登陆注册
15709400000058

第58章

Only it would be well if they could be brought to acknowledge from whence they have learned all that they know.

Our route lay right across the State to a place called Grand Haven, on Lake Michigan, from whence we were to take boat for Milwaukee, a town in Wisconsin, on the opposite or western shore of the lake.

Michigan is sometimes called the Peninsular State, from the fact that the main part of its territory is surrounded by Lakes Michigan and Huron, by the little Lake St. Clair and by Lake Erie. It juts out to the northward from the main land of Indiana and Ohio, and is circumnavigable on the east, north, and west. These particulars, however, refer to a part of the State only; for a portion of it lies on the other side of Lake Michigan, between that and Lake Superior. I doubt whether any large inland territory in the world is blessed with such facilities of water carriage.

On arriving at Grand Haven we found that there had been a storm on the lake, and that the passengers from the trains of the preceding day were still remaining there, waiting to be carried over to Milwaukee. The water however--or the sea, as they all call it--was still very high, and the captain declared his intention of remaining there that night; whereupon all our fellow-travelers huddled themselves into the great lake steamboat, and proceeded to carry on life there as though they were quite at home. The men took themselves to the bar-room, and smoked cigars and talked about the war with their feet upon the counter; and the women got themselves into rocking-chairs in the saloon, and sat there listless and silent, but not more listless and silent than they usually are in the big drawing-rooms of the big hotels. There was supper there precisely at six o'clock--beef-steaks, and tea, and apple jam, and hot cakes, and light fixings, to all which luxuries an American deems himself entitled, let him have to seek his meal where he may. And I was soon informed, with considerable energy, that let the boat be kept there as long as it might by stress of weather, the beef-steaks and apple jam, light fixings and heavy fixings, must be supplied at the cost of the owners of the ship.

"Your first supper you pay for," my informant told me, "because you eat that on your own account. What you consume after that comes of their doing, because they don't start; and if it's three meals a day for a week, it's their look out." It occurred to me that, under such circumstances, a captain would be very apt to sail either in foul weather or in fair.

It was a bright moonlight night--moonlight such as we rarely have in England--and I started off by myself for a walk, that I might see of what nature were the environs of Grand Haven. A more melancholy place I never beheld. The town of Grand Haven itself is placed on the opposite side of a creek, and was to be reached by a ferry. On our side, to which the railway came and from which the boat was to sail, there was nothing to be seen but sand hills, which stretched away for miles along the shore of the lake. There were great sand mountains and sand valleys, on the surface of which were scattered the debris of dead trees, scattered logs white with age, and boughs half buried beneath the sand. Grand Haven itself is but a poor place, not having succeeded in catching much of the commerce which comes across the lake from Wisconsin, and which takes itself on Eastward by the railway. Altogether, it is a dreary place, such as might break a man's heart should he find that inexorable fate required him there to pitch his tent.

On my return I went down into the bar-room of the steamer, put my feet upon the counter, lit my cigar, and struck into the debate then proceeding on the subject of the war. I was getting West, and General Fremont was the hero of the hour. "He's a frontier man, and that's what we want. I guess he'll about go through. Yes, sir." "As for relieving General Fre-mont," (with the accent always strongly on the "mont,") "I guess you may as well talk of relieving the whole West. They won't meddle with Fre-mont. They are beginning to know in Washington what stuff he's made of." "Why, sir, there are 50,000 men in these States who will follow Fre-mont, who would not stir a foot after any other man." From which, and the like of it in many other places, I began to understand how difficult was the task which the statesmen in Washington had in hand.

I received no pecuniary advantage whatever from that law as to the steamboat meals which my new friend had revealed to me. For my one supper of course I paid, looking forward to any amount of subsequent gratuitous provisions. But in the course of the night the ship sailed, and we found ourselves at Milwaukee in time for breakfast on the following morning.

Milwaukee is a pleasant town, a very pleasant town, containing 45,000 inhabitants. How many of my readers can boast that they know anything of Milwaukee, or even have heard of it? To me its name was unknown until I saw it on huge railway placards stuck up in the smoking-rooms and lounging halls of all American hotels. It is the big town of Wisconsin, whereas Madison is the capital. It stands immediately on the western shore of Lake Michigan, and is very pleasant. Why it should be so, and why Detroit should be the contrary, I can hardly tell; only I think that the same verdict would be given by any English tourist. It must be always borne in mind that 10,000 or 40,000 inhabitants in an American town, and especially in any new Western town, is a number which means much more than would be implied by any similar number as to an old town in Europe. Such a population in America consumes double the amount of beef which it would in England, wears double the amount of clothes, and demands double as much of the comforts of life. If a census could be taken of the watches, it would be found, I take it, that the American population possessed among them nearly double as many as would the English; and I fear also that it would be found that many more of the Americans were readers and writers by habit.

同类推荐
  • 龙树菩萨劝诫王颂

    龙树菩萨劝诫王颂

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 安龙纪事

    安龙纪事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Orlando Furioso

    Orlando Furioso

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 斯未信斋文编

    斯未信斋文编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 曹家档案史料

    曹家档案史料

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 独角殿下的专属傲娇小清新

    独角殿下的专属傲娇小清新

    我徒手唱歌,你弹奏的肖邦,却盲了我的眼,事事永远,心微动奈何情已远,时过境迁。唯有幻念情绝。
  • 致命差评—淘宝差评师

    致命差评—淘宝差评师

    你网购过么?你有在网购上给过卖家差评么?职业淘宝差评师居然遭到卖家的拒绝?不久家人接二连三的离奇消失?到底是何人所为……
  • 绝代龙武

    绝代龙武

    他从何而来,又该往何处去?踏遍八荒六合,独战天上天下。且看他如何逆苍天,明身世,诛仇寇…………
  • EXO之谁爱我在永生永世

    EXO之谁爱我在永生永世

    谁,抚我之面,慰我半世哀伤-吴亦凡谁,吻我之眸,遮我半世流离-鹿晗谁,执我之手,敛我半世癫狂-黄子韬谁,携我之心,融我半世冰霜-吴世勋谁,扶我之肩,驱我一世沉寂-金钟仁谁,唤我之心,掩我一生凌轹-都暻秀谁,弃我而去,留我一世独殇-边伯贤谁,可明我意,使我此生无憾-张艺兴谁,可助我臂,纵横万载无双-金俊勉谁,可倾我心,寸土恰似虚弥-朴灿烈谁,可葬吾怆,笑天地虚妄,吾心狂-金钟大谁,揽我之怀,除我前世轻浮-金珉硕执汝之手,倾心千生。深吻君眸,长随万世。
  • 大林二三事

    大林二三事

    当二货到了发乎于情的年纪……小短篇,自娱自乐之作,谨以此文献给我的一位小伙伴。
  • 泪笑九重天

    泪笑九重天

    流着泪没心没肺的笑,远比笑着流泪痛苦的多。或许千万的痛苦无人倾诉,并不真正绞心,莓是听话人将它当笑话一般,才是真正的嘲讽。
  • 平民先生

    平民先生

    这是我的第一部作品求大家多给点赞赏我会尽量多给大家写一些大家喜欢看的书!大家在评论的时候希望大家多个一些建议和宝贵的意见谢谢大家!!!
  • 缠爱:总裁的逃爱娇妻

    缠爱:总裁的逃爱娇妻

    “女人,你以为你逃得了么?就算你逃到天涯海角,我也要把你抓回来,你是我的,谁都不可以碰!”凌夜看着机场的入口,久久不动。欧阳樱影看着云下的a市,再见了,凌夜,祝你幸福。
  • 寻月世界

    寻月世界

    东陵邺城,淮南古道,月上境天,西极昆仑,燕然山脉,苍茫神州……这是个寻月的故事,这是一个描述“寻月者”的世界。
  • 不甘心平凡那就呐喊

    不甘心平凡那就呐喊

    千年难遇的商界奇才,俯视商业风云。身旁全能秘书,翻开一世孽缘。