MÄ LI UP 
Boas 
676 VEGETATION OF THE FEEJEE ISLANDS. 
meg to grow, and be applied to the same purposes of shade as 
the lime tree in England. Nor is it on the whole unhealthy, 
though the inhabitants are sometimes liable to attacks of 
a severe and fatal form of fever. The general tempera- 
ture of the warm season is, in the hottest part of the day, 83°, 
and sometimes 85° or 88°, and has been known to reach 95°. 
In the colder part of the morning the temperature is 7 4°, or 
even 72°. Every visitor must be struck with the prevailing 
fragrance of the vegetation. Numbers of the plants abound 
in an aroma which makes them more or less valuable in com- 
merce, as their productions can be applied to increase the 
luxuries of life. 
(To be continued.) 
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