The Hawaiian Archipelago - Six Months Among The Palm Groves, Coral Reefs, And Volcanoes Of The Sandwich Islands By Isabella L. Bird
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Great Tact, Firmness, And Knowledge Of Human
Nature Are Required In The Manager Of A Plantation.
The natives are
at times disposed to shirk work without sufficient cause; the native
lunas, or overseers, are not
Always reasonable, the Chinamen and
natives do not always agree, and quarrels and entanglements arise,
and everything is referred to the decision of the manager, who,
besides all things else, must know the exact amount of work which
ought to be performed, both in the fields and factory, and see that
it is done. Mr. A. is a keen, shrewd man of business, kind without
being weak, and with an eye on every detail of his plantations. The
requirements are endless. It reminds me very much of plantation
life in Georgia in the old days of slavery. I never elsewhere heard
of so many headaches, sore hands, and other trifling ailments. It
is very amusing to see the attempts which the would-be invalids make
to lengthen their brief smiling faces into lugubriousness, and the
sudden relaxation into naturalness when they are allowed a holiday.
Mr. A. comes into the house constantly to consult his wife regarding
the treatment of different ailments.
I have made a second tour through the factory, and am rather
disgusted with sugar making. "All's well that ends well," however,
and the delicate crystalline result makes one forget the initial
stages of the manufacture. The cane, stripped of its leaves, passes
from the flumes under the rollers of the crushing-mill, where it is
subjected to a pressure of five or six tons.
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