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The universal geography : earth and its inhabitants

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100 WEST AFRICA.<br />

soldiers obtained leave to remain, <strong>and</strong> since then the colony has been maintained,<br />

at times increased by a few shipwrecked sailors, at times diminished by emigration<br />

of young men, or of whole families, eager to escape from their narrow ocean home.<br />

In 1865, during the war of Secession, an American corsair l<strong>and</strong>ed forty prisoners<br />

on the isl<strong>and</strong> without providing for their support. On other occasions the crews<br />

of passing ships have forcibly obtained supplies from the little colony of settlers,<br />

who have nobly avenged themselves by hastening to the succour of vessels often<br />

str<strong>and</strong>ed on their rocky shores.<br />

If left to <strong>its</strong>elf, this little insular community might perhaps be able to subsist<br />

<strong>and</strong> develoj), thanks to the uniform excellence of the climate. <strong>The</strong> families are<br />

said never to lose their children young, so that the natural increase by the excess<br />

of births over deaths Is considerable. <strong>The</strong> natives, issue of Europeans, Americans,<br />

<strong>and</strong> Holl<strong>and</strong>ers from the Capo, married to half-caste women from Saint Helena<br />

<strong>and</strong> South Africa, are a fine race, remarkable for the grace <strong>and</strong> harmony of their<br />

proportions. In 1886 they numbered a hundred <strong>and</strong> twelve souls ; but fifteen<br />

adults, or one-fourth of all the able-bodied members of the community, were soon<br />

after swept away by a terrible storm.<br />

English is the language of these isl<strong>and</strong>ers, who constitute a small republic,<br />

whose " president " is the patriarch encircled by the largest family group. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

recognise the sovereignty of Great Britain, which occasionally affords some help<br />

to the vassal colony.<br />

Saint Helena.<br />

Although situated fully within the tropics, between lo° <strong>and</strong> 16° south latitude,<br />

<strong>and</strong> 1,400 miles nearer to the equator than Tristam da Cunha, St. Helena was<br />

discovered only four years earlier, that is, in 1502, by the Galician Juan de Nova,<br />

who here lost one of his vessels. <strong>The</strong> isl<strong>and</strong> may, however, have been sighted by<br />

some previous navigators, for some l<strong>and</strong>s are figured in these waters on Juan de la<br />

Cosa's map, which was completed in 1500.<br />

Lying within the zone of the regular south-east trade winds, St. Helena<br />

occupies a very favourable position on the highway of ships homeward bound from<br />

the Indian Ocean. But the nearest continental l<strong>and</strong> is the Portuguese province of<br />

Mossamedes, South-West Africa, distant 1,140 miles due west.<br />

Although still nearly double the size of Tristam da Cunha, with a total area of<br />

about 30,000 acres, St. Helena is little more than the nucleus of what it must once<br />

have been. <strong>The</strong> present cliffs, in many places rising 2,000 feet sheer above the<br />

water, are encircled by a sort of bank or terrace with a mean breadth of two or three<br />

miles <strong>and</strong> flooded to a depth of from 300 to 600 feet <strong>and</strong> upwards. This sub-<br />

merged l<strong>and</strong>, which rises abruptly from the marine abysses, forms the pedestal of<br />

the old volcanic mass, of which a mere fragment now survives. And when it<br />

covered a wider extent, the isl<strong>and</strong> also rose vertically to a greater height. But<br />

while the waves were incessantly attacking <strong>its</strong> foundations, <strong>its</strong> upl<strong>and</strong>s were<br />

exposed to the ravages of rains <strong>and</strong> running waters. This twofold work of erosion,

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