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In the Caribbean Style


Article # : 10875 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 7 / 1986  1,603 Words
Author : Rochelle Larkin
Rochelle Larkin is the author of more than forty books and writes a column for the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. She resides in New York City.

       Caribbean is such an evocative word, sensuous even on the tongue as one says it, calling up images of sea and sand and sky, colors of aquamarine and rose and gold and flashing greens. The light of the Caribbean resonates with intensity and clarity simultaneously, giving its skies and its waters opaline brilliancy quite unlike any other in the world. It is a habitat of gorgeously plumaged birds and dramatic flora, peopled by a rainbow of racial types, most of whom had to be dragged to this earthly paradise in chains. Of the original population, Carib and Arawak Indians, none are left, save in some minute amount in the multinational gene pool.
       
        From the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries, European invaders struck the islands with nearly the same frequency as the ominous hurricanes that still wreak havoc here. In the architecture of the various islands, traces of the invaders' influences are still evident. English, Dutch, Spanish, French, and Danes have left their marks, but always adapted to the climatic conditions of the tropics, so different from that of the old World. Then the permanent population had added its own touches to create an ambience and a style that is truly Caribbean and indigenous to the area.
       
        The dwellings that dot the islands much as the islands dot the sea, range from the lavish to the lowly. Although most of the great estates, built on the vast slave-worked sugar trade, are long gone, many houses, restored and refurbished to pristine eighteenth-century elegance and authenticity, remain. The slave quarters, built meagerly out of the commonest materials at hand and not meant to withstand the annual hurricanes that devastated long swathes of the area, are of course long gone, but a popular house form called the ... (1997 of 9743 Characters)
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