A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 14 eBook

Robert Kerr (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 822 pages of information about A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 14.

A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 14 eBook

Robert Kerr (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 822 pages of information about A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 14.

They have no great variety of household utensils; the earthen jars before mentioned being the only article worth notice.  Each family has at least one of them, in which they bake their roots, and perhaps their fish, &c.  The fire, by which they cook their victuals, is on the outside of each house, in the open air.  There are three or five pointed stones fixed in the ground, their pointed ends being about six inches above the surface.  Those of three stones are only for one jar, those of five stones for two.  The jars do not stand on their bottoms, but lie inclined on their sides.  The use of these stones is obviously to keep the jars from resting on the fire, in order that it may burn the better.

They subsist chiefly on roots and fish, and the bark of a tree, which I am told grows also in the West Indies.  This they roast, and are almost continually chewing.  It has a sweetish, insipid taste, and was liked by some of our people.  Water is their only liquor, at least I never saw any other made use of.

Plantains and sugar-canes are by no means in plenty.  Bread-fruit is very scarce, and the cocoa-nut trees are small and but thinly planted; and neither one nor the other seems to yield much fruit.

To judge merely by the numbers of the natives we saw every day, one might think the island very populous; but I believe that, at this time, the inhabitants were collected from all parts on our account.  Mr Pickersgill observed, that down the coast, to the west, there were but few people; and we knew they came daily from the other side of the land, over the mountains, to visit us.  But although the inhabitants, upon the whole, may not be numerous, the island is not thinly peopled on the sea-coast, and in the plains and valleys that are capable of cultivation.  It seems to be a country unable to support many inhabitants.  Nature has been less bountiful to it than to any other tropical island we know in this sea.  The greatest part of its surface, or at least what we saw of it, consists of barren rocky mountains; and the grass, &c. growing on them, is useless to people who have no cattle.

The sterility of the country will apologise for the natives not contributing to the wants of the navigator.  The sea may, perhaps, in some measure, compensate for the deficiency of the land; for a coast surrounded by reefs and shoals, as this is, cannot fail of being stored with fish.

I have before observed, that the country bears great resemblance to New South Wales, or New Holland, and that some of its natural productions are the same.  In particular, we found here, the tree which is covered with a soft white ragged bark, easily peeled off, and is, as I have been told, the same that, in the East Indies, is used for caulking of ships.  The wood is very hard, the leaves are long and narrow, of a pale dead green, and a fine aromatic; so that it may properly be said to belong to that continent.  Nevertheless, here are several plants, &c. common to

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A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 14 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.