Carving a
Cocoa-nut (1877) Cornhill Magazine
THE MILK IN THE
COCOA-NUT.
By GRANT ALLEN.
FOR many
centuries the occult problem how to account for the milk in the cocoa-nut has
awakened the profoundest interest alike of ingenious infancy and of maturer
scientific age. Though it can not be truthfully affirmed of it, as of the
cosmogony or creation of the world, in "The Vicar of Wakefield," that
it "has puzzled the philosophers of all ages" (for Sanchoniathon was
certainly ignorant of the very existence of that delicious juice, and Manetho
doubtless went to his grave without ever having tasted it fresh from the nut
under a tropical veranda), yet it may be safely asserted that for the last
three hundred years the philosopher who has not at some time or other of his
life meditated upon that abstruse question, is unworthy of such an exalted
name. The cosmogony and the milk in the cocoa-nut are, however, a great deal
closer together in thought than Sanchoniathon or Manetho, or the rogue who
quoted them so glibly, is ever at all likely, in his wildest moments, to have
imagined.
The cocoa-nut,
in fact, is a subject well deserving of the most sympathetic treatment at the
gentle hands of grateful humanity. No other plant is useful to us in so many
diverse and remarkable manners. It has been truly said of that friend of man,
the domestic pig, that he is all good, from the end of his snout to the tip of
his tail; but even the pig, though he furnishes us with so many necessaries or
luxuries—from tooth-brushes to sausages, from ham to lard, from pepsine-wine to
pork pies—does not nearly approach, in the multiplicity and variety of his
virtues, the all-sufficing and world-supplying cocoa-nut. A Chinese proverb
says that there are as many useful properties in the cocoa-nut palm as there
are days in the year; and a Polynesian saying tells us that the man who plants
a cocoa-nut plants meat and drink, hearth and home, vessels and clothing, for
himself and his children after him. Like the great Mr. Whiteley, the invaluable
palm-tree might modestly advertise itself as a universal provider. The solid
part of the nut supplies food almost alone to thousands of people daily, and
the milk serves them for drink, thus acting as an efficient filter to the water
absorbed by the roots in the most polluted or malarious regions. If you tap the
flower-stalk you get a sweet juice, which can be boiled down into the peculiar
sugar called (in the charming dialect of commerce) jaggery; or it can be
fermented into a very nasty spirit known as palm-wine, toddy, or arrack; or it
can be mixed with bitter herbs and roots to make that delectable compound
"native beer." If you squeeze the dry nut you get cocoa-nut oil,
which is as good as lard for frying when fresh, and is "an excellent
substitute for butter at breakfast," on tropical tables. Under the mysterious
name of copra (which most of us have seen with awe described in the market
reports as "firm" or "weak," "receding" or
"steady") it forms the main or only export of many oceanic islands,
and is largely imported into this realm of England, where the thicker portion
is called stearine, and used for making sundry candles with fanciful names,
while the clear oil is employed for burning in ordinary lamps. In the process
of purification, it yields glycerine; and it enters largely into the
manufacture of most better-class soaps. The fiber that surrounds the nut makes
up the other mysterious article of commerce known as coir, which is twisted
into stout ropes, or woven into cocoa-nut matting and ordinary door-mats.
Brushes and brooms are also made of it, and it is used, not always in the most
honest fashion, in place of real horse-hair, in stuffing cushions. The shell,
cut in half, supplies good cups, and is artistically carved by the Polynesians,
Japanese, Hindoos, and other benighted heathen, who have not yet learned the
true methods of civilized machine-made shoddy manufacture. The leaves serve as
excellent thatch; on the flat blades, prepared like papyrus, the most famous
Buddhist manuscripts are written; the long mid-ribs or branches (strictly
speaking, the leaf-stalks) answer admirably for rafters, posts, or fencing; the
fibrous sheath at the base is a remarkable natural imitation of cloth, employed
for strainers, wrappers, and native hats; while the trunk, or stem, passes in
carpentry under the name of porcupine-wood, and produces beautiful effects as a
wonderfully-colored cabinet-maker's material. These are only a few selected
instances out of the innumerable uses of the cocoa-nut palm.
Apart even from
the manifold merits of the tree that bears it, the milk itself has many and
great claims to our respect and esteem, as everybody who has ever drunk it in
its native surroundings will enthusiastically admit. In England, to be sure,
the white milk in the dry nuts is a very poor stuff, sickly, and strong-flavored
and rather indigestible. But in the tropics, cocoa-nut milk, or, as we oftener
call it there, cocoa-nut water, is a very different and vastly superior sort of
beverage. At eleven o'clock every morning, when you are hot and tired with the
day's work, your black servant, clad from head to foot in his cool clean white
linen suit, brings you in a tall soda-glass full of a clear, light, crystal
liquid, temptingly displayed against the yellow background of a chased Benares
brass-work tray. The lump of ice bobs enticingly up and down in the center of
the tumbler, or clinks musically against the edge of the glass as he carries it
along. You take the cool cup thankfully and swallow it down at one long
draught; fresh as a May morning, pure as an English hill-side spring, delicate
as—well, as cocoa-nut water. None but itself can be its parallel. It is
certainly the most delicious, dainty, transparent, crystal drink ever invented.
How did it get there, and what is it for?
In the early
green stage at which cocoa-nuts are generally picked for household use in the
tropics, the shell hasn't yet solidified into a hard, stony coat, but still
remains quite soft enough to be readily cut through with a sharp
table-knife—just like young walnuts picked for pickling. If you cut one across
while it's in this unsophisticated state, it is easy enough to see the
arrangement of the interior, and the part borne by the milk in the development
and growth of the mature nut. The ordinary tropical way of opening cocoa-nuts
for table, indeed, is by cutting off the top of the shell and rind in
successive slices, at the end where the three pores are situated, until you
reach the level of the water, which fills up the whole interior. The nutty part
around the inside of the shell is then extremely soft and jelly-like, so that
it can be readily eaten with a spoon: but as a matter of fact very few people
ever do eat the flesh at all. After their first few months in the tropics, they
lose the taste for this comparatively indigestible part, and confine themselves
entirely (like patients at a German spa) to drinking the water. A young
cocoa-nut is thus seen to consist, first of a green outer skin, then of a
fibrous coat, which afterward becomes the hair, and next of a harder shell
which finally gets quite woody; while inside all comes the actual seed or
unripe nut itself. The office of the cocoa-nut water is the deposition of the
nutty part around the side of the shell; it is, so to speak, the mother-liquid,
from which the harder eatable portion is afterward derived. This state is not
uncommon in embryo seeds. In a very young pea, for example, the inside is quite
watery, and only the outer skin is at all solid, as we have all observed when
green peas first come into season. But the special peculiarity of the cocoa-nut
consists in the fact that this liquid condition of the interior continues even
after the nut is ripe, and that is the really curious point about the milk in
the cocoa-nut which does actually need accounting for.
In order to
understand it one ought to examine a cocoa-nut in the act of budding, and to do
this it is by no means necessary to visit the West Indies or the Pacific
Islands; all you need to do is to ask a Covent Garden fruit-salesman to get you
a few "growers." On the voyage to England, a certain number of
precocious cocoa-nuts, stimulated by the congenial warmth and damp of most
ship-holds, usually begin to sprout before their time; and these waste nuts are
sold by the dealers at a low rate to East End children and inquiring botanists.
An examination of a "grower" very soon convinces one what is the use
of the milk in the cocoa-nut.
It must be duly
bone in mind, to begin with, that the prime end and object of the nut is not to
be eaten raw by the ingenious monkey, or to be converted by lordly man into
cocoa-nut biscuits, or cocoa-nut pudding, but simply and solely to reproduce
the cocoa-nut palm in sufficient numbers to future generations. For this
purpose the nut has slowly acquired by natural selection a number of protective
defenses against its numerous enemies, which serve to guard it admirably in the
native state from almost all possible animal depredators. First of all, the
actual nut or seed itself consists of a tiny embryo plant, placed just inside
the softest of the three pores or pits at the end of the shell, and surrounded
by a vast quantity of nutritious pulp, destined to feed and support it during
its earliest unprotected days, if not otherwise diverted by man or monkey. But,
as whatever feeds a young plant will also feed an animal, and as many animals
betray a felonious desire to appropriate to their own wicked ends the
food-stuffs laid up by the palm for the use of its own seedling, the cocoa-nut
has been compelled to inclose this particularly large and rich kernel in a very
solid and defensive shell. And, once more, since the palm grows at a very great
height from the ground—I have seen them up to ninety feet in favorable
circumstances—this shell stands a very good chance of getting broken in
tumbling to the earth, so that it has been necessary to surround it with a mass
of soft and yielding fibrous material, which breaks its fall, and acts as a
buffer to it when it comes in contact with the soil beneath. So many
protections has the cocoa-nut gradually devised for itself by the continuous
survival of the best adapted among numberless and endless spontaneous
variations of all its kind in past time.
Now, when the
cocoa-nut has actually reached the ground at last, and proceeds to sprout in
the spot where chance (perhaps in the bodily shape of a disappointed monkey)
has chosen to cast it, these numerous safeguards and solid envelopes naturally
begin to prove decided nuisances to the embryo within. It starts under the
great disadvantage of being hermetically sealed within a solid wooden shell, so
that no water can possibly get at it to aid it as most other seeds are aided in
the process of germination. Fancy yourself a seed-pea, anxious to sprout, but
coated all round with a hard covering of impermeable sealing-wax, and you will be
in a position faintly to appreciate the unfortunate predicament of a grower
cocoa-nut. Natural selection, however—that deus ex machina of modern science,
which can perform such endless wonders, if only you give it time enough to work
in and variations enough to work upon—natural selection has come to the rescue
of the unhappy plant by leaving it a little hole at the top of the shell, out
of which it can push its feathery green head without difficulty. Everybody
knows that if you look at the sharp end of a cocoa-nut you will see three
little brown pits or depressions on its surface. Most people also know that two
of these are firmly stopped up (for a reason to which I shall presently recur),
but that the third one is only closed by a slight film or very thin shell,
which can be easily bored through with a pocket-knife, so as to let the milk
run off before cracking the shell. So much we have all learned during our
ardent pursuit of natural knowledge on half-holidays in early life. But we
probably then failed to observe that just opposite this soft hole lies a small,
roundish knob, imbedded in the pulp or eatable portion, which knob is in fact
the embryo palm or seedling, for whose ultimate benefit the whole arrangement
(in brown and green) has been invented. That is very much the way with man: he
notices what concerns his own appetite, and omits all the really important
parts of the whole subject. We think the use of the hole is to let out the
milk; but the nut knows that its real object is to let out the seedling. The
knob grows out at last into the young plantlet, and it is by means of the soft
hole that it makes its escape through the shell to the air and the sunshine
which it seeks without.
This brings us
really down at last to the true raison d’être for the milk in the cocoa-nut. As
the seed or kernel can not easily get at much water from outside, it has a good
supply of water laid up for it ready beforehand within its own encircling
shell. The mother-liquid from which the pulp or nutty part has been deposited
remains in the center, as the milk, till the tiny embryo begins to sprout. As
soon as it does so, the little knob which was at first so very small enlarges
rapidly and absorbs the water, till it grows out into a big, spongy cellular
mass, which at last almost fills up the entire shell. At the same time, its
other end pushes its way out through the soft hole, and then gives birth to a
growing bud at the top—the future stem and leaves—and to a number of long
threads beneath—the future roots. Meanwhile, the spongy mass inside begins
gradually to absorb all the nutty part, using up its oils and starches for the
purpose of feeding the young plant above, until it is of an age to expand its
leaves to the open tropical sunlight and shift for itself in the struggle for
life. It seems at first sight very hard to understand how any tissue so solid
as the pulp of cocoa-nut can be thus softened and absorbed without any visible
cause; but in the subtile chemistry of living vegetation such a transformation
is comparatively simple and easy to perform. Nature sometimes works much
greater miracles than this in the same way: for example, what is called
vegetable ivory, a substance so solid that it can be carved or turned only with
great difficulty, is really the kernel of another palm-nut, allied to the
cocoa-palm, and its very stony particles are all similarly absorbed during
germination by the dissolving power of the young seedling.
Why, however,
has the cocoa-nut three pores at the top instead of one, and why are two out of
the three so carefully and firmly sealed up? The explanation of this strange
peculiarity is only to be found in the ancestral history of the cocoa-nut kind.
Most nuts, indeed, start in their earlier stage as if they meant to produce two
or more seeds each; but, as they ripen, all the seeds except one become
abortive. The almond, for example, has in the flower two seeds or kernels to
each nut; but in the ripe state there is generally only one, though
occasionally we find an almond with two—a philopena, as we commonly call
it—just to keep in memory the original arrangement of its earlier ancestors.
The reason for this is that plants whose fruits have no special protection for
their seeds are obliged to produce a great many of them at once, in order that
one seed in a thousand may finally survive the onslaughts of their Argus-eyed
enemies; but, when they learn to protect themselves by hard coverings from
birds and beasts, they can dispense with some of these supernumerary seeds, and
put more nutriment into each one of those that they still retain. Compare, for
example, the innumerable small round seedlets of the poppy-head with the
solitary large and richly-stored seed of the walnut, or the tiny black specks
of mustard and cress with the single compact and well-filled seed of the
filbert and the acorn. To the very end, however, most nuts begin in the flower
as if they meant to produce a whole capsuleful of small unstored and
unprotected seeds, like their original ancestors; it is only at the last moment
that they recollect themselves, suppress all their ovules except one, and store
that one with all the best and oiliest food-stuffs at their disposal. The nuts,
in fact, have learned by long experience that it is better to be the only son
and heir of a wealthy house, set up in life with a good capital to begin upon,
than to be one of a poor family of thirteen needy and unprovided children.
Now, the
cocoa-nuts are descended from a great tribe—the palms and lilies—which have as
their main distinguishing peculiarity the arrangement of parts in their flowers
and fruits by threes each. For example, in the most typical flowers of this
great group, there are three green outer calyx-pieces, three bright-colored
petals, three long outer stamens, three short inner stamens, three valves to
the capsule, and three seeds or three rows of seeds in each fruit. Many palms
still keep pretty well to this primitive arrangement, but a few of them which
have specially protected or highly developed fruits or nuts have lost in their
later stages the threefold disposition in the fruit, and possess only one seed,
often a very large one. There is no better and more typical nut in the whole
world than a cocoa-nut—that is to say, from our present point of view at least,
though the fear of that awful person, the botanical Smelfungus, compels me to
add that this is not quite technically true. Smelfungus, indeed, would insist
upon it that the cocoa-nut is not a nut at all, and would thrill us with the
delightful information, innocently conveyed in that delicious dialect of which
he is so great a master, that it is really "a drupaceous fruit with a
fibrous mesocarp." Still, in spite of Smelfungus with his nice,
hair-splitting distinctions, it remains true that humanity at large will still
call a nut a nut, and that the cocoa-nut is the highest known development of
the peculiar nutty tactics. It has the largest and most richly stored seed of
any known plant; and this seed is surrounded by one of the hardest and most
unmanageable of any known shells. Hence the cocoa-nut has readily been able to
dispense with the three kernels which each nut used in its earlier and less
developed days to produce. But though the palm has thus taken to reducing the
number of its seeds in each fruit to the lowest possible point consistent with
its continued existence at all, it still goes on retaining many signs of its
ancient threefold arrangement. The ancestral and most deeply ingrained habits
persist in the earlier stages; it is only in the mature form that the later
acquired habits begin fully to predominate. Even so our own boys pass through
an essentially savage childhood of ogres and fairies, bows and arrows,
sugar-plums and barbaric nursery tales, as well as a romantic boyhood of
mediaeval chivalry and adventure, before they steady down into that crowning
glory of our race, the solid, sober, matter-of-fact, commercial British
Philistine. Hence the cocoa-nut in its unstripped state is roughly triangular
in form, its angles answering to the separate three fruits of simpler palms;
and it has three pits or weak places in the shell, through which the embryos of
the three original kernels used to force their way out. But as only one of them
is now needed, that one alone is left soft; the other two, which would be
merely a source of weakness to the plant if unprotected, are covered in the
existing nut by harder shell. Doubtless they serve in part to deceive the too
inquisitive monkey or other enemy, who probably concludes that, if one of the
pits is hard and impermeable, the other two are so likewise.
Though I have
now, I hope, satisfactorily accounted for the milk in the cocoa-nut, and
incidentally for some other matters in its economy as well, I am loath to leave
the young seedling, whom I have brought so far on his way, to the tender
mercies of the winds and storms and tropical animals, some of whom are
extremely fond of his juicy and delicate shoots. Indeed, the growing point or
bud of most palms is a very pleasant succulent vegetable, and one kind—the West
Indian mountain-cabbage—deserves a better and more justly descriptive name, for
it is really much more like seakale or asparagus. I shall try to follow our
young seedling on in life, therefore, so as to give, while I am about it, a
fairly comprehensive and complete biography of a single flourishing cocoa-nut
palm.
Beginning, then,
with the fall of the nut from the parent-tree, the troubles of the future palm
confront it at once in the shape of the nut-eating crab. This evil-disposed
crustacean is common around the sea-coast of the Eastern tropical islands,
which is also the region mainly affected by the cocoa-nut palm; for cocoa-nuts
are essentially shore-loving trees, and thrive best in the immediate
neighborhood of the sea. Among the fallen nuts, the clumsy-looking thief of a
crab (his appropriate Latin name is Birgus latro) makes great and dreaded
havoc. To assist him in his unlawful object he has developed a pair of front
legs, with specially strong and heavy claws, supplemented by a last or tail-end
pair armed only with very narrow and slender pincers. He subsists entirely upon
a cocoa-nut diet. Setting to work upon a big fallen nut—with the husk on,
cocoa-nuts measure in the raw state about twelve inches the long way—he tears
off all the coarse fiber bit by bit, and gets down at last to the hard shell.
Then he hammers away with his heavy claw on the softest eye-hole till he has
pounded an opening right through it. This done he twists round his body so as
to turn his back upon the cocoa-nut he is operating upon (crabs are never
famous either for good manners or gracefulness) and proceeds awkwardly but
effectually to extract all the white kernel or pulp through the breach with his
narrow pair of hind pincers. Like man, too, the robber-crab knows the value of
the outer husk as well as of the eatable nut itself, for he collects the fiber
in surprising quantities to line his burrow and lies upon it, the clumsy
sybarite, for a luxurious couch. Alas, however, for the helplessness of crabs
and the rapacity and cunning of all-appropriating man! The spoil-sport Malay
digs up the nest for the sake of the fiber it contains, which spares him the
trouble of picking junk on his own account, and then he eats the industrious
crab who has laid it all up, while he melts down the great lump of fat under
the robber's capacious tail, and sometimes gets from it as much as a good quart
of what may be practically considered as limpid cocoa-nut oil. Sic vos non
vobis is certainly the melancholy refrain of all natural history. The cocoa-nut
palm intends the oil for the nourishment of its own seedling; the crab
feloniously appropriates it and stores it up under his capacious tail for
future personal use; the Malay steals it again from the thief for his own
purposes; and ten to one the Dutch or English merchant beguiles it from him
with sized calico or poisoned rum, and transmits it to Europe, where it serves
to lighten our nights and assist at our matutinal tub, to point a moral and
adorn the present tale.
If, however, our
cocoa-nut is lucky enough to escape the robber-crabs, the pigs, and the
monkeys, as well as to avoid falling into the hands of man, and being converted
into the copra of commerce, or sold from a costermonger's barrow in the chilly
streets of ungenial London at a penny a slice, it may very probably succeed in
germinating after the fashion I have already described, and pushing up its head
through the surrounding foliage to the sunlight above. As a rule, the cocoa-nut
has been dropped by its mother-tree on the sandy soil of a sea-beach; and this
is the spot it best loves, and where it grows to the stateliest height.
Sometimes, however, it falls into the sea itself, and then the loose husk buoys
it up, so that it floats away bravely till it is cast by the waves upon some
distant coral reef or desert island. It is this power of floating and surviving
a long voyage that has dispersed the cocoa-nut so widely among oceanic islands,
where so few plants are generally to be found. Indeed, on many atolls or
isolated reefs (for example, on Keeling Island) it is the only tree or shrub
that grows in any quantity, and on it the pigs, the poultry, the ducks, and the
land-crabs of the place entirely subsist. In any case, wherever it happens to
strike, the young cocoa-nut sends up at first a fine rosette of big, spreading
leaves, not raised as afterward on a tall stem, but springing direct from the
ground in a wide circle, something like a very big and graceful fern. In this
early stage nothing can be more beautiful or more essentially tropical in
appearance than a plantation of young cocoa-nuts. Their long, feathery leaves
spreading out in great clumps from the buried stock, and waving with lithe
motion before the strong sea-breeze of the Indies, are the very embodiment of
those deceptive ideal tropics which, alas! are to be found in actual reality
nowhere on earth save in the artificial palm-houses at Kew, and the Casino
Gardens at too entrancing Monte Carlo.
For the first
two or three years the young palms must be well watered, and the soil around
them opened; after which the tall, graceful stem begins to rise rapidly into
the open air. In this condition it may be literally said to make the
tropics—those fallacious tropics, I mean, of painters and poets, of "Enoch
Arden" and of "Locksley Hall." You may observe that, whenever an
artist wants to make a tropical picture, he puts a group of cocoa-nut palms in
the foreground, as much as to say, "You see there's no deception; these
are the genuine, unadulterated tropics." But as to painting the tropics
without the palms, he might just as well think of painting the desert without
the camels. At eight or ten years old the tree flowers, bearing blossoms of the
ordinary palm-type, degraded likenesses of the lilies and yuccas, greenish and
inconspicuous, but visited by insects for the sake of their pollen. The flower,
however, is fertilized by the wind, which carries the pollen-grains from one
bunch of blossoms to another. Then the nuts gradually swell out to an enormous
size, and ripen very slowly, even under the brilliant tropical sun. (I will
admit that the tropics are hot, though in other respects I hold them to be
arrant impostors, like that precocious American youth who announced on his
tenth birthday that in his opinion life wasn't all that it was cracked up to
be.) But the worst thing about the cocoa-nut palm, the missionaries always say,
is the fatal fact that, when once fairly started, it goes on bearing fruit
uninterruptedly for forty years. This is very immoral and wrong of the
ill-conditioned tree, because it encourages the idyllic Polynesian to lie under
the palms all day long, cooling his limbs in the sea occasionally, sporting
with Amaryllis in the shade, or with the tangles of Neæra's hair, and waiting
for the nuts to drop down in due time, when he ought (according to European
notions) to be killing himself with hard work under a blazing sky, raising
cotton, sugar, indigo, and coffee, for the immediate benefit of the white
merchant,and the ultimate advantage of the British public. It doesn't enforce
habits of steady industry and perseverance, the good missionaries say; it
doesn't induce the native to feel that burning desire for Manchester
piece-goods and the other blessings of civilization which ought properly to
accompany the propagation of the missionary in foreign parts. You stick your
nut in the sand; you sit by a few years and watch it growing; you pick up the
ripe fruits as they fall from the tree; and you sell them at last for
illimitable red cloth to the Manchester piece-goods merchant. Nothing could be
more simple or more satisfactory. And yet it is difficult to see the precise
moral distinction between the owner of a cocoa-nut grove in the South-Sea
Islands and the owner of a coal-mine or a big estate in commercial England.
Each lounges decorously through life after his own fashion; only the one
lounges in a Russia-leather chair at a club in Pall Mall, while the other
lounges in a nice soft dust-heap beside a rolling surf in Tahiti or the
Hawaiian Archipelago.
Curiously
enough, at a little distance from the sandy levels or alluvial flats of the
sea-shore, the sea-loving cocoa-nut will not bring its nuts to perfection. It
will grow, indeed, but it will not thrive or fruit in due season. On the
coast-line of Southern India, immense groves of cocoa-nuts fringe the shore for
miles and miles together; and in some parts, as in Travancore, they form the
chief agricultural staple of the whole country. "The state has hence
facetiously been called Cocoanutcore," says its historian; which
charmingly illustrates the true Anglo-Indian notion of what constitutes
facetiousness, and ought to strike the last nail into the coffin of a
competitive examination system. A good tree in full bearing should produce one
hundred and twenty cocoa-nuts in a season; so that a very small grove is quite
sufficient to maintain a respectable family in decency and comfort. Ah, what a
mistake the English climate made when it left off its primitive warmth of the
Tertiary period, and got chilled by the ice and snow of the Glacial epoch down
to its present misty and dreary wheat-growing condition! If it were not for
that, those odious habits of steady industry and perseverance might never have
been developed in ourselves at all, and we might be lazily picking copra off
our own cocoa-palms, to this day, to export in return for the piece-goods of
some Arctic Manchester situated somewhere about the north of Spitzbergen or the
New Siberian Islands.
Even as things
stand at the present day, however, it is wonderful how much use we modern
Englishmen now make in our own houses of this far Eastern nut, whose very name
still bears upon its face the impress of its originally savage origin. From
morning to night we never leave off being indebted to it. We wash with it as
old brown Windsor or glycerine soap the moment we leave our beds. We walk
across our passages on the mats made from its fiber. We sweep our rooms with
its brushes, and wipe our feet on it as we enter our doors. As rope, it ties up
our trunks and packages; in the hands of the house-maids it scrubs our floors;
or else, woven into coarse cloth, it acts as a covering for bales and furniture
sent by rail or steamboat. The confectioner undermines our digestion in early
life with cocoanut candy; the cook tempts us later on with cocoa-nut cake; and
Messrs. Huntley and Palmer cordially invite us to complete the ruin with
cocoa-nut biscuits. We anoint our chapped hands with one of its preparations
after washing; and grease the wheels of our carriages with another to make them
run smoothly. Finally, we use the oil to burn in our reading-lamps, and light
ourselves at last to bed with stearine-candles. Altogether, an amateur census
of a single small English cottage results in the startling discovery that it
contains twenty-seven distinct articles which owe their origin in one way or
another to the cocoa-nut palm. And yet we affect, in our black ingratitude, to
despise the question of the milk in the cocoa-nut.—Cornhill Magazine.
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