<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</SPAN></span></p>
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<ANTIMG src="images/i015.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="376" alt="St. Augustine" /></div>
<h2>ST. AUGUSTINE.</h2>
<p class="left45">
<span class="smcap">Mandarin</span>, May 30, 1872.</p>
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<p>HE thermometer with us, during the
third week in May, rose to ninety-two
in the shade; and as we had received
an invitation from a friend to visit St. Augustine,
which is the Newport of Florida, we thought it
a good time to go seaward. So on a pleasant
morning we embarked on the handsome boat
"Florence," which has taken so many up the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</SPAN></span>
river, and thus secured all the breeze that was
to be had.</p>
<p>"The Florence" is used expressly for a river
pleasure-boat, plying every day between Jacksonville
and Pilatka. It is long and airy, and
nicely furnished; and one could not imagine a
more delightful conveyance. In hot weather,
one could not be more sure of cool breezes than
when sailing up and down perpetually in "The
Florence." Our destiny, however, landed us in
the very meridian of the day at Tekoi. Tekoi
consists of a shed and a sand-bank, and a little
shanty, where, to those who require, refreshments
are served.</p>
<p>On landing, we found that we must pay for
the pleasure and coolness of coming up river
in "The Florence" by waiting two or three
mortal hours till "The Starlight" arrived; for
the railroad-car would not start till the full
complement of passengers was secured. We
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</SPAN></span>
had a good opportunity then of testing what the
heat of a Florida sun might be, untempered by
live-oaks and orange shades, and unalleviated by
ice-water; and the lesson was an impressive one.</p>
<p>The railroad across to St. Augustine is made
of wooden rails; and the cars are drawn by
horses.</p>
<p>There was one handsome car like those used
on the New-York horse-railroads: the others
were the roughest things imaginable. Travellers
have usually spoken of this road with execration
for its slowness and roughness; but over this,
such as it was, all the rank and fashion of our
pleasure-seekers, the last winter, have been
pouring in unbroken daily streams. In the
height of the season, when the cars were
crowded, four hours were said to be consumed
in performing this fifteen miles. We, however,
did it in about two.</p>
<p>To us this bit of ride through the Florida
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</SPAN></span>
woods is such a never-ceasing source of interest
and pleasure, that we do not mind the slowness
of it, and should regret being whisked by at
steam-speed. We have come over it three
times; and each time the varieties of shrubs and
flowers, grasses and curious leaves, were a
never-failing study and delight. Long reaches
of green moist land form perfect flower-gardens,
whose variety of bloom changes with every
month. The woods hang full of beautiful climbing
plants. The coral honeysuckle and the red
bignonia were in season now. Through glimpses
and openings here and there we could see into
forests of wild orange-trees; and palmetto-palms
raised their scaly trunks and gigantic green
fans. The passengers could not help admiring
the flowers: and as there were many stops and
pauses, and as the gait of the horses was never
rapid, it was quite easy for the gentlemen to
gather and bring in specimens of all the beauties;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</SPAN></span>
and the flowers formed the main staple of
the conversation. They were so very bright
and gay and varied, that even the most unobserving
could not but notice them.</p>
<p>St. Augustine stands on a flat, sandy level,
encompassed for miles and miles by what is
called "scrub,"—a mixture of low palmettoes
and bushes of various descriptions. Its history
carries one back almost to the middle ages.
For instance, Menendez, who figured as commandant
in its early day, was afterwards appointed
to command the Spanish Armada, away
back in the times of Queen Elizabeth; but,
owing to the state of his health, he did not accept
the position.</p>
<p>In the year 1586, Elizabeth then being at war
with Spain, her admiral, Sir Francis Drake,
bombarded St. Augustine, and took it; helping
himself, among other things, to seven brass cannon,
two thousand pounds in money, and other
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</SPAN></span>
booty. In 1605 it was taken and plundered by
buccaneers; in 1702, besieged by the people of
the Carolinas; in 1740, besieged again by Gen.
Oglethorpe of Georgia.</p>
<p>So we see that this part of our country, at
least, does not lie open to the imputation so
often cast upon America, of having no historic
associations; though, like a great deal of the
world's history, it is written in letters of blood
and fire.</p>
<p>Whoever would know, let him read Parkman's
"Pioneers of France," under the article
"Huguenots in Florida," and he will see how
the first Spanish governor, Menendez, thought
he did God service when he butchered in cold
blood hundreds of starving, shipwrecked Huguenots
who threw themselves on his mercy,
and to whom he had extended pledges of shelter
and protection.</p>
<p>A government-officer, whose ship is stationed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</SPAN></span>
in Matanzas Inlet, told me that the tradition is
that the place is still haunted by the unquiet
ghosts of the dead. An old negro came to him,
earnestly declaring that he had heard often, at
midnight, shrieks and moans, and sounds as of
expostulation, and earnest cries in some foreign
language, at that place; and that several white
people whom he had taken to the spot had
heard the same. On inquiring of his men,
Capt. H—— could find none who had heard the
noises; although, in digging in the sands, human
bones were often disinterred. But surely, by all
laws of demonology, here is where there ought
to be the materials for a first-class ghost-story.
Here, where there has been such crime,
cruelty, treachery, terror, fear, and agony, we
might fancy mourning shades wandering in
unrest,—shades of the murderers, forever deploring
their crime and cruelty.</p>
<p>The aspect of St. Augustine is quaint and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</SPAN></span>
strange, in harmony with its romantic history.
It has no pretensions to architectural richness
or beauty; and yet it is impressive from its unlikeness
to any thing else in America. It is as
if some little, old, dead-and-alive Spanish town,
with its fort and gateway and Moorish bell-towers,
had broken loose, floated over here,
and got stranded on a sand-bank. Here you
see the shovel-hats and black gowns of priests;
the convent, with gliding figures of nuns; and
in the narrow, crooked streets meet dark-browed
people with great Spanish eyes and coal-black
hair. The current of life here has the indolent,
dreamy stillness that characterizes life in Old
Spain. In Spain, when you ask a man to do
any thing, instead of answering as we do, "In
a minute," the invariable reply is, "In an hour;"
and the growth and progress of St. Augustine
have been according. There it stands, alone,
isolated, connected by no good roads or navigation
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</SPAN></span>
with the busy, living world. Before 1835,
St. Augustine was a bower of orange-trees.
Almost every house looked forth from these encircling
shades. The frost came and withered
all; and in very few cases did it seem to come
into the heads of the inhabitants to try again.
The orange-groves are now the exception, not
the rule; and yet for thirty years it has been
quite possible to have them.</p>
<p>As the only seaport city of any size in
Florida, St. Augustine has many attractions.
Those who must choose a Southern home, and
who are so situated that they must remain
through the whole summer in the home of their
choice, could not do better than to choose St.
Augustine. It is comparatively free from malarial
fevers; and the sea-air tempers the oppressive
heats of summer, so that they are quite
endurable. Sea-bathing can be practised in
suitable bathing-houses; but the sharks make
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</SPAN></span>
open sea-bathing dangerous. If one comes expecting
a fine view of the open ocean, however,
one will be disappointed; for Anastasia Island—a
long, low sand-bar—stretches its barren line
across the whole view, giving only so much sea-prospect
as can be afforded by the arm of the
sea—about two miles wide—which washes the
town. Little as this may seem of the ocean,
the town lies so flat and low, that, in stormy
weather, the waves used to be driven up into it,
so as to threaten its destruction. A sea-wall of
solid granite masonry was deemed necessary to
secure its safety, and has been erected by the
United-States Government. This wall affords a
favorite promenade to the inhabitants, who there
enjoy good footing and sea-breezes.</p>
<p>What much interested us in St. Augustine
was to see the results of such wealth and care
as are expended at the North on gardening
being brought to bear upon gardens in this
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</SPAN></span>
semi-tropical region. As yet, all that we have
seen in Florida has been the beginning of industrial
experiments, where utility has been the
only thing consulted, and where there has been
neither time nor money to seek the ornamental.
Along the St. John's you can see, to-day, hundreds
of places torn from the forest, yet showing
the unrotted stumps of the trees; the house
standing in a glare of loose white sand, in
which one sinks over shoes at every step. If
there be a flower-garden (and, wherever there is
a woman, there will be), its prospects in the loose
sliding sands appear discouraging. Boards and
brick-edgings are necessary to make any kind
of boundaries; and a man who has to cut down a
forest, dig a well, build a house, plant an orange-grove,
and meanwhile raise enough garden-stuff
to pay his way, has small time for the graces.</p>
<p>But here in St. Augustine are some families
of wealth and leisure, driven to seek such a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</SPAN></span>
winter-home, who amuse themselves during their
stay in making that home charming; and the
results are encouraging.</p>
<p>In the first place, the slippery sand-spirit has
been caught, and confined under green grass-plats.
The grass problem has been an earnest
study with us ever since we came here. What
grass will bear a steady blaze of the sun for six
months, with the thermometer at a hundred
and thirty or forty, is a question. It is perfectly
easy, as we have proved by experiment, to raise
flattering grass-plats of white clover, and even
of the red-top, during the cool, charming
months of January, February, and March; but
their history will be summed up in the scriptural
account—"which to day is, and to-morrow
is cast into the oven"—as soon as May begins.</p>
<p>The chances of an enduring sod for ornamental
purposes are confined to two varieties,—the
broad and the narrow leafed Bermuda grasses.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</SPAN></span>
These have roots that run either to the centre
of the earth, or far enough in that direction for
practical purposes; and are, besides, endowed
with the faculty of throwing out roots at every
joint, so that they spread rapidly. The broad-leafed
kind is what is principally employed in
St. Augustine; and we have seen beautifully-kept
gardens where it is cut into borders, and
where the grass-plats and croquet-grounds
have been made of it to admirable advantage.
A surface of green in this climate is doubly
precious to the eye.</p>
<p>We were visiting in a house which is a model
for a hot climate. A wide, cool hall runs
through the centre; and wide verandas, both
above and below, go around the whole four
sides. From these we could look down at our
leisure into the foliage of a row of Magnolia
grandiflora, now in blossom. Ivy, honeysuckles,
manrundia, and a host of other
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">219</SPAN></span>
climbing-plants, make a bower of these outside
corridors of the house. The calla-lilies
blossom almost daily in shaded spots; and beds
of fragrant blue violets are never without
flowers. Among the ornamental shrubbery we
noticed the chaparral,—a thorny tree, with
clusters of yellow blossoms, and long, drooping,
peculiar leaves, resembling in effect the willow-leafed
acacia. The banana has a value simply
as an ornamental-leaf plant, quite apart from the
consideration of its fruit, which one can buy, perhaps,
better than one can raise, in this part of
Florida; but it is glorious, when the thermometer
is going up into the hundreds, to see the great,
fresh, broad, cool leaves of the banana-tree leaping
into life, and seeming to joy in existence. In
groups of different sizes, they form most beautiful
and effective shrubbery. The secret of
gardening well here is to get things that love
the sun. Plants that come originally from hot
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">220</SPAN></span>
regions, and that rejoice the hotter it grows, are
those to be sought for. The date-palm has
many beautiful specimens in the gardens of St.
Augustine. A date-palm, at near view, is as
quaint and peculiar a specimen of Nature as one
can imagine. Its trunk seems built up of great
scales, in which ferns and vines root themselves,
and twine and ramble, and hang in festoons.
Above, the leaves, thirty feet long, fall in a
feathery arch, and in the centre, like the waters
of a fountain, shoot up bright, yellow, drooping
branches that look like coral. These are the
flower-stalks. The fruit, in this climate, does not
ripen so as to be good for any thing.</p>
<p>One gentleman showed me a young palm,
now six feet high, which he had raised from a
seed of the common shop date, planted four
years ago. In this same garden he showed me
enormous rose-trees, which he had formed by
budding the finest of the Bourbon ever-blooming
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">221</SPAN></span>
roses in the native Florida rose. The
growth in three years had been incredible; and
these trees are an ever-springing fountain of
fresh roses. There is a rose-tree in St. Augustine,
in a little garden, which all the sight-seers
go to see. It is a tree with a trunk about the
size of an ordinary man's arm, and is said to
have had a thousand roses on it at a time. Half
that number will answer our purpose; and we
will set it down at that. Rose-slugs and rose-bugs
are pests unheard of here. The rose
grows as in its native home. One very pretty
feature of the houses here struck me agreeably.
There is oftentimes a sort of shaded walk under
half the house, opening upon the garden. You
go up a dusty street, and stand at a door, which
you expect will open into a hall. It opens,
and a garden full of flowers and trees meets
your view. The surprise is delightful. In one
garden that we visited we saw a century-plant
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">222</SPAN></span>
in bud. The stalk was nineteen feet high; and
the blossoms seemed to promise to be similar
to those of the yucca. The leaves are like
the aloe, only longer, and twisted and contorted
in a strange, weird fashion. On the whole, it
looked as if it might have been one of the
strange plants in Rappicini's garden in Padua.</p>
<p>The society in St. Augustine, though not
extensive, is very delightful. We met and were
introduced to some very cultivated, agreeable
people. There is a fair prospect that the city
will soon be united by railroad to Jacksonville,
which will greatly add to the facility and convenience
of living there. We recrossed the
railroad at Tekoi, on our way home, in company
with a party of gentlemen who are investigating
that road with a view of putting capital into it,
and so getting it into active running order.
One of them informed me that he was also
going to Indian River to explore, in view of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</SPAN></span>
projected plan to unite it with the St. John's by
means of a canal. Very sensibly he remarked,
that, in order to really make up one's mind about
Florida, one should see it in summer; to which
we heartily assented.</p>
<p>By all these means this beautiful country is
being laid open, and made accessible and inhabitable
as a home and refuge for those who need it.</p>
<p>On the steamboat, coming back, we met the
Florida Thoreau of whom we before spoke,—a
devoted, enthusiastic lover of Nature as she
reveals herself in the most secluded everglades
and forests. He supports himself, and pays the
expenses of his tours, by selling the curiosities
of Nature which he obtains to the crowd of
eager visitors who throng the hotels in winter.
The feathers of the pink curlew, the heron, the
crane, the teeth of alligators, the skins of deer,
panther, and wild-cat, are among his trophies.
He asserted with vehemence that there were
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</SPAN></span>
varieties of birds in Florida unknown as yet to
any collection of natural history. He excited
us greatly by speaking of a pair of pet pink
curlews which had been tamed; also of a snow-white
stork, with sky-blue epaulet on each
shoulder, which is to be found in the everglades.
He was going to spend the whole summer alone
in these regions, or only with Indian guides;
and seemed cheerful and enthusiastic. He
should find plenty of cocoanuts, and would
never need to have a fever if he would eat daily
of the wild oranges which abound. If one only
could go in spirit, and not in flesh, one would
like to follow him into the everglades. The
tropical forests of Florida contain visions and
wonders of growth and glory never yet revealed
to the eye of the common traveller, and which
he who sees must risk much to explore. Our
best wishes go with our enthusiast. May he
live to tell us what he sees!
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