The Crater eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 635 pages of information about The Crater.

The Crater eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 635 pages of information about The Crater.

On this occasion Mark determined to have a succession of crops, and not to bring on everything at once, as he had done the first year of his tillage.  Accordingly, he would manure and break up a bed, and plant or sow it, waiting a few days before he began another.  Experience had told him that there was never an end to vegetation in that climate, and he saw no use in pushing his labours faster than he might require their fruits.  It was true, certain plants did better if permitted to come to maturity in particular periods, but the season was so long as very well to allow of the arrangement just mentioned.  As this distribution of his time gave the young man a good deal of leisure, he employed it in the ship-yard.  Thus the boat and the garden were made to advance together, and when the last was sown and planted, the first was planked.  When the last bed was got in, moreover, those first set in order were already giving forth their increase.  Mark had abundance of delicious salad, young onions, radishes that seemed to grow like mushrooms, young peas, beans, &c., in quantities that enabled him to turn the hogs out on the Reef, and keep them well on the refuse of his garden, assisted a little by what was always to be picked up on the rocks.

By this time Mark had settled on a system which he thought to pursue.  There was no use in his raising more pigs than he could use.  Taking care to preserve the breed, therefore, he killed off the pigs, of which he had fresh litters, from time to time; and when he found the old hogs getting to be troublesome, as swine will become with years, he just shot them, and buried their bodies in his compost heap, or in his garden, where one common-sized hog would render highly fertile several yards square of earth, or ashes.  This practice he continued ever after, extending it to his fowls and ducks, the latter of which produced a great many eggs.  By rigidly observing this rule, Mark avoided an evil which is very common even in inhabited countries, that of keeping more stock than is good for their owner.  Six or eight hens laid more eggs than he could consume, and there was always a sufficient supply of chickens for his wants.  In short, our hermit had everything he actually required, and most things that could contribute to his living in great abundance.  The necessity of cooking for himself, and the want of pure, cold spring water, were the two greatest physical hardships he endured.  There were moments, indeed, when Mark would have gladly yielded one-half of the advantages he actually possessed, to have a good spring of living water.  Then he quelled the repinings of his spirit at this privation, by endeavouring to recall how many blessings were left at his command, compared to the wants and sufferings of many another shipwrecked mariner of whom he had read or heard.

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The Crater from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.