162 CAMPS IN THE CARIBBEES. 
CHAPTER XI. 
A CRUISE IN THE HURRICANE SEASON. 
AN EXPERIMENT IN COFFEE CULTURE, -— THE PEST OF THE 
COFFEE PLANT. — LIBERIAN COFFEE VERSUS MOCHA. -—— AN 
AFRICAN DISEASE. — GATHERING IN THE SICK.— DOWN THE 
‘CARIBBEAN COAST.— THE FLAME-TREE. — THE ORCHARD OF 
LIMES. — PROFITS OF LIME CULTURE. — THE MAROON PARTY. 
— THE STAMPEDE.— FAREWELL TO DOMINICA. — CORAL IS- 
LANDS. — AN IMMENSE GAME PRESERVE. — THE “ DOCTOR.” — 
THE JIGGERS. — NEW BIRDS.—A WEARY VOYAGE. — SEASONS 
OF THE TROPICS. — TEMPESTS. — CALMS. — PROVISIONS EX- 
HAUSTED. — TURKEY OR JACKASS. — SHARK. — ODORS OF 
SPICES. — THE TORNADO. — HURRICANE BIRDS. — PITONS OF 
ST. LUCIA. — ST. VINCENT. — PALM AVENUE. — THE SPA. — 
HOSPITABLE PEOPLE. — BASALTIC CLIFFS. — RICHMOND VALE. 
— FALLS OF BALLEINE.— THE WATERSPOUT. 
MILE from the town of Roseau are the cliffs 
of St. Aramant, above which is the snug little 
country seat of Dr. Imray, one of the oldest resi- 
dents of Dominica. A friend and correspondent of 
Sir Joseph Hooker, he is an ardent botanist, and has 
several of the native plants named in his honor. For 
a generation, the good doctor ministered to the sick 
and afflicted; for more than thirty years he was the 
leading physician of the island. At last, feeling the 
need of rest, well advanced in years, though in robust 
health, he delegated his authority and practice, with 
