[At Last by Charles Kingsley]@TWC D-Link book
At Last

CHAPTER II: DOWN THE ISLANDS
28/76

The cane-farming is bad, the sugar-making bad; and the sugar, when made, disposed of through merchants by a cumbrous, antiquated, and expensive system.

These shrewd Frenchmen, and, I am told, even small proprietors among the Negroes, not being crippled, happily for them, by those absurd sugar-duties which, till Mr.Lowe's budget, put a premium on the making of bad sugar, are confining themselves to growing the canes, and sell them raw to 'Usines Centrales,' at which they are manufactured into sugar.

They thus devote their own capital and intellect to increasing the yield of their estates; while the central factories, it is said, pay dividends ranging from twenty to forty per cent.

I regretted much that I was unable to visit in crop-time one of these factories, and see the working of a system which seems to contain one of the best elements of the co- operative principle.
But (and this is at present a serious inconvenience to a traveller in the Antilles) the steamer passes each island only once a fortnight; so that to land in an island is equivalent to staying there at least that time, unless one chooses to take the chances of a coasting schooner, and bad food, bugs, cockroaches, and a bunk which--but I will not describe.

'Non ragionam di lor, ma guarda' (down the companion) 'e passa.' I must therefore content myself with describing, as honestly as I can, what little we saw from the sea, of islands at each of which we would gladly have stayed several days.
As the traveller nears each of them--Guadaloupe, Dominica, Martinique (of which two last we had only one passing glance), St. Vincent, St.Lucia, and Grenada--he will be impressed, not only by the peculiarity of their form, but by the richness of their colour.
All of them do not, like St.Kitts, Guadaloupe, and St.Vincent, slope up to one central peak.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books