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.
the wood was used for the purpose of burning before idols, some pretending it was made into ornamental furniture; but Friend Abraham White had heard the first, and was disposed to provide a set-off, in the event of the report’s being true, by endeavouring to do something towards the civilization of the heathen.  Had he been a Presbyterian merchant, of a religious turn, it is probable a quantity of tracts would have been made to answer the purpose; but, belonging to a sect whose practice was generally as perfect as its theory is imperfect, Friend Abraham White’s conscience was not to be satisfied with any such shallow contrivance.  It is true that he expected to make many thousands of dollars by the voyage, and doubtless would so have done, had not the accident befallen the ship, or had poor Captain Crutchely drank less in honour of his wedding-day; but the investment in tools, seeds, pigs, wheelbarrows, and other matters, honestly intended to better the condition of the natives of Vanua Levu and Viti Levu, did not amount to a single cent less than one thousand dollars, lawful money of the republic.

In looking over the packages, Mark found white clover seed, and Timothy seed, among other things, in sufficient quantity to cover most of the mount of the crater.  The weather temporarily clearing off, he called to Bob, and they went ashore together, Mark carrying some of the grass seed in a pail, while.  Betts followed with a vessel to hold guano.  Providing a quantity of the last from a barrel that had been previously filled with it, and covered to protect it from the rain, they clambered up the side of the crater.  This was the first time either had ascended since the day they finished planting there, and Mark approached his hills with a good deal of freshly-revived interest in their fate.  From them he expected very little, having had no loam to mix with the ashes; but, by dwelling so much of late on the subject of tillage, he was not without faint hopes of meeting with some little reward for the pains he had taken.  The reader will judge of the rapture then, as well as of the surprise, with which he first saw a hill of melons, already in the fourth leaf.  Here, then, was the great problem successfully solved.  Vegetation had actually commenced on that hitherto barren mount, and the spot which had lain—­how long, Mark knew not, but probably for a thousand years, if not for thousands of years, in its nakedness—­was about to be covered with verdure, and blest with fruitfulness.  The inert principles which, brought to act together; had produced this sudden change from barrenness to fertility, had probably been near neighbours to each other all that time, but had failed of bringing forth their fruits, for the want of absolute contact.  So Mark reasoned, for he nothing doubted that it was Betts’s guano that had stimulated the otherwise barren deposit of the volcano, and caused his seed to germinate.  The tillage may have aided, as well as the admission of air, light and water; but something more than this, our young gardener fancied, was wanting to success.  That something the manure of birds, meliorated and altered by time, had supplied, and lo! the glorious results were before his eyes.

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The Crater from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.