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CHAPTER II.

Arrival at Antigua.-Dominica.-Frogs and Humming Birds.—Martinico.
-Diamond rock.-Barbadoes.-Quashi and Venus.-The Alien Bill.—
Sail for Demerara. More about the Sloth.- Scarlet Grosbeak.—
Crab-eating Owl.- Sun-heron.-Feet of the Tinamou. Vampires
again. The Karabimiti Humming-bird.-The Monkey tribe.-The
Red Howler.-Roast monkey.-The Nondescript.-Altered physi-
ognomy.—Gold and silver mines.-Changes of government.-Politics.
-India-rubber.-An ingenious deception.

FOURTH WE were thirty days in making Antigua, and thanked JOURNEY. Providence for ordering us so long a passage. A tre

St. John's.

mendous gale of wind, approaching to a hurricane, had done much damage in the West Indies. Had our passage been of ordinary length, we should inevitably have been caught in the gale.

St. John's is the capital of Antigua. In better times it may have had its gaieties and amusements. At present, it appears sad and woe-begone. The houses, which are chiefly of wood, seem as if they had not had a coat of paint for many years; the streets are uneven and illpaved; and as the stranger wanders through them, he might fancy that they would afford a congenial promenade to the man who is about to take his last leave of surrounding worldly misery, before he hangs himself. There had been no rain for some time, so that the parched and barren pasture near the town might, with great truth, be called

Rosinante's own. The mules feeding on them, mind of Ovid's description of famine:—

"Dura cutis, per quam spectari viscera possent."

put you in FOURTH

It is somewhat singular, that there is not a single river or brook in the whole island of Antigua. In this it differs from Tartary in the other world; which, according to old writers, has five rivers; viz. Acheron, Phlegethon, Cocytus, Styx, and Lethe.

In this island I found the Red Start, described in Wilson's "Ornithology of the United States." I wished to learn whether any of these birds remain the whole year in Antigua, and breed there; or whether they all leave it for the north when the sun comes out of the southern hemisphere; but, upon inquiry, I could get no information. whatever.

JOURNEY.

Guada

loupe.

After passing a dull week here, I sailed for Guadaloupe, Island of whose bold and cloud-capped mountains have a grand appearance as you approach the island. Basseterre, the capital, is a neat town, with a handsome public walk in the middle of it, well shaded by a row of fine tamarind trees on each side. Behind the town, La Souffriere raises its high romantic summit; and on a clear day, you may see the volcanic smoke which issues from it.

Nearly midway, betwixt Guadaloupe and Dominica, you descry the Saintes. Though high, and bold, and rocky, they have still a diminutive appearance when compared with their two gigantic neighbours. You just see Marigalante to windward of them, some leagues off, about a yard high in the horizon.

Dominica is majestic in high and rugged mountains. Island of As you sail along it, you cannot help admiring its beauti- Dominica, ful coffee plantations, in places so abrupt and steep, that

you would pronounce them almost inaccessible. Roseau, Roseau.

JOURNEY.

FOURTH the capital, is but a small town, and has nothing attractive except the well-known hospitality of the present harbourmaster, who is particularly attentive to strangers, and furnishes them with a world of information concerning the West Indies. Roseau has seen better days; and you can trace good taste and judgment in the way in which the town has originally been laid out.

Some years ago it was visited by a succession of misfortunes, which smote it so severely, that it has never recovered its former appearance. A strong French fleet bombarded it; while a raging fire destroyed its finest buildings. Some time after, an overwhelming flood rolled down the gullies and fissures of the adjacent mountains, and carried all before it. Men, women, and children, houses, and property, were all swept away by this mighty torrent. The terrible scene was said to beggar all description, and the loss was immense.

Dominica is famous for a large species of Frog, which the inhabitants keep in readiness to slaughter for the table. In the woods of this island, the large Rhinoceros Beetle is very common; it measures above six inches in length. In the same woods is found the beautiful Humming-bird, the breast and throat of which are of a brilliant changing purple. I have searched for this bird in Brazil, and through the whole of the wilds from the Rio Branco, which is a branch of the Amazons, to the river Paumaron, but never could find it. I was told by a man in the Egyptian-Hall, in Piccadilly, that this humming-bird is found in Mexico; but upon questioning him more about it, his information seemed to have been acquired by hearsay; and so I concluded that it does not appear in Mexico. I suspect that it is never found out of the Antilles.

Martinico. After leaving Dominica, you soon reach the grand

FOURTH

and magnificent island of Martinico. St. Pierre, its capital, is a fine town, and possesses every comfort. JOURNEY. The inhabitants seem to pay considerable attention to the cultivation of the tropical fruits. A stream of water runs down the streets with great rapidity, producing a pleasing effect as you pass along.

Here I had an opportunity of examining a Cuckoo, which had just been shot. It was exactly the same as the Metallic Cuckoo in Wilson's "Ornithology." They told me it is a migratory bird in Martinico. It probably repairs to this island after its departure from the United States.

At a little distance from Martinico, the celebrated Diamond Rock rises in insulated majesty out of the sea. It was fortified during the last war with France, and bravely defended by an English captain.

In a few hours from Martinico, you are at St. Lucie, St. Lucie. whose rough and towering mountains fill you with sublime ideas, as you approach its rocky shore. The town Castries is quite embayed. It was literally blown to Castries. pieces by the fatal hurricane, in which the unfortunate. governor and his lady lost their lives. Its present forlorn and gloomy appearance, and the grass which is grown up in the streets, too plainly show that its hour of joy is passed away; and that it is in mourning, as it were, with the rest of the British West Indies.

From St. Lucie, I proceeded to Barbadoes in quest of a conveyance to the island of Trinidad.

Near Bridgetown, the capital of Barbadoes, I saw the metallic cuckoo, already alluded to.

Barbadoes is no longer the merry island it was when I Barbadoes. visited it some years ago:

:

"Infelix habitum, temporis hujus habet."

FOURTH There is an old song, to the tune of La Belle Catharine, JOURNEY. which must evidently have been composed in brighter

times :-

"Come let us dance and sing,

While Barbadoes bells do ring;
Quashi scrapes the fiddle-string,
And Venus plays the lute."

The difference

Quashi's fiddle was silent; and mute was the lute of Venus during my stay in Barbadoes. betwixt the French and British islands was very striking. The first appeared happy and content; the second were filled with murmurs and complaints. The late proceedings Slavery. in England, concerning slavery, and the insurrection in Demerara, had evidently caused the gloom. The abolition of slavery is a question full of benevolence and fine feelings, difficulties and danger :—

"Tantum ne noceas, dum vis prodesse videto."

It requires consummate prudence, and a vast fund of true information, in order to draw just conclusions on this important subject. Phaeton, by awkward driving, set the world on fire: "Sylvæ cum montibus ardent." Dædalus gave his son a pair of wings without considering the consequence; the boy flew out of all bounds, lost his wings, and tumbled into the sea:

"Icarus, Icariis nomina fecit aquis."

When the old man saw what had happened, he damned his own handicraft in wing-making; "devovitque suas artes." Prudence is a cardinal virtue :

"Omnia consultâ mente gerenda tegens."

Foresight is half the battle. "Hombre apercebido, medio combatido," says Don Quixote, or Sancho, I do not

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