68 TEQUESTA whether the joke is on him or his visitors makes no difference in his appreciation of it.""3 This does, however, contrast with the observation of his step- daughter, Marion, that "the qualities that made him so successful and popular with others didn't always make him pleasant to live with. He had a very strong will, and would push through with anything he set out to do at any cost."32 One would believe this of someone who, as he said, "published nine good-sized volumes and a considerable num- ber of scientific papers..., besides hundreds of articles for magazines and newspapers."32 In a late overview of the Sentinels, Simpson counted 3,000 varieties of plants: over 100 species of trees and shrubs, 75 orchid species, 150 of palms, 20 of rubber trees, 100 of fruits of all kinds, and many single species of rare trees and plants. Simpson the collector gathered around him in a botanical embrace trees and plants that were both native and the result of his many collecting trips throughout the Caribbean. He explained that the money for every plant he purchased was obtained by going without a meal.33 How glorious it would have been for Simpson's private green world to be preserved. Just before his death in 1932, the Miami Rotary Club inaugurated a movement to buy the estate and set it aside as Rustic stone bridge and brackish pool at The Sentinels in Lemon City, home of Charles Simpson. Simpson built the bridge and walls himself. (HASFx-287-2)