Several of my companions suffered by eating too much of the cabbage-palm.
2
It was a plentiful repast, and included roast pintado and cabbage-palm.
3
At last we fell in with another hummock, in which were several cabbage-palm trees.
4
Just outside the hummock was a cabbage-palm, which, as I have said, abounds in Florida.
5
I must not omit to mention the cabbage-palm.
6
Its bed is full of large trees, among which I observed gum, Leichhardt, tea, and cabbage-palm-trees.
7
I remembered the cabbage-palm, and determined to climb the first tree of the kind we met with to obtain a cabbage.
8
As we got farther to the south, the banks were fringed with mangroves, and the cabbage-palm and palmetto made their appearance.
9
The cabbage-palm were in great plenty when I first landed on the island, but, by continual cutting, they were almost destroyed.
10
It was indeed the tender leaf bud of the cabbage-palm, roasted in its own husk, and to Réné it tasted much like roasted chestnuts.
11
It is uncrossable for horses, and the intervening parts are crowded with fine large weeping tea-trees, large Leichhardt-trees, tall cabbage-palm, pandanus, and other trees.
12
One of the ceremonies was that of pronouncing the benediction over a large pile of leaves of the cabbage-palm, or palmetto, gathered in the woods.
13
There were also several cabbage-palms, always a welcome addition to our vegetables.
14
We skirted the great Bay to the Cabbage-palm Wood.
15
At this time we had a welcome addition to our food in the form of cabbage-palms and wild honey.
16
We passed, on our course, alternate narrow strips of grass and jungle, with cabbage-palms and numerous live-oaks scattered about in picturesque groups.