69 
in height—and still retain a portion of their golden fruit. 
But 
all is now in ruins. Two 
barren Island; containing, however, a remarkab 
oyster shells, full of bones of the aborigines, along with the 
domestic eaaene with which they were interred,—as earthen 
vessels, hatchet: ere we spread our blankets under 
the canopy of a a ee sky; wie after a little persecution 
in ur heads were de- 
fended by “Spanish bayonets” (ee ballin 
morning, crossing the Inlet at outhern point of Penon 
howe no books 
fe should ae Baldwin's locality between ee and 
led. Our 
just about the same latitude. 
north, but at about the latitude cone the travelable high- 
way turns away from the coastal ae and a very different 
kind of country is traversed all the to Jacksonville, which 
ie we ci just forty-eight nee after leaving the Cape 
Sable 
A survey vol me front yards of eens ille discov —. many 
Zamia umbrosa. It thrives there and is 
une 
to the decidedly cold weather of the aes Four specimens 
we examined, still very vigorous, are known to have grown there 
for over thirty years. Bane: as nguinice as te the en of 
these cultivated specimen As 
* Bow-legs, the Leathe of Bartram's ‘Long Warrior,” says, that a 
tia” sig s Bread plant. (This proved to be the Zemia pumila. 
subsequent letter, of May 27.) 
