growth of a tropical climate. It sometimes, nay, it often happens, that when the sun is the most genial for vegetation, moisture is wanting to aid its power, and, in some respects, to counteract its influ ence. These long and periodical droughts, however, are not so much owing to heat as to other and local causes. Mark now began to hope, as the spring advanced, that his little territory was to be exempt, in a great measure, from the curse of droughts, the trades, and some other causes that to him were unknown, bringing clouds so often that not only shed their rain upon his garden, but which served in a great measure to mitigate a heat that, without shade of some sort or other, would be really intolerable. With a view to the approaching summer, our mariners turned their attention to the constructing of a tent within the crater. They got some old sails and some spars ashore, and soon had a spacious, as well as a comfortable habita tion of this sort erected. Not only did they spread a spa cious tent for themselves, within the crater, but they erected anothei, or a sort of canopy rather, on its outside, for the use of the animals, which took refuge beneath it, during the heats of the day, with an avidity that proved how wel come it was. This outside shed, or canopy, required a